This litigation involves the construction of the “Confinement Clause” of an insurance policy issued to Dr. J. Donald Hayes of Little Rock by the Michigan Life Insurance Company. In May of 1952, Huntington & Homer, Inc., General Agents for the company, mailed, from their Chicago office, to a large number of professional men in Little Rock, descriptive literature of a new policy which the company was issuing to attorneys, dentists,- and physicians. An application and a specimen policy of the company were enclosed. During the same month, Dr. Hayes executed the application and mailed same to the agency, which in turn forwarded the application on to the company’s office in Detroit. The application was accepted, policy was issued on May 27th, effective June 1, 1952, and returned to the agency, which in turn forwarded it on to Dr. Hayes in Little Rock. Statement for the premium due ($190.00) was also enclosed, and Dr. Hayes mailed his check on May 29,1952. Subsequently, the doctor also paid the 1953 and 1954 premiums. The policy, styled “Professional Disability Policy”, which is a health and accident policy, provides, inter alia, as follows:
“Article 2.
If such injuries, sickness or disease shall wholly, continuously and necessarily disable the Insured, and prevent him from performing every duty of his occupation, the Company will pay at the rate of the Monthly Indemnity specified in the Schedule on page four hereof, for the period of such disability, not to exceed three years commencing with the eighth day of such disability.
If under the preceding paragraph of this Article such disability shall necessarily confine the Insured within a hospital during the first seven days of disability, said Monthly Indemnity shall then he payable commencing with the first day of such hospital confinement.
After the payment of the Monthly Indemnity for three years as aforesaid, the Company will continue the payment of Monthly Indemnity at the same rate thereafter so long as the Insured shall live and be wholly, continuously and necessarily:
A. Disabled by such injuries from engaging in any occupation or employment for wage or profit;
B. Confined in the manner as required in the next paragraph, as the result of sickness or disease and regularly visited and treated by a legally qualified physician or surgeon other than himself;
‘Confined’ means that the Insured is absolutely unable to leave the house and the yard situated immediately around the house, and in order to receive the Monthly Indemnity, the Insured must at all times remain within such confines without any exception but one, namely, the Insured, when deemed necessary and prescribed by the physician or surgeon, may be transported to and from the office of the physician or surgeon or to and from the hospital or sanitarium. If at any time the Insured shall leave such confines, except to be transported to and from the office of the physician or surgeon or to and from the hospital or sanitarium as provided above, payment of the Monthly Indemnity shall terminate.”
On May 5, 1954, Dr. Hayes suffered a heart attack, and under the schedule of benefits provided in the policy, was paid, under the total disability coverage, the sum of $300 per month for three years, or a total amount of $10,800. Thereafter, appellee contended that he was due $300 per month under the confinement clause of the policy, but appellant refused to pay on the ground that Hayes was not confined to the house in conformity with the definition of “confinement” set out in the policy. On August 29, 1957, appellee instituted suit for recovery, amending his complaint in December, 1958, to include amounts which he contended had accrued during that period. The cause was heard by the court, sitting as a jury. On January 8, 1959, judgment was entered for Dr. Hayes in the amount of $6,671.85, which included interest and 12% penalty. An amended judgment was entered to include attorneys’ fee, in the sum of $1,250, making the total judgment $7,921.85, together with interest thereof at 6% per annum. From such judgment comes this appeal. Appellant relies upon two points for reversal, hut under the conclusion we have reached, it is only necessary to discuss point two, which simply poses the question of whether Dr. Hayes was confined, as the term is used and defined in Article 2, of the policy.
Let it first be pointed out that the “total disability” of Dr. Hayes is not in issue, and appellant admits that Hayes became totally disabled in May, 1954, 'and is still so disabled, and unable to practice his profession. As previously mentioned, the company paid appellee for the full three years total disability as provided in Article 2. We are therefore only concerned with whether Dr. Hayes is now entitled to further payments under provision B of the contract. The record reflects the following activities on the part of appellee in 1957 and 1958. He went deer hunting to the Old Dixie Hunting Club,1 located in Chicot County, during the 1957 deer season, and attended the opening deer season at the Club in the fall of 1958, which started on November 10th. Dr. Hayes stayed the full week, from Monday until Saturday. He also went to the opening in December, staying Monday and Tuesday, returning on Tuesday night.2 Appellee likewise hunted deer in Mississippi during the seasons, which follow immediately upon the Arkansas seasons. His testimony reflected that he stays in town at the motel, and a friend drives him back and forth to the camp. He has a choice of stands and sits in a chair by a tree hidden, by brush . . . upon getting tired, he gets in his car and goes back to town. The distance from the motel to the camp is ten or twelve miles. Dr. Hayes testified that he would go on the deer stand early, getting up at 4 or 4:30, and eating breakfast,, “we have breakfast early in order to drive out to the deer stand before daylight”; that he would stay on the deer stand- “from a few minutes to a few hours. Of course, you don’t always do like you want-to do. Tf you come along and kill your deer the first thirty minutes, that pretty well ends the hunting, then you are visiting your friends, getting the deer taken care of, and if the dogs are running around, you have to sit there three or four hours. Q. Did you ever kill a deer -the first thirty, minutes? A. I have lots of times. I am .a pretty good deer killer. Q. Do you sometimes have, to stay, three or four- hours? A. Yes, I have stayed three or- four days and not kill a deer. Q. I mean when you go out in the-morning you may stay three or four hours or thirty minutes? A. According to how I feel. I have my car with me. My jeep or car. If I feel tired I get in the car and rest. If the sun comes up and gets warm, I may take a nap. I was asleep down there and a deer woke me up and killed him last year.” The testimony further reflected that Dr. Hayes has made a number of trips to Hemp-stead County. He testified that he sometimes does his own driving and other times has a boy who acts as chauffeur . . . that he drives the car more frequently than when first becoming ill. He testified that he particularly drives the car on Sundays, since he does not employ the chauffeur at that time. He frequently goes to the Elks Club and plays dominoes, and sometimes drives in the evening; when he plays dominoes late, he drives the car home himself. From the testimony: “You stay at the Elks Club from about noon until 5 in the evening? A. Sometimes later than that. Sometimes I get there before they even open up.” He further testified that he had frequently attended meetings of the North Little Eock Elks Club after May 5, 1957, would sometimes go in the afternoons to play dominoes, and would stay until the meeting adjourned about nine o’clock. “In fact, in the last two or three years, I have gone to more meetings than I ever did before except the year I was exalted ruler. I had to go then. I didn’t go before I got sick much, I didn’t care anything about it then. Q. What time do the meetings convene? A. Eight o’clock. They have supper about seven and the meeting about eight. Q. Do you go to the suppers? A. Yes, sir. Q. What time does the lodge adjourn? A. About nine o’clock.” The evidence given by appellee reflected that his brother still maintains the same office in the Donaghey Building (formerly occupied by the two), and appellee goes by each morning and evening to get his mail, visit with the employees, and take care of business interests (not referring to medical practice, which the doctor has not engaged in since his heart attack). He stated that he sometimes stays as much as two hours, and has stayed as long as three hours. In the summer of 1957, he took the baths at the Majestic Hotel in Hot Springs, and while at that city, would fish on Lake Ouachita. Appellee has mainly fished at Indian Bay, which is about 100 miles from Little Bock, and has also done some fishing at Bearskin Lake, sometimes two or three times a week. On some occasions, the chauffeur drove, and at other times, he operated the automobile. The doctor testified that he keeps a boat at Old Biver,3 and that he would go there each weekend during the summer, and sometimes two or three times during the week, and that he has operated the boat while members of the family were water skiing. Dr. Hayes visited one of his friends in Little Bock who operated a filling station so frequently that, according to his testimony, “I visited so much down there, that it got out that I owned the oil company. ’ ’
The above activities were all related by Dr. Hayes, and obviously cannot be construed as literal compliance with the provisions of Section B, but for affirmance, appellee relies upon Occidental Life Insurance Company of California v. Sammons, 224 Ark. 31, 271 S. W. 2d 922, and cases cited therein. In that case, and each of the eases mentioned therein, the insured was allowed to recover under a “confinement clause” substantially like the one presently before the Court, though the evidence reflected that the insured had not remained in the home. In the Sammons case, testimony showed that the insured would leave the house and yard for the purpose of taking rides, walking for recreation, and that some part-time work as a clothing salesman was engaged in by Sammons. The transcript in that cause reflects that the insured would go to the corner drug store, or to the service station, and would sometimes go uptown to visit the other employees of the store where he had been employed. He testified, however, that “I rest practically all day, get up around 7:30, be back in bed by 8:30, and usually, most of the time, get up around noon, eat dinner, fool around the house a little bit, and maybe stay a couple of hours and sometimes go down town or to the service station or drug store and go back home, maybe lay down until my wife comes-home. That is almost routine work with me, I don’t do it every day, almost every day.” Relative to the work that he had done, he testified that he had not worked more than one day at a time, that he occasionally would go to a picture show, that he had gone to one baseball game, but though a football fan, would not go to games. According to his evidence, the occasional work that he had done had been on the advice of his physician, Dr. J. N. Compton. “I told him I sat around the house, sometimes got pretty nervous. He said it might not hurt to work a little.”
In the case before us, appellee apparently largely relies on the fact that these activities were authorized by his physician, Dr. R. E. McLochlin of Little Rock.4 From the doctor’s deposition:
“I have spent a lot more time, so far as time is concerned, directing Dr. Hayes’ activities than I have in directing any medication. The medication boils down to rather simplified routine. Dr. Hayes’ mental attitude regarding this illness was such it created quite a problem for several months and it took a lot of time, both in my office and at his home and visiting with him to try to get him convinced that he can live and that life can be enjoyable even though his activities are curtailed. I have given him a lot of directions on how to live. ... I recall one of the first things I specifically told him to do other than generalities. I had been talking to him in general terms for weeks, like going fishing, going riding in the car perhaps with a chauffeur, he had one available, those were generalities. I told him to lay in the hammock in the sun and rest and lay out where he could see traffic go by the house, visit with relatives, I mean with friends, and then I have been aware of his interesting in hunting, deer hunting, for a number of years. I know many of the members of his deer hunting club and those hunting trips became almost an obsession with him. He liked it so well that I directed him and urged that he go on a hunting trip with his same group; that he go to the hunting lodge and spend a big part of the time there doing the social affairs of the hunting trip, perhaps rest while the others were riding their horses or that he be put on a stand in a comfortable chair and preferably with somebody to visit with and that he could actually hunt but was not allowed to ride a horse. That was the first time I can specifically recall directing that he do something. I was aware of these trips in previous years. * * * I directed he go fishing provided he have someone do all the heavy work, managing the boat if any rowing was to be done or carrying the motor, someone do that, and he to sit in the boat and not even help drag the boat on the bank. Preferably have a chauffeur to drive him to and from, and in that way he can take some recreation.
Q. Doctor, do I understand correctly that visiting friends, riding about in the car, these hunting and fishing trips and carrying on the activities for recreation were all considered by you to be part of his treatment?
A. They were the important part of the treatment in his specific case because it was obvious his house wasn’t big enough for him to live long confined in it. He wasn’t constituted that way and it was necessary that he have recreational outlets and even go to the Elks Club and play dominoes and visit with folks and recreations that require very little physical exertion but would build his morale.”
This advice was concurred in by Hr. H. F. Gray, and Dr. Walter H. O’Neal. According to Dr. McLochlin, Dr. William D. Stroud of Philadelphia stated that “Dr. Hayes has got to get out, he has got to travel. He recommended that Dr. Hayes book passage on lots of ships and travel the world over. He thought that would keep him busy. Well, he carried it a little too far, but those were the instructions, that he had to keep occupied.”
We have reached the conclusion that this judgment must be reversed. In doing so, we are not unmindful of the fact that the literal language of the confinement clause in the Sammons case, and other cases cited in that opinion, was violated by each respective insured, and yet recovery was allowed. Arkansas has consistently given a liberal construction to confinement clauses, but we think even liberality has its limits. Of course, it would be ridiculous to hold an insured to the very letter of the clause, for, as has been pointed out by other jurisdictions, such an interpretation would prevent his leaving the house during danger of flood, fire, or destruction. So, it is apparent that a reasonable construction should, and must be given, rather than interpreting the contract from a strict, literal view. Certainly it is reasonable for one to go outdoors for fresh air —to visit with friends — to walk for exercise — to pick up mail — to sometimes engage in other activities for pleasure, and to even engage in occasional work. We think the evidence in this case goes far beyond such activities, for the activities of Dr. Hayes seem to be regular and systematic; in fact, one would almost gain the impression that the doctor is away from his home as much as he remains in it. In fact, we do not see a great deal of difference in his routine and that of one who has retired because of age or length of service.
To affirm'this judgment would actually mean that there can be no such-contract in Arkansas as provided in the confinement clause, and that a confinement clause has the exact and identical meaning, as total disability, i.e., if an individual is unable to perform all the substantial and material acts necessary' to the prosecution of his business or occupation, in a customary and usual manner, he is totally disabled — and confined. Not only would such a construction be completely unfair to an insurance company, but it could also have the result of preventing this coverage from being available for persons who would qualify, for a company might well withdraw this provision from contracts sold- in states giving so liberal a construction. Further, to affirm this judgment would be to empower any doctor to reform any similar contract entered into by a company and its insured. The Courts are not permitted to rewrite contracts between parties. Logic dictates that this prohibition should apply likewise to members of the medical profession.
To state our position, we simply say that this Court is unwilling to further extend or further liberalize the interpretation given the confinement clause in the Sammons case, i.e., that case represents the ultimate peak of liberal construction which we have approved — or will approve in future cases. Of course, appellee asserts that this case calls for no more liberal construction than the Sammons ease. As stated, we disagree with this assertion; but if it be correct — then we are modifying our previous interpretation.
Reversed and dismissed,
George Rose Smith and Robinson, JJ., dissent.Now called North Little Rock Hunting Club.
It appears that the doctor returned for the trial, which commenced on December 12, 1958. From the testimony: “Now, did you go down at the opening of the season, December 8th, 1958? A. I was there Monday and Tuesday and came back Tuesday night. Q. Are you going back? A. You have got me tied up here with this thing now. I won’t get to hunt any more.”
Part of the old Arkansas River cut-off below Scott, beyond Willow Beach.
Now deceased.