168 P.2d 302 | Okla. | 1946
Plaintiff in error, wife of Ray R. Rosier, and beneficiary in an insurance policy issued by defendant in error on her husband's life, instituted this action to recover under the double indemnity clause of said policy. The insured was found dead in his office on the night of August 30, 1937, from *36 a bullet wound inflicted by a revolver found in his hand.
In a former appeal a judgment for Mrs. Rosier was reversed on account of the trial court's erroneous instruction of the jury with reference to the burden of proof. See Metropolitan Life Ins. Co. v. Rosier,
Upon a retrial, the insurance company prevailed and she has perfected this appeal. As the parties appear here in the same order as in the trial court, we will hereinafter refer to them by their trial court designations.
The case was submitted to the jury on the issues of whether or not insured's death was accidental, and whether plaintiff had furnished defendant proof of such a death as a prerequisite to recovery under the double indemnity clause, or whether subsequent to the death of the insured she had been relieved from furnishing such proof by the conduct of defendant company acting through its agents and employees.
Before discussing the latter issue, it should be noted that upon the particular proof of death transmitted to the home office of the defendant, said company paid (as shown in our former opinion, supra) the face amount of the policy but refused to pay any amount under the double indemnity feature.
The proof of death was in three parts, one of which was designated "No. 1 Claimant's Statement," another "No. 3 Identification Statement," and still another instrument in the form of a statement from one H.H. Cullison, the county investigator. In the "Claimant's Statement" the cause of insured's death was termed "self-inflicted gunshot wound, accidental or otherwise," while in the county investigator's statement it was said to be "suicide." These documents were submitted to the defendant company together, before it paid plaintiff the face amount of the policy, and as far as the record shows, no other or further evidence or proof as to the cause of insured's death was requested or furnished before this action was commenced.
At the trial, to show that proof of death had been duly furnished the company, plaintiff's counsel introduced as her exhibit No. 1 the "Claimant's Statement" above described, but omitted the other parts of the proof transmitted. to the company above noted, and objected to defendant's introduction of the county investigator's statement, as its exhibit No. 1. It is the trial court's allegedly erroneous admission of this instrument which comprises the first of plaintiff's two assignments of error.
Defense counsel says that the documentary proof of death usually required by his client is in three parts and it was shown that, in this instance, the county investigator's statement was substituted for a physician's or coroner's report as part No. 2 of such proof, because here no physician or coroner was ever called to examine the insured or investigate the cause of his death. Plaintiff's counsel contends that exposing Cullison's statement to the view of the jury was highly prejudicial to the rights of his client and cites many cases to the effect that such a statement is never admissible on the issue of cause of death in a case like the present one. Defendant takes no issue with these cases, but points out that the exhibit in question was not introduced on that issue but merely upon the issue of whether or not it had received proof of the insured's accidental death, so as to warrant, under the terms of the policy, claim and payment of double indemnity. Obviously, there is reason founded upon justice and orderly procedure for admitting such evidence. It could well be said that to give such issue unbiased and thorough consideration, the jury was entitled to know, not just a part, but all of the data submitted to the company as a proof of death in order to decide whether or not all of the conditions had been fulfilled to entitle plaintiff to recover on the double indemnity provisions of the policy. Under the contract involved, the company was not obligated to make this additional *37
payment until it received "due proof" that the insured's death was the result of "injury sustained through external, violent and accidental means" rather than as "the result of self-destruction." On the other hand, it can readily be seen that in a case like the present one, the jury might easily be influenced in determining the cause of the insured's death by what appears on that subject in such an instrument. Generally, proofs of death are admissible, when offered on the issue upon which they were received in this case, even though they may reveal someone's opinion as to the cause of the death. Pomorskie v. Prudential Ins. Co. of America,
Plaintiff's counsel calls attention to the fact that the county investigator's report was submitted as a part of the proof of death at the instance of one of the agents of the defendant company, and there is evidence indicating that one or more of its agents did have something to do with its being procured, but the trial court, taking cognizance of such evidence, gave the jury very liberal and complete instructions, under which, had it found the evidence sufficient, it might have decided that plaintiff should recover without having herself furnished any proof of death.
It would, of course, be absurd for us to venture an opinion as to whether the jury actually gave any weight to the investigator's statement in arriving at its conclusion on the other principal issue in the case. It is always a matter of more or less speculation how the evidence in any case will be received and considered in the minds of the jurors, and especially is this true in a case like the present one where the two main issues are so closely related. However, it should suffice to say here that from an examination of the record it appears that in this case the trial court took every precaution to prevent the jury from giving the investigator's statement any weight in deciding whether or not the insured's death was in fact accidental, and also that there was sufficient basis in other competent evidence introduced on that issue alone for a finding and conclusion that the death was a suicide rather than accidental. Under such circumstances, even though the admission of the questioned evidence was error, it would be considered harmless and no cause for reversal. See cases cited in 2 Okla. Dig., under "Appeal and Error," Key No. 1051(1), 1053(2).
The only other proposition presented for reversal is that the trial court erred in giving its instruction No. 3, which, omitting the formal parts, reads as follows:
"You are instructed that if you find that the facts proved are equally consistent with suicide as with accidental death, then in that event your verdict shall be for the defendant."
It seems to be the opinion of plaintiff's counsel that under this instruction, if the jurors, after considering the evidence, found themselves in doubt as to whether the insured's death was suicide or accidental, they would be compelled to indulge in a presumption that it was suicide, and he cites many cases for the proposition that, in such instances, there is never a presumption in favor of suicide. We believe we have sufficiently expressed our views on the subject of "the presumption against suicide" in cause No. 30914, Prudential Insurance Company of America v. Foster,
As we have found no ground for reversal in either of the two assignments of error presented, the verdict and judgment is hereby affirmed.
GIBSON, C.J., HURST, V.C.J., and OSBORN, BAYLESS, and ARNOLD, JJ., concur. RILEY, WELCH, and CORN, JJ., dissent.