The appellant, as surviving wife of William H. Brown, deceased, filed this suit against appellee, United Modems, a fraternal insurance order doing business in this State, to recover upon a benefit certificate for $1,000, payable to her upon the death of said William H. Brown. The appellee answered by general demurrer, general denial, and specially, that it issued a benefit certificate to deceased for $1,000 upon his written application therefor, wherein he agreed to be bound by the constitution and by-laws of the order, one section of which reads as follows: “If any member dies . . . by self-destruction, whether sane or insane, ... all claims by reason of membership shall be null and void; but the board of managers, in their discretion, if they consider the circumstances surrounding such death warrant it, may, without prejudice, pay any sum in such case not exceeding the full amount.” It further specially alleged that the deceased came to his death through his own act by cutting his neck, from which he died, whereby the benefit certificate became null and void.
To this answer appellant demurred, and answered specially that such by-law is against public policy and void; that the appellee is estopped to avoid its liability because such by-law does not prescribe an unconditional forfeiture, but leaves to the board of managers of appellee, in their discretion, to pay any sum of money they may deem wise, not to exceed the full amount; and that, at the time of his death, “he did not *345 comprehend what he was doing or wanted to do, and while in that condition, and in a fit of insanity, and wholly incapable of reasoning, and at a time his mental powers and reasoning faculties were gone and impaired, to such a degree that he was unable to understand the consequences of his actions or the moral character thereof, and he was thereto impelled by an insane act, by an irresistible insane impulse which he did not have the power to resist, and in that state of mind, and so acting, the said deceased cut a gash in his neck from which he bled to death on that day, July 9, 1903, while in a fit of insanity, and at a time he was not responsible for his actions;” and also pleaded for a return to her of the sum of $96.25. paid to appellee as monthly assessments out of funds in which she had a community interest. The trial court sustained appellee’s special exceptions to appellant’s replication, stating, in his judgment, that “it is the opinion of the court that the defense of suicide, whether sane or insane, as raised by the demurrers, is a complete defense to plaintiff’s cause of action. Plaintiff declining to amend, this cause of action is dismissed.” From this judgment Mrs. Brown has perfected her appeal to this court.
We think the court erred in dismissing appellant’s case upon sustaining the demurrers referred to. The original petition, which was in nowise excepted to, presented a good cause of action, and the same should have been heard and determined. Appellee seeks to avoid this conclusion upon the ground that appellant, by excepting and answering specially in her replication to its answer pleading the clause of exemption above quoted, expressly admitted the truth of such answer. But we can not concur with this contention. In Bauman v. Chambers (
But, in the ruling of the court in respect to the demurrers, we think there was no error. In the leading case in this country upon the suicide question—that of Mutual Life Insurance Co. v. Terry (
Under the pleadings, as presented in this case, it is unnecessary for us to discuss the various phases of insanity, or to speculate as to whether a possible state of circumstances might not arise in which the insanity might be of such a degree, or to such an extent, as that the death would be considered as the result of an accident, rather than as an act of self-destruction at all. It will be time enough to decide that question when such a case is presented to us. It is sufficient for the purposes of the present appeal to say that the policy would be void if the insured was conscious of the physical nature of his act at the time he inflicted upon himself the wounds causing his death.
For the error of the court in dismissing appellant’s case the judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded for another trial.
Reversed and remanded,.
