87 Ky. 541 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1888
delivered the opinion oe the court.
On the first of Marcli, in the year 1881, Jno. B. T. Daviess, a resident of the town of Harrodsburg, insured his life in the Mutual Benefit Life Insurance Company for the sum of ten thousand dollars, the amount of
On the morning of the twenty-eighth of March, in the year 1881, Daviess was found dead in one of the stalls of his stable, a short distance from his dwelling, with a pistol by his side, from which, as the proof conclusively shows, the ball was fired causing his death. The ball entered the back part of his head near the right ear, and came out in front near the top of the forehead. The preliminary proof was made as the policy required, and the company declining to pay the insurance, this action was instituted by his executor.
One of the conditions of the policy is: “That in case the insured shall die by his own hands, or in consequence of a duel, or by reason of intemperance, * * * then this policy to be null and void, except that in case he shall die by his own hand while insane, the amount to be paid by the company on this policy shall be the amount of the premiums actually paid thereon, with the interest.”
It is pleaded by way of defense to the action that the insured took his own life, with his own hand, by shooting himself with a pistol, and that he was insane at the time. The defense also tendered the amount of the premiums paid with the interest, in compliance with the terms of its policy, insisting that this was the extent of the recovery, in the event other defenses that were interposed were held insufficient.
The other grounds of defense relied on consist in certain false statements alleged to have been made by the insured in response to questions propounded in the axiplication for insurance, only one of which will be
In the written application the insured was required to answer this question: “Have you had since childhood gravel, gout, vertigo, disease of the > heart, consumption, bilious colic?” etc. To all of which the insured responded no. It was alleged that the insured did have vertigo from childhood, and that his answer was, therefore, untrue, and being material to the risk, or made so by the contract between the insured and the company, the policy for that reason is void. There was a general denial of these averments by the executor, and in the reply it is averred that if the assured had such a complaint it was not material to the risk, and besides, he further alleged, and the fact is clearly proven, that the insured, at the time he obtained the insurance, made a full and frank statement to the agents of the company as to his condition by informing them that, prior to the date of the insurance, he had swimming or dizziness in the head, caused by indigestion, and being informed by the agents that the question referred to diseases of a chronic character, and that he (the insured) could truthfully say no, and for that reason made such a response. On this branch of the case the court below declined to give an instruction asked by the company, and in effect told the jury that no testimony had been introduced sustaining this part of the defense, or, if so, the company was estopped from relying on this erroneous statement to prevent the recovery, because made in good faith by the insured, and at the instance of, or in explanation of the meaning of the
The first question we will consider is, did the conrt err in taking from the jury the consideration of this particular defense? The only witness introduced by the defense on this subject was Dr. Price, who had been the family physician of the insured, and testifies that some three years before this insurance was obtained the insured complained of indigestion and had more or less vertigo. That the insured went to Crab Orchard and remained a short time, returning feeling quite well. The witness did not consider him seriously affected, and, so far as he knew, Daviess had no recurrence of the complaint, and he thought it merely temporary.
While vertigo “is swimming in the head,” it must be of such a character as renders the- insurance more hazardous, by affecting in some way the general health of the insured. If merely temporary, the result of indigestion, or from some cause that soon ceases to exist, and the condition of the insured fully restored, it can not be regarded as material to the risk the company has assumed. By the express provisions of the act of 1874, February 4, such statements are to be held as mere representations and not warranties, and before a recovery can be prevented on such a plea, the misrepresentation must not only be made, but it must further appear that it was material, and in fact, regardless of the act of February, 1874, the defense on this branch of the case is not sustained, as in the defendant’s own testimony no misrepresentation was made. (Germania Ins. Co. v. Rudwig, 80 Ky., 223.) It also appears from the testimony that the insured explained to the agents
In the second paragraph of appellant’s answer it is averred that the insured, Daviess, took his life with his own hand by shooting himself in the head with a pistol, and that at the time of the shooting he was insane. The reply admits the death, and that Daviess was then insane, but denies that he died by his own hand. On this issue the case went to the jury under general instructions, and also with the direction, at the instance of the defendant, to return a special verdict. On the motion of the defendant two questions were submitted to the jury for answer—
First. Was the pistol shot wound of which J. B. T. Daviess died inflicted by himself? To this the jury responded Yes.
Second. If so, did he, at the time he inflicted the wound, know the physical nature of the act, and intend by it to cause his own death? To this the jury responded No.
After propounding the special interrogatories to the
To the giving of each of the instructions objection was made and an exception taken. In the diversity of opinion to be found in the text-books, as well as the reported cases, as to the effect the mental condition of the insured at the time he takes his life is to have in determining the question of liability on the part of the company in cases of this character, we have found no rule of law or precedent tipon which to base these instructions for the plaintiff. The presumption to be indulged, if any, in reference to an insane man, is, that he will commit irrational acts, and it is this peculiar conduct and action that enables the ordinary observer to perceive his mental derangement. No legal presumption arises, however, on an issue like this, either the one way or the other, and the jury should be left to determine, from all the evidence before them, whether the insured, at the time of the killing, had mind enough to know that if he fired the pistol ball through his head it would likely produce death, and fired the shot with that intention. If-the insured had such knowledge, and fired the pistol for the purpose .of taking his life, in that event the extent of recovery must be confined to the amount of premiums paid with the interest, as provided by the
The plea for the defense was in avoidance of the policy, or such as would limit the recovery to the amount of premiums paid. The mere fact that the insured was insane when he took his life is not, of itself, sufficient to defeat the recovery. There are many phases of insanity. The mind may become so wrecked as to render one incompetent to form a purpose, or to execute that purpose when formed; one may be rational on some subjects and insane as to others, or his mind in such a condition as to relieve him from moral as well as legal responsibility, and still have mind enough to know that to shoot himself through the head would result in self-destruction, and if with reason enough to know this fact, he commits the act with the intent to take his life, it is a bar to the recovery.
While the fact of insanity and the circumstances connected with the killing should go to the jury on this question of intention, it is necessary for the defense not only to establish the insanity oh the insured, if denied, but that he fired the fatal shot with the intention to take his life; for if fired with this intent, his knowledge as to the result of the act necessarily follows. Whether he was a moral responsible agent or not is an immaterial inquiry. His condition may have been such as to exempt him from legal and moral responsibility, and still he may have had reason enough to know the physical nature of 'the act he was about to commit.
This case is unlike that of the Life Insurance Com
The court held in that case that the language used referred to an act of criminal self-destruction, and had no application to one insane, who in that condition took his life.. The insured must have been guilty of a felonious suicide before the company could avoid liability on its contract of insurance.
We have been cited to many cases establishing the proposition that death by one’s own hand when insane is an act done without mind to control it, and is only -death by accident, and that when the act is not the result of thought or reason, should no more be the subject of punishment than if produced by accident. Those cases all arise where the words of the policy are, “if the insured die by his own hand, or shall commit suicide,” in the latter case the court holding .that suicide means “the deliberate purpose to end one’s existence when in the possession and enjoyment of his mental faculties.” (Breasted v. Trust Co., 8 N. Y., 299; Manhattan Life Ins. Co. v. Broughton, 109 U. S., 121.)
There is something more in the stipulations embodied in the policy before us than the language, if the insured die by his own hand. “ In case he shall die by Ms own hand while insane,” the company agrees to refund the premiums, the policy fixing the amount of recovery.
The question of criminal self-destruction is not involved in the controversy, as the contract by its very terms is made to apply to the insanity of the insured.
This is a reasonable contract, entered' into between parties capable of contracting, and is neither against public policy or unjust to the parties who accept its terms. In the case of Bigelow v. Berkshire Life Insurance Company, 93 U. S., 284, the Supreme Court, in a case similar to the one before us, Mr.. Justice Davis delivering the opinion, said: “Nothing can be clearer than that the words sane or insane were introduced for the purpose of excepting from the operation of the policy any intended self-destruction, whether the insured was of sound mind or in a state of insanity.” It may now be regarded as well-established, that intentional self-destruction will avoid a policy containing condi- • tions like this, whether the act was committed volunta- a rily or from irresistible impulse, unless the mind of the insured was so far gone when he took his life as to render him unconscious that he was taking his life at the time he committed the act.
In the case of Pierce v. Travelers’ Life Insurance Company, 34 Wis., 389, the condition in the policy was in these words: “Shall die by suicide, felonious.
It results,' therefore, that if the insured fired the fatal shot, and had sufficient mental power at the time to know that it would take his life, and fired the pistol with that intention, the recovery in this case is limited to the premiums paid with the interest, -while, on the other hand, if the firing of the pistol was not intentional, because of the unconsciousness on the part of the insured that such an act would take his life, the recovery must be had of the principal sum.
The shooting in such a case must be regarded as the result of accident, as much so as if the pistol had gone off unexpectedly to the- insured and killed him. In the discussion of the legal question applicable to the mental condition of the insured, we are not to be understood as directing the court to take from the jury the question as to whether the killing of the insured was the result of accident in the ordinary meaning of that word. If the act was unexpected or unforeseen, then there is no obstacle in the way of recovery. The instructions asked by the plaintiff and refused, failed to embody the law of the case, and, therefore, no error existed in refusing to give them.
The court below having erred, however, in instructing the jury as asked by the plaintiff — that the law (the insanity of the insured having been admitted) presumed that the deceased did not die by his own