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Martin v American International Assurance Life Co [2003] SCC [accidental death benefit]



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Martin v American International Assurance Life Co [2003] SCC [accidental death benefit]


Facts

- Insured was a physician that developed an addiction to certain medication, he had been recovering until he died in his office of a drug overdose

- Policy had a clause granting coverage for “death [that] resulted directly, and independently of all other cause… and accidental means”



Issues

- Whether the insured’s death was effected through “accidental means” and was therefore eligible for coverage

Rules

- To determine if death occurred by accidental means, 1) interpret “accident” in the ordinary sense of the word, 2) look to the chain of events as a whole and consider whether the insured expected death to be a consequence of his actions and circumstances (subjective), 3) whether a reasonable person in the position of the insured would have expected to die

  • When death is the unexpected result of an action, it occurred through accidental means

  • But must also look at what insurance contract stipulates, coverage may be broader or narrower depending on the clause

- Cannot separate the “means” from the rest of the causal chain

  • Either there was an accident throughout, or there was no accident at all

- “Accidental death” and “death by accidental means” connote a death that was in some sense unexpected, both phrases have the same meaning

- Two types of cases where it is difficult to determine when death is accidental



  • In Russian roulette cases where insured engages in activities that carry inordinate risk, will have to look at insured’s perspective, but sometimes reckless abandon and exposure to obvious danger cannot be accidental

  • Rescuers usually take part in larger chain of unexpected events, unlikely that death is the result of a rescuer’s intentional decision

- Plaintiff has the burden of proof to establish prima facie that death was accidental

Analysis

- Insurers argued that death caused by accidental means was narrower than “accidental deaths” and the former occurs when both death and the actions among its immediate causes are accidental

  • SCC rejected this argument since all accidents have some deliberate actions among their immediate causes, to insist that all causes be accidental would effectively deny all coverage, doesn’t accord with reasonable expectations of parties

- SCC interpreted “accidental means” according to its ordinary meaning and reasonable expectations

- Insured died by accidental means

  • Reasonable person in insured’s shoes would not have intended to die because evidence indicated that insured was found in dishevelled state inappropriate for someone anticipating death, insured was optimistic about his future, and dosage of drug was at low end of scale which suggested it was meant to ease insured’s pain

- W.r.t. courting the risk, fortuity is built into the definition of accident itself since P required to show that death was neither expected nor intended from the standpoint of the insured

Conclusion

- Insured’s death occurred through accidental means, coverage restored

  • SCC held that death is accidental even if insured can prevent death by greater care, if mishap was reasonably foreseeable according to tort law, if insured is engaged in risky activity

  • Case law assigns generous meaning to “accidental”, in the absence of language to the contrary in the insurance contract itself

    • i.e. almost everything is an accident, and insurer must create a more strenuous definition in the policy if they want the definition altered

  • Rationale for the definition of accident

    • When an event is unlooked for, unexpected or unintended by insured, it is fortuitous




  • Kate found this case a bit off, she sees insured as courting the risk

    • Insured was a doctor, he would have known the risks of using the drug


Cooperators & Gibbons

  • Insured contracted rare form of herpes from unprotected sex, he was paralyzed from waist down, he was aware he might contract some STD but not aware his partners had any disease, he argued that herpes was an accident since it was unexpected. He claimed under his group insurance policy. Insured also argued that Martin did away with the need to deal with “accidental means”

    • TJ held that to determine whether given means is accidental, must consider whether consequences were unexpected. Insured’s sexual conduct was risky, but did not preclude consequences of the activity. Court held that diseases that do not result from an accidental cause are not accidental.

    • CA held that accident is distinct from a disease, the way insured got the disease was not accidental. Court followed the principle of “if there is no accident in the means, there was no accident in the result”

      • But this didn’t mean that diseases can’t be accidental – e.g. when viscitudes of climate cannot properly be said to be accidental, unless exposure itself is brought upon by circumstances that give it a character of an accident.

      • If mariner catches a cold and dies, death is not accidental. But if mariner was obliged by shipwreck to depart the ship, and be exposed to open seas, then died, his death might be held to be the result of an accident

English case



  • Man died after working with wool in D’s factory, in contact with bacteria that developed into anthrax. HL held that the fact that accident causes injury in shape of disease doesn’t render the cause something that is not an accident

  • Dissent held that if man dies of infectious disease, doctor only has to prove that the bacteria caused the death to make it an accident


Quinn

  • Deals with misrepresentation, ambiguity, and materiality

  • Important takeaways from this case

    • Test for misrepresentation

    • Ambiguity

    • Materiality: established for insurance by asking the question on the insurance application

    • What kind of evidence can you bring in litigation?

    • Courting the risk




  • Facts: D is named beneficiary, K is life insured. D argued that policy couldn’t be voided since questions on policy were ambiguous, which influenced K’s answers. On July 4, 2001, K saw her fam doctor (in background, she had history of hypertension and fam history was significant for heart attacks). Doctor diagnosed a cough, she was sent off for chest x-ray. X-ray revealed she had a large heart. On July 30, 2001 she went over result of x-rays, she was advised that heart was slightly large but would be monitored. On May 27, 2002 K gets second x-ray, showed her heart was upper limits of normal but no other evidence of heart disease, then sent her for ECG on Aug 4, 2002. Results of ECG showed that K had a heart attack, but doctor didn’t follow up with K. One month after ECG, K applied for life insurance (Kate says this raises the issue of coming to the risk). In Oct 2002, application accepted and policy issued after insurer had doctor examine her. She died a few weeks later. On the application, K disclosed ECG, but not both x-rays. Policy was voided on basis that K didn’t disclose her enlarged heart and both x-rays.

  • At trial, insurer had doctor testify as to risk w.r.t. x-ray, TJ accepted the doctor’s evidence, but then said that questions were ambiguous, and accordingly, questions weren’t material. Held that beneficiary should receive coverage

  • On appeal, TJ’s decision overturned

    • Evidence called came from fam doctor who was sympathetic to K, insurer’s senior underwriter (doctor) who testified if insurer knew K’s real state of health insurance would be denied.

    • Note: underwriter who approved the policy didn’t testify at trial





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