189 P. 835 | Cal. | 1920
This is an action brought by the plaintiff, a beneficiary, to recover for death under an accident insurance certificate issued July 27, 1908, to Nathan Olinsky, by the defendant, a fraternal beneficial order. In 1913 certain by-laws were enacted by the association which were in force at the time of the death of the insured, which plaintiff claims modified the certificate. On June 19, 1915, while at a summer resort on the Russian River, the insured, who was then apparently in perfect health, entered the river for a swim. The only witness to the incident testified that he attempted to swim upstream against a very strong current, and after swimming eight or ten strokes returned to the shore, bleeding from the mouth. The water was not more than four and a half feet deep and the deceased was five feet eight inches in height. There was no evidence of slipping or other similar accident. *671 The hemorrhage continued for some time and was followed by others. The insured was brought to San Francisco, placed in a hospital, and died on July 9, 1915. The cause of his death was the violent and successive hemorrhages which, so far as the evidence shows, began at the time mentioned.
The deceased had been suffering for some time with tuberculosis. From June 18, 1914, to July 28, 1914, he was an inmate of a sanitarium for tubercular patients, but had apparently fully recovered. However, the autopsy showed that he was suffering from tuberculosis at the time of his death.
There is no evidence of over-exertion other than the natural inference from the testimony that the deceased swam eight or ten strokes in the face of a very strong current in the river and immediately came ashore with a hemorrhage from the lungs, which in his condition might result from sudden and violent over-exertion. Under the evidence the verdict of the jury must be held to have established the inference that the death was the result of sudden and violent over-exertion at the time in question. It remains to be determined, in the absence of any other evidence as to accidental means of injury, whether this conclusion is sufficient to justify the verdict. It may be conceded that the evidence was sufficient to justify the verdict of the jury under the instruction of the court defining an accident or casualty as follows: "A casualty, something out of the usual course of events, and which happens suddenly and unexpectedly, and without any design on the part of the person injured." This language being taken from Richards v. Travelers'Ins. Co.,
"3. If death result from such injuries alone within one hundred and twenty days," or, to put it in the language of the authorities, the insurance is against death resulting from "accidental means" and not accidental death. (SeePostler v. Travelers' Ins. Co.,
Judgment reversed.
Shaw, J., Olney, J., Angellotti, C. J., Lawlor, J., and Lennon, J., concurred.
Rehearing denied.
All the Justices concurred.