The contention of appellant is, that there is evidence in the record which would justify the submission of the case to the jury upon the issue as to whether or not the death was accidental. The evidence is brief, consisting of the testimony of the plaintiff herself, and the policy of insurance. The plaintiff testified simply that the deceased was her husband; that on March 4, 1917, Spranger shot him with a revolver; that he died from the wound so inflicted, and
“It thus appears that the insured, at a time when he was in full possession of his mental faculties, accosted Porter and engaged in a controversy in consequence of which he committed an assault on the body of Porter, evidently for the purposfe of punishing him for what had just occurred between them. Everything connected with the transaction clearly indicates that the insured intended to do exactly what he did on that occasion. Therefore the injury which he received at the time was the natural and logical result of an intentional act on his part. He was a man of intelligence, and it must be presumed that he knew that in making an assault with his fist in the manner described he would probably sustain more or less injury to himself.”
Consequently it was held that the trial court should have directed a verdict for the defendant.
Hutton v. States Accident Ins. Co.,
“Where one voluntarily and deliberately engages in a fight or brawl, and places another in a position where he, too, must fight to defend himself, it is a natural result, and one known to all sensible men as likely to follow, that one or both of the combatants will receive more or less serious injury. ’ ’
Taliaferro v. Travelers’ Protective Assn. of America,
“From the inception of the difficulty, the deceased appears to have been the aggressor. He was the first to draw a deadly weapon, accompanying that action with the exclamation that ‘he must have revenge; put yourself in shape.’ This can be regarded in no other light than an invitation to a deadly encounter, in which the deceased voluntarily put his life at stake, and deliberately took the chances of getting killed. Where a person thus invites another to a deady encounter, and does so voluntarily, his death, if he sustains a mortal wound, cannot be regarded as accidental by any definition of that term which has heretofore been adopted.”
In Price v. Occidental Life Ins. Co.,
“If it should appear that the killing had been the result of an encounter with deadly weapons, arid that the deceased had himself invited and brought on such conflict, the fatal result would not have been accidental, so far as he was concerned.”
The opinion quotes with approval from Taliaferro v. Travelers’ Protective Assn., 80 Fed. 368 (
“There the deceased had engaged in a quarrel, in the course of which he was killed, but it did not appear that he drew a weapon, or that he knew his opponent was armed.”
The plaintiff in the case at bar contends that where the evidence discloses that the deceased was ignorant of the fact that his adversary was armed, the fatal result was accidental so far as it concerned him. In support of this position, he relies principally upon the case of Lovelace v. Travelers’ Protective Assn., already mentioned, and Union Casualty Co. v. Harroll,
The facts of the Lovelace case are these: His contract of insurance promised indemnity for “death by accident.”0 He was a commercial traveler, and on the
“Whether he acted lawfully as a'guest of the hotel, during the absence and illness of the proprietor, in attempting to remove Graves from the hotel office by force, we think needless to investigate. It may be assumed that, by his course of conduct, he voluntarily assumed the risks of a fight. But there is nothing in the circumstances to show that he voluntarily assumed the risk of death. We consider his killing an ‘accident’ in the popular and-ordinary sense in which that word is generally used.”
We are unable to agree with the eminent jurists who undertake to distinguish this case from the Taliaferro case upon the ground that Lovelace did not know his adversary was armed, nor do we think that anything in the opinion justifies the inference that such fact was a controlling factor. On the contrary we think the/ logic of the learned justice is based upon the fact that Lovelace himself was unarmed, or at least, did not exhibit any weapon, and therefore did not invite that species of combat. This theory is strengthened by the fact in the Taliaferro case, that Taliaferro could not have known that Frith was armed when the assault was made, for the latter did not draw his gun until after he had been struck in the face with the revolver of his enemy.
It is not necessary, in this case, for us to determine whether or not, under any circumstances, the injuries sustained by the aggressor should be regarded as other than accidental, but we think it very clear that if a man deliberately assaults another, with a lethal weapon in his hand, such as a pistol, whether it be loaded or not, it cannot be said that the injuries he receives in the resulting struggle are accidentally received. The very act of assaulting another with a gun is an invitation to that other to resist unto death, and if the aggressor is killed, it is a natural and logical sequence of his own voluntary act.
The judgment of the lower court is affirmed.
Affirmed.
