183 Iowa 1279 | Iowa | 1918
*1281 “I hereby agree that I will accept the certificate of membership which may be issued to me, subject to all the provisions, conditions, and limitations contained in the articles of incorporation and by-laws of said association as the same now are or as they may be legally amended and changed; and I agree to comply with all the provisions thereof.”
The answer further alleges that, among the provisions of the articles and by-laws of the association to which the deceased thus subscribed, are the following:
“The right of any member or person, claiming by, through and under any certificate issued to any member to claim weekly benefits or indemnity from the association shall be fixed and established by the provisions of the articles of incorporation and of the by-laws in force at the time the accident occurred or sickness commenced out of which any claim arises.” Section 15 of Article V.
“The contract between the association and its members shall consist of the articles of incorporation and by-laws and the application.” Section 3 of Article I.
“This association shall not be liable for the payment of benefits or indemnity on account of disability or death resulting from a bodily injury caused by the discharge of firearms, unless the member, or person claiming by, through or under any certificate issued to such member, shall establish the accidental character of such discharge by the testimony of at least one person, other than the member, who was an eyewitness of the event; provided that the hoard of directors may waive this limitation when they are satisfied that said discharge was accidental.” Section 5 of Article XV.
The accidental character of Larson’s death is denied, and the sole contention of the defendant in the court below and in this court is that plaintiff has failed to establish that fact in the manner or by the testimony prescribed in Section 5, Article 4, last above quoted.
“I feel as if something hit me. I was reaching on the shelf for the grease gun, when something knocked me over. I'think it must have been the twenty-two. I didn’t know it was there.'”
Then, sitting down, he asked his wife to examine his side, and added that he was feeling faint. To the doctor, who soon arrived, he repeated his story, substantially as before. The wife, referring to the rifle, says it was a hammer-less gun, which she had herself often used, and that the trigger pull was extremely light. The safety device was operated by slipping it to the side, and it would “slip with the slightest touch.” In connection with the statement made by the injured man to the doctor, he said:
“I thought it was an electric shock, at first. It knocked me down. I got up, and saw some smoking rags or something of the sort; the end of the rifle sticking out.”
This witness also examined the situation at the garage, and says:
“There is shelving along the north wall, occupying the east portion of the north wall, in the northeast corner of the garage. We found a twenty-two rifle lying on one of the*1283 shelves. The butt end was against the east end of the shelf, and the rifle lying a.t an angle across the shelf. The muzzle stuck over the edge of the shelf two or three inches. The rifle was covered with some rags, and there was a tire pump lying on top of the gun, and some rags under the tire pump. There was a grease gun lying there, mixed up among the rags. The muzzle was sticking out, as you lookéd towards the shelves, and the wire plunger, with a loop for a handle, was in the debris on the shelf. These rags were apparently rags which had been used for wiping the car. There was a rag over the muzzle of the gun, with a hole burned through. The charred hole was two or three inches in diameter, and it allowed the rag to drop so that the muzzle of the gun stuck through the hole.”
One other Avitness gives practically the same description.
The only evidence offered on the part of defendant was the several provisions of the articles and by-laws of the association, and the concession by plaintiff that they were in force and effect at the time of the injury and death of the insured.
At the close of the evidence, both parties moved for a directed verdict. The defendant’s motion being overruled, its counsel said to the court, “That leaves nothing, I take it, but to direct a verdict for plaintiff;” and a ruling was entered accordingly. -From the judgment on the directed verdict, the defendant has appealed.
I. The first question presented is the construction of the contract of insurance, Avith special reference to the effect upon such contract of Section 5, Article 4, of appellant’s articles of incorporation, which section we have already quoted in full.
The appellant’s position is that the case before us is, in all essential respects, the parallel of Roeh v. Business Men’s Assn., 164 Iowa 199, and that the rule there approved and
“There is an implication that the directors will act reasonably, and the requirement is the same as if the words ‘acting reasonably’ were inserted, in connection with the words ‘said board.’ ”
Speaking upon the same subject, the court, in the Traiser case, after holding that, upon the proofs offered, the jury might find that the death ivas accidental, adds:
“If the jury should so find, we are of opinion they would have also the right to say the same fair preponderance of the evidence which had convinced their judgments ought to have produced the same conviction in the minds of other reasonable men. It would be an anomaly for us to decide otherwise. It cannot be said, as a matter of law, that reasonable'men were bound to come to only one conclusion. It is not for the defendant, in a case of contradictory evidence, finally and decisively to pass upon the rights of the insured, if such a condition as this has been reasonably complied with.”
In Buffalo, etc., v. Association, supra, it is said that a requirement of “satisfactory proof” entitled the association to demand that the fact “should be shown Avith reasonable definiteness and certainty.” The rule of these precedents is without exception in the cases, so far as avc have been able to discover. As suggested in the Traiser case, it would be
“The event referred to. in the by-law relied upon is manifestly death resulting from a bodily injury caused by the discharge of firearms, and provides that the independent testimony should come from one who was an eyewitness of that event. * * * Not only is the beneficiary to prove the operating cause of death, as that it was from a gunshot wound,*1288 but lie must prove, by eyewitnesses of the event, that the gun was accidentally discharged. It is not enough that he prove that it might have been so committed. His proof must be stronger than that, and fairly preponderate in favor of the proposition that the gun was accidentally discharged. * * * In the ease at bar, the event, — that is to say, the accidental character of the discharge of firearms resulting in death, — must be established by at least one person other than the insured, and ‘who was an eyewitness’ does not necessarily mean that the witness should have seen the exact manner of the discharge; but it seems to us that it does comprehend the presence of the witness at or near the scene, and his direct observation of such facts and circumstances connected with the immediate transaction as, of themselves, and without any aid from presumption or inference arising from love of life, or the instincts of self-preservation, indicate that the shooting was accidental.”
Following this statement of the proposition, the opinion then quotes and adopts, as expressing the views of this court, an extract from Lewis v. Brotherhood Accident Co., 194 Mass. 1.
“An' eyewitness is a person who testifies to what he has seen. By the terms of this policy, the facts and circumstances of the accident and injury are to be established by those who saw them. Not only are the facts and circumstances of the injury to be established by an eyewitness, but also those of the accident; that is, the operating cause of the injury. Enough must be testified to by eyewitnesses to show the operating cause of the injury, or at least to show that, at the time of the injury, there was an operating cause to' which the accident may fairly be attributed, and to indicate in a general way the nature of that cause and the manner of its working.”
As will be readily seen, this statement of the rule is much less rigid and inflexible than the one contended for by
“The jury might have found, on the evidence of actual eyewitnesses, that, shortly before the time when the accident happened, Lewis and Miss Hurley were upon the river in what might be called a ‘cranky canoe,’ liable to overturn at any moment, unless unusual care was exercised both by Lewis and his companion; that, within five (perhaps fewer) minutes of the time when they were last seen alive, the canoe was overturned, and the bodies were under water. Here, then, is shown, upon the testimony of eyewitnesses, an operating cause — namely, the imminent liability of the capsizing of the boat by reason of its cranky nature, taken in connection with the fact that it had two occupants, of whom one was a young woman, not shown to have been experienced in aiding to keep the canoe in balance. It is not the case of a boat which is of such size and construction as to be not liable to be upset by the movements of persons in it, but it is the case of a cranky canoe, having two persons in it, where a not unusual movement, even of one of them, may result in the capsizing of it. An operating cause for disaster is ever present under such circumstances, and that cause is disclosed by the testimony of ■ eyewitnesses. Moreover, upon the evidence the jury might have found that the movements of the canoe and its occupants were shown by eyewitnesses, up to a time within three or four minutes of the accident; and that every operating cause of the accident, except the one above shown to have been present, was fairly excluded by the tes*1291 timony of these same eyewitn esses, it must be held that, in the case before us, the facts and circumstances of the accident and injury were established by eyewitnesses, within the meaning of the policy.”
In other words, if the eyewitnesses testify to personal observation of the “operating cause,” it is not required that they shall have seen that cause in actual operation.
If the rule and reasoning here made use of. by the Massachusetts court in the Leiois case, and adopted and approved by us in the Iioeh case, are sound, and we think they are, it seems hardly open to question that the judgment for plaintiff in the present case is fairly sustainable. If a “cranky canoe” is an ever-present cause of accident to those riding therein, is it not equally clear that a loaded gun, with very delicate trigger action, in a position where it may be disturbed by a careless or thoughtless movement, is an ever-present operating cause of peril to those who may be employed within its reach? And if the tracing of the movements of the occupants of the canoe may stop anywhere from 5 to 15 minutes short of the final catastrophe, and still the testimony be that of “eyewitnesses, within the meaning of the policy,” it will require very considerable ingenuity to find reason for saying, in this case, that the 2 or 8 minutes intervening between Larson’s leaving the house, and his hasty reappearance, exclaiming he was hurt, is such a break or hiatus in the history of the case by eyewitnesses as will defeat an action on the policy. To repeat once more the statement of the principle announced in the opinion from which we have quoted so extensively:
“Enough must be testified to by eyewitnesses to show the operating cause of the injury, or at least to dhow that, at the time of the injury, there was an 'operating cause to which the accident may fairly he attributed, and to indicate in a general way the nature of that cause and the manner of its working
No reversible error is shown, and the judgment of the district court is — Affirmed.