This case has been twice tried, and in each instance the issues of fact were determined in favor of the plaintiffs. On the first trial the verdict was set aside by the district court on defendant’s motion, which was based on several distinct grounds, and on appeal to this court it was held that, in view of the large discretion vested in the trial court in the matter of granting new trials and the impossibility of determining from the record the precise ground upon which the motion had been sustained, the order granting a new trial should be affirmed. On being remanded a new trial was had to the court, jury being waived, and, as we have already said, there was judgment for the plaintiffs, and the' defendant appeals.
In its argument to this court appellant bases its demand for a reversal of the judgment below upon the single proposition that the evidence is not sufficient to establish the death of W. H. Magness. The membership of said Magness in good standing in the defendant association, the relation of the plaintiffs as the beneficiaries of his certificate, and the amount recoverable, if any, are for the purposes of this case all conceded, and the single inquiry which we are to consider is whether, giving the evidence
It is unnecessary, we think, to go into a prolonged review of the aiithorities upon the extent of the presumption of death which attaches to the unexplained disappearance of a party from his home and family for a continuous period of seven years. In Tisdale v. Insurance Co., 26 Iowa, 170, it was held that such a disappearance for even a shorter period might occur under circumstances giving rise to the presumption of death. It is there said: “Any facts relating to the character, habits, condition, affections, attachments, prosperity, and objects in life, which usually control the conduct of men and are thé motives of their actions, are competent evidence from which may be inferred the death of one absent and unheard from, whatever has been the duration of such absence. A rule excluding such evidence would ignore the motives which prompt human actions and forbid inquiry into them in order to
We can not say that the judgment is without' sufficient support in the record, and it is therefore affirmed.