201 Pa. 537 | Pa. | 1902
Opinion by
The Fidelity and Casualty Company of New York issued an accident insurance policy to David W. Van Eman, the beneficiary, if he should die from injuries resulting from accident, being his wife, Millie W. Van Eman. The amount to be paid to her was $5,000; but, if death resulted from injuries received by the insured while “ riding as a passenger in or on a public conveyance propelled by steam, electricity or cable, and provided by a common carrier for passenger service,” the sum to be paid was $10,000. She brought this suit, and, on the trial, proved that the insured, on May 27,1898, when the policy was in full force and he was in good health, had left Gallitin, on
It may be that the statement of the deceased, made to his wife several hours after he had left the train, ought not to have been received as part of the res gestee, and we do not understand that it was offered as such. When the husband reached his home with his aching arm, the one person for whom he first looked and to whom he would first tell the simple truth was his wife. He might have said nothing to any passenger on the train, nor to any friend or passerby on his way home; but there he would tell what had happened, and, first of all, to the one to whom he would naturally turn for attention and comfort. Human experience teaches us that he would speak the truth to her, and that he would tell her just what had happened to him, as he would have told it, if he had spoken, to those about him