79 F.2d 564 | 5th Cir. | 1935
Appellant, Lucy F. Clarke, sued on a certificate of membership of her husband which insured her in a sum of $6,300 against his death if due solely to bodily injury through external, violent, and accidental means. The case was tried at law to a jury, and, on the conclusion of her evidence, the defendant moved for a non-suit and the court directed a verdict for the defendant over the objections of the plaintiff that the case should go to the jury, but if not, a nonsuit rather than a verdict should be ordered.
Mrs. Clarke’s amended pleadings briefly and generally alleged her husband’s death solely through external, violent, and accidental means from injury due to a fall, and then more elaborately attacked the validity of a purported release which she had signed on receipt of $200. There were allegations tending to show surprise and misplaced confidence and mistake on her part which might have been of service to obtain a cancellation in equity, but there was no prayer invoking any equitable relief. Fraud invalidating the release in a court of law was asserted in that the company’s representative, coming to her home at night, falsely represented to her that her husband’s death did not result from the fall, but wholly from disease, as could be conclusively established by the testimony of his own physician; that the defendant owed her nothing, but was willing to give her as a gratuity $200, but could not pay more without forfeiting its license to do business; that it had the right to have her husband’s body disinterred for an autopsy which would demonstrate a death from disease but which would horribly mutilate his body; that each statement was knowingly false and part of a plan to entrap her; and that in her horror and confusion she agreed to accept the gratuity and signed a paper which was not read to her, but which was represented to her to be a mere receipt for the gratuity. , On learning the next morning that it was a release, she immediately informed the defendant’s local secretary that she repudiated the transaction and wished to tender back the $200, but he said she would have to deal with the general officer who had settled with her and who had left town. She then became incapacitated for several months to perform any business, but afterwards employed an attorney to make tender of the $200 and to bring suit, all of which was done, and she offers to pay the $200 into court. To support these pleadings she gave testimony that her husband, seventy-seven years old and previously in good health, accidentally stumbled and fell on the floor upon his face and chest, and though there were no outward marks beyond slight bruises, he became ill and died in about two weeks. A physician who had never visited deceased gave an opinion that such a fall could, without precedent disease, kill a man of that age. She, however, introduced as part of her proof of loss a sworn statement of the attending physician that the fall might have produced some shock, but that cardiovascular and kidney disease was the cause of death. Touching the release, the evidence supported in general her allegations, with the important exceptions that there was no proof of the falsity of the representations made Mrs. Clarke, and especially no proof that the contents of the paper she signed were misrepresented or that any trick was resorted to to prevent her reading it or having her grown daughter, who was present, read it to her. She tried the next morning to give the check for the $200 back to the local secretary, but he said he had no authority, so she indorsed it and put it to her own credit in the bank and she has since kept that much to her credit there. Four months later, she having been ill meanwhile, she had her attorney offer the money back to the company before suing.
Assuming, without deciding, that the physician’s surprising opinion that the fall alone might have produced death would carry the case to the jury on the point of death solely by accidental bodily injury, we think that Mrs. Clarke did not sustain her attack on the release as being void at law for fraud without cancellation in equity for accident or mistake. Her