delivered the opinion of the Court.
The controlling question is: Did the accidental death of the insured on August 23, 1951, occur “in time of war”.
Petitioner Western Reserve Life Insurance Company on October 6, 1932, issued to Benjamin Earle Meadows five policies, each insuring his life for $1,000.00 and naming as beneficiary his wife, respondent Jennie Louise Davidson Meadows. Attached to each policy as a part of it was a supplemental contract providing for payment to the beneficiary of the additional sum of $1,000.00 in the event of death of the insured by accidental means. The supplemental contract contains the following: “This Accident Death Benefit shall be void if the Insured shall be in military, naval, or allied service in time of war at the date of the accident.”
The insured at the time of the accident was a Lieutenant Colonel in the Army Engineers Corps of the United States, was in the military service, and was traveling as a passenger in a United States Army plane under official orders and bound for Fairbanks, Alaska, where he was to open bids for the construction of a United States Army Air Field near Fairbanks. He was instantly killed when the plane crashed and burned in Alaska.
Petitioner, the insurer, admitted liability for and paid the face amount of the policies for life insurance, but denied liability for the additional accidental death benefits provided for in the supplemental contracts. In this suit, tried without a jury, judgment was rendered by the District Court in favor of respondent against petitioner for $5,000.00, the total amount of the accidental death benefits, together with penalties and attorney’s fees. The Court of Civil Appeals affirmed that judgment.
In a thorough opinion, and after reviewing many authorities, the Court of Civil Appeals expressed the conclusion that the insured’s death on August 23, 1951, “did not occur in ‘time of war’ under the Constitution and laws of the United States, and under the terms of the exclusion clause of the insurance policies.”
It is true that the Constitution, by Section 8 of Article I, gives to Congress “Power
***
to declare War”, and that Congress has not in so many words by formal Act declared war against North Korea or against Communist China. There are, however, in many of the decisions, some of which are cited in the opinion of the Court of Civil Appeals and relied upon by respondent, statements to the effect that an Act of Congress which recognizes the existence of war or which is passed in aid or furtherance of existing war is in effect and meaning a declaration of war. For example, in Bishop v. Jones and Petty,
The opinion of Justice Grier in the Prize cases, (The Brig Amy Warwick, 67 U.S.)
The opinion in Pang v. Sun Assurance Co. of Canada,
When the United Nations, after the invasion of South Korea in 1950, called upon member nations to render assistance to
*563
repel the invasion, the United States promptly furnished its vigorous support, and combatant activities to which the armed forces of the United States were committed commenced in Korea on or about June 25, 1950, and continued without interruption to and including the date of the death of the insured, Benjamin Earle Meadows. Army, Navy, Marine Corps and Air Force personnel of the United States in great numbers participated in combat with the enemy forces of North Korea, and later with those also of Communist China. Congressional support of the action in Korea, which we know was in fact war on a large scale, was necessary, and was freely and generously given in many Acts of Congress by which provision was made for support of the armed forces employed, for increased military man power and equipment, and for economic stabilization. Many of those Acts of Congress, including vast appropriations for the support of the armed forces in Korea, are referred to in the dissenting opinion of Chief Justice Vinson in the steel mill seizure case, Youngstown Sheet & Tube Co. v. Sawyer,
Decision of this case could well be placed on the ground that if the word “war” used in the policies of insurance was intended to mean “technical war”, or “legal war”, that is, war declared by Congress, the Acts of Congress prior to the death of the insured should be considered in effect to amount to a declara *564 tion of war. We prefer, however, to meet squarely the very question presented, which is whether the word “war” used in the phrase “in time of war” in the policies means war in fact or means war declared by Congress.
It is the settled law in this state that contracts of insurance in their construction are governed by the same rules as other contracts, and that terms used in them are to be given their plain, ordinary and generally accepted meaning unless the instrument itself shows them to have been used in a technical or different sense. Hall v. Mutual Benefit Health & Accident Ass’n., Texas Civ. App.,
Undoubtedly there may be a war or a state of war without a declaration of war by the department of government clothed with the war-making power. Justice Jackson, in his concurring opinion in the steel mills seizure case said: “Of course a state of war may in fact exist without a formal declaration.” Youngstown Sheet & Tube Co. v. Sawyer,
Many definitions of war and many decisions reflect the common understanding of war as war in fact. The opinion in the Prize cases, (The Amy Warrick, 67 U.S.)
*565
“But every forcible contest between two governments,
de facto,
or
de jure,
is war. War is an existing
fact,
and not a legislative decree. Congress alone may have power to ‘declare’ it
beforehand,
and thus cause or commence it. But it may be initiated by other nations, or by traitors; and then it
exists,
whether there is any declaration of it or not. It may be prosecuted without any declaration; or Congress may, as in the Mexican war, declare its
previous
existence. In either case it is the
fact
that makes
‘enemies,’
and not any legislative Act.” Dole v. Merchants’ Mutual Marine Ins. Co.,
American Jurisprudence thus defines war: “War is an armed struggle or contest by force carried on for any purpose between two or more nations or states exercising at least de facto authority over persons within a given terrtiory and commanding an army prepared to observe the ordinary laws of war.”
Among cases holding that actual armed hostilities without a declaration mean “war” are the following: Bas v. Tingy,
Decisions involving the question whether and when war has ended are controlled by the same principle, that is, that war exists during the period of actual hostilities and ends with the
*566
cessation of those hostilities, even though there has been no treaty of peace or no declaration, proclamation or other official act announcing the termination of the existence of a state of war. In those cases the word “war” is considered as used in the practical and realistic sense in which it is commonly used and understood rather than in a technical or formal sense. See National Life & Accident Ins. Co. v. Leverett,
In view of the definitions of “war” above quoted, the decisions mentioned, and the facts about the Korean war set out in the stipulation of the parties and the facts of general knowledge, we are convinced that the accidental death of the insured on August 23, 1951, occurred “in time of war”. We mention a few of the facts. It is stipulated that “combatant activities to which United States Personnel were committed commenced in Korea on or about June 25, 1950, and that said combatant activities have continued without interruption to and including the date of the death of Benjamin Earle Meadows, and that the United States Personnel battle casualties in the Korean area, based on notification to next of kin cumulated for the period through midnight, September 7, 1951” were a total of 82,362. The tabulation in the stipulation shows that of the total casualties up to that time there were 13,822 deaths, 11,495 of them being in the Army and the other more than 2,000 being in the Marine Corps, the Air Force and the Navy.
We know, as is generally known, that the armed forces of the United States, including all divisions of the service, were engaged in warfare with the North Koreans for more than a year prior to the insured’s death in August, 1951, and that after November, 1950, they were engaged in combat also with the Communist Chinese; that many thousands of soldiers of the United States Army fought up and down the Korean peninsula during that period; that the line of battle shifted to the extreme southeast corner of Korea in September, 1950, and then into North Korea, approaching the north boundary on the Yalu River in November, 1950, and then to the south almost back to the 3.8th *567 parallel in June, 1951; and that during that period powerful units of the United States Navy patrolled and bombarded the coast of North Korea and many hundreds of planes of the United States Air Force gave support to the Army and attacked enemy planes and supply lines.
A concurring opinion in Beley v. Pennsylvania Mutual Life Insurance Co.,
“In discussing the principles of law involved in this case, we must assert at once that to deny that the Korean military action is not war in its popularly accepted meaning is to deny the evidence of one’s senses. Courts normally take judicial notice of whatever is unquestioningly accepted by informed society as fact. A judge does not ask in court for proof that ice forms at the North Pole or that the World Series refers to a contest between baseball teams. Courts know that in Korea, armies are pitted against each other utilizing every device known to modern warfare in the effort and determination to exterminate each other. We know this to be true because every medium of communication extant informs us that it is true. There is not one voice, one printed word, or one picture in the newspapers, radio broadcasts and television images which present themselves before our eyes or appeal to our ears that bespeaks anything to the contrary. In addition, judges have physically seen soldiers who have returned from Korea and have witnessed the evidence of their contact with forces which have inflicted wounds peculiarly the result of gunfire and cannon fire, the trademark of war.”
We are unwilling in deciding this case to shut our eyes to what everyone knows, that there has been and was when the insured was killed, actually and in reality a war in Korea in which the United States has been seriously engaged. The Court should not “affect a technical ignorance of the existence” of that war. The same view is expressed in the opinion of the United States Circuit Court of Appeals in New York Life Insurance Company v. Bennion:
“When one sovereign nation attacks another with premeditated and deliberate intent to wage war against it, and that nation resists the attacks with all the force at its command, we have war in the grim sense of reality. It is war in the only sense that men know and understand it. Mankind goes no further in his *568 definitive search — he does not stand on ceremony or wait for technical niceties. To say that courts must shut their eyes to realities and wait for formalities, is to cut off the power to reason with concrete facts. We cannot believe that the courts are deprived of the power to deal with this vital question in a practical and realistic sense.” 158 Fed. 2d 260, 264.
The decision of the Court of Civil Appeals in this cause is supported by several cases cited and discussed in its opinion. Some of those cases may be distinguished from the instant case. Some hold that no war existed under the facts because there was attack but no resistance at the very time; in others the word “war” used in the contract was considered to have been used in a “technical” or “legal” sense.
Beley v. Pennsylvania Mutual Life Insurance Company,
A very recent opinion by a Superior Court of New Jersey, Stanberry v. Aetna Life Insurance Company, 26 N. J. Superior Ct., 98 Atl. 2d 134, holding exactly contrary to the decision of the Pennsylvania court in the Beley case, criticizing that decision and declining to follow it, points out that the Pennsylvania court gave a “legalistic, technical construction” of the word “war”, whereas the New Jersey courts have given the word a “realistic interpretation when used in private contracts or documents.”
In a recent well supported opinion, another trial court, the United States District Court of the Southern District of California, held that there could be no recovery of double indemnity *569 in an action on a life insurance policy which provided for the payment of double indemnity in the event of death of the insured by accidental means, except in the event of the death of the insured while “in the military, naval or air forces of any country at war”. The insured, in the military service of the United States, was killed by enemy small arms fire in Korea on August 31, 1951. Weissman v. Metropolitan Life Insurance Co., 112 Fed. Supp. 420, 421.
The opinion of the Court of Civil Appeals herein in its approval of the Beley case raises the question presented in that case as supporting its decision, how can it be known when a war begins unless there is a formal declaration of war? One of the opinions of the Court in the Beley case contains the following: “Would the appellant insurance company argue that the military action became war when the casualties reached a certain figure, say, 5,000 or 10,000? Would it argue that the action certainly was war when the casualties amounted to 50,000?” 95 Atl. 2d 216. We are not concerned here with the exact time when the Korean war began. It is enough for us to know that war on a large scale had been waged for a long time in Korea and was still being waged when the insured met accidental death.
In summary: It is, as has been said, the settled law in this state that, unless a contrary intention is shown by the contract, the terms used in policies of insurance are to be given their plain, ordinary and generally accepted meaning. It is clear that nothing in the contract of insurance involved herein suggests that the word “war” is used in its “technical” or “legal” sense. It is clear that the plain, ordinary and generally accepted meaning of the word “war” is war in fact. It is clear that there was war in fact in Korea when the insured was killed and that he was killed “in time of war.” It follows that there can be no recovery under the accidental death provisions of the policies.
The judgments of the District. Court and Court of Civil Appeals are reversed and judgment is here rendered that respondent take nothing by her suit.
Opinion delivered October 7, 1953.
Rehearing overruled November 11, 1953.
Certiorari to U. S. Supreme Court denied,
