Metropolitan Life Insurance v. Daniel

The court erred in overruling the motion for new trial.

DECIDED NOVEMBER 15, 1939. Thomas Daniel, insured under a group policy issued to Southeastern Compress and Warehouse Company, his employer, brought this action to recover total disability benefits. The policy among other things provided: "Upon receipt at the home office in the City of New York, of due proof that any employee, while insured hereunder, and prior to his sixtieth birthday, has become totally and permanently disabled, as the result of bodily injury or disease, so as to be prevented thereby from engaging in any occupation and performing any work for compensation or profit, the company will . . pay equal monthly instalments . . to the said employee. . . Without prejudice to any other cause of disability, the entire and irrecoverable loss of the sight of both eyes, or the loss of use of both hands, or both feet, or of one entire hand and one entire foot, will constitute total and permanent disability within the meaning of this provision." Daniel's duties prior to the time of his injury consisted of sewing the bagging on bales of cotton after they had been compressed. Daniel suffered an injury which necessitated the removal of his hand two inches above the wrist. It is insisted that the injury, with the subsequent removal of the hand, totally disabled the insured under the terms of the policy, and this action is to recover the benefits for such total disability.

The evidence developed that the insured was an uneducated laborer, and that common labor was all that he was fitted to do. He was employed by the same employer after the injury, and his wages were diminished but two and one-half cents per hour. A Mr. Ward testified that Daniel was employed by them while the compress was working, but that the number of bales pressed by them had decreased to a great extent, and that for this reason their need for the services of Daniel was not as great as it had been before such decrease in the volume of their operations. He testified that there *Page 91 were other one-arm and one-leg men working for the company, not all of whom had been injured in their employ, though it was the custom of the company to take care of those persons injured in their employ. He testified further that the only part of his job that Daniel could not do was to sew the bagging on the cotton, but that he could truck the cotton, and perform other duties around the compress that he had done prior to the injury. The jury rendered a verdict in favor of the insured for the full amount sued for, and the insurance company excepted.

We have set out very briefly the facts adduced at the trial of the case. Under the view we have of this case, it will only be necessary to consider that portion of the charge of the court excepted to in ground 5 of the amended motion for new trial, as follows: "I charge you that the words `any occupation' and `any work' shall be construed to mean the ordinary employment of the particular person insured, or such other employment, if any, approximately the same line of endeavor as the insured might fairly be expected to follow, in view of his station and his physical and mental capacity. So that, then the jury should determine, in considering that matter, if he has been deterred from following the usual line of work; if he did, whether it was such ordinary work, such similar occupation, or such work that he could follow and make as much of a livelihood as the one that he was occupying at the time the thing happened. . ." Before considering this portion of the charge of the court it might be well to state that the evidence did not demand a finding for the insured, and, as said in Prudential Insurance Co. v. South,179 Ga. 653, 656 (177 S.E. 499, 98 A.L.R. 781), the insured would not be entitled to a recovery merely upon proof that he had lost his arm. It becomes incumbent upon us then, to see whether the court correctly charged the jury on what constitutes total disability under the terms of the contract sued upon.

The question of what is total disability has been decided by courts of many jurisdictions with, in many instances, startlingly different results. We think that for the purposes of this decision we need consider only the cases of Cato v. AEtna LifeInsurance Co., 164 Ga. 392 (138 S.E. 787), and PrudentialInsurance Co. v. South, supra. As far as any practical results are concerned, the disability provisions in the policy sued on and the provisions in the *Page 92 policies in the cases cited above are so similar as to obviate the necessity of a comparison of the phraseology.

An examination of the charge of the court and of the headnotes and opinions in the Cato and South cases will disclose that the court in the case at bar actually charged the law as laid down in those cases. But where it is stated in the South case that "the expression . . `any occupation' . . should be construed to mean the ordinary employment of the particular person insured, or such other employment, if any, approximating the same livelihood, . ." the court in the case at bar in his charge to the jury changed the words "approximating the same livelihood" to "approximately the same line of endeavor," and then, in elaborating to the jury the meaning of the charge just given, said: "So that, then the jury should determine . . whether . . such work that he could follow and make as much of a livelihood as the one that he was occupying at the time the thing happened." (Italics ours.) This elaboration by the court applied the wrong test of total disability, and had the effect of stressing and emphasizing the interpretation which the court placed on the words "approximately the same livelihood," and in effect told the jury that if the insured was only able to earn five cents less, or one cent less, per week, that they could find that there was a total disability. That this charge was error is apparent from reading the Cato case, where, at page 398, the Supreme Court said: "Total disability is the antithesis of partial disability. One is the opposite of the other. . . It follows as a necessary consequence that the insurer is not liable as for a total disability when the accident or disease has merely prevented the insured from doing as much in a day's work as before. Such lessened earning capacity may be a case of partial disability, but not a case of total disability."

Nor does it matter that the court correctly charged the law of total disability elsewhere in his charge. The erroneous charge was not withdrawn, nor was the jury instructed to disregard it. See case cited in Securities Investment Co. v. Jett, 59 Ga. App. 418 (1 S.E.2d 69).

The charge complained of was error, and the court erred in overruling the motion for new trial.

In view of the above ruling it becomes unnecessary to pass upon the other assignments of error.

Judgment reversed. Stephens, P. J., concurs. *Page 93