Budde v. National Travelers Benefit Ass'n

Ladd, J.

1. Insurance: causal connection between injury and act. I. A policy insuring Elmfer F. Budde against “loss of life, limb, sight and time, resulting from bodily injury (hereinafter called such injuries) effected directly and independently of all other causes through external, violent and accidental means,” was issued by the defendant, October 12,1914. In event of accidental death, the indemnity stipulated was $2,000. On May 30, 1916, the assured was engaged in removing ashes from a cellar in Bellevue, when he became ill, and died on August 15th, following. One Steil placed the ashes in a metal washtub, and lifted it to the cellar window, from which Budde carried it to a wagon, into which he emptied the ashes. The petition alleged that, in the course of this work, it became necessary to move the wagon closer to the sidewalk, and that, while lifting or pulling one of the wheels, deceased was injured by reason of a sudden shift of the weight of the wagon, and that this subjected him to an unexpected strain, which, directly and independently of all other causes, produced an abscess of the pancreas and peritonitis, resulting in death. It also alleged that the ground was rough and muddy; that it was elevated a foot above the grade of the , sidewalk; that, in carrying the ashes, the tub rested against deceased’s abdomen; and that, in passing over the wet and slippery ground, he slipped, and strained himself, producing an abscess of the pancreas, which resulted in peritoneal inflammation and death. Again, the petition charged that, in carrying it, the tub of ashes pressed against his abdomen; and that, while crossing the rough, muddy ground, the assured felt a sudden pain in his abdomen, and was compelled to quit work, and, “as result of said strain, directly and independently of all other causes,” he sustained an injury, such as previously mentioned. These allegations were put in issue, and the main controversy is whether the evidence was sufficient to carry the cause to. the jury. The appellee *1222does not argute the case solely with reference to the pleadings, hut only as to whether the evidence was sufficient to make out a case for the jury.

The deceased, previously to May 30, 1916, had enjoyed good health, and had worked in a livery barn, and generally at manual labor about town. On that day, he was engaged, with one Steil, in moving ashes, as stated. The ashes were carried in a two-bushel washtub. After a few tubs of ashes had been removed, it was thought that the wagon was not close enough to the sidewalk, and the two took hold of the wheels, — Budde, the wheel nearest the sidewalk, — and slid it over. This was easily done, as the lawn was newly made and slippery. Two planks were then so placed as to extend from the sidewalk to the reach, so .that Budde could walk up them to empty the ashes in the wagon, and he carried the tub, having two handles, resting against his stomach. Sometime during the forenoon, he complained that the tubs were being loaded too heavily, and thereafter, Steil placed about 100 pounds of ashes in each, instead of 150 pounds, as he had been doing. The work was completed at twelve o’clock, and together they walked away to dinner. A brother of deceased’s saw him lying on a lounge, about 20 minutes later, with his hands over the pit of his stomach, “very pale, and as though in great pain,” and saying that he did not care for dinner. Steil met him at about one o’clock P. M., when he appeared pale, “like he was sick,” and holding his hand over the pit of his stomach. He suffered pain in his right .side for some weeks, gradually growing worse.

On the same day, at about eight o’clock in the evening, he consulted Dr. Hanske, when, according to the doctor, he complained of pain in his abdomen, showed some prostration; and, on examination, it was found that he had “a-little discoloration over the central portion of the abdomen.” There was continuous rigidity of the muscles, muscular spasms, and the pulse, was accelerated, and there was a *1223very slight rise of temperature. The doctor treated him, up to the time of his death, primarily “for an injury which later resulted in what he supposed, and by diagnosis, was septicemia. Septicemia is a condition applied to invasion of microbic or bacterial elements into the blood tissue,'without any visible foci of operation.” The pain was continu-' ous, though not apparently localized; there was general rigidity of the abdomen; the treatment was “rest and palliative treatment through slight stimulation and liquid foods, regulating of diet, and in a general way used cold applications.’.’ The condition “was obscure, and we allowed him to suffer, hoping that some symptoms might become localized and show themselves.” Narcotics were resorted to, during the last two weeks of his illness.

“Q. Basing your answer on your previous knowledge of Mr. Budde’s physical condition, and the fact that he had septicemia, what would you say was the cause of that septicemia, — what produced that? A. There was some external force that produced that condition, in my estimation.”

On post-mortem examination, evidence of peritonitis fibrin and flakes was found in the lower pelvis, indicating that deceased had peritonitis. About two feet from the ileocaecal valve, there was a kink in the bowel, that showed fibrous adhesions, indicating inflammation there. The spleen was considerably enlarged, and hard. The pancreas also was enlarged, and at the- opening into the small intestine was an abscess, the size of a goose egg.

“Q. What, Doctor, could produce, or rather, what would naturally produce, the kink in the bowel which you discovered there in the post mortem? A. An injury could produce it, an ulcer could produce it, or any portion of the bowel that the mucous surface had been injured, or any condition that would produce an inflammatory change in the intestines might produce it through inflammation caused by contractions. Q. Now, Doctor, what would be the outward *1224effect apparent on man who was suffering from abscess of the pancreas'? A. Well, in the beginning, it would be just like any other form of septicemia, and as it progressed, you would have that same picture, with prostration and general emaciation of the body. Q. Is that gradual development, or is it speedy? A. It is gradual development.”

Dr. Dennison had observed deceased from May 30th on, and was of opinion^that he was suffering from peritoneal abscess or typhoid fever; that he gave evidence of pain and prostration and peritonitis; that, at the post mortem, “there were fibrin and flocculus deposited in the fluid of the abdomen and generally, as had been testified by Dr. Hanske.” This physician was of the opinion that the septicemia was caused by a microbic invasion from where the kink in the bowel occurred, “where there was evidence of inflammation, deposits of fibrin and adhesions;” and testified that:

“There are numerous causes for kinks in the bowel, one of which is injury, traumatism, and strain, unnatural peristalsis (meaning ‘worm-like action of the bowels’). Excessive laxatives will sometimes cause the same thing. Q. Doctor, you may state whether or not, under this statement of facts, the kink in the bowel, such as you found and discovered there on post mortem, could have been produced,— that is, where a man 32 years of age, weighing 140 or 145 pounds, 5 feet 8 inches high, engaged in carrying baskets of ashes weighing from 100 and 150 pounds, by holding the basket against his abdomen and carrying it 40 feet to a wagon, and dropping it into the wagon, — whether that could have produced a kink of the bowel such as you describe. A. Such a condition could have been produced in that way.”

On cross-examination, he testified that the loop in the bowel could have been caused by carrying heavy weight, although he could not tell it, and that:

“There are instances on record of the same conditions *1225producing the same results. Q. That is, an unusual strain upon the muscles? A. I judge it is more of a twist, that one gets into, — would be required to do that than ordinary lifting. Q. That is, the twisting of the muscles in an unusual position ? A. A pressure on the abdominal contents.”

He thought a kink might be caused by “increased vermicular action of the bowels,” or by the “natural spasmodic movement of the bowels,” or “from a weakness in the wall of the gut,” or “from gas formation,” as from “fermentation of food or other things,” or “external violence,”' or from “injuries.”

“Q. If there were peritonitis or septicemia in the bowel, it might cause the loop in the bowel, might it not? A. Well, a loop might occur with those conditions. I don’t say that' it would be the cause of it, but it might occur With it.”

He testified, also, that the inflammation would be produced by the loop, and that, “if peritonitis with the resulting fluids thrown out, it would be possible for that to glue itself on or to become adhered and so kink.”

Dr. Smith also testified as an expert, and thought that the mere carrying of the ashes would not “ordinarily cause decedent any trouble.”

A hypothetical question reciting the facts was then propounded to the witness, and he was asked:

“What do you say, in your judgment, as to whether, in the carrying of the ashes, he in some way injured the intestines? A. My opinion would be, there must be some external cause that produced the conditions described.” -

The doctor was then asked to base his opinion on the assumption that deceased was in good health, a man of 32 years, engaged in moving ashes, as he was, carrying them in a tub, resting against his abdomen, from the window to the sidewalk and up to the boards which stretched to the reach of the wagon, and that the post mortem revealed a kink in the bowel, — what he would say produced *1226that condition of the bowel at that point. He answered that “it would require some quick move, slip, other than ordinary handling of a basket, to produce that condition.” The answer was stricken out, on motion, and, the question being repeated, witness answered, “The labor that he was engaged in.” Objection as a conclusion of witness on a matter.not the subject of expert testimony, and incompetent, because an invasion of the province of the jury, in calling for an ultimate fact, was overruled; and a motion to strike out on these grounds was sustained.

The physician agreed that the loop of the bowel was the primary cause, resulting in septicemia, which produced other conditions mentioned. From this evidence, then, the jury might have found that, when Budde began the removal of the ashes, he was sound in body; that, within a few minutes after he ceased work at noon, he was afflicted with great pain in the abdomen, over the central portion of which there was “a little discoloration;” that his bowel had, in some manner, become looped; and that this was the cause of his death. While" such looping may have been caused otherwise, the physicians were of the opinion that, in this case, it was due to external violence. Such opinions were held admissible in State v. Hessenius, 165 Iowa 415. Of course, an expert may not express an opinion as to what produced the kink in the bowel, as was, in substance, asked of Dr. Smith; for that was precisely what- the jury was to determine, and was not the subject of expert "evidence. Such was the holding in Sever v. Minneapolis & St. L. R. Co., 156 Iowa 664, and other like decisions. The jury, then, might have concluded that the loop of the bowel wasTconsequent upon some external violence, and that, as deceased was in apparent good health in the morning, he suffered from such violence in the forenoon of May 30th, and while he was engaged in moving the wagon, or carrying the ashes. But such work ordinarily would not produce such a result. *1227Dr. Dennison suggested, in answer to the question, “That is an unusual strain upon the muscles?” “I judge it is more of a twist that one gets into, would he required to do that than ordinary lifting. Q. That is, twisting of the muscles in an unusual position? A. A pressure on the abdominal contents.” It certainly was competent for an expert to explain how or in what manner the loop of the bowel might have been caused. If, by some twist of the muscles of the abdomen, or slip, or other happening, the loop was caused, this could not well have been intentional, or by design, and might have been found to have been accidental. In other words, if what deceased was shown to have been doing would not, of itself, have caused the injury, and it ’ was produced by' external violence, as might have been found, then something out of the ordinary, — that is, unusual, — must' have happened, to have produced the result. The case, as we think, falls fairly within the principle of United States Mut. Acc. Assn. v. Barry, 131 U. S. 100 (33 L. Ed. 60). It appears that Dr. Barry, in leaving a railway station platform, jumped to the ground below, a distance of four or five feet. In some way not shown by any direct proof, he sustained a jar, which, it was claimed, caused an injury to his bowels, resulting in death; and, although there was no testimony that he slipped or fell, or that he alighted in any other manner than intended, it was held that the jury was at liberty to find that, by some unexpected or unforeseen or involuntary movement of his body in the course of his descent to the ground, the injury was caused. As to the sufficiency of the evidence to support a finding that the injury was accidental, the court said:

“It must be presumed not only that the deceased intended to alight safely, but thought that he would. The jury were, on all the evidence, at liberty to say that it was an accident that he did not. The court properly instructed them that the jumping off the platform was the means *1228by which the injury, if any, was sustained, — -was caused; that the question was, whether there was anything accidental, unforeseen, involuntary, unexpected, in the act of jumping, from the time the deceased left the platform until he alighted on the ground; that the term 'accidental’ was used in the policy in its ordinary, popular sense, as meaning ‘happening by chance; unexpectedly taking place; not according to the usual course of things; or not as expected;’ that, if a result is such as follows from ordinary means, voluntarily employed, in a not unusual or unexpected way, it cannot be called a result effected by accidental means; but that if, in the act which precedes the injury, something unforeseen, unexpected, unusual,' occurs, which produces the injury, then the injury has resulted through accidental means. The jury were further told, no exception being taken, that, in considering the case, they ought not to adopt theories without proof, or substitute bare possibility for positive evidence of facts testified to by credible witnesses; that, where the weight of credible testimony proved the existence of a fact, it should be accepted as a fact in the cape; but that where, if at all, proof was wanting, and the deficiency remained throughout the case, the allegation of fact should not be deemed established.”

In Martin v. Travelers’ Ins. Co., 1 Fost. & F. 505, the insured, in the course of his business, lifted a heavy weight, and injured his spine. Recovery was permitted, over objections that he had not sustained the injury by reason of an accident. This was a case at nisi prius, but is cited with approval in the opinion in the Barry case. See, also, North American Life and Acc. Ins. Co. v. Burroughs, 69 Pa. St. 43 (8 Am. Rep. 212); Lickleider v. Iowa St. Trav. Men’s Assn., 184 Iowa 423.

In Standard Life and Acc. Ins. Co. v. Schmaltz, 66 Ark. 588 (74 Am. St. 112), it appeared that the assured, Schmaltz, was a strong, healthy man, weighing about 170 *1229pounds; that he was a railroad machinist, and had been for several years, and had frequently lifted cylinder heads from the engines, without accident or injury; that this was usually done by machinists so employed, and was not a dangerous undertaking. On the day in question, the cylinder was unusually warm, and he used some waste, to protect his hands. As the head stuck, he picked up a steel bar and removed it; immediately dropping the bar, he caught the cylinder head as quickly as he could, in order to prevent it from falling, and while he was in a stooping position, standing on his toes. He was immediately taken sick, his stomach filling with blood, which he vomited in great quantities, and his face became pale, and he suffered pain; and death resulted, as was testified by his physician, from the rupture of a blood vessel in his stomach. From this evidence, the court held that there was sufficient evidence to sustain the verdict that the means of death was accidental, the court declaring that the facts were similar to those in the Barry case.

In Horsfall v. Pacific Mut. Life Ins. Co., 32 Wash. 132 (98 Am. St. 846), the insured was a strong and apparently healthy man of 58, accustomed to lift from 200 to 250 pounds without difficulty; and, immediately after he had lifted one end of a bar weighing from 350 to 400 pounds, he became sick and “deathly pale.” His extremities became cold; perspiration stood on his face. The exertion had caused violent dilation of the heart. The court held that:

“The result certainly was unexpected. It did not take place according to the usual course of things. If, instead of a sprain of the muscles of the heart, the deceased had sprained the muscles of his back, or arm, or ankle, it certainly could not have been reasonably claimed that the result was not due to accident. The fact that the heart was dilated or ruptured was none the less an accident, according to the usual acceptation of the term, and according to *1230the definition above given. We think the evidence shows an accident, within the meaning of the policy.”

In Atlantic Acc. Assn. v. Alexander, 104 Ga. 709 (42 L. R. A. 188), the insured was a hale, hearty man, whose occupation was that of a blacksmith. He had occasion to use a heavy sledge-hammer, and had done so many times, in the course of business. On the occasion in question, in striking a slanting blow, he suddenly felt a severe pain in the lower part of his abdomen. The injury proved to be a rupture, producing hernia, which injury resulted in death, after a few days. In holding that a case was made out for the jury, the court said:

“Taking all the facts together, the fact of his previous good health, the fact that he had many times before used the hammer, the sudden pain after the blow of the hammer, and other facts which appeared, the jury could properly infer that the act which preceded the injury was something unforeseen, unexpected, and unusual, and that the injury resulted directly and immediately from such act, and was, therefore, produced by external, violent, and accidental means.”

In Ludwig v. Preferred Acc. Ins. Co., 113 Minn. 510 (130 N. W. 5), the insured appears to have been without physical infirmities; and, during the fifth or sixth inning in a game of baseball, attempted to “steal. second,” and slid, head foremost, on his stomach, the last nine or ten feet of the distance, stopping with his stomach over and upon the second base, which consisted of a piece of cement sidewalk paving block or slab, about 2 inches thick and 12 inches square, rough on one edge and smooth oh the others. He was declared “out,” and, according to some testimony, “stopped with his arms across his stomach.” In walking back, he indicated that he was hurt, and where, but continued to play until the end of the game, though manifesting pain. A day or two later, a physician was called. He *1231gradually grew worse, until he was taken to a hospital, and operated on for appendicitis. Death resulted from septic peritonitis. The autopsy revealed a gangrenous condition of the appendix. Two enteroliths, or concretions of stony formation, composed of hardened fecal matter, were found to he where the appendix was ruptured. More than a year previous, he had consulted a physician, who found some tenderness over the region of the appendix, and that he was suffering from a miid case of appendicitis, catarrhal in nature. Upon the administration of a laxative, the difficulty seemed to have at least subsided. An instruction that, if the “fall on the cement slab on the base is by you found, by a fair preponderance of evidence, to be such exciting cause, and to be external, violent, and accidental injury, the amount of the policy would become payable, on the proper notice and proof being made.”

These authorities amply sustain our conclusion that a jury might have found the death of Budde to have been caused by external, violent, and accidental means. The holding in Feder v. Iowa St. Trav. Men’s Assn., 107 Iowa 538, save on careful reading, would seem adverse to this conclusion; but there, the assured was suffering from tuberculosis, and, though his health had been improved by treatment, he was still in a debilitated condition. Preparatory to leaving the room in which he was, he went to the window to close the shutters, and, in attempting to do so, stood on his toes, and reached over the chair toward the shutter, and, as he did so, blood began to flow from his mouth. He died within a few minutes. Manifestly, he was incapable of making much effort physically, without subjecting himself to injury. The effort to 'close the shutters, which could not have required much exertion, ruptured the artery. So far as it appears, he may not ever have made such an undertaking before. These facts distinguish the case from that at bar. Here, the deceased was in good health, and strong, and engaged in *1232manual labor such as he was accustomed to perform. He suffered an injury which the jury might have found to have been produced by external violence, and not likely to happen in the work in which he was engaged; and the jury might have reached the conclusion that the injury was accidental. The court erred in directing the jury to return a verdict for defendant.

2. Evidence : res gestae. II. Steil testified that he and Budde quit work at about twelve, and went to dinner; that he noticed nothing wrong with him; but that, when he next saw him, at one o’clock, he “looked kind of pale,” and “like ke was sick.” “Q. Now, without stating what Mr. Budde said to you, you may state whether or not he made any complaint at that time as to whether he was suffering pain or otherwise. A. He didn’t say anything to me. He was suffering pain, but he said he had a rupture in his side, —he thought he got it loading ashes.”

Defendant moved to strike j out this answer as a merely voluntary statement, hearsay, and for that reason incompetent, as a self-serving declaration. This motion was sustained. A like ruling was made in the course of the examination of a brother of deceased’s. Both rulings are to be approved, on the grounds that the answers disclose that the assured was merely expressing an opinion as to how he was injured, and in any event, relating a past happening. The authorities are agreed that, in these circumstances, what may be said is not to be regarded as part of the res gestae. —Reversed.

Preston, C. J., Weaver, Gaynor, and Stevens, JJ., concur. Evans, J., takes no part.