260 Pa. 147 | Pa. | 1918
Opinion by
Action was brought to recover on an accident insurance policy issued by the defendant company to one Calvin B. Bowers, who lost his life in an automobile accident 27th August, 1913. The plaintiff in the action is the widow of the deceased and the beneficiary named in the policy. The company denied liability on the ground that accident and death, occurring as they did here, are not within the terms of the insurance contract; specifically, that the assured at the time the accident occurred was affected by intoxicants, that he was violating the law in maintaining the speed he did, and that he was exposing himself unnecessarily to obvious danger in so doing. Under the heading of “Agreements” in the policy this appears — we omit all that is confessedly without relation to the facts of this case — “Sec. 4. This insurance does not cover......injuries fatal or otherwise, resulting wholly or in part, directly or indirectly from, or while, or in consequence of being affected by intoxicant's, ......unnecessary exposure to obvious danger,...... violating laws.” The defense being affirmative in character, the defendant assumed the burden of showing that
With no greater reason can it be claimed that there was error in the instruction with relation to the violation of law- Suppose the rate of speed that the assured maintained exceeded the rate allowed by law, what concern was that of the defendant, if it was in no way a contributing cause of the accident? Suppose again that the rate of speed he maintained did expose him to danger
The assignments of error are overruled and the judgment is affirmed.