166 Iowa 391 | Iowa | 1914
The petition set out the certificate which .was issued to the deceased, Samuel Wood, the fact that deceased came to his death about August 12, 1911, and that the defendant had waived proofs.
The answer admitted all the allegations of the petition, and that plaintiff would be entitled to recover but for the fact that deceased committed suicide, contrary to the terms of the application, certificate, and constitution and by-laws of. the order, which provided, in substance, that in the event of death of the deceased by his own hand or act, whether sane or insane, the certificate should be void.
The only issue in the case, and the only one submitted to the jury, was as to whether or not the said deceased came to ' his death by his own hand or act. The errors assigned relate to the sufficiency of the^ evidence to sustain the verdict, the refusal of the court to give instructions requested by the defendant, and to the giving of others by the court on its own motion. The point most strongly urged is the one first above mentioned.
Because of the presumption that from love of life men will not inflict death upon themselves, the trial court held that defendant had the opening and closing. Defendant assumed the burden and proceeded to introduce its testimony.
The plaintiff claims that the facts shown are consistent with the theory of accidental shooting, and that the defendant had not overcome the presumption, or at least that it was a question for the jury to say whether the presumption and the circumstances tending to indicate an accidental shooting had been overcome.
As to many of the facts there is no substantial dispute. In the application for membership deceased stated, in answer to an inquiry as to his family history, that his father committed suicidé; that the father bought stolen property unknowingly and was about to be placed under arrest and killed himself.
Deceased was at the time of his death superintendent of city parks of Cedar Rapids and had been such for more than a year. Deceased had had a revolver ever since he
‘If. it’s me, it must have been that time-a few days ago when I chased that couple out of the park what has done nuisance in front of the park,’ and said he wouldn't care so much just for himself if it had not been for his. wife and boy, and that he thought these people he had driven out of the park had laid a snare for him.
Deceased said that he would fight the matter to a finish, and a witness says he expressed no fear of the charge or of an investigation. When deceased went to Kansas City, he gave the revolver to his son, a young man about twenty years of age, and told him to take care of it and clean it up; during his father’s absence the son kept the revolver in his bedroom under the bed. The revolver was loaded, and the son did not clean it. Deceased went to bed about 9:30 o’clock Friday night, saying that he had lost sleep the night before while traveling. His widow gives an account of his conduct during the night substantially as follows: That she went to bed between 9 and 10 o’clock, and her husband was then asleep. That he got up about 12 o’clock the first time and was looking through the window. He stated that he thought he heard some one around. She told him there-was no one, and he went back to bed. About a quarter to five he got up again and sajd he heard some one. She told him there was no one around, it must be the horses in the barn, and he said all right. She thought he went back to bed again, and she says he went to sleep so far as she knows; she got up about 6:30.
The son testifies: That he went to bed about 9:30 or 10 o’clock and slept until five in the morning, when his father
After Mrs. Wood got up and went downstairs to prepare breakfast, she made some coffee and took it upstairs to deceased; deceased complained of feeling tired, and that he had lost sleep on the train, she advised him to lie in bed a little longer He drank half the coffee, and that was the last she saw of him alive; she did not go upstairs again until after she had heard the shot.
The son testifies, in substance, that he had started to eat his breakfast when he heard the shot and went upstairs and found deceased on the bed, not in the center, a little more to the side, with his head partly through the rods of the bedstead; he did not notice where the hands of deceased were; he remained there an instant, long enough to see that his father was shot; that the right temple of deceased was towards the outside edge of the bed; that the mother was at the foot of the stairs and came up at once, and the son called Mr. Mashek, who came in about five minutes; that Mr. Mashek drew the body of deceased down on the bed, so his head would
Mr. Mashek says that when he came in he inquired of Mrs. Wood as to what was the matter, and she said that her husband had killed himself; that when he went upstairs deceased had on a union suit, and his head was between the bars at the head of the bed hanging down as far as the shoulders would permit; blood was running from the wound on the right side and coming out of his mouth and nostrils; that when he got there the deceased moved his chest, but was not conscious; that he pulled the body of deceased down so it would lie straight, and so his head would rest on the bed, and that soon after they found a revolver under Mr. Wood, a little back of the crotch; that was after they had pulled the body down on the bed.
There were four loaded cartridges and an empty shell in the revolver. The hammer was down on the shell. The wound was in the right temple, well towards the front. One witness describes it as about an inch or three-quarters of an inch back from the eye.
There is some difference of opinion as to the appearance of the eyes. Some elaim that they were bulged considerably, others not so much. From the appearance of the wound, it seemed to go straight in, as some of the witnesses put it. There is a sharp conflict in the testimony as to whether there was a discoloration or powder marks around the wound in the temple. The coroner testified that:
Around the edge — right around the outside edges of the wound, it appeared to be burned a little. I couldn’t say the flesh was scorched; but it was discolored a little. Q. State whether or not-it had the appearance around, close in the wound, of being blackened. A. It had; yes, sir. Q. As though by powder marks? A. Slightly; yes, sir.
Witnesses for plaintiff, and perhaps the larger number, testified that they observed the wound, and that they saw no evidence of powder marks or discoloration. As to the conflict at this point, it was clearly a question for the jury.
An expert, testifying for defendant, gave testimony as to his familiarity with firearms, powder marks, and as to experiments made by him by firing a revolver into the head of an animal at different distances, and was asked:
Q. Assuming that Samuel Wood was found in bed the morning of August 12, 1911, with a bullet wound in his right temple, about an inch, or such a matter, back of the eye, and around this bullet wound there appeared, the skin appeared to be blackened for about half an inch each side of the hole or wound, and not otherwise blackened, and that the wound was somewhat seared, or having the appearance as though it were somewhat burned, from your experience, and your practice, and your experiments, and your knowledge of the subject, how close would you say the muzzle of the revolver was to his head at the time the shot was fired? A. Pressed against his head.
He also stated that the effect of such a wound would be instant death, or practically so, and that deceased would not be able to walk, or to get up off the floor onto a b'ed after receiving the wound.
Such is the substance of the testimony, stated somewhat in detail, but as briefly as possible. The theory of the defendant is that the motive for committing suicide was the charge against him as to his supposed misconduct with the woman in the park. It is argued for appellant that the presumption against suicide is rebuttable, and that where, by a fair consideration of the testimony, it appears to be rebutted, it is the duty of the court to direct a verdict for the defendant; that where, upon the whole record, the testimony clearly points to suicide, and is inconsistent with any other theory,
In the Agen case, supra, it was said:
Where the reasonable probabilities from the evidence all point to suicide as the cause of death, so as to establish it, in the light of reason and common sense, with such certainty as to leave no room for reasonable controversy on the subject, a jury should not be permitted to find to the contrary and have such finding stand as a verity in the case; but the question should be decided by the trial court as one of law.
Appellee finds no fault with the propositions of law just stated.
Appellant also contends that the facts in the instant case more strongly show self-destruction than in the following Iowa cases-: Beverley v. Supreme Tent, 115 Iowa, 524; Ingraham v. Nat. Union, 103 Iowa, 395; or Gavin v. Insurance Co., supra — and insists that the Gavin case is very much like the present one on the facts.
We shall not compare the facts in the present case with those cited; but, because of the claim that the instant case is so like the Gavin case, we shall refer to the opinion in that case. In that case there seems to have been no dispute as to the flesh being burned around the wound. The revolver was kept in the dresser drawer, and the evidence did not show any occasion or reason for taking it from the dresser. The
In the instant case deceased was in all probability sitting up in bed, possibly on the edge of the bed, when shot. It is difficult to satisfactorily account for the bullet wound in the temple, and going straight, in, as some of the witnesses say, on the theory of accident. But this is often the case, and was so in some of the cases cited where a verdict and judgment against the insurer was sustained. There, are many ways in which people are shot. No one knows how this man was injured. It is possible that he was shot, as he was, accidentally, and it may have been so. The presumption that it was has the force of affirmative evidence, and, unless so negatived by the surrounding facts and circumstances as to leave no other reasonable hypothesis than that of suicide, such presumption will be allowed to prevail, and a verdict founded thereon will not be set aside for want of evidence. Stephenson v. Insurance Co., 108 Iowa, 637; Lindahl v. Insurance Co., 100 Minn. 87 (110 N. W. 358, 8 L. R. A. (N. S.) 916, 117 Am. St. Rep. 666).
Defendant has the burden to so show: In the case at bar deceased had been in the habit of carrying a revolver as an officer. He had left it with his son to be cleaned. He
These are some of the circumstances against the theory of suicide. We are of opinion that, under all the facts and circumstances, there was a jury question. We would not be warranted in bending or breaking the rule simply because there is difficulty in explaining just how deceased met his death.
Appellee cites the following cases, where verdicts for the insured were sustained: Van Norman v. M. B. A., 143 Iowa, 536; Tackman v. Brotherhood, 132 Iowa, 64; Stephenson v. Bankers’ Life, supra; Boynton v. Equitable Life Assurance Co., 105 La. 202 (29 South 490, 52 L. R. A. 687); Knights Templar v. Crayton, 209 Ill. 550 (70 N. E. 1066). In some of these the circumstances indicated suicide as strongly as do the facts in this case. It is unnecessary to discuss the facts of those cases. Each case must be decided upon the facts and circumstances thereof.
II. Instruction No. 8% is criticized. The substance of this instruction is that, in considering whether or not deceased came to his death by his own hand or act, yoú are instructed
The objection to it is that the jury might have believed from the evidence that deceased was insane, and that, being insane, he could not be guilty of intentionally taking his own life; that the instruction entirely eliminated the word “insane” from the certificate. Appellant cites De Gorza v. Insurance Co., 65 N. Y. 232; Clarke v. Assur. Soc., 118 Fed. 374 (55 C. C. A. 200); Tuttle v. Association, 132 Iowa, 652.
In the last case, which was an action upon an accident policy in construing the words “accidental means,” the court said, if the act of the assured “causing death sprung from an insane impulse of a disordered and unsound mind, it was neither voluntary nor intentional.” But we think it is a suf
The court, by this instruction, was simply instructing the jury in accordance with the theory of the trial, and that was whether the death was by suicide or whether it was the result of an accident. Furthermore, the matter of insanity was covered by instructions 4 and 5. The court also instructed the jurors that they should decide the case solely upon the evidence introduced upon the trial and be governed by the instructions, and that they should permit nothing else to influence or prejudice them. It is presumed the jury obeyed the instructions. Under all these circumstances, we should be slow to believe that the jury considered the question of insanity at all.
We do not understand appellant to claim that, if deceased was shot by his own hand accidentally, the defendant would not be liable. It seems to be the rule that the words “by his
III. In instruction 3 the jury were told, in substance, that the provision in the contract as to suicide was binding upon
In the fourth instruction the court said:
That the sole and only issue in this case for your determination is: ‘Was the death of the insured, Samuel Wood, caused by his own hand or act, whether sane or insane V ■ If, therefore, you find from the evidence that Samuel Wood came to his death by his own hand or act, whether sane or insane at the time, your verdict must be for the defendant, etc.
And in instruction No. 2 the court expressly told the jury that the provisions of the policy or certificate were binding on the plaintiff, in this language:
. . . And the plaintiff in this case is bound by all the terms and conditions of the contract made by the said Samuel Wood with the defendant society.
Requested instruction No. 5 is covered by the sixth instruction given by the court, and offered instruction No. 6 is covered by those given.
There was no error, and the judgment is — Affirmed.