9 Ga. App. 43 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1911
Mrs. Edwards, as the beneficiary in a policy of fraternal life-insurance issued by the Fraternal Belief Association, a corporation of the State of Virginia, brought suit against the association for $2,000, which, under the policy, was to be paid upon the death of her husband, James B. Edwards, who was a member of the association. It will not be necessary to state all the facts. The following will be sufficient: The policy was issued in 1903. It was expressly provided that “the constitution and laws of the Fraternal Belief Association now in force, or, as the same may be hereafter altered or amended, . . shall constitute the contract” between the parties. At the time the contract was made, section 19 of the laws of the Fraternal Belief Association provided: “If any member dies . by self-destruction, whether sane or insane, . . the beneficiary certificate, together with all claims by reason of membership, shall be null and void; but the executive committee, in their discretion, if they consider that' the circumstances surrounding such death warrant it, may, without prejudice, pay any sum in such case, not exceeding the full amount: provided, however, that in case of suicide of a member who has been a member in good standing for five years, the full amount of his certificate shall be paid.” On February 13, 1909 (which, as may- be seen, was more than five years after the date of the making of the contract), Edwards, while in good standing, killed himself. While the plaintiff concedes that the death of the insured was the result of self-destruction, she claimed that he was insane at the time, and introduced enough evidence to authorize the jury to find that such was the case. The trial judge, under the conceded facts, practically limited the jury to a finding whether the insured was sane or insane at the time he killed himself, as he charged the jury ex
The court below construed the proviso found at the end of section 19 of the general laws of the Fraternal Eelief Association, as quoted above (“in case of suicide of a member who has been a member in good standing for five years, the full amount of his certificate shall be paid”), as being a provision for the pajnnent of the policy in case of suicide, whether the self-destruction was committed while the insured was sane or insane, and, taking the view that a provision of insurance against suicide, sanely committed, was contrary to public policy of the State, held that the entire section 19 was unenforceable in this State, and that, therefore, the case should be tried as if this provision did not exist; that is, under the general law of this State. It 'was on this theory that the court charged the jury that if the insured was sane at the-time he killed himself, the plaintiff could not recover, and that if he was insane, the plaintiff should recover. We do not so construe the section. We think that this proviso was intended, and is to be construed, as insuring only against suicide in the legal sense of the word. But if we are mistaken as to this, and if the correct view is that this is a provision to pay the amount of the policy in the event of self-destruction, irrespective of the sanity or insanity of the insured, and that it is contrary to the public policy of the State for an insurance company to agree to pay insurance where the insured comes to his death as a result -of self-destruction while sane, we think that the proper way to deal with the section would be to construe it as valid, but subject to an exception to be implied if there were an attempt to enforce it in a case where the insured did sanely kill himself. For instance, if an insurance policy said nothing at all as to the manner of the death of the insured, but merely said that upon the death of the insi &.>d the insurer would pay the beneficiary the named amount, the policy would be valid, generally speaking, but would be subject to defense, on the ground that, so far as its terms included death by sane self-destruction, it was contrary to public policy, and could not be enforced. But this construction of this section of the general
“The pupil of impulse, it forc’d him along,
His conduct was right, with his argument wrong;
Still aiming at honor, yet fearing to roam,
The coachman was tipsy, the chariot drove home.”
So that, unless the court committed some error in the exclusion of the testimony to which we are about to refer, the judgment refusing a new trial should be affirmed.
However, in the case before us we do not find it necessary to say 'that the court would have*been authorized to exclude evidence of this change in the laws of the 'association on the ground that the change was not applicable to the certificate involved in the present case, in order to uphold the ruling of the court in excluding the evidence. Before the books of a corporation are admissible in evidence in favor of the corporation, it is necessary to prove the authenticity of the books. “In mutual benefit societies and orders the relation of the corporation to a member [especially when any right is asserted by the association against a member] can be shown only by the records.” 2 Thompson on Corporations (2d ed.), § 1850. “Before the records of a corporation are admissible in evidence for any purpose, or on any theory, it must be made to appear, prima facie at least, that they are the books of the corporation, arid that they have been kept as such, and that the entries therein were made by the proper acting officer. Such books do not generally prove themselves, and do not carry within themselves intrinsic evidence of their own authenticity.” Id. § 1852.
We conclude, therefore, that the court did not err in excluding the testimony by which the defendant attempted to show that its laws had been so changed as to prevent the plaintiff’s relying upon the law in force at the time the contract was made. Under our construction of that law, the plaintiff was entitled to recover, unless her husband killed himself while sane. The trial court, though giving a somewhat different construction to the section of the general laws of the association upon which this question arises, nevertheless reached the same result and submitted this identical issue to the jury, and their-verdict is by necessary implication to be taken as a finding of fact that the insured killed himself at a time when he was insane, and not morally responsible for his act. The evidence fully authorized this finding of the jury. Abstract errors of the court are to be disregarded. The case was tried with 'all practical fairness to the defendant, and the defendant has failed to- show any harmful error.' Consequently the judgment is
Affirmed.