Opinion
Summary judgment for defendant Allstate Life Insurance Company (Allstate).
Alice Searle’s (Searle) husband, Martin, insured his life with Allstate and took his own life 10 months later. The policy limited Allstate’s liability to a refund of paid premiums if the insured “committed suicide, sane or insane,” within two years of the effective date of the policy. Searle sued to recover the full amount of the policy.
Searle contends summary judgment was error because Martin’s state of mind is relevant, as only a sane man can commit suicide, and his state of mind presents a triable question of fact. Allstate claims Martin’s state of mind is irrelevant because suicide can be an unintentional as well as an intentional act and thus, no triable issue exists.
*616 The case turns on the meaning of the word “suicide.” Webster’s Third New International Dictionary (1968) page 2286 defines suicide as “the act or an instance of taking one’s own life voluntarily and intentionally” or as “the deliberate and intentional destruction of his own life by a person of years of discretion and of sound mind.” The Concise Oxford Dictionary (1964) page 1292 defines a suicide as a person of years of discretion and sane mind who intentionally kills himself and suicide as “intentional self slaughter”; American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language (1976) page 1287 defines suicide as “the act or an instance of intentionally killing oneself.” The plain meaning of the word suicide is to intentionally take one’s life.
If a person is insane and thus is incapable of forming the intent to commit suicide, how can that person commit suicide? One cannot unintentionally do an intentional • act. The phrase “suicide, sane or insane” is both ambiguous and illogical and the ambiguity will be construed against Allstate because it drafted the policy
(Neal
v.
State Farm Ins. Cos.,
Summary judgment reversed.
Cologne, J., and Staniforth, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied September 25, 1979, and respondent’s petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied November 8, 1979. Clark, J., Richardson, J., and Manuel, J., were of the opinion that the petition should be granted.
