(dissenting).— Among the most familiar rales of the law of insurance is that which requires the courts to construe every ambiguous and doubtful provision of the policy most strongly against the insurer. The company itself frames the instrument in language of its own choosing, and it brings to that effort the skill bom of experience and the aid of learned and astute counsel. The average man to whom that contract is tendered is unlearned in such matters, and he accepts it for what it seems to say; relying upon the company, or upon the agent, who is usually his neighbor, to act in good faith and furnish him the indemnity for which he pays. It is to the credit of the great majority of the companies engaged in this most necessary and useful line of business that the confidence of the insured person is not often abused, and when he suffers loss within the apparent terms of the contract his claim is promptly adjusted and paid. Unfortunately, however, this rule is not universal, and not infrequently the courts are required to deal with policies which appear to have been designed with a deliberate purpose to deceive and mislead the holders. Buried in verbiage, ambushed in small type, obscured in technical terminology, are conditions, warranties, forfeiture clauses, and restrictive definitions without limit, which no *567one ever reads, nor are they intended to be read or under|tood, until a loss occurs, when they are summoned forth from their native darkness to defeat a recovery by the assured, or to serve as a menace by which to force him to a compromise of his claim. Ordinarily the courts, when called upon, are prompt to thwart such injustice, though sometimes, as in the case at bar, they reach the conclusion that the aim of the law is too short to arrest the accomplishment of an admitted wrong. The principle stated at the outset of this dissent has been often and effectively applied, and, in my judgment, should be invoked in the present controversy.
In Meyer v. Fidelity & Casualty Co., 96 Iowa, 378, the accident policy sued upon excepted from its operation injuries caused by “ disease or bodily infirmity,” and the company 'defended upon the theory that the cause of Meyer’s death.was within the exception. There was evidence tending to show that he was seen to sway and stagger as if seized with sudden illness, and fell, striking his head upon the pavement, receiving a fatal injury. On the trial of the case the company insisted that the word “ disease ” should be given its strict technical meaning —“ any derangement of the functions or alteration of the structure of the animal organs ”— thus necessarily including the slightest and most temporary as well as the most serious and inveterate • ailments. To this contention we refused to yield, saying:
When speaking of an “infirmity,” we-generally mean the state or quality of being infirm physically or otherwise - — debility or weakness; and by “ disease ” we desire to convey the impression of a morbid condition resulting from some functional 'disturbance or failure of physical function which tends to undermine the constitution. In using either word we do not, as a rule, refer to a slight or mere temporary disturbance or enfeeblement. If this is true in our ordinary speaking and writing, it is certainly clea/r that the words should be given no broader meaning when we find them used by an insurance company in a clause of its policy which it *568relies upon to defeat a recovery thereon. The language used is made up of words framed by the company or its legal advisers in an attempt to limit as narrowly as possible the scope of the insurance, and it is a universal as well as a fair rule, adopted by the courts everywhere, to construe the' terms of the policy most strongly against the assurer, and resolve every doubt or ambiguity in favor of the assured and against the assurer.
This certainly is a most wholesome doctrine, and one which, I trust, has not yet “ lost its savor.”
The language which I have italicized in the foregoing quotation states, with a force not to be improved upon, the proposition of law which in my judgment controls this case —-.that in a policy of accident insurance the company will not be allowed to escape liability by a technical construction of any word or phrase in the contract, but, for the purpose of preserving the policy holder’s indemnity, such words and phrases will b'e given their popular meaning, as employed in ordinary speaking and writing. Apply that rule to the present case, and the right of plaintiff to recover is too clear for argument. The appellant is here relying upon the identical proposition by which the company in tire Meyer' Case sought to avoid recovery. It insists, and the majority opinion sustains its contention, that what is meant by the “ shafts of both bones 'between the knee and ankle joints ” must not be sought in common usage, or in our everyday speaking and writing, but we must delve in the maze of medical and anatomical nomenclature, and observe the minute lines of demarcation by which a learned profession has mapped and charted each particular bone of the human frame into subdivisions too small to permit the inscription of their ponderous Latin names. The opinion tells us that in ordinary parlance the word “ shaft ” is commonly the equivalent of “ handle or haft ” — “ a shaven or smoothed rod.” We find it applied also to an architectural column; to the trunk or the main stem of a tree; to the central stem *569or body of a feather; to an arrow; to the revolving bar or beam by which force or power is conveyed from an engine to various kinds of working machinery. It has many other applications, but.those stated are enough to indicate that to the ordinary mind the word “ shaft ” conveys in a general way the idea of a body having considerable- length in proportion to its diameter, more or less rounded or cylindrical in form, and continuous from end to end. Now, every person of ordinary intelligence knows that he has two bones in each lower leg; that those bones are more or less rounded in form, are comparatively straight, and continuous from knee joint to ankle joint; and, if he hears them spoken of as “ shafts,” his knowledge of the ordinary application of the term to other objects enables him to appreciate its aptness, but, in the absence of a technical education, he has no suspicion that the protection afforded by a policy which insures him against a breaking of these shafts can by any process of interpretation be limited to a mere fraction of' the bones supposed to be thus designated. Indeed, until disaster arrives, and in his innocence he asks payment of indemnity, he will never dream that his shin bone is a “ tibia,” and its lower extremity nothing but a worthless “ malleolus.”
Even if we assume the correctness of the definition and of the illustration given in the majority opinion, I am at loss to understand how it can be' fairly said that the reference in the policy to the shafts of the. bones between the knee and ankle joints “ clearly excludes the heads of the bones, and processes attached to these heads, having distinct and definite names.” The bone is one continuous, solid structure from its upper extremity at the knee joint down to and including the extreme tip at the ankle joint, and the last inch of the tip is no less a part of the bone than is any other inch throughout its length. The long bones of the leg, when denuded of flesh, are shown to be somewhat larger at the ends than at intermediate points, and it is these en*570larged ends to which I understand the opinion refers as “ heads.” The proposition last quoted is, in effect, that by the word “ shafts ” the parties must be presumed to have meant that the company should be liable for no fracture except such as might occur in the smaller part of the bones, between the enlarged ends; and had plaintiff sustained a complete fracture of both bones through both heads “ between knee and ankle ’joints,”, his leg would still be unbroken, for the purposes of this case.
’ It is said by the majority, also, that “ the distinction between the shaft of a bone and its extremities is too clear for argument.” That’there is a difference between a yardstick and the ends of a yardstick is admittedly evident to the dullest intellect, but just how to effect a “ complete solution ” of either “ extremity ” of a yardstick, and leave that ancient standard of measure unbroken and unimpaired, is beyond my comprehension. It appears, however, that the - appellant is the discoverer of a method by which the seemingly impossible may be accomplished. Nor can I appreciate the conclusiveness of the argument based upon the thought that the so-called malleolus is a mere process or •protuberance from the head of the bone, and is known to physicians and surgeons by a distinctive name. Cape Colony is none the less a part of Africa because it constitutes the small end of the continent, and has a name of its own. Moreover, the policy' itself clearly indicates that the word “ shaft ” was used as applicable to the entire bone. In speaking of a fracture of the “ shafts of both bones between the knee and ankle joints,” it, in substance and effect, describes the bones to which it refers as extending from joint to joint, or, in other words, the bones entire from one extremity to the other. That is the meaning which would be given it by the- average reader, and the insurer must be held to have "meant the phrase in the sense in which it would appeal to such reader. The company will not be permitted to assume that the insured person knows the technical mean*571ing of terms employed in the policy. Potter v. Ins. Co., (C. C.) 63 Fed. Rep. 382.
That both bones of the plaintiff’s leg were in fact broken, there is no dispute. The physician describes the injury as a “ fracture of the tibia of the right leg, broken across the malleolus, and of the fibula three inches above the joint; a complete solution of the continuity of both bones.”- This I understand to mean that there Was a complete breaking and severance of each of both bones into two separate fragments. The fact that the lower fragment of the tibia was small, as compared to the entire bone, is a matter of no moment. The breaking was complete, and plaintiff’s cause of action was perfect.- There is a noted precedent in fiction for the thought that the smallness of the fruit of transgression may be pleaded in extenuation of the fault, but the time has not yet arrived when we can safely recognize it as a principle of law. '
Illustrating the tendency of courts- to- construe policies of insurance broadly and liberally, in the interest of the assured, I call attention to a few of the many precedents. Under a policy insuring against the accidental loss of “two entire feet,” a recovery was had on proof that the assured received a gunshot wound in the back, producing total paralysis of both legs and feet. Sheanon v. Ins. Co., 77 Wis. 618 (46 N. W. Rep. 799, 9 L. R. A. 685, 20 Am. St. Rep. 151). Under an insurance against a like loss of an “ entire hand,” recovery was sustained on proof that a “ little over one-half the hand, anatomically speaking,” had been lost by an accidental injury. Sneck v. Ins. Co., 88 Hun, 94 (34 N. Y. Supp. 545). Under a similar policy, it was shown that the assured had lost three fingers wholly, and part of the fourth, and that the joint of the thumb was destroyed. Contending for the literal construction of the policy, the company insisted that it required the amputation of the member at or above the wrist, to constitute the loss of an entire hand; but the court held that this “ would be *572too much, of a refinement upon language for practical purposes,” and sustained an instruction submitting the question to a jury. Lord v. Ins. Ass’n, 89 Wis. 19 (61 N. W. Rep. 298, 26 L. R. A. 741, 46 Am. St. Rep. 815); S. C. of Honor v. Turner, 99 Ill. App. 310. Bearing in the same direction, sec Corbett v. Ins. Co., 85 Hun, 250 (32 N. Y. Supp. 1059). A condition against liability of the company for death or injury by the “ inhalation of gas ” has been held to refer solely to a voluntary inhalation, and recovery upheld for the death of a policy holder by suffocation by gas in a well. Pickett v. Ins. Co., 144 Pa. 79 (22 Atl. Rep. 871, 13 L. R. A. 661, 27 Am. St. Rep. 618). To same effect, Paul v. Ins. Co., 112 N. Y. 472 (20 N. E. Rep. 347, 3 L. R. A. 448, 8 Am. St. Rep. 758). An exception of death caused by “ poison in any way taken, administered, absorbed or inhaled,” does not prevent recovery for a death caused by poison accidentally taken. Metropolitan Acc. Ass’n v. Froiland, 161 Ill. 30 (43 N. E. Rep. 766, 52 Am. St. Rep. 359); Travelers’ Ins. Co. v. Dunlap, 160 Ill. 642 (43 N. E. Rep. 765, 52 Am. St. Rep. 355); Penfold v. Ins. Co., 85 N. Y. 317 (39 Am. Rep. 660). Where the insurance was against “ total and permanent loss of eyesight,” the assured was permitted to recover on proof of the total and permanent loss of one eye. Maynard v. Ins. Ass’n, 16 Utah, 145 (51 Pac. Rep. 259, 67 Am. St. Rep. 602). In the last case cited the court says: “ The terms of the by-law in question must be interpreted liberally and reasonably, and, as they appear to be susceptible to two constructions, that must be adopted which will more nearly carry out the benign purpose of the association and sustain the claim of the injured member. The provision will not be scrutinized for the purpose of enabling the organization to escape liability to any of its members.” Insurance against injury by which the assured is “totally disabled; absolutely, necessarily, and continuously confined to the house” — will sustain a recovery on proof of total disability for labor, although the injured per*573son remained most of the time in the open air. Scales v. Association, 70 N. H. 490 (48 Atl. Rep. 1084). The court there argues that it was unreasonable to suppose that company intended its language to be understood literally, and adds, “ Such supposition cannot be entertained 'without an accompanying inference that the. defendant intended to deceive.” Under a policy insuring against death by “ external, violent, and accidental means,” and excluding all “ injuries from poison or anything accidentally or otherwise taken, administered, absorbed, or inhaled,” a petition alleging that the- assured came to his death by swallowing hard, pointed, resistant substances of food, which perforated his intestines, already weakened by disease, was held to- state a good cause of action. Miller v. Fidelity & Casualty Co. (C. C.) 97 Red. 836. A real estate and loan broker, who held a policy against loss of time which shall “ immediately and wholly disable and prevent him from prosecuting any and- every kind of business pertaining to his occupation,” suffered the dislocation of a shoulder. He .was able to go to his office every day and give orders and directions to his assistant-, but did no other work. It was held there was no error in submitting the claim to a jury. Turner v. Fidelity & Casualty Co., 112 Mich. 425 (70 N. W. Rep. 898, 38 L. R. A. 529, 67 Am. St. Rep. 428). See, also, Young v. Ins. Co., 80 Me. 244 (13 Atl. Rep. 896). In the Turner Case the court- restates the familiar rule as follows: “ Where a stipulation ór exception to a policy emanating from the insurer is capable of two meanings, the one is to be adopted which is most favorable to the insured.-” The policy should “ be so framed with such deliberate care that no form of expression by which, on -the one hand, the party insured can be caught, or, on the other, the company be cheated, should be found on the face of it.”
The foregoing are a few of very many cases, all of which deny the right of an insurance company to escape liability on its policy by strict or technical interpretation of its lan*574guage. In not one of the eases referred to could the policy holder have recovered, had the court permitted the contract to be interpreted strictly and technically, according’ to its literal terms, as this court proposes to interpret the policy now before us. In all of the decisions which it has been my privilege,to examine .upon this subject, I have failed to find a single example in which the facts called more loudly for the application of the rule thus approved than does the one at bar. This controversy involves but a trifling sum of money, and would not justify the time here given to its attention but for the precedent which it establishes. It is a matter of common notoriety that in the wake of legitimate insurance, which is the development of centoies, there has sprung up within recent years a countless horde of unsubstantial schemes, represented by swarms of persuasive agents and promoters, by whom a very large proportion of the people has been wheedled into purchasing so-called indemnity against all the ills to' which flesh is heir. Many millions of dollars have been expended upon these glittering schemes by wage earners and small property holders, only to find concealed within their contracts some unsuspected condition which renders them valueless in the hour of misfortune, or, if perchance the contract be perfect in form, to find that the entire assets of the insurers are represented by an office desk filled with finely engraved stationery and advertising matter, describing with florid laudation the benevolent, fraternal, and unselfish character of the enterprise. I do not wish to be understood as placing the appellant company in this class. The record before us is very brief, disclosing but few facts, and the company is entitled to the benefit of the general presumption of good faith which attaches to all ordinary business transactions. This charitable presumption in which the law indulges also compels us -to assume that, in framing its contract, the appellant used the words which we have been considering in the sense in which it must have known the plaintiff would understand them, and not *575in tbe technical sense in which it now asks the court to interpret them. To adopt any other theoly would make necessary the inference that it deliberately intended to deceive.
The suggestion in the majority opinion that the company had the right to make its own contract is true in a restricted sense only. In few, if any, lines of business have Legislatures and courts gone further in restricting and regulating contract rights and relations than in matters pertaining to insurance. The peculiar nature of the business has not only justified, but compelled, the interposition and exercise of this power of regulation and supervision for the protection of the public, and we should be careful not to relax our insistence upon every rule by which that protection is made effectual.
In my opinion, the judgment of the district court should be affirmed.
Bishop, J.— I concur in the conclusion reached by Weaver, J.