Maupin v. Southern Surety Co.

This is a suit upon a limited accident insurance policy for $3000. Plaintiff is the widow of the insured and beneficiary in the policy. The cause was filed in Johnson county from which the venue was changed to Cedar county and there tried before the court and a jury. The verdict and judgment were for plaintiff for the face of the policy with interest, and for $500 for attorneys' fees for vexatious refusal to pay. From this judgment defendant appealed.

The policy was issued on January 12, 1916, for one year, the premium paid, and policy delivered. The insured was a duly licensed veterinarian and was practicing his profession in Johnson county. On September 27, 1916, insured was vaccinating some hogs for J.T. Allen, giving them what is called the "double treatment." After a hog was treated one of its ears was slit so as to distinguish it from those yet untreated. After administering the treatment to one of the hogs and while endeavoring to slit its ear, insured accidentally cut his finger from which blood poison resulted, and from which he died on October 14, 1916. Defendant denies liability. By the terms of the policy defendant insured Dr. Peter B. Maupin, *Page 85 subject to the terms, provisions, conditions and limitations stated, provided the injury sustained was effected exclusively by external, violent and accidental means which should independently of all other causes, immediately continuously and wholly disable insured or be the sole cause of his death or other injuries specified, within thirty days from the date of the event causing such injury, and provided such injury to the insured be received under certain conditions and specifications named. There are twelve of these specifications, and it is conceded that if insured's injury falls under either it is under the twelfth one. By the policy and this specification it is provided that the insurer, the defendant, will be liable: "In the event that a legally qualified physician, surgeon or dentist, while holding an autopsy or performing a surgical operation, or a legally qualified undertaker while embalming or preparing a body for burial, actually cuts or wounds himself, and by reason of such cutting or wounding and simultaneously therewith be inoculated with poison."

The controversy hinges on the construction of surgeon andsurgical operation as used in the specification quoted. Plaintiff contends that the insured was a surgeon and that the operation he was performing when injured was a surgicaloperation as these terms are used in the specification; while defendant on the other hand makes the opposite contention. A contract of insurance does not differ from other contracts respecting rules of interpretation. The object in interpretation and construction is to ascertain the meaning and intention of the parties, and this will be reached by a consideration of the whole instrument. [Brewing Co. v. Union Ins. Co., 63 Mo. App. 663; Renshaw v. Ins. Co., 103 Mo. 595, 15 S.W. 945; Smith v. Ins. Co.,181 Mo. App. 455, 168 S.W. 831.] It is only when the language in the contract is ambiguous that the rule obtains that it will be strictly construed against the insurer. [Smith v. Ins. Co., supra; Banta v. Casualty Co., 134 Mo. App. 222, 113 S.W. 1140; Dunn v. Ins. Co., 197 Mo. App. 457, 196 S.W. 100; Mitchell *Page 86 v. Accident Ins. Co., 179 Mo. App. 1, 161 S.W. 362.] The contract must be construed as a whole and when a clause in the policy stands with others its sense may be gathered from those clauses which precede and those which follow. [Strance v. Ins. Co.,94 Mo. 182, 6 S.W. 698.] When words are used in one sense in one part of a contract, and such words are again used in the same contract they are as a general rule deemed to have been used in the same sense as in the first instance, nothing to the contrary appearing. [13 C.J., sec. 491, p. 532.] Of the construction of contracts in general no one challenges the rule that all parts must be considered together if possible. This is the general rule.

With these statements of the law as we find it, it is pertinent to consider other specifications in the policy sued on in the instant case as they throw light on the construction which we think was evidently intended by the word surgeon and the wordssurgical operation as used in specification twelve. Specification eight made the defendant liable to the insured for accidental injury: "While riding within a conveyance drawn by horse power, provided that the insured shall not be a hired driver thereof, nor be riding or driving in or upon any conveyance used for any business purpose or any work whatsoever (but this exception shall not apply to any legally qualifiedphysician, surgeon or veterinarian (italics ours) then employed in the practice of his or her profession, nor any commercial traveler selling goods from sample for future delivery only) in consequence of a collision or other accident to the conveyance in which the insured is so riding." Specification eleven makes defendant liable for accidental injury to insured: "While riding upon a motor bicycle, not being used for any business purpose (but this exemption shall not apply to any legally qualified physician, surgeon, or veterinarian (italics ours) then employed in the practice of his or her profession, nor any commercial traveler selling goods from sample for future delivery only), and in consequence of a collision *Page 87 with any other conveyance except another motor bicycle."

In order to sustain recovery upon the policy before us we must say that the word surgeon as used in specification twelve includes a veterinarian, and that the act of administering the treatment to the hog, and the slitting of the ear was a surgicaloperation as that term is used. Bearing in mind the law as we find it relative to the consideration that should be given to clauses which precede and which follow and reerting to specifications eight and eleven, it would appear that the wordsurgeon in the policy was not intended to cover and embrace a veterinarian. It is clear that in specifications eight and eleven veterinarian is not used as synonymous with physician and surgeon. In these two specifications separate and distinct exceptions are made to the limitations therein named. In specification twelve distinct classes are covered, the physician, surgeon and dentist. Following the literal context in each of the three specifications and agreeing for the moment that veterinarian is synonymous with surgeon in eight and eleven, and then applying the same reason to twelve we could with as much reason say that the word dentist is also synonymous with surgeon as therein used. Giving the language this construction a dentist could recover under either of the three specifications whether named or not, notwithstanding the policy is a limited one.

The best construction, and if the best it must be the correct one, is that which is made by viewing the subject of the contract as the mass of mankind would view it; for it may be safely assumed that such was the aspect in which the parties themselves viewed it. "Accordingly it is a familiar rule of constant application that courts give effect to all written instruments according to the ordinary popular meaning of the terms employed, when nothing appears to show that they were used in a different sense, and no unreasonable or absurd consequences will result from doing so. If a particular use of a word becomes common that use must be taken into consideration *Page 88 in construing a contract regardless of whether its meaning can be found in any lexicon. Stated differently the rule may be said to be that the nontechnical terms of every written instrument are to be understood in their plain, ordinary and popular sense, unless they have generally, in respect to the subject-matter, as by the knowledge of trade or the like, acquired a peculiar sense distinct from the popular sense of the same words, or unless the context evidently points out that in the particular instance, and in order to effectuate the immediate intention of the parties it should be understood in some other peculiar sense." [6 R.C.L. 843; Webb v. Ins. Co., 134 Mo. App. 576, 115 S.W. 481; Lovelace v. Protective Ass'n., 126 Mo. 104, 28 S.W. 877.]

The word surgeon, unqualified, in the mind of the ordinary individual means one possessed of such knowledge of the human body, and such other knowledge as the laws of our land require, and possessed of such skill in the use of instruments that he may be expected with reason to correct or relieve some unnatural condition of the human body. We do not think that the "mass of mankind" would connect the idea of a veterinarian with the word surgeon as that word is generally used. We would be doing violence to what we think is the only reasonable construction of the contract of insurance when all the specifications are considered together to say that the word surgeon as used in specification twelve is broad enough to include a veterinarian. Not only would we be doing violence to the plain terms of the policy, but we would certainly be out of line with all the adjudicated cases laying down general rules of construction and interpretation. In view of our conclusion to be given the word surgeon as used in specification twelve, it is unnecessary to consider other questions raised. The judgment below is reversed.Sturgis, P.J., and Farrington, J., concur. *Page 89