The action is brought by the beneficiary named in a certificate of membership in the defendant association to recover $5,000 for the death of the member through accident. The defendant is incorporated and duly licensed under the laws of Missouri as a fraternal beneficiary association. The association has a “lodge system with ritualistic form of work.” The face of the certificate recites that the assured is entitled to such benefits as may be provided in and by the constitution and by-laws of the association in force at the time the accident occurs upon which the claim is based; that the constitution and by-laws and the application of the member, and all amendments thereto, constitute the agreement and govern the payment of benefits, and that changes, additions, or amendments to the constitution or by-laws bind the member, and govern the contract as if incorporated in the constitution at the time of the application. On the back of the policy is the schedule of payments to be made for the injuries and disabilities therein specified, in connection with which is a recital that the benefits scheduled will be paid, subject to the exceptions and limitations of the constitution and amendments thereto, whenever the member shall receive, through external, violent, and accidental means, an injury which shall cause death or disability, and that the payment shall be “$5,000 if [the member is] killed by accident.” This is a part of the contract, and the only part of it containing any particulars of the coverage.
The member was killed when an automobile which he was driving was struck by a railroad train at a highway crossing.
The case was tried to the court without a jury. The court refused to make any of the findings requested by the defendant above noted, but found, (1) that the acts of the member “constituted negligence on his part, which proximately caused his death,” and (2) that “the death . . . was the result of unnecessary exposure to danger and from [to] obvious risk of injury.” The latter finding as first written was that the conduct of the member “constituted and was a voluntary exposure to danger on his part; that [exposure to] such danger was unnecessary, and that the risk to him at said time was obvious.” This was changed by the court to read as in (2) above quoted because it was considered equivalent to a finding of gross negligence, which was contrary to the court’s written decision and its intention. It seems plain from the above that the court by the findings (1) and (2) quoted intended to and in effect did find that the member’s death was not suicide; that the injuries resulting in death were not voluntarily inflicted; that the member’s conduct did not constitute gross negligence; and that the member’s conduct did constitute only ordinary negligence, or its equivalent, a want of ordinary care, that proximately resulted in his death. The
Whether the trial court’s disposition of the case was correct obviously depends on the construction to be given to the excepting clause above stated exempting the defendant from liability when the injuries for which recovery is sought “are the result of voluntary or unnecessary exposure to danger or to obvious risk of injury.” The trial court construed the phrase “voluntary or unnecessary” literally, as disjunctive, and as meaning that injury received as a result of exposure to danger or to obvious risk of injury was excluded if either voluntarily or unnecessarily sustained. This clause was construed in Irwin v. Phœnix Accident &. Sick Benefit Asso.
The decision of the trial court was influenced by the opinion of this court in Shevlin v. American Mutual Accident Asso.
The field for construction being open, it is a familiar rule that in insurance contracts the construction most favorable to the assured will be adopted. Bakalars v. Continental Casualty Co.
Counsel have cited to us a multitude of cases deemed by them to support their respective contentions. All of these have been examined with a view to discover the precise terms of the exempting clauses involved. All of these cases except three involve clauses in substance and effect excluding injuries received either through “unnecessary exposure to dan
Counsel for respondent contends in his brief that the evidence in the case shows that the member was in fact conscious of the danger and voluntarily exposed himself to it. But
Counsel for appellant contends that there is no evidence that the exempting clause relied on by the respondent, in the constitution of the defendant adopted in 1931, had been adopted and was in the contract in 1919 when the certificate in suit was issued; and that, if it had not then been adopted, adopting it afterward would effect such a material change in the contract as would exclude it as a defense, notwithstanding the terms of the certificate relative to the rights of the parties being governed by the constitution existing at the time the injuries giving rise to the suit are sustained, citing Wuerfler v. Trustees Grand Grove W. O. D.
By the Cowrt.- — -The judgment of the circuit court is reversed, and the cause remanded with direction to enter judgment for the plaintiff.
