11 Misc. 36 | The Superior Court of New York City | 1895
The condition of the policy on which the defendant relies for a defense provides that “ Any medical adviser of the association shall be permitted to examine the person or body of the insured in respect to a/ny alleged injury or cause of death, when and as often as he requires, on behalf
Neither the representatives nor the beneficiaries of the insured directed an autopsy, and heneé the medical adviser of the defendant was not, by the language or intent of the condition, authorized to attend, make one, or assist in making one.
Post-mortem examination means an examination of a body after death, and does not necessarily imply an autopsy, which is. the examination of a dead body by dissection to ascertain the cause of death. To dissect means to cut apart or to pieces, and the scientific mode is pointed out in 2 Wharton & Stille’s Medical Jurisprudence (3d ed.), section 1010, subd. 4. The condition does not expressly authorize autopsy or dissection; nor can the power be implied, for the act would be unlawful without the assent of the deceased or his next of kin. Penal Code, §§ 305, 308,'309. The deceased, in his lifetime, gave mo such consent, and the next of kin were under no obligation to give their assent.
The provision which gives the defendant’s medical adviser the right to examine the body means scrutiny, investigation and inspection while the body is unburied. The defendant, in its answer, admits that it received immediate notice of the death, and if it failed to avail itself of the privilege of examination before burial the right was waived. The deceased met his death September 4, 1893, was embalmed,, and buried September ninth, so that the defendant had five days within which to assert and exercise its right to examine the body, if it had chosen to avail itself of the opportunity.
The provision cannot be extended to mean that the defendant, after burial, had the right to exhume and dissect the body “ when and as often as he ” (the medical adviser) “ requires.” Even if the language of the condition could by any logical reasoning furnish argument for the existence of the right stated, it would be strictly construed against the person mak
The condition of the policy requiring immediate notice of death and the provision for examination of the body are to be construed together, the former being in aid of the latter, and to enable the defendant to exercise whatever liberties it confers.
The defendant’s counsel frankly admitted at' the trial that the right to examine asserted under the policy was to disinter the body and to dissect it by an autopsy. The defendant had no such right, and when it put its refusal to pay upon that ground it was tantamount to an admission that if the deceased met death by drowning it had no legal defense. The plaintiffs were clearly right in their contention “ that they were not required by law either to grant or refuse the permission asked for ” by the defendant. Indeed, they would have forfeited nothing if they had unequivocally refused the permission as officious.
When a body has once been buried, the law, having a proper respect for the dead, a just regard for the sensibilities of the living and for the due preservation of the public health, has jealously guarded the grave against ruthless intrusion. Exhumation has been tolerated only upon consent of the next of kin, for substantial reasons satisfactory to the family, and which appealed to the finest instincts of their' nature, or upon permission of the proper municipal authority, in extreme
The reason assigned by the defendant for this extraordinary demand is .that by one of the conditions of the policy it is provided that the insurance •“ shall not extend to injuries of which there is no visible mark, or cover accidental injuries, ór death resulting from or caused, directly or indirectly, wholly or in part, by hernia, fits, vertigo, somnabulism, or disease in any form,” and that it was the right of the defendant to dissect 'the body in expectation of finding some trace of disease which under this provision might exempt it from the payment of the loss claimed. The answer to this demand is, that the ' policy gives no right to the autopsy claimed, and the law will not tolerate it for experimental purposes simply to aid such a. defense., No case has been called to our attention in which any such demand was sustained.
Claflin v. Ins. Co., 110 U. S, 81; Gross v. Ins. Co., 14 Ins. L. J. 158 ; State Ins. Co. v. Maackens, 9 Vroom, 564; Weide v. Ins. Co., 1 Dill. 441, cited by the defendant, relate to the right of an insurance company to examine the injured, pursuant to a condition of the policy, concerning the circumstances of the fire and the manner of arriving at the amount of
It will be implied that in a proper case the courts, in the interests of justice, may compel the exhumation and examination of a body which is under the control of a plaintiff, if facts are established showing that there is strong reason to believe that without such examination a fraud is likely to be accomplished, and that the defendant has exhausted ■ every other method known to the law of exposing it. Such a right was claimed in Granger’s Ins. Co. v. Brown, 57 Miss. 308, and proofs were presented in support of the demand; but the court in denying the application said: “ It would be a proceeding repugnant to the best feelings of our nature, and likely to be in many cases so abhorrent to the sensibilities of the surviving relatives that they would prefer an abandonment" of the suit to a compliance with the order.”
The body of the testator when taken from the water exhibited visible, external signs of the cause of death. Water came from the mouth, and the body seemed to be filled with water. So that every condition precedent to a right of recovery within the terms “ external, violent and accidental means,” as defined in Tucker v. Ins. Co., 50 Hun, 50, was established.
If immersion in water was the direct cause of death it must be deemed the responsible one. The possibility that at some future time the deceased might have died from some other cause cannot be a defense, for in the nature of things all persons must die sooner or later. It was, therefore, the immediate cause that was insured against, and not a possible, hidden, secret cause which might or might not in the future develop itself. True, a person injured may die from some cause other than the injury. But it is difficult to say that a man who goes into water in apparent good healtl^ and is taken
The plaintiffs on the record before us ought (if the jury had found that death resulted from accidental drowning and from no other cause) to have had a verdict at the close of the case; the refusal to send the case to the jury for such a finding and the direction to find for, the defendant constitute error; and the exceptions thereto are fatal to the verdict.
Many of these principles as to the sanctity of the grave find support in authoritative decisions, Meagher v. Driscoll, 99 Mass. 281; Weld v. Walker, 130 id. 422; Commonwealth v. Cooley, 10 Pick. 37; Wynkoop v. Wynkoop, 42 Penn. St. 293 ; Pierce v. Cemetery, 10 R. I. 227; 14 Am. Rep. 667; State v. Wilson, 94 N. C. 1015 ; State v. McClure, 4 Blackf. 328 ; McNamee v. People, 31 Mich. 473; Kanavan’s Case, 1 Maine, 226; Reg. v. Sharpe, D. & B. 160; 7 Cox Crim. Cas. 214; Ehlen v. Ehlen, 18 Chicago L. N. 208; Secor’s Case, 31 Leg. Inst. 268; 18 Abb. N. C. 79 ; King v. Lynn, 2 T. R. 733.
It is an indictable offense in many of the states to disinter a corpse, unless the deceased in his lifetime had directed such a thing, or his relatives consent to it (see N. Y. Statute in Penal Code, §§ 305, 308, 309); and the resurrecting it-for the purpose of dissection does not improve matters. Tate v. State, 6 Blackf. 111; Commonwealth v. Loring, 8 Pick. 370 ; Commonwealth v. Marshall, 11 id. 350; Commonwealth v. Cooley, 10 id. 37. In our own state removing dead bodies “ for the purpose of selling the same ” or “ from mere wantonness ” is punishable by fine and imprisonment. 2 R. S. 688, § 13; Laws 1819, p. 279, § 1; Penal Code, § 311; People v. Fitzgerald,. 105 N. Y. 146. Relatives may sometimes remove, ánd enjoin others
If the policy, the contract between the parties, had given the defendant, in express terms or by necessary implication, the right to demand of the representatives the exhumation of the body for the purpose of holding an autopsy upon it as a condition precedent to recovery, the existing sentiment against the act would not have excused a refusal, and the citations as to the sanctity of the grave would be irrelevant to the question at hand, for no recovery could be had except upon proof of readiness to perform. As the contract does not in words confer such power, the reported cases present an array of authority showing the policy of the law and public sentiment to be so strongly set against the claim that the right asserted was intrinsic, grew out of the contract or was in any way contemplated by or incidental to it, that the representatives cannot be charged with captiously withholding a consent when the giving of it would be repugnant to the extraordinary sensitiveness which has existed in all nations in regard to the disturbance of the human body after burial.
Gildersleeve, J., concurs.
Exceptions sustained, verdict set aside and new trial granted, with costs to plaintiffs to abide event.