Hurley v. Bankers' Life Co., 34544.

Decision Date28 June 1924
Docket NumberNo. 34544.,34544.
Citation198 Iowa 1129,199 N.W. 343
PartiesHURLEY v. BANKERS' LIFE CO.
CourtIowa Supreme Court

OPINION TEXT STARTS HERE

Appeal from District Court, Allamakee County; W. J. Springer, Judge.

Action on a policy of insurance providing for payments in monthly installments in case of total, permanent, and incurable disability. The trial court directed a verdict for the defendant, and the plaintiff appeals. Affirmed.Wm. S. Hart, of Waukon, for appellant.

R. B. Alberson, of Des Moines, Murphy & Gleason, of Waukon, and W. S. Ayres, of Des Moines, for appellee.

FAVILLE, J.

The policy of insurance contained the following provision:

“After the premiums have been paid for at least one full year and provided no premium is in default, if the insured, before attaining the age of 60 years, becomes totally, permanently, and incurably disabled as a result of accident or disease (not due to any cause or condition existing at the time of application for this agreement), and is thereby prevented permanently, continuously, and wholly from performing any work or following any occupation for compensation or profit, the company will waive payment of premiums thereafter becoming due under said policy, which shall be continued in force for the same amount and with the same cash surrender and loan values (except as hereinafter provided) as if such premiums had been paid, and beginning one year after receipt of due proof of such disability, if the policy is in full force, the company will pay the policy to the insured as a monthly income for 10 years, dividing the face of the policy into 120 equal monthly installments; the policy to be returned to the company for indorsement thereon of each payment.”

Appellant is a single man, 38 years of age. He is a farmer, and has never had any other occupation. He has no education beyond that acquired in the public schools through the third grade. In July, 1918, he was kicked on the leg by a horse. Three amputations were necessary, following the injury, resulting in leaving a stump of the leg 5 inches in length and the bone so near the end of the stump that an artificial limb could not be used, and appellant is compelled to use crutches. Appellant knows no business except farming. He can drive a team, if it is harnessed and hitched for him, and can do some chores on the farm, such as any man with one leg could do.

We meet at once the question in the case as to whether or not appellant became “totally, permanently, and incurably disabled,” and is “thereby prevented permanently, continuously, and wholly from performing any work or following any occupation for compensation or profit.” Many cases have been before the courts involving construction of contracts of this character, which, however, are not always identical in phraseology, The cases fall quite readily in two general classes: Those wherein the policy provides for indemnity if the insured is disabled from transacting the duties pertaining to the occupation in which he is then engaged, and those wherein the policy provides for indemnity if the insured is disabled from performing any work or following any occupation. This case belongs to the latter class. We shall consider our own decisions first.

In Lyon v. Ry. Pass. Assurance Co., 46 Iowa, 631, the policy provided:

“The Railway Passengers' Assurance Company, of Hartford, Conn., will indemnify the assured under this contract, in the sum of fifteen dollars per week, against loss of time, not exceeding twenty-six consecutive weeks from the date of the accident under which claim is made, while totally disabled and prevented from the transaction of all kinds of business, solely by reason of bodily injuries effected through outward and accidental violence.”

On appeal we considered two instructions given upon the trial. We quote at length from the opinion:

“The court gave the following instructions:

‘4. The policy provides that the defendant will be entitled to recover for injuries resulting from accidents only while the insured was totally disabled, and prevented from the transaction of all kinds of business. But this language must be construed in a practical sense, and means inability to follow any occupation, business, or pursuit in the usual way. Though he may have been able to do some parts of the accustomed work thereof, he may yet recover, so long as he cannot to some extent do all parts, and engage in all such employments. The fact that he may do some light parts of the work, when he cannot engage in the work itself, to any practical extent, will not prevent a recovery.'

‘5. The words “all kinds of business” should receive a practical construction and with reference to the party insured, and if he was qualified to engage in any business which he could do under the injury, then it would be his duty under the contract so to do; but the fact that there may be some business or occupation in which he could engage would not prevent a recovery, unless it was an occupation or business which he was qualified to engage in as an occupation, and transact in the usual way.'

These instructions are, it seems to us, clearly erroneous. The parties must be bound by the terms of their contract. The contract of insurance provides that the defendant will indemnify the assured against loss of time while totally disabled and prevented from the transaction of all kinds of business, solely by reason of bodily injuries effected through outward and accidental violence. The fourth instruction construes the contract to mean something entirely different. The jury are directed that plaintiff may recover, though he may be able to do some parts of the accustomed work pertaining to his business, so long as he cannot, to some extent, do all parts and engage in all the employments thereof. Almost total soundness and ability, instead of total disability, is made the condition of plaintiff's right to recover, and of defendant's liability. The plaintiff is a carpenter. If he was simply disabled from going upon a four-story building to put on the roof, and could do everything else pertaining to his trade, he would under this instruction be entitled to recover $15 a week, during the period of such disability. This is not the proper construction of the agreement. It interpolates into it terms and conditions upon which the parties never agreed, and attaches to the words employed a meaning of which they are not susceptible.

The fifth instruction is equally erroneous. The contract of insurance binds defendant to indemnify plaintiff for loss of time while totally disabled and prevented from the transaction of all kinds of business. The court tells the jury that this does not mean what it plainly says, but that defendant will indemnify plaintiff for loss of time while disabled, and prevented from the transaction of any business in which he was qualified to engage. Under this instruction the defendant's liability is governed by the plaintiff's versatility. If the plaintiff is skilled in but one business, and can pursue but one employment, and is disabled from pursuing that, he may recover; but if he has greater skill, and can turn his attention to other pursuits, he cannot recover, unless he is disabled from engaging in any employment for which he is qualified. The parties have not incorporated any such condition in the contract. There is no reason nor justification for wresting from the language employed its natural signification, and placing upon it a construction which substitutes for the contract which the parties have made one of entirely different signification, and one imposing upon the defendant a greatly enlarged liability. The language of the parties is plain, unambiguous, and needs no construction. It provides that ...

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