97 Neb. 71 | Neb. | 1914
This is an action on a fraternal beneficiary certificate for $1,000 issued by defendant to James W. McLaughlin. Plaintiff is the mother of assured, and is named in the certificate or insurance contract as beneficiary. In the petition it is alleged that assured is dead, and that ihe and plaintiff performed all of the conditions of the contract on their part. These allegations and the liability of defendant are denied in its answer. From judgment in favor of plaintiff for the full amount of her claim, defendant has appealed.
The first question is whether the evidence entirely fails to establish the presumption of death of the insured. The findings of the trial court in actions at law, like the verdict of a jury, will not be disturbed, if the evidence is substantially conflicting. The rule now thoroughly established and always acted upon is that the verdict of the jury or findings of the court in-jury cases will be sustained by this court upon appeal, unless upon-the whole record found to be clearly wrong. Other forms of expression sometimes adopted in opinions are not intended by the court to vary
The best authorities, with substantial unanimity, hold that whether seven years’ continued absence from one’s usual place of residence will raise the presumption of death must depend largely upon the circumstances and conditions of each particular case. Upon this-point the supreme court of Kansas, which has perhaps required as strict proof to raise this presumption as has any court in this country, said: “It is conceived, however, that the character of the inquiry, the persons of whom it must be made, and the place or places where it must be made are all to be determined by the circumstances of the case.” Modern Woodmen of America v. Gerdom, 72 Kan. 391. In that case and in Renard v. Bennett, 76 Kan. 848, the court appears to adopt the rule that, when a young, unmarried man leaves the home of his parents and goes from place to place for some time, corresponding regularly with his parents, and suddenly ceases corresponding, and nothing is heard from him for more than seven years, inquiry must be made at all places and of all people where there was any probability that information might be obtained. But, in general, the courts of this country have held, as did the supreme court of Wisconsin, that it “does not require proof of diligent search and inquiry in order to establish the presumption of death when a person has absented himself from his home or place of residence for seven years.” Miller v. Sovereign Camp, W. O. W., 140 Wis. 505. The supreme court of Minnesota approved this instruction: “If you find from the evidence that on the 17th day of July, 1901, Behlmer (that is, Fred) left his home, wife, and children, and that he has never returned, and that no tidings from him have ever been received by his family, a presumption arises after seven years that he is dead.” Behlmer v. Grand Lodge, A. O. U. W., 109 Minn. 305; Magness v. Modern Woodmen of America, 146 Ia. 1; Oziah v. Howard, 149 Ia. 199.
This question has frequently been before this court, and, ■so far as its application to the case at bar is concerned,
In Thomas v. Thomas, 16 Neb. 553, it was held that a wife could not rely upon the presumption of the death of her husband because of his absence from her for a period of seven years, when she, after he had left her, removed from state to state, establishing new places of residence, and had made no inquiry at her place of residence at the time her husband left her. And, when the same case was before this court upon a subsequent appeal (19 Neb. 81), the court held that the fact that the husband had been seen alive within the seven years overcame the presumption of his death. But upon the first appeal it was definitely decided that, if he had been absent for a period of seven years, and during that time had not been heard from “by those who, were he living, would naturally hear from him,” this was sufficient to raise the presumption of death. Surely it cannot be said that, under the evidence in this case, the finding of the trial court is so unsupported that we must say, as matter of law, that it is clearly wrong.
2. The defendant contends that under its by-laws the insured has forfeited his certificate. ' His original contract of insurance contained the provision that the assured should comply' with the laws, rules and regulations in force when he became a member, or which might thereafter be enacted. In July, 1907, when the insurance had been in force more than seven years, and about three years after the assured was last heard from in Peru, the defendant alleges that it adopted the following by-law: “Any member who shall abscond, remove or- depart from his home or last place of residence, and remain away for a period of one year, and not report to the clerk of his camp, or, if a member at large, to the sovereign clerk, of his location, with post office address, shall thereby forfeit his membership, and his beneficiary certificate shall become null and void. The absence or disappearance of a member from his last known place of residence for any
About three months after the adoption of this bylaw, the clerk of the local camp notified Thomas McLaughlin, the father of the assured, in writing, as follows: “I hereby notify you that I must refuse any more money in payment for your son J. W. McLaughlin as assessments on his certificate, No. 15326, W. O. W., on account of his disappearance over one year ago, and will send him in suspended in my Oct. ’07 report, by instruction from Sov. Camp. Am sorry, but can’t help it.” During the seven years prior to that time the mother of the assured, who
It sometimes happens that one whose life is insured abandons his home and parents for more than seven years;, and afterwards returns, or is known to be living. Insurance companies, no doubt, may adopt reasonable regulations to guard against payment of unjust claims in such cases. Whatever may be thought of the reasonableness of the rule adopted by defendant, as a general proposition, it cannot have the effect claimed for it in this case. When the assured went to South America, there was no such provision in his contract. If he lost his life in the mining regions within two weeks after he arrived there, it would, of course, not be insisted that several years thereafter-a by-law could be adopted which would cancel his certificate. It is alleged as a defense in this case that he has; violated this by-law. Unless he was living when the bylaw was adopted, he could not violate it. This the defendant has wholly failed to prove. There is no presumption: that he was then living. In Lawson, law of Presumptive-Evidence (2d ed.) p. 255, the author states-that the rule-in this country is different from the rule in England, and that in this country he is presumed to be alive until the end of seven years. The text and the notes seem to be in conflict on this point, and the authorities cited appear to be very conflicting.
In Coe v. National Council of K. & L. of S., 96 Neb. 130, there is a quotation from the opinion of Sanborn, J., in Northwestern Mutual Life Ins. Co. v. Stevens, 71 Fed. 258, in which it is said: “The established presumption of fact from the disappearance of an individual under ordinary circumstances, from whom his relatives and acquaintances have never afterwards heard, is that he continues to live for seven years after his disappearance.” The question
In 4 Ency. of Evi. 47, 48, the rule is stated “that the date on which the death of such an absentee occurred is a matter of proof,” and “the burden of proof is on the party asserting that death occurred on á particular time.” This statement of the law is well supported by authorities there cited. It is peculiarly applicable to this case. There is a-strong probability that, if .he had lived to adopt a post office address in Peru, he would have informed his parents of that fact, as he promised in his last letter that he would do. Even if the law were otherwise, and if the presumption ordinarily were that the absentee lived to the end of the seven years, the circumstances of this case are
The findings and judgment of the trial court are not so unsupported by the evidence that we can say they are clearly wrong. The judgment is therefore
Affirmed.