185 Iowa 674 | Iowa | 1918
To this answer the plaintiff demurred, on the ground, in substance, that the facts pleaded therein did not constitute a defense, for that the burden was on defendant to plead any defense or partial defense it might have,- and that the provisions of “Part C” quoted, constituting a limitation upon the amount of liability or a partial exemption therefrom, are defensive matters, and necessarily to be pleaded affirmatively. In other words, the limitation of the amount of indemnity to $1,000 is not consequent on death “resulting from the overturning of any automobile” or “being thrown from any automobile,” as pleaded in the answer; but, to invoke such limitation or exemption, it must appear, and hence be pleaded by way of defense (this being omitted from the answer) that death was not caused by the automobile’s “being struck by a railway train or engine, or by an interburban or street car, or by another automobile, without any fault on the part of the driver of the automobile in which” the insured was riding. ■ The demurrer was sustained, and the controversy is with reference to whether the portion omitted from the answer should have been pleaded, to constitute a good defense. Counsel for appellant concede that what was pleaded, i. e., that the insured was killed by the overturning of the automobile.
In Ramsdill v. Wentworth, 106 Mass. 320, a statute providing that, when a testator omits to provide for any of his children, they shall take a share, unless otherwise provided for, or unless it appears that the omission was intentional, was held to imply that the burden of proof is .upon those who would make such intention appear. In Manning v. Keenan, 73 N. Y. 45, a section of the code of that state provides for the service of an affidavit of title to property in the possession- of the sheriff on that official, and that thereupon, the officer would not be bound to retain the property, unless he should, on demand, be indemnified.
“The word unless has the force of except; its primary meaning is ‘unloosened from,’ so what follows in the sentence after the word unless is excepted or unloosened from what went before it; and, though the officer is primarily bound by his process to keep the property, or to make delivery to the plaintiff, the service of affidavit of claim suspends that obligation and he is no longer bound so to do, unless indemnity is given, when he is again bound; and as no claim by a third person was, without the section, valid against an officer who had obeyed strictly his process, so none should after that section be valid, unless made as it provided, and if so made, then it should be valid. For such a form of expression in a statute sometimes amounts to an affirmative enactment, and in fact in proprio vigore, con fers all that is excepted from a negative or restrictive provision.” See In re Estate of Pearsons, 110 Cal. 524 (42 Pac. 960); Alexander v. People, 7 Colo. 155 (2 Pac. 894) ; In re Estate of Smith, 131 Cal. 433 (82 Am. St. 358).
As seen, the word is often employed as equivalent to “except.” That meaning could well have been intended; for, manifestly, the clause following was intended as a limitation on or description of what preceded. The reduction on the amount of indemnity was to be upon the loss’ being caused by the overturning of the automobile, -or being thrown therefrom, if not caused by a collision, such as described. In other words, the language following the word “unless” is in the nature of a limitation, attached to what preceded. The definitions of the lexicographers lend support to this construction; for if “unless” be defined as meaning “if not,” or “if it be not,” the clause following is made as a limitation or description of conditions under which the general clause preceding shall apply. The language bears this construction; and, as it must be construed