194 Mass. 1 | Mass. | 1907
This is an action upon a policy of insurance against accident. The case is before us upon the exceptions taken by the defendant at the trial, in which a verdict for the plaintiff was returned for the full amount claimed.
1. One of the grounds of defence was that there had been no compliance with the arbitration clause. The judge ruled that
The clause is as follows: “10. In the event that this company and the certificate holder or beneficiary disagree as to the liability of this company under this certificate, it is agreed, and this certificate is issued upon the express condition, that such liability and the amount thereof shall be determined by arbitration ; the board of arbitrators to consist of three members of the order of the Odd Fellows, one to be appointed by the company, one by the claimant, and the third shall be the Noble Grand of the lodge of which the assured is a member; and that no legal proceedings for recovery under this certificate shall be brought until the expiration of three months after receipt by the company of acceptable proofs of loss, and of a request in writing, in case of disagreement, to arbitrate, and a refusal by the company to arbitrate; and the company shall not be liable in any legal proceeding unless said proceeding is commenced within six months from the time when the right of action accrues and no suit shall be brought in any case except to enforce payment of the award of said arbitrators unless” the company refuses to arbitrate.
It is to be noted that the subject of reference is not merely the question of damages, or, as put by Colt, J. in Wood v. Humphrey, 114 Mass. 185, 186, such a matter as does “ not go to the root of the action, but . . . [is] . '. . only preliminary thereto or in aid thereof — such as respect[s] the mode of settling the amount of damage, or the time of paying it, or the like,” but it includes also the question of the “ liability of this company under this certificate.” To what extent and under what circumstances an agreement to refer a question of liability to arbitration is valid has been the subject of considerable discussion in the courts of England and this country. In England, as stated by W. Allen, J. in Reed v. Washington Ins. Co. 138 Mass. 572, 576, “The question . . . has been one of the construction of contracts,—
Upon an inspection of the policy in this case we are of opinion that the clause in question comes under the second class of cases above named, and that it is in substance an agreement to refer a cause of action arising under the other provisions of the contract, and therefore is void as an attempt to oust the courts of their jurisdiction. The first page of the policy contains an express promise to pay a certain sum to the estate of the insured in case of his death from one of the causes named. It also contains an express promise to pay certain sums, varying with the extent of the injury, to the insured. These promises are made subject to the by-laws of the company and the conditions thereto annexed. Neither in the by-laws nor in the conditions annexed is
2. It also is contended by the defendant that the policy does not cover accident by drowning unless as a result of the accident there are upon the body external marks of contusion or wounds. In considering this ground of defence it is to be observed that the provisions of the policy are very voluminous, elaborate and intricate. Many of them are printed in very fine type. It is the general rule in the construction of an insurance contract, that any doubt arising upon its face as to its meaning is to be resolved in favor of the insured. This rule is founded in sound sense, and is particularly applicable to a contract so complicated in detail as the one before us. Bearing in mind this rule of construction we proceed to look into this policy. Upon the first page it is said that the insurance is “ against personal bodily injury leaving upon the body external marks of contusion or wounds.” Upon the second page, under the head of “ What is insured against,” it is said that “ This certificate of insurance provides against bodily injuries, such as dislocations, fractures, broken bones, bruises, cuts, accidental gun-shot wounds, crushing or mangling, burns and scalds, bites of dogs, stroke of lightning, drowning, or -injuries produced by falls, effected through external, violent and accidental means, within the intent and meaning of this contract and its conditions as hereto annexed.” Then follows a statement of the conditions. The conditions are very complicated and numerous, and are printed in very fine type. It is unnecessary to insert them here. It is sufficient to say that they provide in substance that “in the event of any accidental bodily injury, fatal or non-fatal, contributed to or caused by” any one of along list of events accidental or otherwise which are detailed at great length, the limit of liability in case of death shall be only “ one-twentieth of the . . . death benefit provided for in this policy.” The part as to drowning is in these words: “ drowning or shooting when the facts and circumstances of the accident and injury are not established by the testimony of an actual eye witness; and also when in an alleged drowning (shipwrecks at sea excepted) the body
In cases of drowning death is caused by the filling of the lungs with water so that the air cannot get to them, and there is no reason why there should be any external mark of contusion or wound. In the ordinary case, therefore, none is to be expected. And if while drowning the body is bruised, there is usually no natural or necessary connection between such bruise and death. Suppose two persons, each having a policy like this, are accidentally swept overboard from a -ship by the same wave. One goes clear and receives no mark, while the other is bruised and scratched by a spike in no way disabling him as he goes over the rail. Both are drowned and both bodies are recovered. Upon the body of the first is found no external mark or contusion or wound, while upon the body of the other appears the work of the spike. Is it to be said that the first case is covered by the policy and the second is not? To hold that drowning is not covered by the policy unless in addition to the flooding of the respiratory organs there is some external mark of contusion or wound is to base a distinction upon a circumstance which generally has nothing whatever to do with the cause of the death, and moreover is to eliminate practically the ordinary and usual case of drowning. An interpretation founded upon such a basis of distinction, and leading to results so unreasonable is not to be adopted unless clearly required by unmistakable language.
In view of these and other obvious considerations the provisions of the policy relating to external marks of contusion and wounds must be held applicable to the more violent causes of injury and not to the case of death by drowning.
3. The policy provides that in case of loss the company shall pay to the estate of the insured “ in trust however for and to be paid over forthwith to his legal heirs ”; and the defendant contends that the. policy could not be made payable to the estate, because, if so made, the sum received would be assets for the payment of debts and expenses of administration and would be subject to an unrestricted disposition by will, which would
4. The difficult question in the case is one of damages. Shall the plaintiff recover the full sum of $5,000, or only one twentieth of that sum, to wit, $250 ? The answer turns upon the meaning of the clause in the policy respecting eye witnesses. This clause is found among the large amount of fine print -upon the second page of the policy under the head of “ Conditions,” and, so far as material to the question before us, is as follows: “ In the event of any accidental bodily injury, fatal or non-fatal, contributed to or caused by . . . drowning or shooting when the facts and circumstances of the accident and injury are not established by the testimony of an actual eye witness, . . . then and in every such case the limit of the liability of this company hereunder shall be one-twentieth of the accidental death benefit provided for in this policy not to exceed two hundred and fifty dollars for accidental death, and for non-fatal injuries causing total or partial disability, one-fifth of the weekly indemnity provided for in this policy.” This whole paragraph of which the above is a part describes more than two dozen cases in either one of which the same reduction to one twentieth is to be made. Although the case before us is one of drowning, still upon the question of interpretation the fact that the clause includes also injury or death by shooting may be properly considered.
The clause seems to be of somewhat recent origin in policies of insurance, and our attention has not been called by counsel to any case, nor are we aware of any except National Accident Society v. Ralstin, 101 Ill. App. 192, in which it has received judicial attention. That case was one of shooting and the injury was not fatal. It was held that the plaintiff, who was the
Before the insertion of this clause the insurance companies labored under some difficulty in their defence. Especially was this felt in eases of death by drowning or shooting. If the defence was that the death was suicidal, inasmuch as suicide was not to be presumed, the burden of showing suicide was upon the defendant; and where the facts and circumstances of the accident were shown only by circumstantial evidence there frequently would be great difficulty in sustaining this burden even if death actually was suicidal. Moreover, in the case of disappearance of the person whose life was insured, and the subsequent finding of the dead body in the water, the question whether death was caused by drowning or by some disease or cause not insured against was frequently embarrassing to the defence. A good illustration of such a case is Trew v. Railway Passengers' Assurance Co. 6 H. & N. 838.. In that case it appeared that the assured left his lodgings for the purpose of bathing, and was not afterwards seen alive. Subsequently his clothes were found by the water side. A body was found in the water at a distance from the place where he went to bathe, but not at such a distance that it might not have been carried there by the waves, and there was some evidence that this was the body of the assured. It was held that, assuming that the body was that of the assured, it was a question for the jury whether the death was by drowning or by suicide or natural causes, such as apoplexy or heart disease or the like. In an attempt to meet such cases doubtless, a clause has been inserted in policies providing in substance that there shall be no recovery in certain cases unless the claimant proves by direct and positive proof that the death or injury was caused by accident and was not the result of design, or in other words was from a cause covered by the policy. But it was held that such a clause did not make it necessary that the facts and circumstances of the injury should be shown by persons who were actually present when the insured received the injuries, but that it was sufficient if they were shown by circumstantial evidence. Travellers' Ins. Co. v. Mc Conhey, 127 U. S. 661. Utter v. Travelers' Ins. Co. 65 Mich. 545.
In the light of this interpretation of the clause we proceed to examine the evidence in this case to see to what extent the facts and circumstances of the accident and the injury are shown. One Black testified that about five minutes before four o’clock in the afternoon of June 25, 1902, he, being out on the river in a skiff with one Beissman, saw Lewis in a red canoe with a lady, going “ in the opposite direction from the way the witness was going. Lewis was paddling the canoe sitting in the stern, and Miss Hurley was sitting in the centre of the canoe on the bottom, leaning back against the cushions. The pair were talking, and Lewis smiled and bowed to witness.” The witness had known Lewis very well for two years. “ Lewis looked bright and happy; . . . the pair were chatting together; . . . Miss Hurley appeared the same as any young woman on the river; and . . . there was nothing unusual in the appearance of either; . . . they were going quite swift and . . . Lewis was a good hand on the river.” He “ had his coat and vest off.” Beissman, who was with Black, testified substantially to the same facts. He further said that about three or four minutes after they had passed the couple, and after a point of land had shut the canoe out of sight, he heard a scream, but could not swear whether it was the scream of a man or a woman; that it did not seem to him at the time to be a cry of agony; that it seemed like a cry of despair, but that he did not go back, and never thought any more of it until the next day when he heard of the accident. So far as appears this was the last time that either Lewis or Miss Hurley was seen alive.
One Ghellman testified that he was out on the river that afternoon, but did not know Lewis; that shortly before four o’clock the witness and a man named Esselen “were coming up the river and found the overturned canoe; that they were paddling and had been picking pond lilies; that as they came around the bend he discovered the cushions and the lady’s coat, gentleman’s coat and lady’s hat, and a red canoe, bottom up; that the carpet was with the canoe with one end thrown over the bottom, and after paddling around they found a gentleman’s vest five feet
The next day the bodies of Lewis and Miss Hurley were taken from the river near the place of the accident, and there was no question about identification. There were no external marks upon the body of Lewis, and the medical examiner testified that death was caused by drowning, and that in his opinion it was a case of accidental drowning. Hiatt, the owner of the canoe, testified that Lewis hired the canoe about two o’clock; that he “ seemed natural ”; and that “ he was a very good boatman and had been coming constantly to his boathouse for two seasons.” As to the canoe he testified that it was a “ sixteen foot canoe of thirty-four or thirty-five inch beam, made of cedar with a canvas skin and painted red ”; that it “ was what he should call a medium safe canoe, that a person would have to be more careful with it than with a larger one.” On cross-examination he testified that there “ was no reason for his [Lewis’s] upsetting in a medium safe canoe; . . . that he was a perfectly competent man and had a perfectly safe canoe.”
It is unnecessary to recite the evidence further in detail. The jury might have found on the evidence of actual eye witnesses that shortly before the time when the accident happened Lewis and Miss Hurley were upon the river in what might be called a “ cranky ” canoe, liable to overturn at any moment unless unusual care was exercised both by Lewis and his companion; that within five (perhaps fewer) minutes of the time at which they were last seen alive the canoe was overturned and the bodies were under water. Here then is shown upon the testimony of eye witnesses an operating cause, — namely, the imminent liability of the capsizing of the boat by reason of its
In view of our decision upon this point it becomes unnecessary to consider the contention of the plaintiff that such a provision is void upon the ground that it is an attempt to dictate to a court as to rules of evidence.
5. Under the circumstances disclosed in this case we do not see how it was material whether the defendant is a fraternal beneficiary association or not. The action is upon the policy. The exceptions to the admission of the evidence are also overruled. Even if the evidence excepted to was immaterial, as contended by the defendant, we do not see how the defendant could have been harmed by its admission.
.Exceptions overruled.
The "case was argued at the bar in December, 1905, before Knowlton, C. J., Morton, Hammond, Loving & Sheldon, JJ., and afterwards was submitted on briefs to all the justices.