38 Pa. Super. 110 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1909
Opinion by
The plaintiff brought this action on a life insurance policy, in which she was named as beneficiary, issued by the defendant company to Philip Biehl, her husband, to recover indemnity
The first specification is based upon the following quotation from the charge of the court below: “Neither of these witnesses, as I understand, says distinctly that he saw him jump from the car. If they did say so the testimony is for you; I do not recall that they said that.” The learned judge did not have a clear recollection of the testimony and did not correctly state it, but the language used by him clearly indicated to the jury that he was only giving his recollection of what had been said and that he did not intend the jury to accept it as accurate, but it was for the jury to remember what had been testified. When this slip of memory upon the part of the court occurred, counsel for the defendant ought to have at once called attention to it. Wdien a charge is full, fair and adequate, in other respects, a judgment will not be reversed because of some lapse of memory upon the part of the judge in referring to the testimony, where counsel for the party subsequently complaining were present and had an opportunity to call attention to the lapse at the time and failed to do so. The first specification of error is overruled.
The appellant requested the court to charge as follows: “If the jury believes that the deceased, while occupying a safe position in the body of the car and intending to leave the car at the next stop voluntarily stepped down on to the running board of the car into such a position that he was in danger of being thrown off and injured, and was thrown off and injured, the plaintiff cannot recover, and the verdict should be for the defendant.” The learned judge of the court below refused this point, which refusal is assigned for error. This point would have been a correct statement of the law had the action been against the street railway company to recover damages upon the allegation that the death of Philip Biehl had been caused by the negligence of those operating the car. Negligence of the
The learned counsel for the appellant argues that because the deceased would as a matter of law have been held guilty of contributory negligence, in an action brought against the street railway company upon the allegation that his death had been caused by the negligence of its employees, that, therefore, the death of the assured must, assuming the facts to have been as stated in the request of the defendant for instructions, be held, as matter of law, to have resulted from “unnecessary exposure to obvious risk of injury or obvious danger.” The exception in the policy, if the contention of the defendant is correct, would be to deprive an assured of any right to recover for an injury to which his own negligence in any way contributed. Such a construction would render the policy little better than a snare to the insured. The question is not whether the assured was negligent, but whether he exposed himself to a risk not covered by the policy: Burkhard v. Travelers’ Insurance Company, 102 Pa. 262; DeLoy v. Insurance Company, 171 Pa. 1; Rebman v. General Accident Insurance Company, 217 Pa. 518; Cornish v. Accident Insurance Company, L. R. 23 Q. B. Div. 453. The exception upon which the defendant relies is that of “unnecessary exposure to obvious risk of injury or obvious danger.” The very language of the exception implies that there may be a necessary exposure to obvious danger. Is this necessity to be construed as an imperative one, which would permit only the incurring of such risks as cannot possibly be avoided? If so the burden would be upon the assured to guard himself against the ordinary dangers which beset every prudent man in everyday life. The man
The learned judge of the court below charged the jury that if they found that the deceased had jumped from the car the verdict should be in favor of the defendant company. He also instructed the jury that if they should “find from the evidence that he tripped or fell from the car, and if you also find from the evidence that his rising and walking' on the platform and attempting to descend to the running board, as it approached the
The judgment is affirmed.