27 A.2d 286 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1942
Argued May 1, 1942. Regis Kinavey fell from the Homestead High Level Bridge into the Monongahela River and was drowned. His life was insured by defendant company in the policy in suit which provided for the payment of $500 upon death, and an additional sum of like amount upon proof that insured `sustained bodily injury, solely through external, violent and accidental means . . . . . . resulting in death.' His mother was paid the face of the policy under a `facility of payment' provision of the contract, but defendant denied liability for double indemnity on the ground that death did not result from accidental means. This action, brought by his administratrix to recover additional benefits, resulted in the entry of a compulsory non-suit at the close of plaintiff's case. This appeal is from the refusal of the court to take it off.
Giving plaintiff the benefit of every favorable inference from the testimony, the following facts appear: Near eleven o'clock on the night of June 8, 1938, deceased was observed by two of his friends standing on the bridge near Homestead. He was then visibly intoxicated and his friends offered to take him home. He demurred and, instead, the three young men walked across the bridge to the Pittsburgh side. Deceased staggered as he walked but talked coherently. According to the testimony the bridge is about one mile long and they consumed about three quarters of an hour in crossing. When they reached the far side they sat down and `talked and told jokes.' In the midst of their conversation deceased saw someone he knew a short distance away at the top of the incline and left to talk with him. On his return he eluded his friends and crossed to the other side of the bridge and proceeded in the direction of Homestead. There was a sidewalk on each side of the bridge about four feet in width, about eight inches above the level of the cartway, separated from it by curbing. There was a substantial *571 metal railing 44 inches high near the outer edge of the walk. At the time, vehicular traffic was heavy in each of the four lanes of the bridge and deceased's friends had difficulty in crossing. In the meantime Kinavey had climbed over the top of the iron railing. The floor of the sidewalk extended about 4 inches beyond the outer edge of the railing and deceased stood on this narrow footing with his hands on the top of the railing. His companions called to him "to get off before he fell." Instead, he began doing stunts; he moved from side to side, crossing one foot over the other; "he hunched up and down" and sat in a crouched position with his hands holding on to the lower part of the upright iron panels of the railing. Just before his companions could reach him he stood up straight with both arms "up in the air"; lost his balance and fell backward into the river.
The evidence does not support the conclusion that deceased committed suicide and we must assume that death was not intentional. Deceased was 22 years old, unmarried and apparently living happily in the home of his mother. He was employed and normally was of good habits; he seldom drank to excess. The inference is reasonable that, with the dulling of his normal inhibitions, he, though he realized the risk and was warned of it by his friends, voluntarily placed himself in a position of great danger and by his conduct was guilty of such recklessness that falling from the bridge was not only forseeable by him, but was almost inevitable. We are in agreement with the lower court that death, therefore, did not result from accidental means and there can be no recovery.
The rule applicable to this class of cases is: `If a result is such as follows from ordinary means, voluntarily employed, in a not unusual or unexpected way, it cannot be called a result effected by accidental means; but if, in the act which precedes the injury, something unforeseen, unexpected, unusual occurs which produces *572
the injury, then the injury has resulted through accidental means. This is substantially the definition given in the textbooks; 6 Cooley, Briefs on Insurance (2d edition) 5234; Couch, Insurance, section 1137; Vance, Insurance, 871'; Urian v.Equitable Life Assur. Soc.,
Plaintiff is not barred in this case merely because deceased was negligent, for the policy does not except from the risk, injury or death to which the negligence of the insured contributed. 29 Am. Jur. Insurance, §§ 941-946; Couch on Insurance, § 1489. What defeats recovery is the fact that death was not an unusual or unexpected result of the voluntary means employed. An entirely different situation would have been presented if the iron railing had given way or the ledge upon which he was standing had crumbled under his feet or some greasy substance had caused his feet to slip. No *573
unforeseen element combined with the deceased's acts; no agency independent of his own acts contributed to his death. His every act was voluntary and though his behavior was extraordinary, falling from the bridge was a foreseeable probable result naturally following from his reckless acts. Intoxication to the degree present in this case does not convert an otherwise nonexisting claim into a right of recovery under the policy. Cf.O'Neill et al. v. Metropolitan Life Ins. Co.,
This conclusion is not inconsistent with the cases cited by plaintiff. In Arnstein v. Metropolitan L. Ins. Co.,
No independent agency combined with deceased's voluntary acts in the present case and nothing unforeseen, unexpected or unusual occurred in causing his death, other than the result which must have been foreseen; therefore, there can be no recovery.
Judgment affirmed. *575