105 N.Y.S. 87 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1907
' This is an action on a policy of insurance, issued by the defendant on the 16th day of February, 1903, on the life of Louise L. Buxton, by which tile defendant agreed to pay the plaintiff $500 on her death in accordance with the ■ provisions of the policy.
“ Suicide.— If within one year from, the date hereof the Insured shall die. by suicide — whether sane or insane — or in consequence of his (or liér) own criminal'action the liability of the Company shall not exceed the amount of the premiums paid on this Policy.”
The insured died on the night of the 12th or morning of the 13th day of September, Í9Ó3, within one year after the policy was issued, and the company refused to pay the insurance upon the ground that she committed suicide. This was the issue litigated upon the trial. The plaintiff proved the issuance of.the policy and the death of the insured. The defendant then showed that the insured rented and. lived in a room on the top floor of PTo. 28 West One Hundred and Fifteenth street; that some time prior to hér death she had an operation at St. Luke’s Hospital and thereafter suffered from hemorrhages ; that the physician, of whom she rented the room and who attended her in part during her illness, had discharged her “ as cured ” about two weeks before her death; that about seven o’clock on the evening óf the twelfth of September the insured came down stairs to the sitting room of the house with a paper which she 'asked her landlord to read; that “ she appeared greatly excited. . Her eyes were very glassy in color. * * * Her hair was somewhat disheveled, which was unusual with her, and she said nothing. Said she was going to look over 'some papers ” and asked the landlord to read the one she gave him, which was poetry in printed form; that at or about three o’clock in the afternoon on the thirteenth of September she was found dead “lying in a normal position on the bed, with the cover over, just a"s a person undressed would do; ” that the two gas jets in the room were fully turned' on and the 'room was tilled with illuminating gas which caused her death by asphyxiation. The fact is not expressly shown, but it is to be inferred from the testimony given that the windows and door were closed. It appears, however, that there was “ no plugging around' them or anything of that character,” and there was nothing like a tube running from that gas or a funnel or anything 'of that kind running from the jet.” The bed was in its usual place, which evidently did not bring the head of it under or near the gas jets, for it was shown that “ the bed had not
The law indulges in the presumption that a person will not take his own life, and where the fact's and circumstances are as consistent with death from negligence, by accident or homicide, as by suicide, the presumption is against suicide. (Germain v. Brooklyn Life Ins. Co., 30 Hun, 535; Goldschmidt v. Mutual Life Ins. Co., 102 N. Y. 486; Mallory v. Travelers' Ins. Co., 47 id. 52; Travellers' Insurance Co. v. McConkey, 127 U. S. 667.) This is a presumption, however, which yields to evidence tending to show that death was. self-inflicted, and where np other reasonable inference may be drawn from the evidence, it is the duty of the court to direct a verdict upon the theory of death by suicide. (Pagett v. Connecticut Mutual Life Ins. Co., 55 App. Div. 628; Seybold v. Supreme Tent, 86 id. 195; Johns v. Northwestern Mut. Relief Assn., 90 Wis. 332.) In this state of the evidence, without a fact or circumstance tending to show that the gas had been turned off outside the room and turned on again, or that the supply of gas to these open jets'had been in any manner interfered with, or that there was any door or- window open, or wind or draft which might have extinguished the flames, the plaintiff
It follows, therefore, that the judgment and order should be reversed and a new trial granted, with costs to appellant to abide the event. ' ■
McLaughlin, Houghton and Scott, JJ., concurred ; Patterson, P. J., dissented.
Judgment and order reversed, new tidal ordered, costs to appellant to abide event.