195 Ill. App. 421 | Ill. App. Ct. | 1915
delivered the opinion of the court.
This is an action on an accident insurance policy for $5,000 issued by defendant upon the application of one James W. Martin, in which plaintiff, his wife, was named as beneficiary. The court, upon the conclusion of plaintiff’s case, on the motion of defendant, instructed a verdict in its favor, upon which verdict a judgment of nil capiat and for costs was entered, and plaintiff appeals.
The policy contains a provision that “in ease of bodily injury or injuries received through external violent and accidental means, which shall independently of all other causes result in the death of said member, there shall be payable to Davella Martin, wife of James W. Martin, if living, * * * the sum of $5,000.” It also recites that “any and all such payments or liability to pay shall be in accordance with and subject to each and all of the provisions of the bylaws of said association,” including amendments, alterations and new issues of such by-laws. The by-laws in force at the time the policy was issued and at the death of the insured provided that notice in writing must be sent to the secretary of the association within fifteen days after the happening of the accident resulting in death, and that claims for death benefits must be presented to the association within thirty days after death, together with full proof of death and of the particulars of the accident claimed to have caused death.
The facts concerning the death of the insured are, in brief, that in the night of January 16,1912, plaintiff, the wife of the insured, was awakened by the insured arising from his bed, in which she also was sleeping, and hearing him exclaim, “Oh, my God!” Plaintiff thereupon arose and went to her husband and found him on the floor upon his hands and knees trying to pull himself up. . It was then discovered that the insured had in falling struck a chiffonier, resulting in the cutting of his lip and nose, from which he freely bled. A physician was called, but the insured died before his arrival. This physician, one Thomas J. Fox, gave a certificate of death, certifying that death was caused by fatty degeneration of the heart superinduced by chronic alcoholism.
Plaintiff and the insured were twice married to each other, first on December 22, 1897, and second on March 12, 1910. In August, 1909, plaintiff divorced her husband, the insured, on the ground of his being an habitual drunkard. On the trial of the divorce suit plaintiff testified that the insured was an habitual drunkard and procured others so to testify, and in the faith of the verity of her own testimony that the insured was an habitual drunkard the divorce was granted "and the matrimonial bond sundered.
In the light of these facts, her attempt in this suit to cast doubt upon the fact of the inebriety of the insured must fail. Dr. Fox, a witness for plaintiff, verified by his oath on this trial the facts set forth in his certificate as to the insured’s death. He also testified that he knew that the insured was afflicted with heart trouble and that this information was communicated to him by the insured personally. Dr. Fox testified that the insured told him that he had heart trouble and that he carried strychnine for his “pump,” as he designated his heart. While Dr. Fox would not state positively that the insured stated to him the quantity of strychnine he was in the habit of taking, still he was certain that the insured did tell him that he used strychnine to stimulate the action of his heart, and continually carried it with him for the purpose of meeting any emergency which might arise from the defectiveness of that organ.
In this condition of the testimony, reasonable minds could not well disagree upon the proposition that the insured did not come to his death by accidental means within the terms of the policy, but that he in fact died from fatty degeneration of the heart, resulting from chronic alcoholism. Hence, the instruction of the court to the jury to render its verdict for defendant was without error.
The insurance policy in suit is an accident and not a life policy, and its provisions and conditions bind the parties. That the death of the insured may have been hastened somewhat by the fall may not be doubted, yet his death was not the result of bodily injuries sustained through violent, external and accidental means, independently of all other causes. Unless death did result from bodily injuries sustained through violent external and accidental means, independently of all other causes, there can be no recovery. The evidence in the record on the part of the plaintiff utterly fails in its probative value to establish that the death of the insured was accidental within the conditions of the policy, but on the contrary such evidence establishes that the death of the insured was attributable to fatty degeneration of the heart, and that such fatty degeneration was caused by chronic alcoholism.
The by-laws of the defendant company are by the policy made a part of the contract of insurance. One of these by-laws provides, in part, that no death claim will be paid “unless said claim for death benefit be presented to the association within thirty days after the death of the deceased member, together with full proof of the death and of the particulars of the accident claimed to have caused said death.” The furnishing of the proofs of death within the time required by the by-laws is one of the conditions essential ‘to be performed by the claimant to entitle such claimant to receive from the defendant company the insurance money. A failure to furnish such proofs within the time limited by the by-laws will, unless waived by the company, preclude a recovery. There seems to be no ambiguity in the by-law referred to, and as said in Norwaysz v. Thuringia Ins. Co., 204 Ill. 334: “Contracts of insurance are to be construed like other contracts. If ambiguous terms are used, the meaning more favorable to the insured will be adopted, not because he is the sufferer in a recent loss or because of a disparity in the financial condition of the two parties, but because the words are those of the insurer, and the ambiguity is chargeable to it. Where, however, there is no ambiguity in the terms, neither party is to be favored. If the stipulation is one that the parties could lawfully make, and, having been made, is not actually or inferentially waived, it is the function of the court to enforce its observance as the parties made it, and not to make a new agreement for the purpose of mollifying the hardship that the rigorous and inflexible terms occasion.”
The rule as thus laid down is equally the rule of construction to be enforced in this case in holding the parties to their contract obligation, of which time provided for the furnishing of proof of death and claim is a material and essential part. In Love v. Modern Woodmen of America, 259 Ill. 102, it was held that a by-law containing a provision similar to the one found in this record was binding upon the member.
That proofs were not furnished to the defendant within the time required by the by-law is not disputed. Plaintiff, however, contends that defendant waived the time limit in the by-law and also contends that the mailing of the proofs to defendant within the thirty days was a substantial compliance with the by-law, regardless of the time when such proofs were actually received by defendant. We find no fact in this record warranting this court in holding that defendant by any act waived the by-law regarding the time in which proof of death and claim should be furnished. The fact that defendant delayed sending blanks requested in behalf of plaintiff upon which the proof could be made is of no moment, for the reason that it had not obligated itself to furnish such blanks and the law did not require it so to do.
A failure to furnish such blanks was held in Great Western Ins. Co. v. Staaden, 26 Ill. 360, not to operate as a waiver. The doctrine of estoppel does not arise upon the evidence in this record. Fraud is neither charged nor proven as the reason of the delay by defendant in sending the blanks requested. Where fraud is absent, there is no estoppel. Holcomb v. Boynton, 151 Ill. 294. Plaintiff urges upon us Manufacturers & Merchants’ Mut. Ins. Co. v. Zeitinger, 168 Ill. 286, as authority for the contention that the mailing of the proofs within the thirty days was a sufficient compliance with the by-law. We think the Zeitinger case, supra, clearly distinguishable from the case before us. In the Zeitinger case the words interpreted were, “shall render a statement to the company.” Here the words are entirely different, rendering their significance and interpretation wholly at variance with the words above quoted. The by-law in the case at bar is that written notice shall be presented to the defendant within thirty days after the death of the deceased member. Mailing the proof directed to the defendant was not a presentation nor a compliance with the by-law.
In Miller v. Milwaukee & Mechanics' Ins. Co., 181 Ill. App. 133, it was held that a condition in a policy requiring proof of loss within sixty days is not complied with where such proofs are furnished sixty-one days thereafter, and that such failure to furnish such proofs within the time required relieved the defendant from liability.
The Municipal Court did not err in instructing a verdict for defendant, and its judgment is therefore affirmed..
Affirmed. .