CAROLINA LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY v. YOUNG
37649
Court of Appeals of Georgia
JUNE 30, 1959
REHEARING DENIED JULY 13, 1959
99 Ga. App. 848
We have here the record containing the language addressed by attorney Garland to Judge Tanksley, and subject matter relating to the attorney‘s demeanor, manner and conduct. His Honor, Judge Tanksley, did rightfully, and consistent with the law and justice, determine attorney Garland to be in contempt of the court. No jury question is involved. It is my opinion that Judge Jeptha C. Tanksley properly held attorney Reuben A. Garland to be in contempt of court by the language addressed to the court and the tone and manner thereof, as well as by the acts and conduct of the said attorney in the court‘s presence, and being one of the Judges of the Superior Court of Fulton County, a constitutional court, did not abuse his discretion in the premises.
Richter & Birdsong, A. W. Birdsong, Jr., contra.
FELTON, Chief Judge. The facts alleged in the petition do not show conclusively and as a matter of law that the homicide was not accidental within the meaning of the policy and the court did not err in overruling the general demurrer to the petition.
“My name is Mrs. Agnes L. Young. Melvin Young was my husband. On the night of April 5th, this year, Mr. Young and I and our children had been to a party in honor of Mr. Pate, who was going overseas. At the time we went to that party, my husband and I did not have any argument of any kind. My husband was drinking that night, he started drinking down at the party, he had a reputation of drinking pretty heavily. As to who was drinking at the party, just the men folks at Mr. Pate‘s house. We went to his sister‘s house and left the men there, there were two women that went to get the men to come to supper and my husband and the rest of them had drinks. As I remember, we left for home about ten o‘clock. As to whether my husband and I had any argument about who was going to drive home, we did not have any argument about who was going to drive home. Mr. Pate suggested that I drive home on account of his drinking and I did drive the car home. Telling the jury what took place after we got home, I got out of the car and took the kids in the house—I was sitting on the couch and he came in and went to the bathroom, I reckon, and he came back and said I was smart, he kept saying I was too smart not to let him drive home, and I told him I reckon I was and we started fighting and scuffling around, and he caught me on the porch and beat me with the jaws of his knife and he just shut me out there on the porch. The jaws of the knife was not open, it was closed at the time. By the jaws of the knife, I mean the ends of the knife. He beat me with the jaws of the knife on the porch and he shut me out and I broke the door in and went to the kids, they were screaming, I wanted to see that he did not harm them, and when I came in he had his knife open and was fighting me and we were all around in the house. I told him to leave me alone and he just kept coming and we went in around in the kitchen, he had the knife open, and I told him he better leave me alone, and I got the rifle in the bedroom and he kept coming after me and I said I bet I do stop you and as I started out to the porch, he grabbed the rifle and we were scuffling getting to the porch and evidently the rifle went off and struck him in the neck. The bedroom
“In order for a plaintiff to recover under a double-indemnity provision of an insurance policy for death resulting, independently of all other causes, from bodily injuries caused solely by external, violent, and accidental means, it is incumbent upon him to show that in the act which preceded the injury alleged to have caused the death of the insured something ‘unforeseen,
The case of Podesta v. Metropolitan Life Ins. Co. (1941 Mo. App.) 150 S. W. 2d 596, involves a contention by the plaintiff wife that her shooting of her husband, the insured, during a struggle for possession of a revolver, was unintentional on her part and the fatal injury was therefore accidental. In reversing a judgment for the plaintiff, the Missouri Court of Appeals said: “Here the insured was not only the aggressor as shown by plaintiff‘s own recital of the facts, but his fatal injury was inflicted in the course and as the result of the forcible resistance which plaintiff courageously offered to his aggression, so that his death was clearly not by accidental means, unless it should be, in line with plaintiff‘s theory as to her right to recover under the policy, that the situation was altered by the fact that notwithstanding all the other pertinent circumstances in the case, she had no intention of shooting the insured. In other words, she would have the result in the case depend, not upon the insured‘s aggression and legal invitation of the natural and probable consequences of the character of assault he had committed, but rather upon the question of her own personal intention with respect to bringing about the death of the insured. She argues, therefore, that since her act in discharging the revolver (if she did discharge it) was wholly unintentional on her part so far as the evidence directly discloses, it was consequently accidental, making the insured‘s death correspondingly accidental, and thereby serving to distinguish the case at bar from the usual case of this general import, where the person
The case of Koester v. Mutual Life Ins. Co., 36 Del. 537 (179 A. 327) differs in no material circumstance from the case at bar. In affirming a judgment for the insurer, the Supreme Court of Delaware said: “In a struggle to obtain possession of a loaded firearm, whether automatic and equipped with safety devices or not, the discharge of the weapon during the struggle was not an unforeseeable nor unusual result. It was a natural consequence of the effort made by the insured to obtain the weapon, and might well have been expected as probably apt to occur during the course of the struggle. This voluntary attempt of the insured, we think, was the direct cause of his death. If there had been no such attempt by the insured, there would have been no such injury to him. Therefore, his death was not caused by accidental means within the meaning of the policies of insurance.”
In Johnson v. Southern Life Ins. Co., 95 Ga. App. 625 (98 S. E. 2d 382) this court held: “It is for the jury to determine whether or not death by being shot by another is an accident, where the evidence, together with all reasonable inferences to be drawn therefrom, is conflicting as to whether or not the insured‘s own wrongful assault produced his death, or whether or not he voluntarily and intentionally committed an assault from which he foresaw, or could have foreseen, that death might result.”
The judgment denying such motion is reversed with direction that the court enter up judgment in accordance with the motion. It is not necessary to rule on the exception to the denial of the motion for a new trial.
Judgment affirmed in part and reversed in part with direction. Quillian and Nichols, JJ., concur.
ON MOTION FOR REHEARING.
It is contended by the defendant in error that this court has overlooked previous decisions which have left the question of accidental death to the jury where the death of the insured occurred during the course of an altercation with his wife or some other person. In Riggins v. Equitable Life Assurance Soc., 64 Ga. App. 834, 840 (14 S. E. 2d 182), this court held: “Under one phase of the evidence in the instant case, the jury would have been authorized to say that the fights between the insured and his wife were so common that when he attempted to and did force open and break down the door to his apartment, and attempted to enter his home, there was no reason for him to believe his wife would shoot him. It might be said, as a matter of common knowledge, that some men in an intoxicated condition have entered their homes (when they knew their wives were therein) at unseemly hours and in an unseemly manner, and that one would not necessarily expect to be killed on such an occasion, especially where the wife knew it was he. In other words, the insured did not necessarily appreciate that by doing the act of forcing the door and breaking into his own home he was putting his life in hazard.” (Emphasis added). The distinction between the facts of the situation in that case and the instant case is obvious. Here, the deceased insured actually undertook to struggle for possession of a loaded firearm and the evidence of previous altercations with his wife which did not involve the use of a dangerous instrumentality on her part does not suffice to create a question for the jury under these circumstances. The following cases are likewise clearly distinguishable upon their facts: Empire Life Ins. Co. v. Einstein, 12 Ga. App. 380 (77 S. E. 209); Nelson v. American Nat. Ins. Co., 67 Ga. App. 775 (21 S. E. 2d 658); and Johnson v. Southern Life Ins. Co., 95 Ga. App. 625 (98 S. E. 2d 382).
Rehearing denied.
