25 S.D. 325 | S.D. | 1910
This is an action on a membership certificate issued bjr the defendant, an Iow'a fraternal beneficiary corporation. The complaint is in usual form, alleging death by drowning. All its allegations are admitted, the only defense being that the certificate was issued on an application containing this stipulation: “I further agree that in the event of my death by 'suicide, whether sane or insane, any certificate which may be issued upon this application by said fraternity shall become void;” that the certificate itself contained this clause: “If the holder of this certificate shall die by her own hand, whether sane or insane, then the certificate ' shall be null and void;” and' “that said Anna F. Bircher came to her death by suicide at the time and place stated in plaintiff’s complaint, she their and there having caused her own death by drowning herself with suicidal intent.” A verdict having been returned in favor of the plaintiffs and judgment entered thereon, defendant appealed thereform and from the order denying its application for a new trial.
The learned circuit court charged the jury in part as follows: “The court further instructs the jury that the law does not presume that a person came to his death by suicide, but on the contrary presumes in the absence of explanation -that death resulted from natural causes or from accident. The vital question in this case is whether Anna F.- Bircher intended to commit suicide, and the presumption of law in the absence of explanation is that she did not so intend, and this presumption remains until overcome by clear and satisfactory evidence which excludes every other reason - able theory; and the plaintiff is entitled to recover, unless on a fair consideration of all the evidence, yon are satisfied that the evidence does exclude every reasonable theory except that of
The circumstances attending the drowning are thus described by Tena Johnson, called on behalf of the defendant, the only witness who saw the deceased enter the water: “I saw -her coming from the -direction- of Rollin' Johnson’s house and towards our house; she came to -the -place where the wall of the bank is quite steep. At that place the bank is curving around to make the curve, and the steepest point is a little off the line of the path, and she looked back just as she was turning. She turned her head over her shoulder and kept coming. She -did not stop, and when she got. to the bank she went down very fast, her body leaned forward and her .hands out in front of her. She had a medium long skirt on. I could not see her feet. She went down the bank very fast, and pitched forward face down in the water. The bank goes down straight. I saw the place where she was taken out; it is very near the place where she went down. I could not tell whether she ran -do-wn the bank and threw -herself in, or whether she was trying to save herself from'' falling when she went -down there. When she went down
The trial judge was talking to laymen not to lawyers. He was not writing a treatise on the law of evidence. An attempt ■on his part to define the distinction between a presumption of law and an inference of fact probably would liave confused rather than have assisted an ordinary jury in properly deciding the simple issue involved in this action. The gist of his instructions, the rule applicable to this class of cases, was plainly and correctly stated by .the trial judge when he said: “The plaintiff is entitled to recover unless on a fair consideration of all the evidence you are satisfied that the evidence does exclude every reasonable theory except that of suicide.” Lindahl v. Supreme Court, I. O. F., 100 Minn. 87, 110 N. W. 358, 8 L. R. A. (N. S.) 916; Mutual Life Ins. Co. v. Wiswell, 56 Kan. 765, 44 Pac. 996, 35 L. R. A. 258; Boyton v. Equitable Life Assurance Co., 105 La. 202, 29 South. 490, 52 L. R. A. 687. “If the known facts are consistent with a cause of death which does not' involve self-destruction, that cause must be accepted. After all the hypotheses which are consistent with an innocent or accidental death are eliminated, the conclusion of suicide may then be drawn. The burden i-s upon the defendant to show that the circumstances and condition’s are inconsistent with any other reasonable cause of death than that of suicide; that is, it must eliminate and disprove all other causes of death which are consistent with the evidence before the jury is justified in inferring that the deceased committed suicide.” Lindahl v. Supreme Court, I. O. F., supra.
As to the sufficiency of the evidence: In an action at law, when the facts are in dispute, or, if undisputed, are such that ■different impartial minds might fairly draw different conclusions
Its judgment is affirmed.