delivered the opinion of the court.
Appellee, Reserve Life Insurance Company, on September 24, 1952, issued its policy of insurance, by the provisions of which it agreed to pay to Florence A. Rodgers, mother of James 0. Rodgers, the sum of $1,000 in the event James 0. Rodgers lost his life resulting directly and independently of all other causes from accidental bodily injury sustained while the policy was in effect. On September 25, 1954, while the policy was in full force and effect, James 0. Rodgers, twenty-one years of age, accompanied by Patricia Allen, eighteen years of age, and Judy Gorman, seventeen years of age, was driving a 1950 Chevrolet convertible automobile with a 1954 motor. The car in which they were riding left the pavement and was overturned and James O. Rodgers was killed.
On January 14,1955, Florence A. Rodgers, the beneficiary, filed the instant complaint to recover under the provisions of the policy. The defendant answered, admitting the issuance of the policy and that it was in effect on September 25, 1954, and admitted the death of James 0. Rodgers on that day, but denied that he died from accidental bodily injuries and set up as an affirmative defense that Rodgers drove his automobile on a country road at night at a speed of 100 miles per hour while approaching a curve in disregard of the protests and warnings from the passengers in his car and from these allegations the pleader concluded that Rodgers’ death resulted from his wilful and wanton driving of an automobile under circumstances which exhibited a reckless disregard for his own safety. The plaintiff replied, denying the allegations of the affirmative defense and the issues made bv the pleadings were submitted to the court, without a jury, resulting in a finding and judgment for the defendant and the plaintiff appeals.
There is no conflict in the evidence. The defendant, by its insurance policy, agreed to pay the plaintiff $1,000 in the event her son, James 0. Eodgers, lost his life, resulting directly and independently of all other causes, from accidental bodily injury. On the evening of September 25, 1954, James 0. Eodgers attended a party with a group of young people near a forest preserve. About eleven o’clock that evening he left the party in his automobile accompanied by Lee Johnson, Patricia Allen, and Judy Gorman. Johnson was in the back seat, but his presence was not revealed to Patricia Allen or Judy Gorman, who occupied the front seat with Eodgers, until Eodgers stopped the car in front of the home of Johnson in Eockford. Eodgers got out of the car there and let Johnson out. He, Eodgers, then reentered the car, and he and his two guests intended to return to the party. While Eodgers, upon the return trip, was driving along Kishwaukee Street near an intersection his car hit the rear end of a Cadillac car driven by a lady whose name does not appear in the record. Eodgers got out of his car, and the lady driving the Cadillac left her car, and some words were exchanged. Eodgers returned to his car and drove rapidly in an easterly direction on Corlett Eoad, which is a twenty-foot paved highway. As he approached a curve in the road, Patricia Allen testified that she heard Judy Gorman tell Eodgers to watch out as there was a curve ahead; that she, Patricia Allen, looked at the speedometer and it registered 100 miles per hour; that she then told Eodgers that he was going too fast to go around a curve and Eodgers answered, saying “Yes” or “Yup.” A few seconds thereafter the car left the paved portion of the highway at the beginning of the curve and travelled approximately 400 feet on the east shoulder as the road curved to the right in a southerly direction. The car hit a steel guard rail, turned over on its top and skidded another 50 feet before it came to rest. Kodgers was thrown from the car, and his dead body was found under the guard rail.
The sole question presented by this record is whether, under the detailed facts, the death of the insured was an accident within the meaning of provisions of the policy.
The terms “accident” and “accidental” as used in insurance policies covering accidental death mean “happening by chance; unexpectedly taking place; not according to the usual course of things or not as expected.” (45 C. J. S., Insurance, sec. 753, p. 777.) The author of the Article on Insurance in 29 Am. Jur. sec. 931, pp. 706, 707, states that the words “accident” and “accidental” have never acquired any technical significance in law and, when used in an insurance contract, are to be construed and considered according to the ordinary understanding and common usage and speech of people generally; that the courts are practically agreed that these words mean that which happens by chance or fortuitously, without intention or design and which is unexpected, unusual and unforeseen. “The definition,” says this authority, “that has usually been adopted by the courts is that an accident is an event that takes place without one’s foresight or expectation — an event that proceeds from an unknown cause, or is an unusual effect of a known cause, and therefore not expected.”
Counsel for appellee insists that the evidence discloses that the insured drove his automobile with wilful disregard of his own safety and that his death resulted from his own deliberate misconduct and, therefore, there can be no recovery, citing Cory v. Woodmen Accident Company,
Thompson v. Prudential Ins. Co. of America,
In Kalahan v. Prudential Ins. Co. of America,
We have examined the other cases relied upon by counsel for appellee to sustain judgment of the lower court, but the facts in none of them are analagous to the facts in the instant case.
In Yates v. Bankers Life and Casualty Co.,
In the instant case the insured was proceeding rapidly but safely along a straight, level, twenty-foot paved highway free of other traffic. The road curved. He misjudged or did not know the angle of the curve and was unable to keep his automobile on the paved portion of the highway and his car hit a protecting guard rail and he was killed. It does not follow that his death was not accidental or that his death must have been foreseen or expected. There is no evidence from which one would be justified in concluding that the insured expected that he could not negotiate this curve or that his fast driving would result in his own death and injury to his guest passengers. The fair intendment of his conduct is that what did happen was unforeseen and unexpected by him and his death, under the circumstances, was accidental within the accepted definition of that term and therefore within the provisions of the policy. One may voluntarily and knowingly, with an appreciation of the attending risk, expose himself to danger and be killed, yet his death be accidental. Where a pedestrian or a driver of a vehicle is killed or injured as a result of his miscalculation of distance, speed or his own capabilities, in an attempt to pass in front of an oncoming train, he is still the victim of an accident, even though he knew the train was approaching, failed to heed warning signals and knowingly exposed himself to danger, under circumstances which would have deterred a careful person from attempting to cross, but can it be said that under such circumstances such death or injuries were not accidental?
In this connection it might be noted that the policy issued by appellee did not contain what is sometimes designated as an “exposure-to-danger” provision. Such a clause expressly excepts from the coverage of the policy injury or death if caused by “voluntary exposure to unnecessary danger” or “unnecessary exposure to danger” or “exposure to unnecessary danger” or by “wilful and wanton exposure” or by exposure to “obvious risk of injury or obvious danger” or by exposure to “unnecessary danger, hazard or perilous adventure” (45 C. J. S. Title; Insurance, sec. 774, p. 805). The author of this Article on Insurance in C. J. S. then states (sec. 774, p. 805): “Where, however, the policy does not contain an exposure-to-danger provision, the element of danger is both unimportant and immaterial unless insured intended to produce the very result which occurred.” The author of the Article on Insurance in 29 Am. Jur., sec. 944, p. 716, says that voluntary exposure to danger by the holder of an accident insurance policy will not defeat recovery for an injury caused by accidental means, where such an exposure is not an exception in the policy and the insured has no intention of producing the injury received. Both articles cite Richards v. Standard Accident Ins. Co.,
In the Richards case, supra, it appeared that the insured died of a sunstroke and the company defended upon the ground that his death was not the result of an accident within the meaning of the provisions of the policy sued on, but his death was the natural result of his own acts. In affirming a judgment for the plaintiff and after citing and reviewing many cases, the court stated that the authorities generally hold that death or injury do not result from accident or accidental means within the terms of an accident insurance policy where the injury or death is the natural and probable result of the insured’s voluntary act unaccompanied by anything unforeseen except the death or injury. The court then said that a well-established exception to that rule is where death or injury is not the natural and probable result of a voluntary and intentional act by the insured or something unforeseen or unexpected or unusual occurs in the act which precedes the injury, then the injury is the result of accidental means and stated that the leading case on the subject is United States Mut. Acc. Ass’n v. Barry,
In the instant case, Rodgers consciously incurred a known hazard in attempting to negotiate the curve in the highway at the high rate of speed he was travelling. He clearly failed to exercise judgment, was careless, reckless, perhaps foolhardy, but it does not follow that he intended to destroy himself or imperil the lives of his guest passengers. His death was not the rational, natural and probable result of his intentional act and, upon the facts as they appear in this record, plaintiff is entitled to recover.
The judgment of the circuit court of Winnebago County is reversed and this cause is remanded with directions to render judgment for the plaintiff.
Reversed and remanded with directions.
