209 Mo. App. 63 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1922
The plaintiff .secured a judgment in the circuit court of Dunklin county against the defendant, which is a fraternal beneficiary association organized under the laws of Nebraska and licensed to transact business in the State of Missouri.
The recovery was based on a certificate which was issued on the life of Henry A. Gill by the local Camp at Malden, Dunklin county, Missouri, dated September 10, 1896. The plaintiff made a prima-facie case by showing the death of her husband, which was on July 1, 1918; that his dues were all fully paid up at that time and that she was the beneficiary. The amount of the insurance was $1000. The defendant association appeals from the judgment, assigning several grounds for a reversal, which we .will take up in the order arranged in its brief.
First, on the demurrer to the evidence. It is contended that the court should have sustained a demurrer offered by defendant at the close of the evidence, on the ground that the certificate provided that if the member habitually uses opiates, cocaine, chloral or other narcotics, or poison, the certificate shall be. null and void. This contention is based on the ground that plaintiff herself admitted that her husband was addicted to the use of narcotics and hence there was no question to go to the jury and the court should have directed a verdict for the defendant. This contention is based on the following evidence in the case: After the death of plaintiff’s husband, the family doctor, B. E. Garrison, of Wayne City, Ill., which was the-residence of the deceased and
The rule is well established that when a plaintiff makes out a prima-facie case the question of whether that prima-facie case is destroyed must be left to the jury, unless such rebuttal evidence conclusively binds plaintiff. [See Gooden v. Modern Woodmen, 194 Mo. App. 666, 189 S. W. 394.]
In the case of Holmes v. Protected Home Circle, 199 Mo. App. 528, 204 S. W. 202, it was held that the evidence furnished by plaintiff there in forwarding the
It is next contended by the appellant that the evidence conclusively shows that plaintiff’s husband came to his death by his own hand or act. The evidence referred to were the affidavits of the attending physician, a relative and the beneficiary. These affidavits stated that his death came from an overdose of opium compound. This in no way is evidence that the deceased met his death by his own hand. The only other evidence in the case from which this inference could be drawn was that of a letter from Dr. Garrison, which on its very face shows that his statements were merely his own deductions and conclusions, drawn from circumstances. Such evidence is far from being sufficient to overcome the presumption of love of life and falls far short of showing that his death was caused by an accident at his own hand.
It is next contended that the demurrer should have been sustained, because there was a provision in the policy that no suit could be brought after a year had elapsed from the date of the death, it being shown that the suit in this case was filed something over one year from the time of her husband’s death. The ground upon which appellant raised this propostion is that the contract was an Illinois contract, and that under the laws of Illinois such provisions in insurance contracts are valid and enforceable. We cannot uphold the contention, however, because the facts show that this man was initi
It is next contended that tbe circuit court of Dunklin county bad no jurisdiction over this action or tbe person of defendant. We cannot sustain this, because tbe circuit court of Dunklin county, being a court of general jurisdiction, tbe presumption will prevail that it bad jurisdiction of this cause when tbe record does not affirmatively makes it appear that it bad no jurisdiction. [See State v. Baker, 246 Mo. 357, 152 S. W. 46.] As said in the case of Davidson v. Schmidt, 256 Mo. l. c. 19, 164 S. W. 577, “Tbe circuit court is a superior court of general jurisdiction and nothing will be presumed to be without its jurisdiction.” When the record of a court of general jurisdiction is silent about a matter necessary to confer jurisdiction, tbe existence of such matter will be presumed. [State v. Fulton, 152 Mo. App. 345, 133 S. W. 95; In re Ford, 157 Mo. App. 141, 137 S. W. 32.]
It is clearly decided in the opinion rendered by Judge Faris, in State ex rel. v. Gantt, 274 Mo. 490, 203 S. W. 964, that where a non-resident insurance corporation is sued in Missouri, in order for a circuit court to have jurisdiction, tbe cause of action must have accrued in tbe county where tbe suit is brought, or it must be shown that tbe company bad some agent or officer in tbe county transacting tbe usual and customary business of tbe company. In our case it is shown that tbe death did not occur in Dunklin county, therefore tbe cause of action did not accrue there, but there is nothing appearing in tbe record to show that tbe defendant did not have an agent or officer in Dunklin county transacting its usual and customary business. In tbe Gantt case (274 Mo. 490), tbe Supreme Court denied a writ of. prohibition because it was not presumed that tbe defendant in that
Objection is made to the plaintiff’s instructions. Upon reading the same we find that these instructions declare the law of th© case to the jury.
Instruction No. 1 required the jury, among other things, to find that the deceased was in good standing at the time of his death. This, of course, was amplified in defendant’s instructions which were given telling the jury that if they found that he was an habitual user of opiates, they must find for the defendant; or that he intentionally took an overdose of opium they must find for the defendant, and that unless they found that the statement made by Dr. Garrison that the. deceased was a habitual narcotic had not been denied or explained, his statement would bind the plaintiff and bar a recovery. These are the affirmative defenses raised by the defendant, and a finding for it on the instructions would necessarily be a finding that plaintiff was not in good standing at the time of his death. The instructions of plaintiff and defendant, when read together, clearly defined the issues to the jury to be found-and contain no reversible error.
It was proper for the court to refuse defendant’s instruction No. 4, because it is for the court, and not the jury, to determine the question of jurisdiction.