63 Neb. 530 | Neb. | 1902
This action was brought by Oeorge B. Scherar, a minor,by John G-. Hetter, his next friend, in the district court of Douglas county, to recover upon a policy of insurance for the sum of $1,000, issued by the Prudential Insurance Company upon the life of Rose H. Scherar, payable, in the event of death of the insured, to the plaintiff. Upon the trial the court directed the jury to return a verdict in favor of the plaintiff for the amount of the premiums paid. In obedience to this instruction a verdict ivas returned for the plaintiff for $63.36, upon which judgment Avas rendered, to rcvieAV which the plaintiff brings the case to this court on error.
The defendant admitted the execution of the policy on October 10, 1891, and the death of the insured on or about April 13,1896. By way of defense it pleaded a provision of the policy that if, Avithin three years from the date of the. policy, the insured should die by suicide, Avhether sane or insane, the liability of the company should not exceed the amount of the premiums paid on the policy. It was' also alleged that the insured came to her death by strangulation, caused by her OAArn act Avhile insane. The defense was also pleaded that the policy contained a stipulation that, if the premiums were not paid when due, the policy should be void; that the insured had failed to pay the premium becoming due April 10,-1896, and by reason of such nonpayment of premium the policy became null and void. The
The important question presented by the record, is the construction to be given to the clause avoiding the policy if the insured should die by suicide, sane or insane. It is the duty of the court to ascertain from the contract, if possible, what the parties meant by it, and, when so ascertained, to give effect to it. The intention of the parties in incorporating into the contract the proviso that it should be void if, within three years from date thereof, the insured should die by suicide, sane or insane, seems to us so manifest that an explanation of its meaning seems hardly necessary. The language employed is plain, simple and concise, and, when given its common and ordinary meaning, is not likely to be misunderstood. Under the terms of this policy it was clearly the intention of the parties to protect the insurer from liability, except to the amount of the premiums paid, for any self-destruction by the insured, no matter what the mental condition of the insured might be at the time the act was committed. It ivas entirely immaterial whether the insured was mildly or violently insane, or whether her malady was of such a character that she was unconscious of the moral and physical nature of the act. No kind or degree of insanity will prevent an avoidance under such a contract where the assured commits the act of self-destruction. There is no reason why. the insurer may not by stipulation contract that the liability shall not extend to acts of self-destruction commi tted while the insured is sane or while he is insane, the samé as the insurer may contract that the liability shall not extend to hazardous occupations, residence within the tropics, death in a duel, or the like. The insurer evidently was unwilling to incur the perils of insanity, and the clausg exempting it from liability was inserted to protect it against that hazard. It is ■yvell settled by a long line of decisions in this country that
It is insisted by counsel for plaintiff that the defendant company, by its acts, waived its right to set up as a defense to the policy that the insured had committed suicide. The
By the Court: For the reasons stated in the foregoing opinion, the judgment of the district court is
Affirmed.