197 S.E. 721 | W. Va. | 1938
This writ of error presents for review the trial court's judgment for the defendant on a double indemnity clause of a life insurance policy which the defendant issued in 1927 to Kate Beveridge Chappell, daughter of the plaintiff. The parties waived a jury.
The insured lost her life October 25, 1936, while a guest passenger in an airplane which crashed to the ground.
The double indemnity clause is not applicable "in case deathresults * * * from engaging in aeronautic or submarineoperations, either as a passenger or otherwise."
The sole problem is whether the, fatality of the insured *257 is covered by the double indemnity clause, or whether, by reason of the quoted exception, there is no double liability.
In considering this subject, effort has been made to collate the cases dealing with accidents, fatal and nonfatal, which have befallen passengers in airplanes, there being involved the question of liability under personal insurance carried by the parties injured or killed.
We here first set forth cases wherein recovery was upheld by the reviewing courts: Benefit Ass'n. Ry. Employees v. Hayden,
From these cases, it is noted that emphasis has been laid on these thoughts: (a) " 'Engaged' means to carry on, to conduct, to employ one's self, and does not relate to a single act. To say that one is engaged in a thing is to say that the act is continuous." (b) " 'Participate does not connote to the average person the meaning that his mere presence is sufficient to participate or engage in such art or occupation (aeronautics)." (c) That a clause of the kind discussed in the above cases "means that the death of the insured must have resulted from having taken part in aviation operations other than by merely being in an airplane when it fell * * *." (d) "Participating in aeronautics" does not include a passenger. (e) That if by such clauses, insurers intend to exclude passengers in airplanes, the clauses should be so framed as to make that intent clear. (f) That at the very least, such clauses are ambiguous and should consequently be resolved favorably to the insured.
There falls within the foregoing group and class of cases our concurrently decided case of Mattie Chappell v. CommercialCasualty Ins. Co.,
In contrast with the foregoing cases allowing recovery, *259
there is a line of cases, involving different phraseology, wherein recovery has been denied. The cases follow:Pittman v. Lamar Life Ins. Co.,
The cases appearing in this latter group are entirely harmonious and consistent with one another, and, in our opinion, are clearly distinguishable from the cases appearing in the group first above herein set forth. *260
In the case at bar, liability under the double indemnity clause is excluded if death results from "engaging inaeronautic or submarine operations, either as a passenger orotherwise." The employment of the phrase, "passenger or otherwise", in our judgment, unequivocally places this case within the principles and enunciations of the above stated second group of cases.
There are a few cases within this general order which we are unable to accept as precedents. They follow here. InProvident Trust Co. v. Equitable Life Assur. Soc.,
There is another case, standing alone, which we approve, though its classification comes about, not because of the phraseology of the excluding portion of the double indemnity clause, but because of the peculiar facts involved. The case isFirst Nat. Bank of Chattanooga v. Phoenix Mutual Life Ins. Co.,
In the light of all which herein precedes, we are of opinion that the trial court correctly decided the case at bar. Therefore, we affirm the judgment.
Affirmed. *262