
    Rheinheimer v. The Aetna Life Insurance Company.
    
      Accident insurance policy — Excepts loss resulting from disease — ■ Death of insured from blood poisoning — Induced by accidental scratch — Not within exception — Special instructions to jury— Sufficient if court gives substance of request.
    
    1. An accident insurance policy, after providing for idemnity for accidental injuries resulting in disability, loss of time from labor, etc., contains the further stipulation, that “if death results solely from such injuries within ninety days, the said company will pay the principal sum of five thousand dollars to the beneficiary, if living; and in the event of the death of said beneficiary before the death of the insured, to the executors, administrators or assigns of the insured.” The policy contains the further provision, that it. is issued and accepted on certain conditions, one of which is, that “this insurance does not cover in event of accident or death, loss of limb or sight, or disability, resulting wholly or partly, directly or indirectly, from bodily or mental infirmity, or disease in any form, proximate or contributory, as a primary, secondary or final cause of accident, injury or death; * * *.” While said policy was in full force, and the insttred was not afflicted with any known physical or mental infirmity, he unintentionally and accidentally sustained a cut or scratch on the index finger of his left hand from which blood at once issued, through which wound and coincident therewith, it became so infected that blood poisoning was at once introduced into the circulatory system of the insured from the effects of which he died within five daj's of the accidental injury.
    
      Held: That the death was not within said exception, and the insurance company is liable. Insurance Co. v. Domey, 68 Ohio St., 151, distinguished.
    2. Where proper special instructions to the jury are requested, but not to be given before argument, the court is not required to . give such instructions in their precise terms or language as submitted. It is sufficient if the substance thereof be given in other instructions, or in the general charge.
    (No. 10227
    Decided December 17, 1907.)
    Error to the Circuit Court of Cuyahoga County.
    
      The plaintiff in error was plaintiff in the court of common pleas in an action against the defendant in error to recover on a policy of insurance. She was the wife of Elias Rheinheimer, the insured, and the beneficiary named in the policy. The petition alleges that: “On the 13th day of November, 1899, at the city of Cleveland * * *, through W. G. Wilson, who was then and there its general and countersigning agent, with authority to receive premiums, accept risks and issue policies, in consideration of the sum of twenty-five dollars then paid to it by the said Elias Rheinheimer, said defendant agreed and promised in case of the death of said Elias Rheinheimer, resulting solely from bodily injuries effected during the term of twelve months from noon of the 13th day of November, 1899, through external, violent and accidental means within ninety days from the date of said injuries, to pay to the said plaintiff the sum of five thousand dollars.
    “Thereafter, in consideration of the further payment of twenty-five dollars to it paid by said Elias Rheinheimer, said defendant continued in full force said policy for twelve months from noon on November 13, 1900, through W. G. Wilson, its agent as aforesaid. On the 30th day of December, 1900, said Elias Rheinheimer accidentally scratched the index finger of his left hand, leaving a visible mark, thereby then and there introducing into his system blood poisoning, which caused his death on the 3d day of January, 1901. Said death did not result wholly or partly, directly or indirectly, from any of the causes excepted in said policy, but wholly and directly from said accidental scratching of said hand.
    “Immediate and due notice in writing of said accidental injury and death, and the proof of death, was forthwith made and delivered to said company and accepted -by it. More than ninety days have elapsed since the receipt by defendant of said proof of death. By reason of the premises there is now due and payable from said defendant to this plaintiff the sum of five thousand dollars, with interest thereon from the 3d day of April, 1901.”
    Plaintiff prayed for judgment in said sum with interest. No copy of the policy was attached to the petition.
    The defendant answered and set up six defenses. The first defense consists of admissions of the execution and delivery, the payment of premiums and terms of the policy, the death and proof thereof as averred in the petition, and denies all other allegations not admitted.
    As a second defense, the answer sets out a copy of the insurance policy, and pleads the third condition of the policy, the part pertinent here being as follows: “nor the result, fatal or otherwise, of voluntary or involuntary taking of poison, contact with poisonous substances, inhaling of any gas or vapor, or of sunstroke or freezing. This insurance does not cover in event of accident or death, loss of limb or sight, or disability, res%ilting wholly or partly, directly or indirectly, from bodily or mental infirmity, or disease in any form, proximate or contributory, as a primary, secondary or final cause of accident, injury, disability or death; nor does it cover death or disability due to hernia, existing prior or subsequent to the issue of .this policy,” etc.
    Having quoted this clause of the policy, the defense further says, the death of the insured was not the result of means or causes covered by said policy, but was caused wholly or partly by a disease, to-wit, blood poisoning.
    The third defense alleges that the death was caused by the voluntary or involuntary contact of said Elias Rheinheimer with poisonous substances.
    The fourth defense avers that, “the insurance policy in terms provided only for injuries or death resulting from bodily injury effected during the term of this insurance, through external, violent and accidental means, and that the death of said Elias Rheinheimer did not result from such means, but resulted from the intentional, wilful and intelligent contact of said Elias Rheinheiiner with poisonous substances and material.”
    The fifth defense is in substance like the second.
    The sixth defense avers, in substance, that the death was due to unnecessarily exposing himself to obvious risk of injury, especially that, well knowing the danger of so. doing, wilfully and persistently handled and came in contact with poisonous substances', when such acts were obviously dangerous and would result in injury, disease or death.
    . The reply denied each and every affirmative allegation of the answer. The case was tried to a jury. The court gave some of the special instructions requested by defendant and refused others. Exceptions were taken to the refusal and to the general charge. Counsel for defendant, before the general .charge to the jury, requested the court to instruct the jury to return a special verdict in writing upon all the issues raised by the pleadings, but defendant’s counsel declined to assist in framing the form of such verdict, and when it was prepared and submitted to the court by counsel for plaintiff, the defendant’s counsel objected to it going to the jury, but offered no form in its place.
    The special verdict returned by the jury is as follows : “We, the jury in the above entitled case, being duly impaneled and sworn do find that plaintiff is the wife of Elias Rheinheimer; that the defendant is a corporation under the laws of' Connecticut; that at the time of all the matters hereinafter mentioned the policy of insurance, a copy of which is annexed hereto, marked ‘A’ and made a part hereof, was outstanding and in force; that due proofs of death were delivered to the defendant and accepted by it. That on the evening of the 30th day of December, A. D. 1900 (the jury are unable to determine the exact hour), said Elias Rheinheinier accidentally and unintentionally scratched his left index finger in locking up the house; upon what he scratched it the jury are unable to say. That this scratch penetrated through the skin to the tissues and blood vessels beneath and left a visible mark; that it drew blood; that at the time of the accident and by the accident germs of staphylococcus pyogenes aureus and of the vibrión septique of Pasteur were introduced into the circulatory system of said Elias Rheinheinier by the lymphatic vessels, setting up an inflammation of the lymphatic vessels of said finger, left hand, left arm and upper left breast, producing an oedema of a malignant nature, that is, an acute and aggravated oedematous condition of the left arm and left breast, producing ultimately the death of the said Elias Rheinheimer. That said accidental scratch was the sole, proximate and immediate cause of the death, of said Elias Rheinheimer which resulted directly and proximately therefrom between ten and twelve o’clock of the morning of the third day of January, A. D. 1901. That the effects of said wound began to manifest themselves ■at about seven o’clock on the evening of the 31st day of December, A. D. 1900, and continued to progressively increase until they finally resulted in his death; and said death did not result from contact with poisonous substances, nor did it result wholly or partly, directly or indirectly from bodily infirmity, or disease in any form, proximate or contributory, as a primary, secondary or final cause of death; nor did it arise from any unnecessary exposure to obvious risk of injury or obvious dang'er. If upon the whole matter, the court shall be of the opinion that the plaintiff has established her cause of action, we then find for the plaintiff and assess her damages at the sum of sixty-two hundred dollars.”
    The defendant excepted to the verdict and to its being received by the court. These were overruled, as was a motion for new trial, and the court rendered judgment on the verdict. The case was taken on error to the circuit court. That court reversed the judgment of the court of common pleas, “for error in overruling the motion of plaintiff in error for judgment in its favor upon the pleadings, there being no other error apparent in the record to the prejudice of the plaintiff in error.” Having so found, the circuit court rendered final judgment dismissing the petition.
    Error is prosecuted in this court to reverse the judgment of the circuit court.
    
      Messrs. White, Johnson, McCaslin & Cannon, for plaintiff in error.
    Now we are assured by the highest medical authority that if this policy be construed, as did the circuit court construe it, not to cover cases where total or partial disability, loss of hand, foot, sight or death is caused by morbid processes set in action by the injuries, then this policy does not cover any cases except where the loss of hand, foot, sight or' death is coincident, or nearly coincident with, the receipt of the injuries, and that if such be the construction of the policy, it would be impossible to have a case arise for which defendant would be liable.
    All morbid actions, all abnormal actions of tissues, of membranes, of bones, of circulation and organs are denominated disease, and, according to the parts affected, they have different names given to them by pathologists. It usually happens that these results are progressive. An accidental injury will involve one organ. The injured state of this organ will give rise to morbid action on its part, which will involve progressively other and yet other organs or parts of the body until it re-suits in loss of limb, of sight, total disability or death.
    The accidental injury here alleged is not the accidental scratch, but is the accidental introduction into his system of blood poisoning. 'The same substance, whether it was the bolt of the door, or screw head, or edge of the lock, or splinter, which tore its way through the skin and subcutaneous tissue, at the same time deposited in the wound the bacteria or microscopical vegetable organisms which, by their rapid multiplication by separation, produced in the body of Elias Rheinheimer the condition which is popularly called blood poisoning, and from which he died, and which, in more technical language, is described in the passage quoted above from the special verdict.
    In the language of some of the cases we can not see why an introduction of these minute vegetable organisms into the system is not a part of the accidental injury as much as would be the loss of blood by hemorrhage, the rupture of the membrane of the stomach, allowing the escape of the entrails, known as hernia, or any other injury which forms a part of tire injury received.
    If now we examine the authorities, we will find that they sustain the views above expressed, and indeed we have not been able to find any holding adversely. Insurance Co. v. Young, 20 Can. Sup. Ct., 280; Carey v. Insurance Co., 106 N. W. Rep., 1055; Martin v. Accident Assn., 61 Hun, 467; Martin v. Indemnity Co., 151 N. Y., 94, s. c. 71 Hun, 614; Bailey v. Casualty Co., 8 N. Y. App., 127; Hall v. Accident Assn., 86 Wis., 518; Car 
      
      roll et al. v. Fidelity & Casualty Co., 137 Fed. Rep., 1012; Commercial Travelers Assn. v. Smith, 85 Fed. Rep., 401; Insurance Co. v. Melick, 65 Fed. Rep., 178; Accident Assn. v. Barry, 131 U. S., 100; Peck v. Accident Assn., 52 Hun, 255; Fitton v. Insurance Co., 17 C. B. N. S., 122; Accident Assn. v. Alexander, 104 Ga., 709; Insurance Co. v. Murray, 16 Col., 296; Omberg v. Accident Assn., 101 Ky., 303; Lawrence v. Insurance Co., L. R., 7 Q. B., 216; Smith v. Insurance Co., L. R., 5 Exch., 302; Mardorf v. Insurance Co., 1903, L. R., 1 K. B., 584; Insurance Co. v. Dorney, 68 Ohio St., 151; Jiroch v. Insurance Co., 108 N. W. Rep., 728; Insurance Co. v. Rembe et al., 220 Ill., 151.
    ■ Stress is laid a number of times in defendant’s brief upon the fact that die special verdict was drafted by counsel for plaintiff. Defendant requested a special verdict. “The court requested both the plaintiff’s and defendant’s counsel to prepare forms of special verdict setting forth the facts as they respectively claimed they were established by the evidence. Defendant’s counsel declined só to do.”
    The court charged the jury properly upon the subject of the use to be made of the draft form prepared by plaintiff’s counsel. Apparently, defendant thinks that this course was improper. The course pursued by the court has been approved in this state both by the circuit court and by this court. Railway Co. v. St. Bernard, 19 C. C., 299; Gale v. Priddy, 66 Ohio St., 400; 22 Ency. Pl. & Prac., Verdict, 979, et seq.
    
    
      
      Messrs. Foran, Pearson & Powell, for defendant in error.
    The plaintiff in error avers, as the external, violent and accidental means, through which the insured was injured, and which primarily brought the injury within the terms of the policy, a scratch upon the-finger, but does not predicate the liability of the defendant in error upon the mere scratching of the finger, but rather upon a disease, to-wit: blood poisoning, the germs of which, she avers, were introduced into the system of Elias Rheinheimer by and with said scratch. So that it is apparent and admitted by the plaintiff in error that Elias Rheinheimer died of blood poisoning. That blood poisoning is a disease has been decided judicially. - Bacon v. Insurance Co., 123 N. Y., 304; Kasten v. Casualty Co., 40 L. R. A., 651; Martin v. Indemnity Co., 151 N. Y., 94.
    The blood poisoning caused by the activity of these germs may result from their entrance into the system through an external cut, at the time of the cutting, or in some manner after the cutting, but such blood poisoning might be caused by such germs entering through the mucous membrane, and in many cases it.would.be impossible to determine which.
    The insurance company might then well decline to take the risk and might further desire to relieve itself of the burden of inquiring whether the disease was or was not caused by an accident otherwise within its policy.
    The question is whether it did or did not make the terms of this exception such as to exclude it from liability in such cases. By the rules of interpretation some meaning, if reconcilable with the other portions of the policy, is to be given to all the provisions and terms therein. If the words of the exception contained in this policy do not exempt the company from the liability suggested, it would seem almost impossible to frame an exception that would.
    This court has spoken on this question in the case of Insurance Co. v. Dorney, 68 Ohio St., 151; State, ex rel., v. Railway Co., 68 Ohio St., 9.
    Many of the decisions cited by the plaintiff in error discuss the question of the proximate cause of the death or disability sued upon. Many of the policies use the terms “proximate” or “sole cause,” and the courts went upon the maxim “Causa próxima, non remota spectatur,” but the question here is not as to the proximate cause, nor the causa catisans, but whether a condition of disease served to bring about the result; in other words, was the disease a causa sine qua non of the result.
    The plaintiff in error admits that the insured died from disease. The doctor’s testimony is to the same effect. The coroner, by inquest, must have found that to be the fact, and it seems sufficient, under' the wording of the exception, to show that the death was attributable to disease. In any event, supervening as it did, it must have been a secondary cause. 25 Am. & Eng. Ency. Law, 2d Ed., 160.
    If the blood poison was such as arose within the system, there would be no possible claim under the policy, and the purpose of the exception was to exclude such as might result from accidental means within the general proviso of the policy. McGlother v. Accident Co., 89 Fed. Rep., 685.
    The injury suffered by the insured here was not of itself likely to result fatally or even in any great degree harmfully. The cut upon the finger did not cause such wasting or loss of blood as to endanger the safety of the insured, nor can it be said that the blood poisoning was its inevitable concomitant.
    Admitting, for the purpose of argument, that the germs, whose activity resulted in blood poisoning, were introduced into the wound at the time of the wounding, nevertheless they might not have caused blood poisoning, it being very largely a matter of chance, of the physical condition of the insured and of the subsequent care given the wound. It may well be argued that there is no provision in the policy providing for insurance against the accidental incurring of disease. In a sense, every disease is incurred accidentally. Casualty Co. v. Peltier, 51 S. E. Rep., 209; Clark v. Assurance Co., 72 Vt., 458; Carr v. Insurance Co., 75 S. W. Rep., 180.
   Price, J.

The record shows that the circuit court reversed the judgment of the court of common pleas for “error in overruling motion of plaintiff in error for judgment in its favor upon the pleadings, there being no other error apparent in the record to the prejudice of the plaintiff in error. And proceeding to render the judgment the court of common pleas should have rendered, it is considered thatrthe petition and proceeding brought by the said iEmma Rheinheimer, the defendant in error, be and the same is dismissed.” A judgment for costs was rendered against her. A most careful search of the record discloses no such motion, and it appears from the briefs of opposing counsel that no motion was ever made in the court of common pleas for judgment on the pleadings, and there is no entry found in the record that the latter court ever heard or passed on such a motion.

Speaking on the subject, counsel for plaintiff in error say in their brief: “No motion for judgment on the pleadings was made, but what is substantially equivalent, defendant in error objected to any testimony being given by the plaintiff in error.” We think the learned counsel concede entirely too much, for the right to judgment on the pleadings must arise from a consideration of all the pleadings, it not being infrequent that the averments of an answer may help out a defective petition. And so may a reply contain facts which will aid a weak answer. To justify a judgment on the pleadings, it must be found that taking all their averments as they stand, they present simply a question of law. The objection to the introduction of any evidence by the plaintiff may be based on the ground that the petition does not state a cause of action, and in this respect differs widely from a motion for judgment on the pleadings. Commenting on the above condition of the record before us, counsel for defendant in error, in their brief, copy the same entry of the circuit court, and proceed at once to say that, “in' the trial court a number of exceptions were taken by the defendant in error to the rulings of the court upon the admission and exclusion of evidence, and to the charge of the court. In the exercise of caution the defendant in error, therefore, filed in this court a cross-petition in error and a record containing a complete record of the proceedings in this case. The cross-petition in error asked this court to consider the alleged errors of the trial court, if this court should be of opinion that the circuit court, erred in giving judgment upon the pleadings for defendant in error.”

We regard it as a fair inference from this statement, that counsel making it as the representative of the insurance company, do not now claim that the trial- court ever had before it, or passed upon a motion for judgment on the pleadings. Nor did the petition in error filed in the circuit court assign as error any ruling on such motion. It follows, therefore, that the circuit court'erred in reversing the judgment of the court of common pleas on the only ground stated in its judgment entry.

But counsel for the defendant in error say they filed a cross-petition in error, pointing out other grounds of error, for which the circuit court should have reversed the judgment of the common pleas. That was an unnecessary proceeding, as often ruled by this court, and at an early stage of the case in this court, and on motion of the plaintiff in error, the cross-petition in error was stricken from the files. It has long been a rule of practice here, that if there are other errors in the rec’ord brought here from the circuit court, for which that court should have reversed, they may be .pointed out, and this court is not necessarily confined to those found by that court.

Having cleared the way for a proper review of what is before us, we find that in the beginning of the trial the insurance company “objected to the introduction of any evidence by the plaintiff under the petition.” This objection was overruled and defendant excepted. This ruling was assigned for error in the circuit court without avail. Should the circuit court have held that ruling to be error?

The statement of this case contains very liberal quotations from the petition, and, in fact, its vital averments are set out, omitting the formal statements of the capacity in which the plaintiff sues and the- defendant is being sued. The plaintiff did not attach to her petition a copy of the insurance policy, but did set out the obligatory part thereof on which she founded her claim, such as the promises contained in the policy; the payment and acceptance of the two premiums. Enough is alleged to show that the insurance was alive and otherwise valid at the death of her husband; that through external and violent means the deceased sustained an injury which caused his death a short time thereafter; and going more into detail, it was alleged that on the 30th day of December, 1900, the deceased accidentally scratched the index finger of his left hand, leaving a visible mark, thereby then and there introducing into his system blood poisoning, which caused his death on the 3d day of January, 1901. Then, taking care to meet an anticipated question as to the cause of death, it is alleged that, “said death did not result ‘wholly or partly, directly or indirectly, from any of the causes excepted in said policy, but wholly and directly from said accidental scratching of said hand.” There was no motion to make the averments' of the petition definite and certain as to the condition of the insured between the sustaining what appeared to be a very slight injury and the hour of his death, and we can not assume, while passing on the sufficiency of the petition, that some or all of its averments are shaded in doubt, or are partly if not altogether untrue. It is said that the scratch of the finger was accidental; that it left a visible mark as such injury, then and there introducing blood poisoning into the system. The introducing of the poison is charged to have been simultaneous or next in time to the injury. The inoculating of the poison was the first sequence of the accident. The accidental injury is alleged to have been the sole and proximate cause of the death. We are not able to say, as a matter of law, that the facts so averred were so far improbable or impossible that we should ignore the positive terms of the pleading. Moreover, the positive averment as to the cause of death is followed by a denial that jt resulted wholly or partly, directly or indirectly, from any causes excepted in the policy.

We are of opinion that the petition states a cause of action under which the plaintiff was entitled to introduce her competent evidence.

There was some controversy over the introduction of testimony, but it did not reach a serious stage. The first, and perhaps the most important question made by the plaintiff in error, relates to some statements elicited from Marcus Feder, who was a son-in-law of deceased, and then resided in part of the same house. After testifying that he was at home that evening (December 30), he said it was about nine o’clock, and he saw Mr. Rheinheimer standing under the chandelier in his sitting room squéezing out blood from the finger. He says there was a tear of the finger where the blood came out; the extent of the tear being about a quarter of an inch. The witness' was then asked: “Now, what, if anything', did he say to you when you saw him squeezing the blood out of his finger under the chandelier ?” Counsel for defendant company objected, and after full argument, the court overruled the objection, and exception was reserved. The witness answered: “ T hurt my finger locking up the door,’ ” or “ 'locking up the house.’ ” The witness then stated that he went into the bath or toilet room and procured a clean linen rag and helped- him dress the wound. The spirit of the objection to the question and answer is, that the statement of Rheinheimer as to how he sustained the injury was not part of the res gestae; on the contrary, it was hearsay in this case.

The courts have found it difficult to establish a satisfactor}'- line between what statements are considered part of the res gestae and what are not. The decisions are not in harmony on the subject, some courts holding to - a more liberal rule than that recognized by former adjudications of this court, and if it were necessary to go into the subject anew in this case, the discussion might be of value; but if we take it for granted here (but we do not decide) that the statement was not a part of the res gestae as defined by óur former rulings, it does not follow that the error of its admission is so far prejudicial “that the judgment of the trial court should be reversed. This is true as to the present question, because, aside from said statement, there is much uncontradicted evidence as to the nature and probable cause of the injury to the finger, from which the deadly inflammation proceeded. Early in the record it appears that Mrs. Addie Feder, wife of Marcus Feder, was a witness. She is a daughter of Mr. Rheinheimer, deceased, and resided with her husband in a part of the house. She testified that Dr. Peskind was called to see her father on New Year’s morning, and she was asked: “When, if at any time, did you see any cut or hurt or anything of that kind on his hand * * *?” She apswered: “There was a black mark traced down through the finger, and I saw that.” Other answers were made concerning the description of the streak on the arm and finger, and she said: “It was quite large and led down in a streak from here (indicating). The doctor drew my attention to it, and I saw it leading from the finger up to that discolored spot.” Again, she was asked: “Where was this scratch or whatever it may be that you refer to, on the finger?” Ans. “It was on the forefinger. * * * As near as I can remember, it started from somewhere the middle of the finger,” etc. Again she says: “It was rather a deep scratch. Oh, I should judge from a quarter of an inch perhaps, or a little more than that.”

In the testimony of Dr. Peskind, the first physician called, and on the second day after the alleged injury, he states concerning the injury to the finger: “There was a small scooped out wound on the second or third phalange — the second or third section of the finger of the right hand — a red streak, and that ran to the back of his hand and on the inside running up to his armpit. These infected streaks always indicate- poisons being carried from the surface into the general circulation.” Marcus Feder testified that his father-in-law was locking' up the house just preceding the act of standing under the chandelier and squeezing the blood from the torn finger.

In another part of his testimony Dr. Peskind states: “I found the finger had a scooped out wound about a quarter or three-eights of an inch long. The wound looked scooped out, slightly excoriated and a little water on the surface * *

The wound was fresh. It had not been seen before the deceased stood under the chandelier and squeezed the blood from it. He had just been engaged-in locking up the house. In the presence of all of these facts it was immaterial that he said that he hurt his finger, “locking up the door, or locking up the house.” Without such statement there was evidence strongly tending to show that he received the cut or scratch at the time and in the manner claimed, and there is no evidence to the contrary. There was no contest of these facts in the evidence, and the case does not rest on the declaration of the deceased. It is not suspected that the injury was self-inflicted. Some other questions arose during the introduction of the evidence, but none, of sufficient importance to demand special mention..

The defendant below set out in its answer the clause of the policy which limits its liability, and relying on that clause as a defense to the action, introduced evidence tending to prove that blood poisoning caused the death, and not the injury to the finger, and other evidence tending to show that the policy does not cover the death or loss made the basis of the action. That clause reads: “This insurance does not cover in event of accident or death, loss of limb or sight, or disability resulting wholly or partly, directly or indirectly, from bodily or mental infirmity, or disease in any form, proximate or contributory, as a primary, secondary, or final cause of accident, injury, disease or death; nor does it cover death or disability due to hernia existing prior or subsequent to the issue of this policy,” etc.

Believing that the evidence brought the case within the terms of the above exception, the insurance company requested twenty-seven instructions, the first of which was to find a verdict* for the defendant. This was not given. Some of the others were given and others refused. As the record stands, it was not asked that these of any of them should be given before argument, and if the substance of the proper instructions is contained in the general charge, there is no ground for complaint. But counsel specially allege error in refusing to give the 7th, 9th, nth, 17th and 18th requests. As to two of these requests, it seems they might be refused because the facts in the case did not call for or permit of such rules. And when we look to requests 2, 3, 4, 5_ and 6, which were given, and to the general charge, we conclude that the law was submitted to the jury in such form ánd language that the issues could be clearly understood by the jury. In the 2d request the jury were told' that a preponderance of the evidence must show “that the decedent, Elias Rheinheimer, came to his death from bodily injuries effected through external, violent and accidental means which, independently of all other causes, produced the death of the said Elias Rheinheimer,” etc. In the 3d the jury was instructed that they must be convinced by a preponderance of the evidence “that the death of Elias Rheinheimer resulted solely from bodily injuries effected through external, violent and accidental means on or about the 30th day of December, 1900, and that the death of the said Elias Rheinheimer resulted solely from such bodily injuries within ninety days of the said 30th day of December, 1900.” In the 4th 'instruction requested and given the jury was told that “if the evidence in the case convinces you that the death of Elias Rheinheimer was due to disease of any kind, the plaintiff can not recover in this case.” And in the 5th the jury was told that in order for her to recover, “the plaintiff must show by a preponderance of the evidence that the death of Elias Rheinheimer was due to and effected through external, violent and accidental means, which, independently of all other causes, caused the death of the said Elias Rheinheimer, and so caused the death * * * solely from such injuries within ninety days,” etc. This is not all, for in the 6th instruction given, the court said: “Unless the plaintiff has shown by a preponderance of the evidence in this case that the death of Elias Rheinheimer, the decedent, was the direct, proximate result of external, violent and accidental means, there can be no recovery,” etc.

Beyond doubt, these instructions cover the terms of all the other proper requests which were not given in terms, and they lack only the addition of the supposed saving words “wholly, partly, directly or indirectly from bodily infirmity or disease in any form which was a proximate, contributory, or a secondary, or a final cause of such accident and injury.” These words are literally taken from the clause of the policy quoted, and we know of no rule that requires the- court to charge a *proposition as law, which is contained in the technical language of the contract. The court, in charges given, had stripped from the real issue some of these qualifying words which to the jury might seem mysterious, and which might even confound them, and gave their purport and meaning in clear and simple terms. For -if the accident was the sole cause of death, and it was so caused independently of- any other cause, then it did not result partly from any other cause; and if the accident was the sole and proximate cause of death, then it did not result, directly or indirectly, from any other cause. And if the accident was the sole and proximate cause, it was the primary, and not the secondary or contributory cause. It seems to us the above special instructions given at the defendant’s request, and the general charge, covered the terms of the exception in the policy, and the court sufficiently and correctly construed the policy. The qualifying words, above noted, were contained, in whole or in part, in several of the rejected instructions, and the same comment applies to them. We will further refer to the general charge and the rejected instructions when we come to consider the special- verdict returned by the jury.

On the whole case, as well as to the sufficiency of the- petition, counsel have cited many authorities pro and con. We have not space to give our views of them separately. They will appear in the official report of this case in their proper order.

But the insurance company cite and seem to rely on Aetna Life Ins. Co. v. Dorney, 68 Ohio St., 151, as controlling the case at bar. The facts of the cases are so widely different that we are unable to make the application attempted by counsel. The vital conditions presented by one case are the reverse of those presented in the other. In the Dorney case, supra, there was no visible mark of injury. At some period prior to his death an ulcer formed in his stomach which gradually made a hole through it. Nature had patched by growing a fold of the omentum or covering of the bowels over the opening and closing it as by a patch. By the strain, jar, or wrench which Dorney sustained in helping to carry a stone, the patch was torn off, so that the contents of the stomach escaped into the abdomen and death resulted shortly thereafter. This condition of the stomach was set out in the petition and was a conceded fact of the case. There was a well-defined pre-existing physical infirmity in the stomach, only partly healed by nature, but its work gave way with a slight jolt of the body and death ensued — not from the jolt or strain but from the ruptured stomach. The perforated stomach was the pre-disposing cause of death and the motion or jar in carrying the stone, only the incident, the transpiring of .which precipitated the results of the defective organ.

In the case at bar it appears that Rheinheimer, prior to the injury to the finger, enjoyed fairly good health, and for a man of his years was active in business. It is not shown that he had any organic disease, or any other kind of disease. The scratch of the finger preceded all, as the physical injury, and its mark was visible. Its relation, whether a proximate, direct and sole cause of the death, became a question for the jury. We still approve of the doctrine of the Dorney case, but it is not in conflict with our conclusions in this investigation.

Complaint is made of the special verdict, as to the drafting and submitting of the same to the jury, and also of the court receiving the verdict and rendering judgment upon it. This verdict appears in our statement of the case. It exhibits an ability and conciseness not common to the ordinary petit juror. How did it come into existence, and into court? On page 244 of printed record, it appears that counsel for the insurance company asked the court to direct the jury to return a special verdict. The request is as follows: “We ask the court to instruct the jury to return a special verdict in writing in this case, upon all the issues raised by the pleadings.” The court: “Under what provisions of the law do you make that request?” Answer: “Section 5201.” The jury was then charged, at the close of which the subject of the special verdict was taken up. The court suggested that it would aid the jury if opposing counsel would draft an outline of such verdict. Counsel for the plaintiff submitted to the court a form" of special verdict drawn by them, and requested the court to submit it to the jury, to be filled out in returning its verdict, to conform to the request of counsel for the defendant. Counsel for the defendant then and there objected to the form of the verdict as prepared by the counsel for the plaintiff going to the jury room. This objection was overruled, but counsel for defendant declined to prepare, or assist in preparing any form or outline for a special verdict. The court said to the jury: “The defendant in this case has requested the court to direct you to give a special verdict in writing upon all the issues in this case, and it is the duty of the court to so instruct you, and I do now instruct you to return a special verdict in writing upon all the issues in this case, and I have defined to you, gentlemen of the jury, at length in my general charge, what, the issues in this case are, and I will not endeavor now to make a repetition of the charge. It will 'be your duty to select your foreman in the usual manner and to reduce to writing your finding upon all the. issues in. this case,” etc. But the court does not stop here, but proceeds to say: “The plaintiff in this case, gentlemen of the jury, has prepared a special verdict, which upon her theory of the case you may find, if you see fit so to find. You are not bound to find any of the facts, or to find any of the findings that are shown in this special verdict that will be submitted to you. As to every statement in it you are at liberty to find different. You are at liberty to disregard the paper altogether, and it is your duty to disregard it if you can’t concur in its findings, and prepare one of your own entirely different from this * * *. This is submitted to you merely as a form and merely to guide you in so far as the issues are concerned from the standpoint of the plaintiff.”

This is the record of a rather unusual course of practice, although it has been common in the past to ask for special verdicts, and the right, to do so is clearly provided in Section 5201, Revised Statutes, which is: “In all actions, the jury, unless otherwise directed by the court, may in its discretion render either a general or special verdict; but the court shall, at the request of either party, direct them to give a special verdict in writing upon all or any of the issues,” etc. Here it was requested that the jury return a special verdict on all the issues, and it was so done. The court had no discretion in the matter, nor had the jury any discretion when the demand was made for a special verdict in writing. It so happened, as we presume, that the jury chose to adopt the form submitted as meeting its conclusions from .all the evidence, inasmuch as they asked for .no other form and made no attempt to draft another. The whole proceeding touching the form of the verdict was in open court and in the presence of counsel for both parties, and there is no claim or insinuation that unfair means were used or advantage taken of the situation, and while the practice disclosed here is not common, we see no reason to condemn it in this case. It has always been the practice for the court to draw up and send to the jury forms of general verdicts, and the way was open in this case for counsel for defendant to have "his form of special verdict sent to the jury. There was no such irregularity in the special verdict or in the manner in which it was prepared and returned as will require us to set it aside.

' In the light of this special verdict, it seems that the insurance company has not been prejudiced by the court refusing to give several of the special requests.

Entertaining these views, wé reverse the judgment of the circuit court and affirm that of the common pleas.

Judgment reversed.'

Shauck, C. J., Crew, Spear and Davis, JJ., concur.  