19 A.2d 556 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1940
Argued October 23, 1940. Peter Kaub held five life insurance policies issued by defendant aggregating $1,077 payable to his estate. Each of the policies contained a clause agreeing that upon receipt of due proof that the insured "has sustained bodily injury, solely through external, violent and accidental means . . . . . . resulting in the death of the insured within ninety days from the date of such bodily injury . . . . . . the company will pay in addition to any other sums due under the policy . . . . . . an accidental death benefit equal to the face amount of insurance stated in the policy." Within the exceptions of the policy it is specifically provided that "no accidental death benefit will be paid if the death of the insured resulted from suicide."
Insured died from drowning at age 68 on April 9, 1937 and the policies then were in full force. Defendant promptly paid the face amounts of the policies but refused to recognize plaintiff's claim for double indemnity, contending that death was from suicide and *309
not through accidental means. The case was tried twice (seeHeffron, Admrx. v. Prudential Ins. Co.,
That there were no eyewitnesses to the drowning does not necessarily defeat the right of recovery, for death from accident may be established wholly by circumstantial evidence. "The evidence may be sufficient to sustain a finding that death occurred through external, violent and accidental means although there are no eyewitnesses (McCullough v. Railway Mail Assn.,
The well recognized distinction between death due to an accident which is the natural or probable consequence of the means voluntarily employed which produced it, and death due to accidental means (Urian v. Equitable Life Assur. Soc.,
The uncontradicted evidence is that insured, for 12 years, had made his home with his daughter and her husband in the borough of Taylor. He busied himself by assuming a number of duties in the household; he raised chickens and canaries; his occupation had been that of a gardener and he cared for the lawn and the garden and occasionally did similar work for others in the neighborhood. The son-in-law testified that the value of the services rendered exceeded the cost of his maintenance. He was drowned in the Lackawanna River not far from his home. He had been in the habit of gathering driftwood from the river and coal from along its banks, sufficient for the needs of the household, and on the morning of his death said that he was going to the river for wood. The river was swollen, though not at flood stage, and the current was swift; conditions favorable to more than the usual amount of floating driftwood, but making its recovery difficult if not dangerous. His body was found down stream from the vicinity of the place he was accustomed to gather coal and wood. To eliminate the possibility that the drowning may have been caused by a fall due to illness, plaintiff proved that insured was in reasonably good health. There was no apparent motive for suicide nor evidence of a suicidal intent. The night before and on the morning of his death insured apparently *311
was in good spirits. He was happily situated in his daughter's home with no apparent reason for concern for the immediate future. Plaintiff's testimony goes much further than showing merely that life to him was more attractive than death. The preponderance of the evidence not only supports the finding of death from accidental means, but excludes the inference of suicide. It is not improbable in the absence of eyewitnesses that more could not be shown. Defendant contends that there were other facts consistent with its theory of suicide which were developed at the first trial but do not appear in the record before us in this appeal. To benefit by the inferences from those additional facts defendant should have proved them. Defendant offered no testimony. In cases of this nature, where plaintiff's circumstantial evidence of accidental death is not strong and as a whole comes close to the border line, the testimony, nevertheless, is prima facie sufficient, presenting a case which must be submitted to the jury. Since defendant failed to offer any evidence rebutting plaintiff's prima facie case of accident and affirmatively proving death by suicide, the verdict of the jury will not be disturbed. Pomorskie v. Pruden'l Ins. Co. ofAm., supra; Walters v. W. S. Life Ins. Co.,
Defendant also assigns as error plaintiff's failure to furnish sufficient proofs of accidental death. In its affidavit of defense defendant contented itself with a bald denial of plaintiff's allegation that the proper proofs were furnished. From the fact that the insurance on the life of deceased was promptly paid we may assume that proofs of death were delivered to defendant. And if these proofs were considered insufficient to support a claim for additional benefits for death from accident it was the duty of the company to give immediate *312
notice to the plaintiff of its objection, pointing out the defects in the proofs so that additional information might be supplied if available. Defendant insurer neglected to do so and its silence therefore must be held a waiver of inadequacies in the proofs, and the proofs of death must be considered as having been made in full compliance with the policies or the irregularities were waived. Girard Life Ins. Co. v. Mutual LifeIns. Co.,
We find no merit in the remaining assignments of error.
Judgment affirmed. *313