159 A. 69 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1931
Argued December 14, 1931. This is an action on a life insurance policy. The question involved is whether death was the result, "directly and independently of all other causes, of bodily injuries, effected solely through external, violent and accidental means."
Shortly after midnight on November 30, 1928, a private watchman, in plain clothes, saw the insured, with four companions, "roaming" in an automobile in the neighborhood which he was guarding. He paid little attention to them until he saw them get out of the car at Third and South Streets, Philadelphia, and start toward South Street. He then walked to the car, looked in, and, by the use of his flashlight, saw New York license plates lying on the front seat, although there were Pennsylvania tags attached to the car. He followed the men, remaining 150 feet behind them. At 220 South Street, one of the group, later identified as the insured, walked into Levy's Sporting Goods Store doorway, which is about 20 or 25 feet deep with display *476 windows on either side, containing firearms, jewelry, sporting goods, etc. In a moment this man returned to the pavement, joined his companions, and they continued down the street to 212 South Street, where there is the same kind of a store, and the insured again entered the doorway, the others remaining at the curb as before. The watchman walked rapidly toward them and the other four men started to run, the insured following behind 10 or 15 feet. The watchman shouted to them to halt, but instead of stopping they increased their speed, and thereupon he fired two warning shots in the air. By this time they turned north on Second Street, and shortly thereafter the insured "slowed down," partly turned, placed his hand in his hip pocket — then the watchman fired the fatal shot. The bullet entered his brain, causing almost instant death. When his body was picked up, it was discovered that he had in his hand a 32-calibre revolver.
The learned judge below, sitting without a jury, found for the plaintiff.
There is no dispute that the insured met his death through external and violent means, but was it by accidental means? The answer depends on whether the insured culpably provoked or induced the act which resulted in his death. If his death was the natural and probable consequence of his own act and should have been foreseen, it was not effected by accidental means: Erb v. Commercial Mut. Acc. Co.,
In Price v. Occidental Life Ins. Co.,
In McKeon v. National Cas. Co., (Mo.)
Whether one intentionally exposes himself to a risk is usually a question of fact for the jury and not for the court, as a matter of law: Union Cas. Surety Co. v. Harroll, supra; Campbell v. Fidelity Cas. Co. of New York, 60 S.W. 492; Johnson v. London Guarantee Acc. Co., supra. There is no evidence that this insured was engaged in the commission of, or that the watchman knew that he had committed, a crime; he was not a fleeing felon. The record does not irrefutably show that the shooting was the probable consequence *478 of the insured's own act. His walking on the sidewalk, looking in windows, and then running away from a man attired as a civilian, firing a revolver, do not indicate that he was an aggressor, or that he was doing any voluntary act which reasonable prudence would have pronounced dangerous. He was endeavoring to escape from, rather than to provoke, an encounter. To sustain the appellant's contention that the death was the natural and probable result of his own conduct, we must conclusively presume that he was engaged in the commission of a crime, which is unwarranted by the facts. Certainly, the appellant would not have been entitled to binding instructions, if a jury had been sitting. We find no merit in the fifth assignment of error which complains of the trial judge's refusing to find, as a conclusion of law, that "under all the evidence, the verdict must be in favor of the defendant."
The first, second and third assignments relate to the exclusion of testimony that the companions of deceased had not been seen since the shooting by the private watchman, and that the car in which these men had been riding was stolen. There was no attempt to show, however, that the insured had stolen it, or that the watchman knew at the time of the shooting that the car was stolen.
The fourth assignment covers the rejection of evidence to prove that the watchman believed, when he hit the deceased, that he was acting in self-defense. If the watchman had been on trial, his motive may have been material (Com. v. Gormley,
We have examined the other assignments of error and find them without merit.
Judgment affirmed.