This appeal grows out of an action brought by the beneficiary of a contract of life insurance to recover the double indemnity provided for by the policy in the event that the insured died from injuries effected through “external, violent and accidental cause.” At trial, the jury disagreed and was discharged. The respective parties then filed separate motions for judgment on the record under Rule 50 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, 28 U.S.C.A. fol
Frederick Lennig died as the result of a fractured skull and other bodily injuries received through the impact of a fall from a third story window in his home to the paved areaway at the ground level below. His life was insured by the defendant company under a policy whereof his wife was the beneficiary. In addition to the fixed or face amount payable by the company upon the insured’s death, the policy also provided that the company would pay the beneficiary double the face of the policy “upon receipt of due proof that the death of the Insured resulted directly and independently of all other causes from bodily injury effected solely through external, violent and accidental cause.” The policy excluded from the benefits of the double indemnity clause a death from suicide, from mental infirmity or illness, or from disease. The company refused to pay the beneficiary’s claim for the double indemnity but did pay, without prejudice to the beneficiary’s rights, the face amount of the policy. The beneficiary thereupon brought suit in a state court to recover the double indemnity, and the defendant, after removing the case to the District Court, filed an affidavit of defense denying that the insured’s death was due to injuries effected through external, violent and accidental cause, and alleging that his death was the result of his own intended act of self-destruction. The proofs leave no doubt, in fact it is undisputed, that the cause of the fatal injuries was both external and violent. Consequently, the sole question here is whether the evidence produced by the plaintiff was legally sufficient to support a finding by a jury that the insured’s injuries, which admittedly caused his death, were due to accidental cause.
Federal jurisdiction of the case rests upon the diversity of the citizenship of the parties. In such instance, it has been held that the question of the legal sufficiency of the evidence in support of a claim is to be determined according to the local law applicable to the rights of the parties. See Stoner v. New York Life Insurance Co.,
There were no eye-witnesses to the insured’s fall. None the less, the accidental cause of the fall may be inferred from the attending circumstances if the inference be warranted. See Heffron, Adm’r’x v. Prudential Insurance Company of America,
In the Wainstein and Walters cases, supra, where verdicts for the beneficiaries were upheld, the proof of accidental injury causing death was no stronger from a legal viewpoint than the evidence in the instant case. In the Wainstein case, the engineer of the locomotive which killed the insured testified that the latter had deliberately lain across the tracks. Yet, the deceased’s natural motive to live was the fact which, in conjunction with the external and vi
In the instant case the insured was last seen by his wife shortly before his fall while he was working in an alcove on the third floor of his home close by an open window, from which he later fell, and the sill of which was twenty-seven inches from the floor. The insured was attending, as was his custom and pleasure, to flowers and plants on a table placed diagonally because of the limited space in the alcove. He conversed pleasantly with his wife, who did not remain long but descended to the second floor to attend to some personal matters at which she was still engaged when called to the front door by a neighbor who informed her that her husband had just fallen to the ground, where he was then lying unconscious. He was carried into his home where, shortly afterwards, he was pronounced dead upon the doctor’s arrival. The insured, who was sixty-five years old at the time of his death, had long been engaged in a business in which he was interested up to the time of his death. He had no financial worries and was living happily with his wife to whom he had been married thirty years. There was no proof that he had ever threatened or contemplated suicide. His presence on the third floor and his working there under the conditions obtaining were satisfactorily explained as the usual and ordinary practice of the insured.
The evidence thus adduced by the plaintiff was sufficient under the law of Pennsylvania to warrant an inference that the insured’s fall was accidental. The learned court below, assuming, if not conceding, as much, concluded that an inference of intentional fall could equally be drawn from the surrounding circumstances, and, for that reason, held that the plaintiff’s proofs failed to sustain her burden of establishing accidental death. Yet, in Watkins v. Prudential Insurance Company of America,
It is unnecessary for us to relate or pass upon the facts in the instant case from which, it is said, an inference may be drawn that the insured’s fall was intentional. At best, such facts are for the jury and not for the court. Certain it is that suicide must be proven. There is no legal presumption of intentional death. Necessarily, therefore, any finding of suicide would have to rest upon evidence either direct or circumstantial. But, assuming that an inference of suicide is admissible under the facts in this case and recognizing that the plaintiff’s burden to prove accidental death endures throughout, once the evidence adduced by the plaintiff became sufficient to warrant an inference of accident, it was thereupon the jury’s exclusive duty to determine which of the
The appellant cites and relies upon the case of DeReeder et al. v. Travelers Insurance Company,
Not only was it the plaintiff’s burden in the DeReeder case, supra, to establish accidental death, but the pertinency of the particular instruction, there given, was peculiarly indicated by the paucity of evidence in that case. Thus, the fact of the insured’s death, itself, rested wholly on an inference to be drawn from the circumstance that the insured, while unobserved by anyone, had disappeared from a ship, thirteen miles at sea, and was never thereafter seen. While the fact of the insured’s death was thus inferentially established, there was no proof whatsoever, even circumstantial, that the insured had died from an injury effected through external and violent cause. As the Pennsylvania court pointed out (
The judgment of the District Court is reversed and a new trial ordered.
