DocketNumber: No. 20929. Department Two.
Citation Numbers: 264 P. 410, 146 Wash. 665, 1928 Wash. LEXIS 784
Judges: MacKintosh
Filed Date: 2/29/1928
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
Richard T. Sandgren, in his lifetime, purchased for one dollar a policy of accident insurance in the respondent company. Across the face of the policy in red letters appeared this warranty: *Page 666
"This is a Limited Policy." This statement represented truthfully the character of the insurance issued.
Among the provisions was one that death occasioned "by being accidentally thrown from" an automobile would be compensated for.
The testimony in the case showed that Sandgren, while a passenger in an auto truck, was killed by having his head come in contact with an upright of a bridge through which the truck was being driven.
The trial court entered judgment notwithstanding the verdict of a jury upon the ground that the death did not result from being "accidentally thrown from" the vehicle.
[1] A reading of the testimony compels us to reach the same conclusion as was reached by the trial court, for it shows that, at no time, was Sandgren's body out of the truck; that the driver made a quick swerve to avoid hitting the girders of the bridge, which was considerably narrower than the highway approaching it; that the truck came so near to the structure of the bridge that Sandgren's head struck an upright, causing his death; and that all the time his body was within the truck, which was not stopped from the time of the accident until a doctor was reached.
In considering a policy similar to the one here involved, this court, in Lavender v. Continental Life Insurance Co.,
This policy, issued for a minimum premium, expressly limits the right of recovery within very narrow bounds, and the accident here not coming within those bounds, the judgment of the trial court must be and is affirmed.
ASKREN, MAIN, FULLERTON, and HOLCOMB, JJ., concur.
Lavender v. Continental Life Insurance , 143 Wash. 201 ( 1927 )