Williams v. Pilot Life Insurance
Williams v. Pilot Life Insurance
Opinion of the Court
When judgment was announced, defendant made and the court denied the following motion:
“That the Court make specific findings of facts as to whether the decedent had (a) slipped and fallen or (b) became suddenly stiff and fallen or (c) the court was concluding that the fall was accidental regardless of whether decedent slipped and fell or suddenly became stiff and fell.”
The policy provided that defendant insurance company would pay death benefits if the insured’s death occurred “solely as a direct result, and independent of all other causes, of accidental bodily injury” sustained while the policy was in effect. All of the evidence shows that the insured’s death occurred solely as a result of the blow to her head which she received when she fell, and in its brief defendant concedes that “[t]here is no dispute in this case that the death of the insured was caused by a blow she' sustained as a result of a fall.” Thus, there was here neither evidence nor contention that death was due to a seizure or to illness or to any bodily infirmity whatever other than the injury caused directly by the blow to the insured’s head. The question presented, therefore, is whether the injury so caused was an “accidental bodily injury,” as those words are used in the policy, even though the fall which resulted in the blow to the head might itself have been caused by a sudden seizure. I hold that it was.
When confronted with a case involving a policy of accident insurance, the courts should interpret the policy words “accident” and “accidental” as those words are commonly understood in ordinary popular usage, for that is the sense in which they are understood by those who purchase such policies. If those words are to have a more restricted meaning, the burden of making that clear should be upon the insurance company which drafts the policy and sells it to the public. In common usage the words “accident” and “accidental” are used to describe some sudden, untoward event, happening apparently by chance, taking place unexpectedly, and not according to the usual course of events. I submit that in common understanding one whose head is bashed against some hard object because he “suddenly became stiff and fell” has suffered an “accident” no less than
This holding is supported by the decision in Salisbury v. John Hancock Mut. Life, 259 Or. 453, 486 P. 2d 1279 (1971), in which the Supreme Court of Oregon expressly overruled one of its prior decisions in order to sustain recovery under an accident insurance policy which extended coverage for “death resulting directly and solely from * * * [a]n accidental injury” in a case in which the insured had a preexisting infirmity or disease which was a cause of the accident, but death was caused solely as the result of injuries suffered in the accident and not by virtue of the disease or infirmity itself. In the opinion in that case the Court said:
“If it was the intention of the defendant that the policy not cover death caused solely as the result of injuries suffered in an accident where a cause of the accident is infirmity or disease, it should have more clearly expressed such intention. Ambiguous policies are construed against the company which draws them.” 259 Or. at 456.
Although decided against the background of differing factual situations and varying policy language, other cases which support the decision here are: Manufacturers’ Accident Indemnity Co. v. Dorgan, 58 F. 945 (6th Cir. 1893), 22 L.R.A. 620 (1905) (opinion by Taft, Circuit Judge, later Chief Justice of the United States Supreme Court) ; Fairclough v. Fidelity & Casualty Co., 297 F. 681 (D.C. Cir. 1924) ; Wells v. Prudential Insurance Co., 3 Mich. App. 220, 142 N.W. 2d 57 (1966).
Cases cited and relied on by defendant are distinguishable. In Skillman v. Insurance Co., 258 N.C. 1, 127 S.E. 2d 789 (1962), the insured’s automobile was seen to leave the highway and run
“If he jumped backwards voluntarily, the fall was not through accidental means. ... If he jumped backwards involuntarily as a result of a stroke brought on by hypertension, delirium tremens, or some other disease, mental or physical infirmity, the fall was not the sole cause of his death, and insured’s death is not covered by the policy.” 268 N.C. at 104.
It should be noted that, unlike the case now before us, the controlling policy language in both Chesson and Skillman, provided coverage only for death caused by “accidental means,” and the opinion of the Court in each case recognized the distinction between the terms “accidental death” and death by “accidental means.” Although I am reluctant to enter upon the “Serbonian Bog” which the maintenance of that distinction creates in this branch of the law, see Annot., 166 A.L.R. 469, 476 (1947), it is a distinction still recognized by our Supreme Court and serves as one basis for distinguishing those cases from the one now before us.
The judgment appealed from is
Affirmed.
Concurring Opinion
concurring:
In my opinion Chesson v. Insurance Co., supra, insofar as it relates to the decision in this case, simply stands for the proposition that there was no competent evidence in the record to support the jury’s finding that Chesson’s “fall was accidental” and hence that his death was “caused by accidental means.” Since all parties agreed here that the insured’s death “was caused by a blow she sustained as a result of a fall,” the only question before the trial judge was whether the fall was “accidental.” Unlike Chesson where the matter was “left to conjecture,” there is competent evidence in the record before us that the insured fell as a result of her foot slipping on the kitchen floor, which had only shortly before been mopped. Thus, there is competent evidence in the record to support Judge Moore’s finding that Mrs. Williams “suffered an accidental fall” and this finding supports the judgment.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.