217 N.W. 123 | Minn. | 1927
Mr. Garbush conducted a hardware store in the city of Stillwater and dealt in guns and pistols. Plaintiff assisted him in the store. She went into the rear or stock-room for a drink of water and while *193 there heard a pistol shot. She rushed back into the store and found her husband on the floor shot through the heart and the pistol on the floor near him. In response to her excited call, two men who were on the sidewalk looking in the show window came in at once. No one had seen what occurred at the time the pistol was discharged. Plaintiff maintains that it was discharged accidentally; defendant that Mr. Garbush intentionally killed himself. The jury found he came to his death by accidental means.
The case of Garbush v. New York Life Ins. Co.
Defendant contends that although the evidence is sufficient to sustain a recovery upon the contract involved in the cited case, it is not sufficient to sustain a recovery upon the contract here in question for the reason that this contract provides that the benefits thereunder shall not
"be payable nor extend to any case of death or loss of time unless the claimant under the certificate establishes, by direct and positive proof, that said death or loss of time was caused by external violence and accidental means."
Plaintiff had the burden of establishing, "by direct and positive proof, that said death * * * was caused by external violence and accidental means." McAlpine v. Fidelity Cas. Co.
Defendant also cites Becker v. Interstate Business Mens Acc. Assn. 265 F. 508; Roeh v. Business Mens Prot. Assn.
Defendant also cites Aetna Life Ins. Co. v. Tooley,
Defendant's policy does not require eyewitnesses, but requires direct and positive proof that the death was caused by external, violent and accidental means. What evidence is sufficient to sustain a recovery under a policy containing that provision has been considered in a number of cases. They are to the effect that proof of circumstances from which the jury may legitimately infer that *195
death resulted from external violence and accidental means is sufficient, in the absence of eyewitnesses. The leading case is Travellers Ins. Co. v. McConkey,
"It was incumbent upon the plaintiff to show, from all the evidence, that the death of the insured was the result, not only of external and violent, but of accidental means. The policy provides that the insurance shall not extend to any case of death or personal injury, unless the claimant under the policy establishes, by direct and positive proof, that such death or personal injury was caused by external violence and accidental means. Such being the contract, the court must give effect to its provisions. * * *
"The requirement, however, of direct and positive proof, as to certain matters, did not make it necessary to establish the fact and attendant circumstances of death by persons who were actually present when the insured received the injuries which caused his death. The two principal facts to be established were external violence and accidental means, producing death. The first was established when it appeared that death ensued from a pistol shot through the heart of the insured. The evidence on that point was direct and positive; as much so, within the meaning of the policy, as if it had come from one who saw the pistol fired. * * *
"Were the means by which the insured came to his death also accidental? If he committed suicide, then the law was for the company. * * * The court instructed the jury that self-destruction was not to be presumed. * * * Did the court err in saying to the jury that, upon the issue as to suicide, the law was for the plaintiff, unless that presumption was overcome by competent evidence? This question must be answered in the negative. The condition that direct and positive proof must be made of death having *196 been caused by external, violent, and accidental means, did not deprive the plaintiff, when making such proof, of the benefit of the rules of law established for the guidance of courts and juries in the investigation and determination of facts."
In the following cases, the policy contained a provision requiring "direct and positive proof," and it was held that proof of the circumstances and surroundings was sufficient to sustain a recovery, there being no eyewitnesses. Manufacturers Acc. Ind. Co. v. Dorgan (C.C.A.) 58 F. 945, 954, 22 L.R.A. 620; Preferred Acc. Ins. Co. v. Barker (C.C.A.) 93 F. 158; Travelers Ins. Co. v. Sheppard,
In the present case there is conclusive and unquestioned proof that the death was caused by a bullet through the heart discharged from the pistol, but no witness knows how the pistol came to be discharged. That the deceased discharged it himself is undisputed. The question for determination at the trial was whether he discharged it accidentally or intentionally. The verdict was a finding that it was discharged accidentally. In none of the cases cited was the evidence that the death resulted from an accidental cause any stronger than the evidence to that effect in this case. That plaintiff, in making the proof required by the provision in question, is entitled to the benefit of the presumption against self-destruction *197 is expressly held in the cases, and no case has been called to our attention holding the contrary. The provision does not require eyewitnesses, and therefore does not exclude proof by evidence other than that of eyewitnesses, as in one class of cases cited by defendant. If it were to be construed as requiring proof by a witness who could testify of his own knowledge that death was caused by accidental means and not by the intentional act of the deceased, it would bar a recovery in perhaps a majority of the cases of fatal accidents. If the insured came to his death in consequence of falling from a building; or of driving his automobile against an obstruction, into a ditch or over a cliff; or of upsetting a canoe; or of being in the path of a railway train or automobile, could a witness testify whether the act which resulted in his death was accidental or intentional? Whether he intended to create the situation which resulted in his death rested in his own mind. Others, although eyewitnesses, could determine that fact only by inference from other facts known to them and the attending circumstances.
Here the only evidence to overcome the presumption against self-destruction is the fact that the pistol had the safety devices described in the New York Life Ins. Co. case. All the other evidence is consistent with the hypothesis that the pistol was discharged accidentally and indicates in no way that it was discharged intentionally. From the evidence taken as a whole, the jury could legitimately find an absence of intent to commit suicide, and an absence of intent to discharge the pistol.
Order affirmed. *198