82 Wis. 255 | Wis. | 1892
I. It is maintained on behalf of plaintiff that the judgment should be affirmed, and on behalf of defendant that it should be reversed, on the ground of estop-pel. These conflicting claims will, first be considered and disposed of.
1. It is argued for plaintiff that by calling for further proofs of the identity of “Maria” with “Marie” Bach-meyer, and putting the plaintiff to trouble and expense to supply such proofs after the- defendant was informed that
2. The defendant maintains that the plaintiff is estopped to claim the insurance because, in her proofs of the death of her husband, she deposed that he committed suicide while insane, by which sworn statement it is claimed she is bound. This court has held in several cases that an honest
3. The defendant further claims that plaintiff is estopped to maintain'this action on another ground. It is said that this is a mutual’ association, and that under its rules and by-laws the amount of this policy, if defendant is held liable to pay it, should be assessed upon the members existing at the time of Bachmeyer’s death, and them only, and that more than 1,000 persons who were then members have, by death or otherwise, ceased to be such, and several thousand other persons have since become members, and hence that such an assessment is impossible. In view of the fact that the membership of the defendant is constantly changing^ if the above proposition is sustained it would defeat the payment of all claims against the defendant upon policies the allowance of which has, by reason of litigation or any other cause, been suspended for any considerable time. We think the proposition is not a valid one. The by-laws require the executive committee to make an assessment once in two months, of such amount as it may deem sufficient to meet the current mortality of the association, upon the entire membership at the date of the last death of the audited claims prior thereto. No specific assessment is made to cover each case, but the assessments are based upon estimates of the amount which defendant will be required to'
We conclude, therefore, that the plaintiff is not estopped to show that her proofs of death contain honest mistakes
II. The learned circuit judge took from the jury the question whether or not the insured was insane at the time he took the drug which terminated his life. We .think this was error. The sworn statement of plaintiff that her husband was then insane was put in evidence by defendant; and, as against the plaintiff, it tends to prove such insanity, even though there were no other testimony tending in the same direction. It might not have that effect as against any other person who might be interested in the question, but no person other than the plaintiff has such interest. The case of Hiles v. Hanover F. Ins. Co. 65 Wis. 585, cited to the opposite doctrine, is not in point. It was there held that proofs of loss are not competent evidence in favor of the claimant of the facts stated therein, but only of compliance with the requirements of the policy. The same is true of proofs of death in case of a life policy. Here the insurer, and not the claimant under the policy, offers the proof as evidence against the claimant of facts therein admitted by the latter. Insanity is a fact which may be proved, like any other fact, by the admissions of the adverse party of the existence thereof. Ye think, however, there is other testimony tending to prove the insanity of Bachmeyer at the time he took the fatal drug. The testimony shows that after living in reasonable harmony with his wife for twenty-three years, and after he was more than fifty years of age, the insured conceived the purpose of being divorced from his wife and marrying their adopted daughter, then but fifteen years old. If consulted in respect to the proposed project, the girl never consented thereto, and the plaintiff found it necessary to send her away from their home. Yet he compelled his wife to apply for a divorce from him, and to open negotiations for a home with her son by a former marriage. When informed on the day
But it is argued that the error is immaterial. We do not so regard it. The defendant is a New York corporation, and the contract of insurance is, by its terina, a New York contract, to be interpreted by the laws of that state. The contract is that if the insured came to his death by his own hand, voluntarily or involuntarily, whether he was sane or insane at- the time, the defendant is not liable on the contract. The law of New York in respect to such a contract is laid down in De Gogorza v. Knickerbocker L. Ins. Co. 65 N. Y. 232, substantially as follows: “ If the insured commits suicide, although at the time utterly bereft of reason, it is a death by his own hand or act, within the meaning of the condition, and the policy is forfeited.” The case also holds that a suicide resulting from insanity is in no correct sense a death by accident. All the cases seem to agree that if one commits suicide by taking poison it is a death by his own hand. We do not understand that the law of New York differs from our law on the same subject as laid down by Chief Justice Dixon in Pierce v. Travelers’ L. Ins. Co. 34 Wis. 389. Indeed, the New York court quotes extensively from the opinion and professes to adopt the doctrine of that case.
The significance of the above observation is that if Bach-meyer was insane when he took the drug which terminated his life, there is no testimony which will support a finding that he took it by accident or unintentionally, and in such
By the Court.— The judgment of the circuit court is reversed, and the cause will be remanded for a new trial.