Court Opinion

ID: 6855882
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-23 20:42:07.095531+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:05:08.985475
License: Public Domain

BRYAN, Circuit Judge.
This is an action on a double indemnity provision of a $5,000 life insurance policy. The beneficiary, John A. Kennedy, recovered judgment in the District Court, but died pending this appeal, and, upon appropriate suggestion, his next of kin have been substituted as appellees.
Double indemnity is payable upon proof that the death of the insured “resulted directly and independently of all othér causes from bodily injury effected solely through external, violent and accidental means.” But the policy contains a clause which exempts the insurer from liability for double indemnity, “if the Insured’s death resulted from self-destruction, whether sane or insane; from the taking of poison or inhaling of gas, whether voluntary or otherwise, ° * * or, directly or indirectly, from infirmity of mind or body, from illness or disease, or from any bacterial infection other than bacterial infection occurring in consequence of accidental and external bodily injury.” The original petition acknowledged payment of the face of the policy, and, as a basis for the asserted right to recover double indemnity, alleged that the insured died “from poisoning produced by impure and contaminated food accidentally eaten.” An amended petition, without withdrawing that allegation, disclaimed an intention to allege that the insured had taken poison in his food, but alleged by way of explanation that the word “poisoning” was used in-the sense that “food poisoning” is generally used to describe an injurious effect of food eaten naturally and normally. The amended petition then proceeded to plead plaintiff’s evidence by stating that the insured had eaten lunch, consisting in part of cold ham, potato salad, and a beverage called Budweiser, and that what he ate and drank “was impure and contaminated in that it was unwholesome and indigestible in the insured’s system, without his knowledge, and caused violent irritation, erosion and injury to insured’s stomach and intestines.” The evidence is not in the record, and the only assignment of error open for consideration is one which complains of the overruling of appellant’s exception of no cause of action. Not even the insurance policy, which was an exhibit to the petition, nor the part of it that is material to this controversy, is printed in the record; only photostatie copies of the policy outside the record are separately brought up, in flagrant violation of our rules. Stephenson v. National Bank (C. C. A.) 39 F.(2d) 16. We would be justified in dismissing the appeal but for the fact that the terms of the double indemnity provision as set forth in the answer are not in dispute. Because and only because there is no doubt suggested or question raised as to the exact language of that provision, we feel at liberty to pass upon the sufficiency of the petition as amended.
Although bodily injury resulting from food poisoning is an internal injury, it is generally held that the food which causes it is a violent and external means. Newsoms v. Commercial Casualty Insurance Co., 147 Va. 471, 137 S. E. 456, 52 A. L. R. 363. Nor have we any doubt that the death of one who dies from eating impure food which he mistakenly believes is wholesome is caused by accidental means. See Christ v. Pacific Mutual Life Ins. Co., 312 Ill. 525, 144 N. E. 161, and note to that case in 35 A. L. R. 737. The amended petition alleges not that impure food was the sole cause of death when eaten, but only that it became impure, contaminated, and poisonous to the insured after he had eaten it. If that be true, the food was not the sole external cause of death, for a contributing internal cause was the physical condition of the insured. But we may assume in favor of appellees the truth of the allegation contained in the original petition, which was never withdrawn, to the effect that death resulted solely from poisoning produced by impure food. This poliey, unlike many policies under consideration in cases referred torn the briefs, does not stop with the promise to pay in the event of death effected solely through external, violent, and accidental *992means; but it goes much further and exempts the insurer from liability for death by or regardless of such means, provided death results from any one of several specially enumerated and excepted causes. In policies containing double indemnity provisions and also exemption clauses, the latter vary so widely that a decision in one ease may not be in point in another. In Maryland Casualty Co. v. Hudgins, 97 Tex. 124, 76 S. W. 745, 746, 64 L. R. A. 349, 104 Am. St. Rep. 857, 1 Ann. Cas. 252, the exemption clause excluded liability for death “resulting from poison, or anything accidentally * * * taken.” The cause of death was eating spoiled oysters. The, court said that, if the oysters were poisonous, the death was. within the exception of poison taken; if they were not, the cause of death was brought within; the exception of “anything” taken. In Hawkeye Association v. Christy (C. C. A.) 294 F. 208, 40 A. L. R. 46, death resulted from inhaling fumes from lighted sulphur candles. It was held that there was no lia^-bility because of an exemption clause which excluded death resulting from poisonous gases, etc., taken or inhaled accidentally or otherwise. These two eases are more strongly relied on by appellant than any others. We do not think either one decided the question involved in this ease. Of the causes of death exempted from the double indemnity provision of the policy in suit only two are material. The first relates to taking of poison whether voluntarily or unintentionally, and the other to bacterial infection not occurring in consequence of accidental and external bodily injury. There was no external bodily injury, and so we are not concerned with the exception which appears in the exemption clause. As words are commonly used and' understood, the taking of poison is a very different thing from eating impure food. The word “poison” as used in this exemption clause was intended, as it seems to us, to designate a well-known poison such as arsenic or strychnine. The exemption clause itself recognizes and draws a distinction between poison and bacterial infection. And so we think the petition should not be held to allege that the insured died from the taking of poison. However, if the petition as amended be construed as alleging death from food poisoning, that is only another way of saying that death was due to bacterial infection, which is another cause of death for which the insurer was not liable. Medical authorities cited by both sides agree that the prime cause of putrefaction of food is a species of bacteria. See, also, Cent pry Dictionary. Sometimes the baeteria in food will cause the death of a healthy person; at other times the bacteria multiply in the system and cause death because the acids in the body are not strong enough to overcome the baeteria in the food. The death of the insured was due to bacterial infection whether the bacteria in the food alone was responsible for it, or whether the physical condition of the insured contributed to the infection. In either event there could be no recovery under the terms of the double indemnity clause of the policy.
The judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.