40 F.2d 817 | 5th Cir. | 1930
This was an action by the appellee on two policies of insurance in the sum of $20,000 each issued in September, 1926, by the appellant upon the life of William C. Ellis, who died on October 25, 1926. Each of the policies contained the following provision: “Self-destruetion sane or insane, within one year from the date of issue hereof, is a risk not assumed by the Society under this policy. In such an event the Society’s liability shall be limited to an amount equal to the premium actually paid.” The appellant by pleading alleged that the insured took his own life by shooting himself with a gun. Error was assigned on the court’s refusal to instruct the jury to the effect that under the evidence they could not find in favor of appellee for more than the amount of premiums paid to appellant.
The assured died between 11:30 and 12 o’clock in the morning of Monday, October 25,1926, while in the bathroom on the second floor of his residence in Union Springs, Ala. At the time of his death, and since the death of his father, J. M. Ellis, in 1922, the assured was a stockholder and the president of J. M. Ellis Sons Company, a corporation which conducted a mercantile business in Union Springs, and he managed the financial affairs of that corporation. The evidence as to the cause of the death of the assured was wholly circumstantial. There was no evidence tending to prove that the assured’s death was caused by the act of another. When the assured’s dead body was found he was lying flat on his back, completely dressed in an ordinary business suit and having on shoes, with a double-barreled hammerless shotgun lying diagonally across his body, the stock being on the left of his lap, the barrels pointing toward Ms right shoulder, the muzzle being about twelve inches from the right side of his face, there being two shells in the
When the question is whether a death was or was not- suicidal, it is one for the jury if the evidence is such that reasonable persons, in an impartial and fair exercise of their judgment, may honestly reach different conclusions. The court cannot properly give an instruction involving or requiring a finding that the deceased voluntarily killed himself if there is evidence furnishing any substantial basis for a belief that the death was accidental or was caused by the act of another, or for an honest doubt as to it having been voluntarily self caused. Mutual Life Ins. Co. of New York v. Savage (C. C. A.) 31 F. (2d) 35; Ætna Life Ins. Co. v. Tooley (C. C. A.) 16 F.(2d) 243; Mutual Life Ins. Co. of New York v. Gregg (C. C. A.) 32 F.(2d) 567.
It is apparent that the evidence which indicated suicide would have been more convincing if it had disclosed things which were not disclosed. A finding that the assured intended to kill himself would have been more clearly called for if uncontroverted evidence, instead of indicating that he did not seem to be seriously disturbed by financial troubles, had shown that thereby he had been made apparently despondent or hopeless. The evidence that the insured intentionally killed himself would have been stronger if it had shown that he knew or was informed that the gun was loaded when he got it, or that he loaded it after he got it. A doubt as to the assured having a suicidal purpose not un
The judgment is affirmed.