Plaintiff sues on a major medical insurance policy for the costs of certain medical treatment. There is no dispute but that the sum sued for was in fact paid to a doctor for treatment of the plaintiff’s son and that the latter was a person covered by the policy. It appears that the son, as the result of an accident, had to undergo an operation which resulted in the loss of an eye. Following the operation the young man developed a psyehoneurotic disorder caused by the emotional impact of the loss of the eye. The sum in question is the medical fee for the treatment of that disorder. We agree with Trial Term that the psychic .trauma was an effect of the original accident.
The policy provides coverage for medical expense to the persons covered resulting from injury or sickness. Injury is defined as “accidental bodily injury * * * resulting directly and independently of all other causes in loss covered by this policy.” The policy further contains certain exceptions, which would mean that these are not “ causes covered by this policy.” Among the exceptions are: “ (3) mental disease or deficiencies, psychotic or psycho-neurotic disorders or reactions ”,
No one disputes that what the young man was treated for was a psycho-neurotic reaction to the consequences of his prior accident. The claim is that the policy does not clearly exclude such an injury. We fail to see any ambiguity or any grounds for holding that an ordinary reader would reach the conclusion that a psychic reaction .to an injury was not excluded. We are told that the policy does not say in so many words that the psychic trauma resulting from an injury is excluded.
Here the policy provides for exceptions — not exceptions to sickness alone but exceptions to injury and sickness. Among those exceptions are all manner of mental hurt, whether original or the result of a reaction. We submit that this can mean one thing only to the ordinary human intelligence. No matter h'ow a policy or any other instrument is worded it can always be claimed that a different wording would produce greater clarity. Here .the claimed verbal deficiency is purely fanciful and doubtless is induced by the fact that defendant is an insurer. This persuasive argument completely overlooks the fact that if insurance policies are stretched beyond their real meaning to fit hard oases, premiums must be stretched to cover all eases.
We vote to reverse and dismiss the complaint.
Valente, J. P., McNally and Eager, JJ., concur in decision; Steuer, J., dissents in opinion in which Stevens, J., concurs.
Judgment affirmed, with $50 costs to respondent. [42 Misc 2d 410.]