73 Mo. App. 679 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1898
The defendant issued an accident policy of insurance on the life of John C. Cornwall, in which it agreed to pay to plaintiff’s ward the sum of $2,000, if, during the life of the policy, the death of the assured should result from external, violent and accidental means, except the death should result from “injuries intentionally inflicted upon the assured by
The shooting occurred on the morning of the eighth of August, 1896, in Jonesboro, Arkansas. McManis was a trainmaster on the St. Louis and Southwestern Railroad Company. Cornwall had been a conductor on a freight train on the same road. Several weeks prior to the difficulty McManis caused the discharge of Cornwall/ In addition to this Cornwall believed that McManis had seduced his (Cornwall’s) wife. Cornwall was very hostile to McManis and at different times threatened to kill him. These threats were communicated to McManis. For several days prior to the homicide Cornwall had been away from Jonesboro. He returned the evening of the seventh of August. On the next morning he went to the railroad station. He was without his coat and was unarmed. He met McManis on the platform of the station. They exchanged a few words, when McManis shot him with a pistol. The bullet entered the brain and produced instant death. The record contains the testimony of four witnesses, who professed to have seen the shooting. F. L. Nasor, after testifying to some pre
The following is from the testimony of Fritz Hoffman:
11Q. What took place between McManis and Cornwall? A. I was passing down the platform with some ice. I was going to wait on that passenger train and I saw McManis with a revolver in his hand and he was walking toward Cornwall, and Cornwall was backing away from him, and McManis kept on walking toward him and I suppose he was playing with the revolver. I passed on by and just as I got by the shooting commenced. He shot and Cornwall fell. Cornwall was shot in the upper jaw and he dropped dead instantly. Q. What was Cornwall doing when you saw McManis take his pistol out and move to where Cornwall was? A. Cornwall was backing away from him. Q. How far apart, were they when you first saw McManis pull out his pistol? A. Eight or ten feet; he got closer before the shot was fired. It looked like they were going to give up the trouble, for MeMannis turned away then turned around and shot Cornwall.” * *- *
A. J. Ward testified as follows: “Q. I will ask you if you were present at the time McManis shot and killed Cornwall. A. I was, yes, sir. Q. State what you saw of it, and all about it? A. I never seen much; I was there at the depot loading soda pop cases on some trucks and two men were there talking, but I didn’t think that they were quarreling at the time until I heard Cornwall make the remark, “I will kill you,” and I turned and noticed the two men, and about the time I turned or a little afterward, McManis shot him. Cornwall had a pick handle at the time I saw him, but he didn’t get the pick loose because it was fastened in the end of a pipe. Q. And'before he got it loose he was shot. He was trying to get it loose? A. Yes, and McManis shot and killed him, that is all I know. ” The witness stated on his cross-examination that it might have been McManis who said “I will kill you.”
If the character of the assault is to be judged by what occurred at the time of the shooting, there can be no question that the finding of the jury that McManis was the aggressor is supported by substantial evidence. Hoffman is the only disinterested witness who saw the -entire difficulty. He says that when McManis drew his ■pistol he was eight feet from Cornwall, that he
“The court instructs the jury that before plaintiff can recover in this case, it must appear from the evidence that the assault made upon the deceased by MeManis was without any provocation, that this without MeManis being provoked thereto by anything deceased did or said at the time of the killing, and if the assault was so provoked, you will find the issues for the defendant.”
Complaint is made of the third instruction given for plaintiff, which is as follows:
“If the jury believe from the evidence that the deceased, John C. Cornwall, was intentionally shot and killed by one MeManis on the 8th of August, 1896, that such assault was unprovoked, that is to say, that said MeManis was the aggressor and assaulted Cornwall when and while he, the said Cornwall, was making no demonstration and was in no way provoking said MeManis, then such killing is an accident within the meaning of the policy sued on, and you will find the issues for the plaintiff.”
The objection urged against the instruction is that it ignores other issues and directs a verdict for the plaintiff, if the jury should find that McManis was the aggressor. This criticism is not, in our opinion, well founded. It is true that the instruction presents only a partial view of the case, but it does not direct a verdict on the entire case, provided the issues therein submitted are found in favor of the plaintiff. The last clause in the instruction is inartificially drawn, but it is evident that the word “issues” therein, referred only to the matters stated in the instruction, and the jury must have so understood it.
We are fully justified in this conclusion as the other instructions, especially those given for the defendant stated the other issues and required the jury to pass on all of them. It is well settled that a partial view of a general expression instruction may be supplied or explained by other instructions. Goetz v. R. R., 50 Mo. 474; Hohstadt v. Daggs, 50 Mo. App. 240.
Other assignments are presented in the briefs, but they were not pressed on the argument. We think it clear that the defendant has no just ground of complaint on account of them. The judgment of the circuit court will be affirmed.