69 F.2d 849 | 5th Cir. | 1934
Lead Opinion
The New York Life Insurance Company in 1926 issued a policy of insurance upon the life of Guy H. Trimble by which it agreed to pay $10,000 upon proof of death of the insured, and an additional $10,000, called “double indemnity”, upon proof that death resulted from bodily injury effected solely through “external, violent and accidental cause.” The insured died on Monday, October 13, 1930, of a pistol wound. His mother, the beneficiary named in the poliey, acknowledging payment of $10,000, the face of the policy, but alleging that the death of the insured was caused by the accidental discharge of a pistol, brought this action to collect the double indemnity. The insurance company denied this allegation and pleaded affirmatively that the insured committed suicide. The trial resulted in a verdict and judgment for the plaintiff. The defendant appeals and assigns as error the refusal of the trial court at the close of the evidence to direct a verdict in its favor.
At the time b£ his death the insured was employed as junior engineer by the Arkansas Natural Gas Corporation. About the 1st of September, 1930, ho was sent to Tullos, La., a village or small town about 100 miles from Shreveport where his mother lived. While at Tullos he slept in an upstairs room of his employer’s warehouse. About 7 o’clock on the morning of October 14,1930, Ms body was discovered in his bedroom by one of his employer’s lease foremen. The body, fully clad in working clothes, was lying face up crosswise the bed, the feet resting on the floor toward the norih. There was a west window at the head of the bed, the upright facing of
That the cause of death was external and violent was conclusively shown by the character of the injury. The evidence is entirely circumstantial, but the circumstances all exclude any theory that death resulted from the aet of another than the insured; and so the conclusion must be that the insured himself fired the fatal shot. Whether he fired the pistol intentionally and so committed suicide, or unintentionally and therefore accidentally, is the only question in the case. Suicide will not be presumed from the mere fact of violent death, and the reasonable inference of accident therefore arose upon proof of death without any additional evidence. But the presumption against suicide was overcome if the preponderance of the evidence was consistent with the theory of suicide and at the same time was inconsistent with any reasonable hypothesis of death by accident. “Verdicts must rest on probabilities, not on bare possibilities.” Love v. New York Life Ins. Co. (C. C. A.) 64
Tho judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
Concurrence Opinion
(concurring).
1 concur in the result a.nd in all that is said in the opinion except the discussion on page 4 of the presumption against suicide. I think this has no place in this ease, for the evidence, taken as a whole, does not raise any presumption. It does not maintain, it defeats her cause.
In suits on life policies containing exceptions for suicide, not only is the burden on the insurer to prove the exception, but the burden is made heavier by the presumption against self-destruction. In such suits plaintiff need prove no more than that death has occurred. In suits on accident policies insuring against the risk of death from external, violent, and accidental causes mere proof of death will not suffice. Plaintiff must prove, too, that tho death was accidental. The true rule, I think, is that, where plaintiff’s proof shows a violent death and does not show it to have been self-inflicted, his case is prima facie made out, because suicide will not he presumed. When, however,