94 Ala. 434 | Ala. | 1891
— This action is prosecuted by Jane Jones — appellee here — upon a contract enuiing to her benefit, whereby the defendant — appellant here — insured Albert Hutchinson against death' by accident. The complaint
The case of National Benefit Asso. v. Jackson, 114 Ill. 533, is not opposed to the conclusion we have reached. No question was made in that case as to the manner in which the insured discharged the duty in. the performance of which he was killed. The contention was that he voluntarily exposed himself to unnecessary clanger, or, in other words, that he should not have attempted the act in question at all. The court held, on the facts, that the duty was embraced in his employment with reference to which the policy was issued, and that therefore the policy covered any injury received while attempting to discharge it, ior aught that appeared in the case, in a careful and prudent manner. It is of no consequence in this connection that the complaint alleged due care and diligence on the part of the insured. Notwithstanding this, the' action of the trial court forced the defendant to take issue on the replication, and thus to try the case upon inquiries as to facts which were not really controverted by the defendant, and upon which its rights in the premises did not depend.
It is to be observed with respect to this replication, that it does not allege that the insured was killed while in the discharge of a duty incident to his employment, in the customary mode of performing that duty, as counsel seem to insist, but only that he was performing a customary duty of the service, no account being taken and nothing alleged in respect of the manner in which the attempt was being made. Whether, therefore, .had the averment been that he was discharging the duty in the mode and manner customary and usual in the service, the replication would have been good, is a question not presented for our consideration. But see Warden v. L. & N. R. R. Co., 10 So. Rep. 276, ante, p. 277
But this exception to the insurer’s liability was also a matter of affirmative defense, and under the principle stated, and the authorities cited above, should have been specially pleaded before it could be availed of by the defendant. In the absence of such plea, it was not error for the court to exclude the evidence offered to establish the existence of the rule which it was proposed to show had been violated by the' insured, in such sort that the violation contributed to his death.
But the phrase “under the influence of intoxicating drinks,” as used in policies of this character and in this connection, has a legal significance, differing from the popular one, and implying such influence as in reality amounts to intoxication. In a well considered case, it was said by the Supreme Court of New York, that “to be under the influence of intoxicating liquors, within the meaning of this policy, the insured must have drunk enough to disturb the action of the physical or mental faculties, so that they are no longer in their natural or normal condition. When, therefore, the defendant imposed upon persons insured by it the condition that it would not be liable when death or injury should happen while the insured was under the influence of liquor, the intention manifestly was to require the insured to limit its use in such a degree as
It follows that charges 1, 3 and 4 asked by the defendant, were properly refused. They are either misleading, in that they rest defendant’s immunity from liability on the mere fact that the insured was under the influence of liquor, which the jury would probably have understood to mean a condition not amounting to inebriety, or affirmatively bad, in that they would have authorized a verdict for defendant under this exception, notwithstanding the jury might have found that the insured was not intoxicated at the time the injury was sustained.
We entertain no doubt but that it was competent for- the parties, by appropriate stipulations, to take out of the field of inquiry and controversy, in the event a claim should be advanced for an injury alleged to be within the policy, the question whether the intoxication of the insured did in fact contribute to the injury, and to provide that the policy should not cover any injury sustained while the insured was in that condition, irrespective of any agency the fact of intoxication may or may not have had in the production of the result complained of. There can be no doubt either that this policy contains such a provision. It stipulates, as we have seen, that it shall not cover any accidental injury which may happen to the insured while (not in consequence of being) intoxicated; and serving to emphasize, the purpose to exclude injuries suffered while the insured was under the influence of drink, whether that fact contributed to the result or not, it is provided further, in the same sentence, that the exclusion shall apply also to injuries suffered in consequence of the insured
Charge 2 requested by the defendant is argumentative, and tends to confuse or mislead the jury, if indeed it is not erroneous. The court properly refused to give it.
There was conflicting evidence, or conflicting inferences deducible from the evidence, on every issue of fact presented on the trial; and the court’s action in refusing the general •affirmative charge requested by the defendant was clearly right.
Reversed and remanded.