163 Mo. App. 728 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1912
Plaintiff’s action is based on a fraternal benefit certificate in her favor, issued by defendant to her husband A. W. Johnson on the 16th of July, 1900. Dues were properly paid by the husband up to the 19th of December, 1902, when he disappeared. Dues were then paid up to the 1st of March, 1904, by the plaintiff and none were paid after that date. The action is based on the theory that Johnson died prior to the 1st of March, 1904, for, from that time, as just stated, no dues were paid. The judgment in the trial court was for the plaintiff.
It being conceded that no dues were paid after the 1st of March, 1904, it devolved on plaintiff to show that Johnson died prior to that time. More than seven years had elapsed from his disappearance until the bringing of this action, and while that period is sufficient to create a presumption of death, it is not a presumption that he died at any particular time during the running of seven years. “If it be important to any one to establish the precise time of such person’s death, he must do so by evidence of some sort, to be laid before the jury, beyond the mere lapse of seven years.” [Hancock v. Life Ins. Co. 62 Mo. 26; Lancaster v. Life Ins. Co., 62 Mo. 121; Duff v. Duff, 146 Mo. App. 247; Springmeyer v. Woodmen of the World, 144 Mo. App. 483; Bradley v. Modern Woodmen, 146 Mo. App. 428.] Formerly the character of evidence necessary to establish death short of the seven years period, was that the person claimed to be dead must have been exposed to some peril, or afflicted with some serious disease. But other character of evidence will now answer the purpose; as that the person was of good habits, comfortably and happily .situated in life, — of cheerful temperament, pleasantly and hap
The ease as made for plaintiff along the line we have suggested, is that Johnson was born and reared in Randolph county, where his mother and two brothers still live. That he left Randolph county in 1898 and went to Clinton, Missouri, where he resided with his wife and two children, eight and ten years old, and operated a dairy on a rented farm. That he owned a farm in Randolph county, and while both it and the dairy were mortgaged, they were worth much more than the amount of the incumbrances. A while before his disappearance he had bought Christmas presents for the children, and the evening he left he spoke of his arrangements for an enlargement of his barn. He left money in the bank and had not collected his last month’s dairy bills. This is a short statement of the conditions the day he disappeared.
On that day, at five o’clock in the evening, he returned to his house from Clinton, something less than two miles away, and after helping about the milking, he put on a clean collar and returned to Clinton; but without taking any clothing or anything else with him. Not having returned at two o’clock in the morning, his wife began making inquiry (presumably by telephone). She heard nothing from him and neither she, nor his mother or brothers, have ever seen or heard from him since. She instituted inquiry and so did the defendant, through its proper officers. Advertisements were put out and cards of inquiry sent, but no response ever came and all search made for him failed.
There was evidence in defendant’s behalf tending to show that Johnson had fallen into the habit of gambling and staying out of nights. That he made a fntile effort to quit such practice, but failed, and that he was. despondent and had been heard to say he was going to leave the country and be lost to the world; and that he was seen to take a train at Clinton the night of his disappearance. There was an effort made to show that the relations between him and his wife were seriously unpleasant, but she denied this. She said she had spoken to him about staying out at night too late. That his business required his getting up early and retiring late and that he could not keep his health and remain up so late, and besides it was a bad example for their boy. But we do not think the jury, after considering all the evidence on this head, were bound to conclude that their relations were unhappy. In rebuttal, she testified in reference to his having been seen at the depot at Clinton the night he disappeared, that they lived near a railway crossing where the trains were compelled to stop, and that her husband frequently would go to the depot, get on a train and ride down as far as the crossing. There was also some evidence, not very satisfactory, as to his having been seen in "Wichita, and perhaps some other supposed clues. When plaintiff heard of the Wichita matter, she sent out there, without finding him, and when she or his relatives learned of anything purporting to be about him anywhere in the United States, they investigated and found it to be a mistake. And so it is; if he is not dead, he was at time of trial, after the lapse of seven years, still adrift and his whereabouts wholly unknown. The fact cannot be known to an absolute, or, we might say, a physical, certainty; neither his live, nor dead body has been
The foregoing compose the principal points made for reversal, and our labor in disposing of them has been greatly lessened by the able and comprehensive opinions of Judges Goode, and Guay of the St. Louis and the Springfield Courts of Appeals in the cases above cited.
There was some objection made to the admission of evidence concerning the efforts and results of the inquiry and search made for Johnson. But clear it was not subject to the objection made.
The judgment will be affirmed.