240 F. 653 | 3rd Cir. | 1917
In this case Mrs. Nancie M. Searing, a citizen of Pennsylvania, brought suit against each of the defendant insurance companies, corporate citizens of other states, to recover on a policy on the life of her husband. On trial by the court below she recovered verdicts, and on entry of judgment thereon each company sued out a writ of error.
As the alleged errors are the same in both cases, we dispose of both in this opinion. The questions here involved are: First, whether the court erred in refusing the companies’ request for binding instructions; 'and, secondly, whether, if the case was one for a jury, the court erred
_ Turning to the first and underlying question, we are of opinion that under the evidence the issue here involved was one which fell within the province of a jury, and not the court, to determine. Turning to such evidence, we find, for example, that on November 10, 1914, the defendant the Continental Rife Insurance Company executed and delivered its policy here sued on, whereby it covenanted to insure the life of Frederick Roe Searing and “to pay at its home office $5,000 immediately on receipt of due proof of the death of the insured, Frederick Roe' Searing, of Philadelphia, Pa., while this policy is in force to the beneficiary, Nancie M. Searing,.wife of the insured/-’ etc. The allegations of the plaintiff, the beneficiary, were that her husband died on August 17, 1915, at Atlantic City; that .due proofs of his death were furnished the company; that thereby a right of action had accrued to her. The defendant denied the insured’s death, and also the furnishing of due proofs of death by the beneficiary. Much of the confusion in this case arises from the course pursued in the trial, and, as there must be a retrial, we indicate the course to which the plaintiff’s case should be directed on a retrial.
Searing’s auto broke down shortly before reaching Atlantic City. Some time was spent in a fruitless effort to repair it, and boj:h he and. Miller were picked up by a passing automobile and taken within a couple of blocks of Searing’s apartment. From there the men hurried to that apartment and up three flights, where Searing put on a bathing suit and, leaving his clothes, started for the beach. While at the house Searing complained of being warm and tired. On leaving .the ápartment about 7 o’clock, the two men stopped at a bar, where they took a drink, and where it appeared that Searing had no money -
In view of these proofs, was the court bound to withdraw the case from the jury, and to hold as a matter of law that.no inference could be drawn from these proofs that the insured was dead? We have not referred to the evidence produced by the defendant, to the contradictions of all the plaintiff’s, and in view of the case going back for a retrial we refrain from any such discussion at all of it, or of the plaintiff’s proofs in detail. For present purposes it suffices to say that an examination of all the proofs satisfied us that the court below would have been in error had it withdrawn the case from the jury-