196 Mo. App. 383 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1917
Plaintiff is the beneficiary in a policy of accident insurance issued to her husband by the defendant company. Insured died while the policy was in force and defendant refused to pay. Thereupon this suit was brought resulting in a verdict and judgment for plaintiff in the full amount of the policy with interest, from which the defendant has appealed.
The petition alleged that in said policy defendant agreed to pay plaintiff the sum of $1000 if the death of J. M. Freeman, her husband, “should occur, while the policy was in force, as the result, alone and independently of all other causes, of bodily injuries occasioned by external violent and accidental means, leaving upon the body marks of contusion or wound visible to the eye.” The answer admitted the execution of the policy and the death of the insured, but asserted that his death was occasioned by disease and not of a cause covered by the policy; also that insured did not sustain bodily injuries from external violent and accidental means which left upon the body marks of contusion or' wound visible to the eye.
Freeman was going from place to place in Howard county driving a team and medicine wagon, engaged in selling medicines. On September 29, 1915, he spent
“Q. I will ask you to state to the jury what Mr. Freeman said to you was the trouble with him at the time he was talking to you? A. He said a bug flew into his throat and was causing him considerable discomfort.
“Q. Hid he say anything about his condition? A. He said it seemed it would neither go down nor he couldn’t get it np — could neither get it up nor down, is the way he expressed it.
“Q. State whether or not he indicated the location? A. It seemed it was in the throat here (indicating), is what he said, and would neither go up nor down.”
From Mrs. Torbit’s testimony, given elsewhere, it appears that Freeman said to her that the bug flew in his throat at the gate, and that he made the statement to her in excusing and explaining his coughiug.
Insured then left the house and went out on the farm to see Mr. Torbit and returned in about two hours, but appeared then to be very sick, vomiting and having spells of .coughing. He got into his wagon and drove away.
From Torbit’s, insured drove about two miles to. the home of Willard Liggett, arriving shortly after
“Q. Did he state anything further about his condition? A. He told me the cause of his condition.
“Q. What did he say? A. He said he had got an insect in his throat or windpipe — I don’t remember just the words he used — anyway, he said it seemed to stop somewhere down here (indicating on throat), and he couldn’t get it up; that he had vomited and it didn’t seem to remove the cause of the trouble; that it seemed to settle there; that he was getting sicker all the time, and that he would like to lie down awhile and see if that would help him.”
Mr. Liggett remained at the house only about thirty minutes after insured came. Mrs. Liggett testified that insured came in and was lying down for about two hours and complained of being very sick; that he vomited, complained of being sick at the stomach and of headache and backache. She said his breathing at one time seemed a little unnatural but she did not hear him cough during the time he was there. Over the objection and exception of defendant, she was allowed to state that insured said “it seemed like an insect had lodged in his throat” and that “he still felt like he could feel an insect or whatever it was in his throat — he vomited and couldn’t get it up.”
From Liggett’s, insured drove to his home and Doctor Smith'was called who arrived about six or seven in the evening. This was September 30.' Dr. Smith found him suffering with a pain over his stomach and having fever. He was not coughing. He gave the doctor a history of his case. The doctor did not examine his chest nor did he do so the next day or the day after
Dr. Lee, who was called in consultation on October 10th, saw deceased three times before he died. His testimony is that at the first time he saw the patient he did not have pneumonia but that there was an abscess or cavity in his left lung, that when he saw him two days later the cavity had enlarged and pneumonia was developing in that lung, and on the evening before his death on the 16th, the pneumonia had spread over the entire left lung and it was solidified and the patient was in a dying condition; that after death autopsies showed both lungs affected with pneumonia.
Both of these physicians testified for plaintiff, over the objections and exception of defendant, that in their opinion the probable cause of the pneumonia was the cavity or abscess they found in the lung and that it was caused by the inhalation of a bug or some foreign substance. No bug or foreign substance was found in the lung; and it is clear, from the testimony of the doctors,
Now, without passing upon the question, but assuming that if the original cause of insured’s trouble was the inhalation of a bug or some foreign substance then his death was caused by an external violent and accidental means “which left upon the body marks of contusion or wound visible to the eye,” so as to come within the terms of the policy, still it is clear that the burden is upon plaintiff to show not only that such accidental inhalation occurred but also that there is reasonable ground for thinking that insured’s death came from that cause rather than from disease. The cause of his death cannot be left to conjecture. [Rogers v. Hammond Packing Co., 180 Mo. App. 227, 230; Farner v. St. Louis etc. R. Co., 178 Mo. 125, 134; Wright v. Order of United Comm. Travelers, 188 Mo. App. 457; Carnes v. Iowa State Travelling Men’s Assn., 106 Iowa 281; Merrett v. Preferred Masonic etc. Assn., 98 Mich. 338.] Plaintiff’s doctors say that they found no pneumonia until after
With reference to the opinions of plaintiff’s experts as to insured’s death being produced by an accidental, external cause, it should be observed, that they were not given in answer to hypothetical questipns in which the truth of insured’s inhalation of a bug or some foreign substance was assumed. Plaintiff’s doctors testified to
The declaration to Mrs. Torbit was made after insured had driven a half mile from the gate, where the inhalation is said to have occurred, and after he had entered the house and had begun showing his medicines. She said she saw nothing the matter with him, he appeared to be in perfect heatlh except that he coughed considerably. She first noticed his coughing when he began to talk and show his medicines. He was showing his medicines and he could hardly explain for coughing and hacking, and he apologized for it, and in doing so told her a bug flew in his throat. She says, “I guess he thought it necessary to make an explanation, because there was so much of it.” Mrs. Torbit’s husband was not very well and Mr. Freeman was saying he thought he had something to help him and went out on the place to see him. Now, it is well settled that declarations need not be contemporaneous with the exciting cause, nor can there be any general rule fixing a definite length of time as determinative of their admissibility. But where there is a lapse of time between the occurrence and the declarations, the latter must be made under circumstances which show that they are the spontaneous, unreflecting, instinctive impulse generated by some physical shock, stress of nervous excitement, or excited feeling which extends continuously and without abatement or dissipation from the moment of the occurrence to the time of the declaration in such full sway as to dominate the reflective faculties and take away the opportunity for reasoned reflection. [3 Wigmore, secs. 1747, 1749, 1750.] That is not the situation here, nor anything like it. Insured is carrying on his business, showing his medicines, in the course of which he is coughing and
The other declarations to the Liggetts are made some hours afterward. He is not coughing then but is pale. He is. sick at the stomach and is suffering with headache and backache but is not giving a spontaneous exclamation under the stress of his feelings. He is asking for a place to lie down, saying he thinks he will be better. What he there says about having swallowed a bug is not the spontaneous instinctive impulse born of his situation or condition and under the stress of which the control of his reflective faculties are in abeyance. Neither in the statements here made nor in those made to Mrs. Torbit is there such a continuous uninterrupted connection between the occurrence and the declarations as to constitute the two one transaction or to make the latter the spontaneous exclamations of the real cause free from the influence of the reflective faculties to reason over and narrate the happening of a past event. We think the declarations were not admissible as a part of the res gestae, and that this conclusion is supported by the following authorities. [Hopper v. Standard Life Ins. Co., 166 Mo. App. 209; Leahey v. Cass Ave. etc. Ry. Co., 97 Mo. 165; Ruschenberg v. Southern Electric Ry. so., 161 Mo. 70; Barker v. St. Louis etc. R. Co., 126 Mo. 143; State v. Hendricks, 172 Mo. 654, 672; Redman v. Metropolitan St. Ry., 185 Mo. 1; Dunlap v. Chicago etc. R. Co., 145 Mo. App. 215; Grant v. Kansas City Southern Ry. Co., 172 Mo. App. 334; Keefer v. Pacific Mut. Life Ins. Co., 201 Pa. 448; National Masonic Accident Ass’n. v. Shryock, 73 Fed. 774.]
The burden being .on plaintiff to establish that insured’s death was caused by bodily injury sustained by external violent and accidental means, and there being no evidence of such unless insured’s declarations be admitted, and they not being admissible as a part of the res gestae, it follows that the case should be reversed. It is so ordered.