39 Ind. App. 382 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1906
Action by appellant as widow of Thomas IT. Hutchens, a deceased member of the police force of the city of Evansville, to recover the funeral benefits and pension provided for in the act approved February 27, 1903 (Acts 1903, p. 102). To appellant’s amended complaint a demurrer was sustained, and the only question presented by this appeal is the correctness of that ruling.
The amended complaint is brief, and we set out its material averments as follows: “That on September 18, 1903, Thomas H. Hutchens, who was, and had been for more than twenty years prior thereto, a member of the police force of said city, was regularly detailed for duty at the Tri-State Eair Grounds in and adjoining said city, and in obedience thereto he entered upon the discharge of
The decision rests upon the question whether appellant’s husband lost his life “while in the line of his duty,” within
In the act approved March 6, 1905, entitled: “An act concerning municipal corporations,” the act of 1903, supra, was repealed (Acts 1905, pp. 219, 349, §178, §3602 Burns 1905), expressly preserving any right that had accrued under it. In the act of 1905, supra, the entire subject of pensions and benefits to policemen, and their widows and orphans, is covered. That part of the new statute which covers the same matter as the one under which this action is prosecuted, is as follows: “Upon the death of any member of such police force, active or retired, while in the line of duty, and as a result of the performance of his duty, or for natural causes, there shall be paid,” etc. The beneficiary provisions of the act of 1905, supra, are identical with those of 1903, supra.
In Rhodes v. United States (1897), 79 Fed. 740, 25 C. C. A. 186, which was an action to recover from Rhodes what was claimed had been paid to him by reason of his fraudulent representations, the court approved the following instruction: “(2) If, now, under the foregoing general directions, you find either that the defendant never had the disease in question before he enlisted, or that he had been afflicted therewith, but had entirely recovered therefrom, before his enlistment, then, inasmuch as there appears to be no doubt but what he suffered from the
The claim of Gillespie for pension further illustrates the interpretation of the words “in line of duty.” In re Gillespie (1888), 2 Dec. Dept. Int. Relating to Pension Claims, etc., 16. The claim was based upon an injury claimant received in an altercation with a member of his company, in which the latter struck Gillespie upon the head with a board and injured his skull. The claim was disallowed,' upon the grorind that the injury was not received while' he was in “the line of duty,” and in disposing of the case it was said that the fact that claimant did not sustain a culpable relation to the cause of his disability does not, by reason of the same, affect his title to pension. The question involved in the claim is not whether claimant was to blame for the conduct of his assailant, but whether the blow struck by the latter was a necessary or even a reasonable incident of line of duty in the service.
In the claim of Ammerman for pension (In re Ammerman [1886], 1 Dec. Dept. Int. Relating to Pension Claims, etc., 5) the claim was rejected on the ground that the cause of the disability or of death giving title to pension must in some manner pertain to, and have a natural and logical connection with, the military service and to the line of duty in said service.
A case directly in point is that of In re Gallagher, swpra, where it appeared there was an entire failure of proof connecting the insanity or suicidal mania of the soldier with his army service, and in passing upon the claim it was said: “This is a missing link in the chain of evidence which is absolutely essential to make out a proper case for the allowance of pension, and, unless supplied, it is necessarily fatal to the claim. It seems to be reasonably certain, from the testimony on file, that the soldier’s death resulted from poisoning by arsenic administered by himself with suicidal intent while the victim of dementia or mania, and when, therefore, he was irresponsible for his actions; and, also, that he had suffered more or less, at intervals,, from attacks of said dementia or mania for some years • subsequent to his discharge from the service and prior to his death.” These authorities settle the question against appellant. We are clearly of the opinion that, under the facts pleaded, appellant has not brought herself within the statute, and that she has no right of recovery.
Judgment affirmed.