204 Mo. App. 597 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1919
It is conceded that defendant is a fraternal benefit society and that its benefit certificate on the life of Emery Ingle in favor of plaintiff, his wife, was in full force and effect at the time of insured’s death. The defendant refused to pay the policy and its defense of this suit is based on the ground that the manner and cause of the insmred’s death rendered the policy void under the clause following: “If the member holding this certificate . . . shall die . . . from the direct result of drinking intoxicating liquors, . . . or by his own hand or act, whether sane or insane . . . or in consequence of the violation or attempted violation of the laws of the State, . . . this certificate shall be null and void.” The defendant alleged in its ans/wer and undertook the burden of proving that the insured’s death was the direct result of drinking intoxicating; liquors and in consequence of the violation of the laws of the State. The plaintiff offered no evidence on this point but rested her case on the
Since the jury found for plaintiff we must take the facts supported by substantial evidence most favorable to her side of the case, which are in brief as follows': The insured came to his death by a gun shot wound fired from a shot gun in his own hands about midnight while he was in the act of opening or passing through a revolving gate at the house of one Riddle just across the street from his own home in the town of Duenweg, Jasper County, Missouri. To what extent this was due to accident, to the insured’s intoxication and the unlawful possession and use of the gun is the question presented. The deceased went to Joplin in the evening in an automobile with some friends including a brother-in-law and while there was drinking — “took a few drinks,” as his brother-in-lay testified. He returned home about eleven o’clock at night and. at once began quarreling, with and threatening his wife, accusing her of ‘following him.” He seized his wife and choked her but she escaped and went across the street to the home of Mr. Riddle where her brother-in-law was staying. The insured followed his wife in a few minutes and with profane language ordered her to go home. She purported to obey but instead went into a vacant lot and later to’ another neighbor’’si house. The deceased had a shot gun with which he smashed in the door of Riddle’s house and in doing so broke the stock off the gun retaining the loaded barrel. He then went home and not finding his wife soon returned to the Riddle home, was yet boisterous and broke a window and again left with the gun barrel going toward his
There was evidence that the insured was when sober a peaceable man and kind to his family; and to hold that his outrageous conduct on this occasion was due to his drinking is the most charitable excuse suggested. The evidence, however, strongly tends' to prove that his passions had larg’ely subsided and that he was in a calmer and repentant mood at the time he discharged the gun into his own body by attempting to push open the revolving gate therewith.
The defendant insists that the factsi conclusively show that the deceased’s death was the direct result of his intoxication and was in consequence of his violating the law. The defense pleaded is that insured while in an intoxicated condition did unlawfully and feloniously while in the presence of various persons exhibit in a rude, angry and threatening manner a deadly weapon and while so doing discharged same inflicting' his death wound. The jury evidently found the facts to be in accordance with plaintiff’s instruction to the effect that, although deceased after drinking intoxicating liquors did exhibit a deadly weapon in an angry and threatening manner in the presence of various personls,, yet if he had abandoned such acts for a period of time prior to his death and was quiet and peaceable .and did in a peaceful manner attempt to turn the gate with the shot gun, thereby accidentally discharging same and causing his death, then the defendant is liable.
This instruction i;s supported by the evidence and is, we think, in accordance with the law on this subject. It is not the law, as defendant argiuesi and as his refused instructions declare, . that mere proof that one meets hi;s death while violating the law or while intoxicated avoids a policy containing a clause such as is shown here. [Griffin v. Western Mut. Benev. Assn. (Neb.), 31 N. W. 122.] The intoxication or law viola
It has been held in this State in Harper v. Ins. Co., 19 Mo. 506, that though one is a violator of the law in assaulting another, yet if after such assault he seeks to withdraw from the difficulty and avoid further trouble, but is followed and killed by hisi adversary, his death does not fall within the meaning of the policy clause similar to this one. Judge Scott uses this language: “If the person whose life is insured, uses offensive language to one, whilst they are engjaged in an unlawful game of chance, which language is concerning the game, and he is shot down for the provocation, it would not be maintained that he died in the known violation of the law of the land, within the meaning of the contract. So, if he is riding a race in a public highway, which is forbidden, and Ms horse
In the present case 'the- attempt of the -insured to open the gate by pushing it with the butt end of the loaded gun barrel was not itself a violation of the law and not directly connected with his previous unlawful conduct either toward his wife or in handling the gun.
There is less reason for holding that insured’s death was the direct result of his drinking intoxicating liquors. The immediate cause of insured’s death was his act of thrusting the gjun against the gate to open it. That act might be justly characterized as grossly; negligent and his negligence was doubtless caused in whole or in part by his intoxication. Gr os's negligence, however, does not malee such a policy void -even in accident insurance. [Lovelace v. Travelers’ Protective Ass’n, 126 Mo. 104, 28 S. W. 877; Joyce on Insurance, sec. 2845.] And in seeking tbe cause of the negligent act, itself the primary cause of the death, we are seeking the cause of the cause and thus going beyond