146 Mo. 114 | Mo. | 1898
This is an appeal from a judgment in favor of a beneficiary in a policy issued by the defendant insurance company, containing among others the following provisions:
“If death shall result within ninety days, from such injuries independently of all other causes, the*118 company will pay the principal sum of this policy to Mrs. Mary A. Logan, his mother, if'surviving, or in the event of her prior death, to the legal representatives of the assured, (a) or if the loss by actual separation, at or above the wrist or ankle, of both hands, or both feet, or of one hand and one foot, or the irrecoverable loss of the sight of both eyes, shall so result within ninety days, the company will pay the assured the principal sum before named; which payment shall terminate the policy; (b) or if the loss by actual separation, at or above the wrist or ankle of one hand, or of one foot, shall so result within ninety days, the company will pay the assured one half the principal sum before named, which payment shall terminate the policy.
“Or if such injuries, independently of all other causes, shall immediately, continuously and wholly disable and prevent the assured from performing any and every kind of duty pertaining to his occupation, the company will pay the assured, the weekly indemnity before specified during the continuance of such disability, and for a period not exceeding fifty-two consecutive weeks. If the assured is injured fatally, or otherwise, in any occupation or exposure classed by this company as more hazardous than that before stated, the company’s liability shall be for such principal sum or weekly indemnity, as the premium paid by him will purchase at the rate fixed for such increased hazard. In case of injuries fatal or otherwise wantonly inflicted upon himself by the assured; or inflicted upon himself, or received by him while insane, the measure of this company’s liability shall be a sum equal to the premium paid, the same being agreed upon as in full liquidation of all claims under this policy.”
Thé petition in the case set out that on the eighteenth day of December, 1893, the assured, William E. Logan,
Defendant set up in its answer that the assured died by reason of a pistol shot wound intentionally and wantonly inflicted upon himself and by his own hand, and that the death of said assured was caused while either sane or insane, in either of which events defendant was not liable except for the amount of the premiums paid. Defendant further pleaded the stipulations and covenants contained in the policy that in the event of fatal injuries to said assured resulting from injuries wantonly inflicted upon himself, or inflicted upon himself while insane, the defendant’s liability under its policy should be a sum equal to the premiums paid, said sum being agreed upon in said policy as in full liquidation of all claims thereunder, which sum with interest .amounting to $20, defendant in its answer tendered to plaintiff together with all costs to date of tender, and avers its willingness to pay said sum into court with costs for plaintiff. Plaintiff then filed her reply denying each and every allegation of defendant’s answer.
During the progress of the introduction of defendant’s testimony in the court below, the trial was abruptly terminated by this announcement on part of the counsel for defendant: “We want this case to go up on the question as to whether or not the suicide statute makes suicide a defense in a case of this kind, and applies to a policy such as this, and if so, then the jury should be instructed to find for plaintiff, and there may not be any question upon that point, and for the purpose and in order to have the matter clear, we with
Section 5855, Revised Statutes 1889, reads as follows: “In all suits upon policies of insurance on life hereafter issued by any company doing business in this State, it shall be no defense that the insured committed suicide, unless it shall be shown to the satisfaction of the court or jury trying the cause, that the insured contemplated suicide at the time he made his application
Appellant’s contention is that when section 5855 was enacted, it related to life insurance in its usual and ordinary significance and referred to those life policies issued by life insurance companies furnishing indemnity to the insured from death from any and every cause, and not otherwise, and in aid of its contention has given in its brief filed herein, a detailed history of the legislation of this State bearing upon the subject of life and accident insurance, and argues that as the legislature has made a class distinction between life and accident insurance, and the policies relating to such insurance under separate articles appropriately- entitled “Life Insurance” and “Insurance Other Than Life” up to 1889, when the legislature authorized life insurance companies thereafter to be organized in this State, to engage not only in life insurance, but also in accident insurance, and that as each department was provided for by provisions and requirements peculiar to itself as a separate and distinct corporate creation and business venture, and that as section 5855 first appeared in the statute under chapter 119,,article 2, Revised Statutes 1879, entitled “Life Insurance,” that the provision of that section related only to policies issued by life insurance companies, as were treated of, provided for, and designated in said article.
From our consideration of section 5855, the history of the legislation, in this state, on life -and accident insurance, or life and accident insurance companies, furnishes no particular assistance in the matter of interpreting its meaning. Certain it must be, that if the provisions of section 5855, as contended for by appellant, expressly and exclusively applied to policies of insurance on life issued by life insurance companies as such, by name, prior to 1889, there is nothing to be
The error into which respondent has fallen is in assuming that section 5855 was intended to affect a particular line, class or department of insurance, as the same has been classified for legislation. The real object of the section, as the clear terms of its language express, is to affect all policies of insurance on life from whatever class, department or line of insurance the policy may be issued or by whatever name or designation the company may be known. It is policies of a given kind, and not companies of a class, that are to be affected by the provisions of section 5855. The section was enacted clearly to protect all policy holders of insurance on life against the defense that the insured committed suicide, all provisions in the policies to the contrary notwithstanding, unless as provided in the section, it can be shown that the insured contemplated suicide at the- time he made application for
Neither the enlarged provisions, covering death from the usual as well as the unusual or accidental causes, as in the ordinary life policy, nor the restricted provisions as in some accident policies covering liability for death alone from accidental causes, nor the insertion of an indemnity clause, in case of disability, in an accident policy covering death from external, violent or accidental means, in any wise affect the nature or construction of the provisions which are common to all the policies, and no good reason can be given why in one instance, the provisions of the policy covering death, should be said to be one of insurance on life, and in the others deny the same provision, the same construction, so as to avoid the force of a statute that provides that in all suits upon policies of insurance on life hereafter, insured by any company doing business in this State, it shall be no defense that the insured committed suicide. An examination of the various schemes of accident and life insurance must convince any one that although there are differences in the result sought of accomplishment in some particulars, there are many requirements and provisions in common to both and that the only substantial difference between the two plans of insurance on life is, that in the accident contract, death must result from a more limited number of causes than is covered by the other and broader contract of insurance on life, called life insurance con
The mere addition of one or more features or elements in a contract of insurance on life, that may serve to give the contract or policy a particular designation in the business or insurance world, will not in the least divest the contract or policy of its chief character, of insurance on life, or make the contract other than life insurance. The promise to pay a weekly indemnity, by an insurance company, in the event the insured receives an injury from an accident not resulting in death, does not change the character of the agreement of the policy to pay a certain other sum when the accident results fatally, which is life insurance from accidental causes, as the promise to pay a certain stipulated sum to the insured (now contained in many of the policies issued by what is known as old line life insurance companies) when the insured attains a given age, or in a definite specified time, and if, before the insured arrives at the age designated, or before the time fixed for its certain payment, he shall die from any cause, accidental or otherwise, to pay his legal representatives or some one named in the policy as beneficiary the amount stipulated, is none the less life insurance because coupled with an investment or bond feature, not found in what is commonly known
Insurance on life includes all policies of insurance in which the payment of the insurance money is contingent upon the loss of life.
The policy in controversy certainly corresponds to that definition, and must be held to be subject to the provisions of section 5855.
The judgment of the circuit court will be affirmed.