186 Iowa 454 | Iowa | 1919
Ted Thomas Rowe was a member in good standing of the defendant accident association, and his wife, who is the plaintiff in this action, was his duly appointed beneficiary. On June 26, 1916, while the insured was driving an automobile on the streets of the city of Des Moines, the vehicle wras broken down or upset, and he was instantly killed. This action was brought to recover the indemnity provided for in the insurance contract. The defendant denies liability, alleging that the death of Rowe was not caused by accidental means, within the meaning and intent of the contract. The defendant further alleges affirmatively that, by the terms of the contract, the benefits of the insurance “do not cover or extend to any death, disability, or loss resulting from violation of any law, or from voluntary exposure to danger;” and that the indemnity is not payable in any case, “unless external, violent, and accidental means, producing bodily injuries, are the sole and only cause of the death, disability, or loss.” It further avers that the death of Rowe “was
The cause was tried to a jury. At the close of the testimony, defendant moved for a directed verdict in its favor, on the ground that plaintiff had failed to show the death of the insured from injuries by accidental means; and that it had been conclusively shown that his death resulted from voluntary exposure to danger, and from his violation of law in operating his automobile at an unlawful rate of speed. The motion was overruled and, the cause being submitted to the jury, there was a verdict for plaintiff for the amount of the insurance.
The testimony shows, without dispute, that the deceased had an automobile, which he was accustomed to drive about the city, and was well acquainted with the streets in the neighborhood where his death occurred. About six o’clock in the afternoon of June 26, 1916, accompanied by a neighbor, one Fisk, he started to drive the car from the business part of town to his home. Soon after starting, they picked up two young women. The car was provided with but two seats, into which the four persons were quite compactly crowded. In this position, they made their way to the northern limit of the city, where they turned back. Their course in returning led them from a street running north and south into one running east and west; and either as they turned, or soon after making the turn and straightening their course into the last-mentioned street, the car was capsized, Rowe was killed, and the other passengers received injuries of a minor character. It appears, also, that one of the wheels of the car was broken down; but whether such break was the cause or the effect of the overturn is not made entirely clear by the evidence, and the jury could have properly found the truth of either theory.
If this were all which the evidence discloses, the objection that the injury to the deceased was not shown to have been caused by accidental means would be trivial and without merit. There was evidence, however, from which the jury might have found that the car was being driven at a high, if not a reckless, rate of speed, and that the collapse or overturn was the result of such imprudence; • and it is the defendant’s contention that this fact was conclusively established, and that, if so, the injury resulting to the de
But passing, for the present, the questions of an alleged violation of the law and voluntary exposure to danger, it is yet true that driving the car at a high or unsafe rate of speed, or in a manner to justly convict the insured of negligence, does not necessarily deprive the disaster which he
The charge as given to the jury is not vulnerable to this criticism. The court did state the ultimate facts which must be found to justify a recovery in words almost, if not quite, identical with the appellant’s request. It also defined to the jury the meaning of-the word “accident,” and this, too, was practically in the language of the request; but it declined to add to
“If an injury or death is the result of a man’s intentional act, it is not an accident; but if, preceding the injury, something unforeseen, unexpected, and unusual occurs, which produced the injury, then the injury has resulted from accident, or from accidental means. A person may do a certain act, the result of which may produce what is commonly called accidental injury or death; but the means are exactly-what the man intended to use and did use and was prepared to use. The means were not accidental, but the result might be accidental.”
It is of this ruling that complaint is made. It will be seen, therefore, that, upon final analysis of appellant’s objection, it is directed, not to any fault in the definition given, but rather to the refusal of the court to go further, and, by way of illustration, give to the jury an assumed state of facts in which bodily injury may' not be an accident, or, if an accident, may not be caused by accidental means.
The first and manifest answer to this objection is that, having properly defined the terms, there is no reason or rule requiring the court, as a matter of law, to go further, and define what is not an “accident,” or what is not “accidental means.” In other words, having told the jury in general terms what the definition does include, it is not the duty of the court to set out, by way of illustration or otherwise, assumed specific instances which are not within the scope of the definition. To impose such duty upon the court would be to compel its entrance into a field without boundary or limit, and divert the jury’s attention from the merits of the case on trial. The definition to the jury of terms which have acquired no restricted or technical meaning in law is something in which trial courts ordinarily and properly indulge but sparingly; for the jury may be
It reads as follows:
“Sec. 1571-m20. Except as herein otherwise provided, * * * the local authorities of cities and towns may limit by ordinance, rule or regulation the speed of motor vehicles on the public highways', such speed limitations not to be in any case less than one mile in six minutes, and the maintenance of a greater rate of speed for one eighth of a mile shall be presumptive evidence of driving at a rate of speed which is not careful and prudent.” (Sec. 21, Ch. 72, Acts 34 G. A.).
“Sec. 1571-m27. Any person violating any of the provisions of any section of this act for which violation no punishment has been specified shall be guilty of a misdemeanor punishable by a fine not exceeding twenty-five dollars.”
The language of the insurance contract which appellant relies upon as affording it exemption from liability to the plaintiff is that:
“The benefits under this article shall not extend to or cover any death disability or loss resulting from the violet tion of any Iwo.”
The statute above quoted is a law, within the meaning of the contract. It prescribes a duty for the violation of which á penalty is provided, and it follows, of necessity, from the agreement that, if Rowe violated this law, and his death “resulted from” sueh violation, then there can be no recovery of benefits; and this, we hold, the jury should have been told.
Other assignments of error do not materially affect the merits of the case, and we shall not extend this opinion for their further discussion.
For the errors pointed out, the judgment below is reversed, and cause remanded for new trial. — Reversed and remmded.