130 Wis. 61 | Wis. | 1906
1. Error is assigned because the court refused to abate the action. This is based upon the ground
2. Counsel also contends that by reason of such proofs of loss the court should have granted the defendant’s motion for a nonsuit. Such proofs, at most, were mere prima facie evidence of the facts therein stated. This court held long ago, in an opinion by Chief Justice Ryan:
“While the Code allows defenses in abatement and bar to be pleaded in one answer, it does not permit the same de*66 fense to be pleaded in abatement and in bar, and where that is done the plea in abatement is a nullity.” Hooker v. Greene, 50 Wis. 271, 6 N. W. 816.
Upon the authority of that case it was subsequently held by this court:
“While a' right to plead in abatement may be waived by pleading to the merits, yet it does not follow that a plea to the merits is to be deemed waived or withdrawn by subsequently filing a plea in abátement. Dilatory pleas are not favored in the law, whereas pleas in bar and to the merits are favored.” Baker v. State, 88 Wis. 140, 148; 59 N. W. 570. See Crowns v. Forest L. Co. 99 Wis. 103, 105, 74 N. W. 546.
There was no error in refusing to grant a nonsuit or to dismiss the action.
3. Error is assigned because the court refused to set aside the verdict and grant a new trial. The claim is that there is •no evidence in the record to support the verdict. That ver•dict is to the effect that the death of the deceased was not naused by suicide, whether sane or insane. That was the only question submitted to the jury. As frankly stated in the brief of counsel for the defendant: “The defense set up was suicide of the insured.” That is the only defense on the merits' alleged in the answer. The question whether the deceased came to his death in some other way than by suicide was not in issue and not determined. The finding is, in effect, that the deceased did not intentionally or designedly destroy his own life. The evidence as to the circumstances under which the body was found are undisputed. The death occurred on Sunday, January 15, 1905. The deceased was the street commissioner of the city of Appleton. On the •evening before the death he was at his office in the basement ■of the city hall and gave directions to those under him for the work of the then coming week. In the forenoon of the fatal day, at his home and'in the presence of his wife and children, he was engaged in cleaning a revolver. On objec
It was Dr. Ellsworth’s affidavit tha#was contained in the proofs of loss; and, on being questioned in relation to the statement there made, he testified to the effect that at the coroner’s inquest the questions and answers all tended’ towards suicide; that he did not know whether it was suicide or not, but such was the presumption indulged from start to finish; that in answer to a hypothetical question based upon the facts stated he answered that in his opinion it was impossible for the deceased to have shot himself. In answer to another question he said perhaps it was possible, but it was a questionable ease; that, as he stated before the coroner’s inquest, it was'never done with the right hand, and if done at all it was done with the left hand.
The physical facts, of which the foregoing is a general outline, are undisputed. The whereabouts and conduct of the deceased from about half past 2 o’clock on that Sunday afternoon to the time his body was found in the evening are wholly unaccounted for and left to conjecture. Can it be said, as a matter of law, that the inferences or conclusions to be drawn from such facts and circumstances are so clear
4. In charging the jury upon the question whether the deceased intentionally killed himself the court said:
“The burden of proof is upon the defendant to establish by a fair preponderance of the evidence that the cause of death was suicide. ... As applied to the facts in this case, it devolved upon the defendant to satisfy you by a preponderance of the evidence that the cause of death was suicide. It does not devolve upon the plaintiff to prove a negative— that is, to prove that it was not suicide, — but the burden of proving it is on the defendant.”
And again the court said to the jury:
The “presumption of law is against the commission of suicide, and the defendant must first overcome this presumption in law against suicide, and establish the fact of suicide by a preponderance of evidence, and in the absence of such proof you must answer the question submitted to you by ‘No;’ . . . but this presumption may be rebutted by proof, and . . . the burden is on the defendant to rebut that presumption and satisfy you by the evidence that the cause of •death was suicide.”
5. We perceive no error in excluding from the consideration of the jury a certified copy of the certificate of the death of the deceased, made by the witness Dr. Ellsworth and health officer, and filed in the register’s office as required by secs. 1024, 1024a, Stats. 1898. It was not the best evidence and was not offered by way of impeachment, but as original testimony, and was clearly incompetent.
6. The defendant claims that the court improperly excluded testimony as to the amount of money collected by the deceased as financial secretary of the church and his arrears for moneys so collected. In excluding such testimony the court ruled that it was competent for the defendant to show that the deceased was short in his accounts with the church, but that the defendant could not prove by a trustee that he had made partial inquiries among members of the church and found that certain of them claimed, to have made payments to the deceased and taken receipts therefor, because the
By the Court. — The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.