delivered the opinion of the Court.
This suit was brought by the Respondent, Ruby Lee Blanton, hereinafter referred to as Plaintiff, against Petitioner, Combined American Insurance Company, hereinafter referred to as Defendant, to recover the face value of a policy of insurance, insuring the life of her husband, J. 0. Blanton, who died on August 8, 1958, as a result of a shotgun wound. The policy of insurance in question insured Blanton
against loss of life caused by bodily injuries effected exclusively of all other causes by accidental means.
The trial court, without the intervention of a jury, rendered judgment for the Plaintiff. The Court of Civil Appeals has affirmed.
We have concluded to reverse the judgments of both the trial court and the Court of Civil Appeals and render judgment that Plaintiff take nothing.
*227 The Court of Civil Appeals concedes that the facts and circumstances of the record “lead to a strong belief that Blanton committed suicide”, but has held that the judgment of the trial court must stand, unless the evidence established that the “shooting was intentional to that degree of conclusiveness which precludes a reasonable doubt to the contrary.”
The Court of Civil Appeals has held that the evidence of suicide “does not overcome the well-known presumption against suicide, and therefore leaves a presumption that Jasper 0. Blanton died as a result of an accident unassailed.”
The judgment in favor of the Plaintiff must fall unless the implied finding (no findings of fact or conclusions of law were filed) of the trial court that Blanton died by accidental means is supported by probative evidence. The burden of pleading and proving that the death of Blanton was by accidental means rested with the Plaintiff. International Travelers’ Association v. Bettis,
*228 The facts have been shown in this case. Ordinarily, presumptions must give way when in conflict with clear evidence such as we have here. In Jones on Evidence (2d Ed.), Sec. 32, it is thus stated:
“* * * Courts have frequently remarked that presumptions are only intended to take the place of facts and cannot be relied upon where the facts are shown; or that no presumption can stand in the face of facts. According to such authorities a presumption is an artificial thing, a mere house of cards, which one moment stands with sufficient force to determine an issue, but at the next, by reason of the slightest rebutting evidence, topples utterly out of consideration of the trier of facts.”
The Plaintiff relies upon the case of United Fidelity Life Ins. Co. v. Adair, Texas Civ. App.,
Plaintiff cites the recent case of Great Southern Life Insurance Company v. Watson, Texas Civ. App.,
*229 Since the Plaintiff has sued here on a policy of insurance limiting liability to death by accidental means, and since there is no evidence of death by accidental means, the judgments of the trial court and the Court of Civil Appeals are both reversed, and judgment is rendered that Plaintiff take nothing.
Opinion delivered February 7, 1962.
