271 S.W. 1011 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1925
There is no controversy over the issuance and delivery of the policy, nor over the fact that the policy was in force at the time of insured's death on January 20, 1923, from external, violent and accidental means. It is also agreed that on said date insured was sitting in a seat in a day coach, riding as a passenger upon a train traveling a short distance west of El Paso, Texas, and that while thus sitting, an insane man suddenly and without warning fired a pistol and killed insured, and that insured in no manner caused or contributed to said act or his death.
The controversy arises over the construction and effect to be given to a provision in the policy which provided that it was "issued by the company and accepted by the insured with the understanding and agreement that no benefits will be paid for injuries, resulting fatally or otherwise, received under or in consequence of any of the following conditions:
(1) While on a locomotive, freight-car or caboose used for passenger service or otherwise or while on the platform or steps of any railway-car while in motion; or while entering or leaving, or trying to enter or leave any moving conveyance; or while improperly on the right-of-way or bridge of any railway; or (2) while, or in consequence of being, or having been, affected by, or resulting directly or indirectly, wholly or partly, from intoxicants, anesthetics, narcotics, sunstroke, freezing, vertigo, sleepwalking, fits or any bodily or mental infirmity in any form, either as a cause or effect, or medical or surgical treatment or operation; or from gas or poison in any form or manner, or contact with poisonous substances; or (3) whileengaged in aerial navigation, hunting, fishing, or in exploringexpeditions, or under any *325 circumstances from firearms of any kind, explosives, war orriot; or (4) from wrestling, lifting, racing, or competitive games, etc. (Italics ours.)
Defendant relies upon the above exception clause No. (3); and asked a declaration of law from the trial court, sitting as a jury, to the effect that if deceased was killed in his seat in the coach by a man suddenly and without warning firing a pistol, then plaintiff could not recover. The court refused to give the declaration and rendered judgment for plaintiff, and defendant has appealed.
The pivotal question in the case is whether the exception clause relied upon is so plain and unequivocal as to afford no room for construction. If the terms are plain and unambiguous, they cannot be changed by judicial construction, for that would be making a new contract for the parties. [Penn v. Travelers' Insurance Co., 225 S.W. 1033, 1034.] "So long as the contract is plain and unambiguous, not open to different constructions, and is so framed as that the insured is not justified in thinking the contract to be something other than it is, it is not within the power of the courts to change it or to make a new contract for the parties by judicial construction." [Taylor v. Loyal, etc., Ins. Co., 194 S.W. 1055, 1057.] But when an insurance contract is so drawn as to be "fairly susceptible of two different constructions, so that reasonably intelligent men on reading the contract would honestly differ as to the meaning thereof, that construction will be adopted which is most favorable to the insured." [Imperial, etc., Ins. Co. v. Coos County,
That under exception No. (2) no insurance would be paid if he were hurt or killed "while, or in consequence *327 of being, or having been, affected" by intoxicants, anesthetics, narcotics, etc.; and
That under exception No. (3) the policy would afford no insurance if he were hurt or killed, "while engaged in" aerial navigation, hunting, fishing, or exploring expeditions, or under any circumstances from firearms of any kind; and
That under exception No. (4) the policy would afford no insurance if he were hurt or killed by injuries resulting "fromwrestling, lifting, racing or competitive games" etc.
The foregoing are matters which the insurer provides against because they are extra-hazardous; and they are things which the insured can and must avoid if he would have full protection under the policy. All of the exceptions, even the sunstroke, freezing, vertigo, sleepwalking, fits or bodily or mental infirmity or medical or surgical treatment or operation, or gas, poison or contact with poisonous substances, are matters with which insured is himself personally affected, since the injury must result "while, or in consequence of being,affected" by them. In other words, since the injury must resultwhile, or in consequence of his being, affected by such things, they are, so to speak, matters originating with andcontinuing to inhere in him, and with which he alone is immediately and personally connected not only in origin but also in effect. And the provision relating to firearms, is not only associated in the same sentence with these, but is, in the very clause (3) in which it appears, connected with the words "while engaged in," thus still stronger conveying the idea that it too relates to a matter of extra hazard with which he himself sustains a relation both in cause and effect. Hence insured would understand that the firearms clause, like the others, refers merely to those situations where he has increased the risk either by engaging in enterprises where firearms are used or by handling or using them himself; and that *328 he must not engage in such enterprises and must refrain from handling or using firearms if he would avoid coming within the exemption as to them. Would it ever enter the mind of a reasonably intelligent man accepting insurance under this contract that if he were to go on board a vessel and a cannon should get loose and roll about the deck, as in Victor Hugo's "Ninety-three," and crush the life out of him, his beneficiary could not recover because his death was caused by a firearm? The illustration here used is however more favorable to defendant's contention than the facts in the case at bar, for in the former it could be said that he had knowingly placed himself in such situation or relation to the cannon that if it got loose from its moorings it might roll against and crush him. Whereas, in the facts of this case, the insured was in no way connected with the use of the firearm nor could he know or apprehend in any way that it would, or was likely to be, used. If defendant's contention be correct, then if insured had been walking along the street and someone had, from an upper story, dropped a rifle upon and killed him, the insurer would be exempt from liability.
The phrase, "under any circumstances from firearms," is used in the same sentence with the provision that the company will not be liable if insured is injured "while" at or in certain places or "while engaged in" other things, and the implication would be that the "circumstances" connected with firearms are of the same kind and character as those with which it is associated. "It is a familiar rule in the construction of terms to apply to them the meaning naturally attaching to them from their context. Noscitura sociis is a rule of construction applicable to all written instruments. Where any particular word is obscure or of doubtful meaning, taken by itself, its obscurity or doubt may be removed by reference to associated words. And the meaning of a term may be enlarged or restrained by reference to the *329
object of the whole clause in which it is used." [1 Fed. Stat. Ann. (2 Ed.), of Statutes and Statutory Construction, 115.] It is a rule of interpretation by which the meaning of not merely one word but that of several may be arrived at where there is use or room for construction. [Brown v. Chicago, etc., R. Co.,
The cases cited by defendant are not deemed to be strictly in point and controlling in the present case. They are cases where the exemption clearly and unequivocally, and without qualification, applied to death or injury from the causes excepted. Such, for example, are the cases of Bader v. New Amsterdam Casualty Co.,