33 Ga. App. 566 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1925
This is an action upon a certificate of insurance issued by the defendant, the Sovereign Camp of the Woodmen of the World, to Edgar J. Simmons, the husband of the plaintiff. The certificate contained the following stipulation: “If the member holding this certificate should die by his own hand or act, whether sane or insane, the certificate shall be null and void and of no effect.” The only portion of the defendant’s answer material to the decision of this case is as follows: “Defendant further shows that said Edgar J. Simmons, the holder of said certificate of insurance, died by his own act or hand; that is, he committed suicide on July 10, 19'23, which act on his part violated the provisions of said certificate herein above set out.” The verdict was for the plaintiff. The defendant’s motion for a new trial was overruled, and it excepted.
•Taken as a whole the charge of the court was full and fair, and the criticisms of excerpts from it are not meritorious. The sole remaining and controlling question is whether the jury’s verdict can stand under the evidence.
The evidence may be summarized as follows: The insured was found dead in a store run by him on Pine street, near the limits of the city of Albany, Georgia, on July 10, 1923. He had been dead at least half an hour before seen by any witness testifying. The store was a frame building about sixteen by forty feet, located near the highway. He was found lying on his back on the floor near the front of the store, with his head towards the front door, his feet towards the rear door, his right foot under his left, and his hands by his side. The front door was barred and the backdoor open. A thirty-eight-caliber hammerless pistol, with one of the shells fired, was lying on the floor, to his right and near his head. There was a bullet wound through his right temple, and blood about the wound. The bullet passed entirely through his head, coming out on the left side and going through the front glass of a show-case about the height of the head of a man sitting on the floor. The bullet appeared to be “rising the least bit” when it went through the other side of the show-case. A witness swore: “I found the bullet there two or three days afterward.” It
Certainly the evidence in this case would have amply sustained a verdict for the insurer, hut the jury found otherwise. The question for this court to determine is not which way the weight of the evidence leaned, but whether the facts and circumstances proved, with all reasonable deductions and inferences therefrom, absolutely demanded a finding in favor of defendant’s plea of suicide. We can not say that they do. "It was night, and at least half an hour elapsed before any witness saw the dead body of the insured. The evidence was contradictory as to whether or not there were powder burns on the body, and there was evidence from which the jury
Judgment affirmed.