Citation Numbers: 70 S.W. 798, 30 Tex. Civ. App. 489, 1902 Tex. App. LEXIS 560
Judges: Bookhout
Filed Date: 11/24/1902
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
This suit was filed in the District Court of Dallas County, Texas, on the 8th day of December, 1900, by Mrs. Addie J. Hunter against the Travelers Insurance Company on an accident insurance policy issued by said defendant to W. Hugh Hunter for the sum of $5000 and payable to his wife, Mrs. Addie J. Hunter. The provisions of said policy are as follows: “In consideration of the warranties, in the application for the policy and of twenty-five dollars, does hereby insure W. Hugh Hunter for the term of twelve
Said policy was continued in force by renewal receipts up until November 10, 1899, being the day on which the alleged*1 accident occurred. It is alleged that W. Hugh Hunter was accidentally injured on November 10, 1899, from which he died on January 17, 1900. It is alleged that the accident happened to W. Hugh Hunter while alighting from a vehicle in which he was going from place to place, and that the horse unexpectedly started forward, causing the said Hunter to lose his balance and to fall accidentally, and in falling he caught the vehicle with one hand and lighted on the ground with one foot, and in the movement of the horse forward the said W. Hugh Hunter was bruised; sprained and wrenched his arm, wrist, foot, leg, shoulder, and body. That as a result of the said accident the said Hunter died.
Defendant plead general demurrer and general denial, and specially plead that in the application -for the policy the following statements were made, to wit: “I have never had nor am I subject to fits, diseases of the brain, or any bodily or mental infirmity, and I agree that the policy shall not cover any injury through or while under the influence of intoxicating drinks.” Said application specially warranted the statements made therein to be true. The policy further specially provided that: "This insurance shall not cover injuries of which there is no visible mark on the body, nor accident, nor injuries, nor disability, nor death, resulting wholly or partly, directly or indirectly, from intoxication, or while intoxicated, from disease or while affected thereby.” That if said Hunter received any accidental injuries while said policy was in force the same were received while the said Hunter was under the influence of intoxicating drinks. That the statement contained in said application to the effect that applicant had never had any bodily infirmity, which was warranted to be true, was not ,in fact true in this, that at and before making the said application the said Hunter had been afflicted with an eczema or running sore on the arm, and had more than once been afflicted with rheumatism and had rheumatic tendencies.
The trial of the cause before a jury resulted in a verdict and judgment for plaintiff for the amount sued for. and a motion for new trial
Opinion.—1. Under appellant’s first assignment of error the following proposition is presented: “Where one sends for a doctor to treat him and the doctor comes and finds him suffering from swollen limbs and treats him for rheumatism, and there is nothing said to the doctor about the sufferer having received an accident, the jury should not- be allowed to infer that the swollen limbs were caused by an accident.” W. Hugh Hunter was a special agent of the Georgia Home Insurance Company. He resided with his family at Dallas. During the first part of November, 1899, and prior to the 10th day thereof, he visited San Antonio on business for his company. He attended to his duties as usual up to the 10th of November. On November 10th he was confined to his .room at the hotel where he was stopping, and was suffering from a badly swollen and inflamed arm and shoulder, and from a swollen ankle. He requested the local agent of his company to send him a physician, and in obedience to such request the agent notified Dr. Wilson. Dr. Wilson called on November 13th and found Mr. Hunter’s wrist and ankle badly swollen. He treated him for inflammation of the wrist and ankle joints. Dr. Wilson supposed at the time that the trouble was rheumatic arthritis. At the time Dr. Wilson testified in the case, which was by deposition taken February 25, 1901, he stated that he did not remember that W. Hugh Hunter told him that he had received an accidental injury. The fact that Dr. Wilson did not, at the time he testified in the case, remember whether Mr. Hunter told him that he had received an accidental injury did not, as a matter of law, preclude the court and jury from inferring, from all the facts adduced in the case, that an accident and injury had occurred. This evidence was of a negative character, and it had been more.than a year and six months when the deposition of Dr. Wilson was taken since he treated Mr. Hunter. Had Mr. Hunter actually failed to make known to his physician the fact that an accident had occurred to him, such failure would not estop plaintiff from showing (if such was the case) that, in fact, Hunter’s condition was the result of an accidental injury. It is further insisted that Hunter came to his death from heart trouble, and that the heart trouble resulted from rheumatism, which is an independent disease, and the cause of death independent of an accident, and that the contract sued on simply meant to cover death caused by an accident independent, of any disease. The evidence discloses that the injury produced rheumatism and that the heart trouble followed therefrom and death from heart trouble. If the rheumatism which produced the death of Hunter was not caused by an accidental injury then the company is not liable, but if such rheumatism was caused by the accidental injury and was but a mere link in the chain of causation between the . accident and death, then the death is attributable not to the disease, but to the accident alone. As stated in the case of Freeman v. Mutual
On the 16th of November Mr. Hunter was removed to his home in Dallas, where he was treated by Dr. Thatcher, who for five years prior to that time had been his family physician. Dr. Thatcher testified that Hunter had some swelling and fever, a swollen condition -in one of his wrists, and a slight swelling and inflammation in one of his ankles at the time he first called on him in November. Dr. Thatcher stated that the condition in which he found Mr. Hunter could have been produced by an injury whereby his right ankle and wrist had been wrenched and sprained severely. He gave it as his opinion that the injury described was the ultimate caues of -Hunter’s death: He testified that Mr. Hunter never suffered from rheumatism, to his knowledge, prior to his last sickness. He was confined to his bed until January 17th, when he died. Plaintiff testified that she had never known Mr. Hunter to suffer from rheumatism. She had been married to him twenty-eight years. A. L. Lowery, an agent of the insurance company, testified that as such agent he received notice from Hunter in his lifetime of a claim for benefits under the policy by reason of an accident and injury alleged to have been received by him in November, 1899. Death proofs were furnished in May, 1900. Thereafter the agent of the defendant company examined into the loss and offered to pay plaintiff a weekly indemnity of $25 per week for the time lost by Mr. Hunter up to the time of his death. This offer was declined by the plaintiff, she demanding the full face of the policy. There was evidence that W. Hugh Hunter had been regularly attending to his duties as special agent and adjuster for his company, and had the appearance of being in good health and in good physical condition up to the 10th of November, 1899; that on that day he hired a team at a livery stable, and thereafter, on the same day, returned to his hotel and was confined to his room. Upon examination it was found that his arm was badly bruised and swollen; that there were bruises upon his shoulder; that his ankle was sprained; that he seemed to be suffering great pain, and that he had never previous thereto had rheumatism. There was medical expert testimony that
2. The third assignment of error complains of the action of the court “in refusing to sustain appellant’s motion to withdraw from the jury all that part of the evidence of F. Scudder to the effect that W. Hugh Hunter told him that he happened to the accident, and also the testimony of Bmil Haueisen to the same effect, and also all the testimony in the record to the effect that W. Hugh Hunter had told anyone that he had been accidentally injured, because the evidence showed that said declarations were made long after the accident had happened, and at a different place, and were made at such time as not to be res gestae, and were self serving declarations.” The motion was overruled, and the defendant took a bill of exceptions in which the court states his reason for overruling the same “that he was unable to recall, and counsel failed to point out, any testimony which had been admitted which is objectionable on the grounds herein indicated, and for the further reason that the court could not recall any testimony which had been admitted over any such objection, but on the contrary the court had been careful to sustain every such objection.” The particular testimony which the defendant sought to have withdrawn was not specially set up in the motion, nor is the same stated in the bill of exceptions. The motion was too general. Had it been sustained, the jury would have been left in doubt as to what particular testimony it embraced. The motion should have set out the exact testimony which the defendant sought to have withdrawn. Railway v. Johnson, 95 Texas, 409, 67 S. W. Rep., 768.
3. The fourth, sixth, and seventh assignments of error complain of
4. The matters complained of in the fifth assignment present no reversible error. It is contended that the court erred in overruling the exception to direct interrogatory number 2, propounded by the plaintiff to witness, Haueisen, the exception being that it assumed the happening of an accidental injury to Hunter. The question reads: “Did you know, in his lifetime, W. Hugh Hunter, who was special agent of the Georgia Home Insurance Company of Texas, who met with an accident and injury at San Antonio, Texas, on or before November 10, 1899 ? If so, how long had you known the said Hunter?” To which the witness answered: “Yes, sir; I knew W. Hugh Hunter in his lifetime. He was special agent of the Georgia Home Insurance Company of Texas, in November, 1899. I have known Mr. Hunter about five or six years.” The jury must have understood the interrogatory, considered in connection with the answer thereto, was one intended to identify the witness. The same interrogatory was propounded to other witnesses and read without objection when the testimony of such witnesses was offered. No objection was made to the interrogatory in writing before the trial began.
5. The tenth assignment of error complains of the action of the court in refusing a special charge requested by defendant. The matters contained in the requested charge were embraced, in general terms, in the main charge. The requested charge contained a proposition of law which was not correct, and there was no error in refusing the charge as a whole. Railway v. Sheider, 88 Texas, 166; Railway v. Kelley, 34 S. W. Rep., 813.
Finding no reversible error in the record, the judgment is affirmed.
Affirmed.