delivered the opinion of the court:
The plaintiffs sought recovery for the death of the decedent resulting from an overdose of heroin based on the provisions of a group insurance policy under which the defendant (Metropolitan) insured against death by “Accidental Means * * * independently of all other causes.” 1 Judgment was entered on the jury verdict in favor of Metropolitan following a jury trial and plaintiffs appeal. They contend that death by an unintended overdose of a narcotic drug, as a matter of law, is accidental within the meaning of the policy and that the verdict of the jury is not supported by the evidence.
The decedent, an employee of Caterpillar Tractor Co., was insured under a group policy for accidental death. On April 26,1974, he left work and returned to his apartment which he shared with his sister. Witnesses testified that decedent was planning to have dinner with them that evening. At approximately 5 p.m. he was found by his sister sitting on the floor of his bedroom, unconscious, with a needle in his arm. An analysis of the blood and urine of decedent taken after his death indicated the presence of 1.4 percent morphine, a lethal level. It was conceded that although the overdose was self-administered, death was unintended. Prior to his death, decedent had been a patient in various drug treatment programs. After Metropolitan disclaimed liability the plaintiffs as beneficiaries of the policy brought this action to recover accidental death benefits.
Metropolitan essentially argues that the trial court did not err in denying plaintiffs’ motion for a directed verdict at the close of all the evidence because the question of whether a death is accidental is a question of fact; and that the jury’s verdict was not contrary to the manifest weight of the evidence. Metropolitan argues that the death was not an “accident” because it was “foreseeable” that a heroin user will unintentionally administer a lethal dose to himself. This poses the principal issue in the case, but since the jury found for the insurer in a general verdict, it is necessary to additionally consider whether it may be justified based on either of the relevant exclusionary provisions which deny coverage for “an intentionally self-inflicted injury” or an injury . “caused or contributed to by disease or bodily or mental infirmity.”
Under the Illinois cases recovery is permitted for a death if that result is accidental even though the means of destruction, here the injection of heroin, is intentional. “ ‘Accidental means’ has been held to be synonymous with ‘accidental result’, and defined as something which happens by chance or fortuitously, without intention or design, and which is unexpected, unusual and unforeseen.” Taylor v. John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance Co.,
Here, Metropolitan reasons that the death of the insured, although unintended, was not “unexpected, unusual or unforeseen” within the requirement of Taylor. We cannot agree. The test of foreseeability in these circumstances appears to be an objective one, phrased in terms of a contingency “known to all sensible men as likely to follow” as a natural result of one’s conduct. (Hutton v. States Accident Insurance Co.,
The test of foreseeability in interpreting coverage under an insurance policy is not aided by the definition of foreseeability set forth in either the tort or the criminal cases. In the area of tort liability, foreseeability is defined generaUy in terms of “more than a mere possibility of occurrence [arising from] * * * conduct which falls below the standard established for the protection of others ‘against unreasonable risk of harm’.” (Cunts v. Brennan,
This is illustrated by the case of Taylor v. John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance Co.,
Cases involving “Russian roulette” are not analogous in terms of the level of foreseeability. Nor are the other cases cited by Metropolitan which involve violent attacks by an insured upon another where one clearly places his life in jeopardy and where the insured must expect to a high degree of certainty that he will be violently repelled. See Rodgers v. Reserve Life Insurance Co.,
In jurisdictions, like Illinois, which do not distinguish between accidental means and accidental results the courts have generally concluded that death under circumstances similar to those found in this case is accidental. In Beckham v. Travelers Insurance Co.,
“All of this uncontradicted evidence * * * leads one inescapably to the conclusion that the decedent was just getting another ‘fix’ to satisfy his addiction to the drug, and that the overdose was unexpected, undesigned and certainly unintentional. Very obviously he intended the act of administering the drug but he did not intend the overdose or the resultant death.”25 Cal. App. 3d 717 , 725,102 Cal. Rptr. 82 , 87.
We therefore conclude that the plaintiffs’ decedent’s death from an unintended overdose of heroin must be regarded as an “accident” as a matter of law in interpreting the instant insurance policy.
As we previously noted the jury rendered a general verdict so that it may be considered possible that it found the plaintiffs’ decedent’s death to be an accident but also found that recovery was precluded because of the exclusionary clauses. However, the record does not support this. It should be noted that it is the duty of the insurer to plead and prove that a particular loss is within the exception of an exclusionary clause. (See, e.g., Goldfarb v. Maryland Casualty Co.,
“We are of the opinion that in the legal sense, and within the meaning of the last clause, if the deceased suffered death by drowning, no matter what was the cause of his falling into the water, whether disease or a slipping, the drowning, in such case, would be the proximate and sole cause of the disability or death, unless it appeared that death would have been the result, even had there been no water at hand to fall into. The disease would be but the condition; the drowning would be the moving, sole, and proximate cause.”
In Strohurg v. Insurance Company of North America,
“The language of this contract, to the effect that the ‘accidental means’ must have operated ‘independently of all other causes’ to produce the death, does not change the general rule of law, that the proximate and not a remote cause is the one to which the law looks. * o o 'j’jjg policy in the case at bar does not go so far as to require the court to search beyond the active, efficient, procuring cause to a cause of a cause. When one single predominant agency is disclosed, directly producing as a natural and probable result the injury, which is accidental, and which operates independently of other like causes, then the effectual means required by the policy have been found.” (Emphasis added.)215 Mass. 32 , 35,102 N.E. 342 , 344.
The Texas Supreme Court, in Strohurg, referred to nine decisions of courts of other jurisdictions which, at first glance, appear to reach a contrary conclusion. The Texas court, however, distinguished all nine cases in the following way:
“The cases have a common denominator; in each case the policy of insurance on which suit was brought contained a provision excluding liability if disease or bodily infirmity contributed ‘directly or indirectly’ to the insured’s injuries or death. Liability was denied in such cases because of the wording of the exclusionary clause and not because of the wording of the coverage clause. The distinction was drawn in the early case of Manufacturers’ Accident Indemnity Co. v. Dorgan,58 F. 945 (6th Cir. 1893), in which the court recognized the soundness of the English decisions in Lawrence and Winspear, supra, but held that a different result is required when a policy contains a provision excluding liability when disease or bodily infirmity contributes to the loss ‘directly or indirectly.’ ” 464 S.W.Bd 827, 831.
The Illinois cases that touch upon this matter agree with the majority view, discussed above. In Sturm v. Employers’ Liability Assurance Corp.,
“Even though the insured were diseased and his abnormal condition led to his falling into the water and being drowned — and so in a sense contributed to his death — it is not the law that that contribution of disease to his death would prevent the plaintiff from recovering.” (212 Ill. App. 354 , 364.)
See also Miner v. New Amsterdam Casualty Co.,
The exclusionary clause under consideration merely excludes coverage for loss “caused or contributed to by disease or bodily or mental infirmity.” It does not state, in broad terms, that any injury caused “directly or indirectly, partly or wholly, by disease or mental infirmity” is not compensable. As a consequence, this court need not seek out the cause of the act of self-injection, i.e., the cause of the cause.
Moreover, there is some question whether heroin addiction is a “disease” within the intendment of the clause in the policy which excludes coverage where death is caused or contributed to by disease. Terms of an insurance policy are to be taken and understood “according to their plain, ordinary and popular sense.” (Canadian Radium ¿r Uranium Corp. v. Indemnity Insurance Co.,
Metropolitan also raised an affirmative defense based on the exclusion in (E) which bars recovery for injuries caused by “intentionally self-inflicted injury.” It argues that the jury may have determined that the insured’s death was caused by the intentionally self-inflicted injury in the nature of the heroin overdose. While this argument might be a defense in states which distinguish between accidental means and accidental results (see, e.g., Rossman v. New York Life Insurance,
We therefore conclude that the death of the decedent was the result of “accident” within the coverage of the policy issued by Metropolitan and that the trial court erred in denying plaintiffs’ motion to direct that finding as a matter of law. In addition, we conclude that the verdict and judgment cannot properly be supported on this record by the provisions of the exclusionary clauses of the policy. We therefore reverse the judgment and remand to the trial court with directions to enter judgment in favor of the plaintiffs in the amount found to be due.
Reversed and remanded with directions.
RECHENMACHER and WOODWARD, JJ., concur.
Notes
“If, while insured under the Group Policy for insurance for Death or Dismemberment by Accidental Means, the Employee sustains bodily injuries solely through accidental means, and within 365 days thereafter suffers [loss of life] 4 4 4 as a direct result of such bodily injuries independently of all other causes, the Insurance Company shall pay the amount of insurance specified for such loss in Section B hereof, provided, however, that in ■ no case shall any payment be made for death or any other loss which is:
(A) caused or contributed to by disease or bodily or mental infirmity, or by medical
or surgical treatment or diagnosis thereof, or
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(E) caused by or resulting from intentional self-destruction or intentionally self-inflicted injury, while sane or insane.”
