The plaintiff as named beneficiary in a policy of life insurance brings this action against the defendant company to recover under a double indemnity provision for the alleged accidental death of the insured. There was a verdict and judgment for the defendant company, and the plaintiff appeals.
By the terms of the policy the defendant company agreed that in the event of the death of the insured from natural causes it would pay to the plaintiff beneficiary the sum of $5000. It was further agreed that double indemnity, to-wit, $10,000, would be payable
"* * * upon receipt of due proof that the insured died as a direct result of bodily injury effected solely through external, violent, and accidental means, independently and exclusively of all other causes * * *."
Upon the death of the insured and upon proofs being made, the defendant paid the plaintiff the sum of $5000 with certain interest and additional benefits, *Page 610 but it refused to pay under the double indemnity clause of the policy. In her action on the policy the plaintiff alleged that her husband, the insured, came to his death from bodily injury effected solely through external, violent and accidental means. She expressly remitted all of her claim in excess of $3000 and seeks judgment under the double indemnity provision for that amount.
By its answer, the defendant company alleged that the insured committed suicide, and the jury so found. The only assignments of error which are presented on this appeal relate to the refusal of the court to give certain instructions requested by the plaintiff. Those requests were as follows:
"You are instructed that there is a legal presumption against suicide and when the body of a person is found under circumstances pointing to a sudden death from injury or drowning, such death is presumed to have been caused by accidental means rather than by the intentional act of the person himself."
"You are instructed that in an action on an accident policy, if it is shown by the evidence that the death must have been accidental or suicidal, the presumption against suicide can be overcome by circumstantial evidence only if it is of such quality and weight as to negative every reasonable inference of death by accident."
Under these circumstances it is unnecessary to make any detailed review of the evidence concerning the circumstances surrounding the death of the insured. He disappeared on the evening of January 2nd, 1941, and his body was found on March 28th, 1941, floating on the Snake River, near Copperfield in Baker County, Oregon, some seventy miles distant. The evidence concerning *Page 611 the cause of his death, whether by accident or by suicide was all circumstantial, and from it inferences might be drawn by the jury in favor of either accidental or suicidal death. The plaintiff makes no claim that she was entitled to a directed verdict, and the only questions submitted to us on this appeal are whether or not the court committed prejudicial error in refusing to give the requested instructions set forth above.
In view of the nature of the testimony it was proper to submit the case to the jury regardless of our conclusion as to the effect of the alleged presumption. The burden of proof was on the plaintiff to establish that the death of the insured was caused through external, violent and accidental means. Watkins v.Prudential Insurance Company, 315 Pa. 497, 173 A. 644 (1934),95 A.L.R. 869; Metropolitan Life Insurance Co. v. Rosier,189 Okla. 448, 117 P.2d 793 (1941); Laventhal v. New York LifeInsurance Co. 40 F. Supp. 157 (1941); Lambert v. MetropolitanLife Insurance Co., 123 W. Va. 547, 17 S.E.2d 628 (1941);Brunswick v. Standard Accident Insurance Co., 278 Mo. 154,213 S.W. 45, 7 A.L.R. 1213 (1919); New York Life Insurance Companyv. Ross, 30 F.2d 80 (1928); Wojcik v. Metropolitan LifeInsurance Co., 124 Conn. 532, 1 A.2d 131 (1938); Postler v.Traveler's Insurance Co., 173 Cal. 1, 158 P. 1022 (1916);Landau v. Pacific Mutual Life Insurance Co., 305 Mo. 542,267 S.W. 370 (1924); Warbende v. Prudential Insurance Co. ofAmerica, 97 F.2d 749, 117 A.L.R. 760 (1938).
The rule imposing upon the plaintiff the burden of proof in actions on accident policies containing such provisions as those found in the case at bar must *Page 612 not be confused with the rule imposing the burden of proof of suicide on the insurer in actions brought on ordinary life policies, as in Hildebrand v. United Artisans, 50 Or. 159,91 P. 542 (1907) and Cox v. Royal Tribe, 42 Or. 365, 71 P. 73, 60 L.R.A. 620, 95 Am. St. Rep. 752 (1903). The effect of an inference or presumption coming to the aid of one having the burden of proof may require that the opponent go forward with the evidence or risk or suffer defeat, but the general burden of proof, the risk of non-persuasion, remains unchanged. Judson v.Bee Hive Auto Service Co., 136 Or. 1, 294 P. 588, 297 P. 1050, 74 A.L.R. 944 (1931); Hansen v. Oregon-Washington Railroad Navigation Co., 97 Or. 190, 188 P. 963, 191 P. 655 (1920); 9 Wigmore on Evidence (3d Ed.) § 2489, p. 285. Therefore, it was not affected by the allegations of suicide, affirmative in form, contained in the answer. The situs of the burden of proof will be found to have an important bearing upon our consideration of the effect of presumptions.
In the discussion which follows, the party having the burden of proof upon an issue will be referred to as the proponent, whether he be plaintiff or defendant, and the party not having the burden of proof (the risk of non-persuasion) will be called the opponent.
In accord with authorities hereafter cited, we hold that there is a presumption of law against suicide which arises upon mere proof of death by violent and external means, but in order to determine whether the court erred in refusing to instruct upon that presumption it is necessary to consider the nature and function of inferences and presumptions in view of the common law and the provisions of the Oregon statutes. *Page 613 In approaching the problem, we echo what has been repeatedly said by other courts.
"An examination of many cases concerning presumptions, particularly `presumptions against suicide,' reveals what has been aptly characterized as `a welter of loose language and discordant decisions concerning presumptions.'" Watkins v. Prudential Insurance Co., (supra) 173 A. at p. 649.
At the outset, we are confronted by the preponderant weight of reason and authority outside of Oregon which supports what we shall call the "majority doctrine" concerning the nature of presumptions of law as distinguished from presumptions of fact (inferences). The doctrine is stated by Wigmore as follows:
"The distinction between presumptions `of law' and presumptions `of fact' is in truth the difference between things that are in reality presumptions (in the sense explained above) and things that are not presumptions at all. A presumption, as already noticed, is in its characteristic feature a rule of law laid down by the judge, and attaching to one evidentiary fact certain consequences as to the duty of production of other evidence by the opponent. It is based, in policy, upon the probative strength, as a matter of reasoning and inference, of the evidentiary fact; but the presumption is not the fact itself, nor the inference itself, but the legal consequence attached to it. But, the legal consequence being removed, the inference, as a matter of reasoning, may still remain; and a `presumption of fact,' in the usual sense, is merely an improper term for the rational potency, or probative value, of the evidentiary fact, regarded as not having this necessary legal consequence. `They are, in truth, but mere arguments,' and `depend upon their own natural force and efficacy in generating belief or conviction in the mind.' They have no significance so far as affects the duty of one or the other party *Page 614 to produce evidence, because there is no rule of law attached to them, and the jury may give to them whatever force or weight it thinks best, — just as it may to other evidence." * * *
"Nevertheless, it must be kept in mind that the peculiar effect of a presumption `of law' (that is, the real presumption) is merely to invoke a rule of law compelling the jury to reach the conclusion in the absence of evidence to the contrary from the opponent. If the opponent does offer evidence to the contrary (sufficient to satisfy the judge's requirement of some evidence), the presumption disappears as a rule of law, and the case is in the jury's hands free from any rule." (Italics ours.) 9 Wigmore on Evidence (3d Ed.) § 2491, pp. 288, 289.
The doctrine that presumptions of law as such are not to be given probative forces as evidence is described by the annotator in 95 A.L.R. at p. 880, as "the rule which is approved by most text writers and the majority of courts which have discussed the subject." Supporting decisions in great number are cited from United States, Alabama, Arkansas, Connecticut, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Missouri, Nebraska, New Hampshire, New Jersey, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Dakota, Texas, Utah, Washington, Vermont and Wisconsin. For recent supporting cases see Seiler v. Whiting, 52 Ariz. 542, 84 P.2d 452 (1938);St. Louis-San Francisco Ry. Co. v. Mangum, 199 Ark. 767,136 S.W.2d 158 (1940); Hobert-Farrell Plumbing Heating Co. v.Klayman, 302 Mass. 508, 19 N.E.2d 805 (1939) (involving presumption of receipt of letter properly mailed); Hollen v.Reynolds, 123 W. Va. 360, 15 S.E.2d 163 (1941); People v.Kayne, 286 Mich. 571, 282 N.W. 248 (1938): Quick v. State,191 Miss. 179, 2 So. 2d 812 (1941); Clary v. Lindley, 30 Cal. App. 2d 571,86 P.2d 920 (1939) (but see later *Page 615 reference to the California rule); Langlitz v. American Nat.Insurance Co. (Tex.) 146 S.W.2d 484 (1940).
The Supreme Court of Vermont recently examined the entire question, overruled a long line of decisions which had held that presumptions as such constitute evidence and adopted the majority rule. We quote:
"Upon a careful consideration of the whole subject, and with a keen appreciation of the wide-spread effect it will have upon our jurisprudence, but with a firm conviction that a false doctrine has dominated the subject and persisted in our law too long already, we have now reached the following conclusion:
"A disputable presumption is a rule of law to be laid down by the court, which shifts to the party against whom it operates the burden of evidence, merely. It points out the party on whom lies the duty of going forward with evidence on the fact presumed. And when that party has produced evidence fairly and reasonably tending to show that the real fact is not as presumed, the office of the presumption is performed, and the fact in question is to be established by evidence as are other questions of fact, without aid from the presumption, which has become functus officio." Tyrrell v. Prudential Insurance Co. of America, 109 Vt. 6, 192 A. 184, 115 A.L.R. 392 at p. 403 (1937).
The majority doctrine has been applied with especial force in cases involving the asserted presumption against suicide, especially in cases in which the presumption was invoked by a party having the burden of proving accidental death. Jahn v.Commercial Travelers Mutual Accident Association of America,256 A.D. 835, 9 N.Y.S.2d 257 (1939); Honrath v. New YorkLife Insurance Co., 65 S.D. 480, *Page 616 275 N.W. 258, 112 A.L.R. 1272 (1937); Jefferson Standard LifeInsurance Co. v. Clemmer, 79 F.2d 724, 103 A.L.R. 171 (1935);Del Vecchio v. Bowers, 296 U.S. 280, 56 S.C. 190, 80 L. Ed. 229;Watkins v. Prudential Insurance Co. (supra); Lambert v.Metropolitan Insurance Co. (supra); Reliance Life Insurance Co.v. Burgess, 112 F.2d 234 (1940) (citing many cases); NewYork Life Insurance Co. v. Ross (supra); Modern Woodmen ofAmerica v. Craiger, 175 Ind. 30, 92 N.E. 113 (1910); 103 A.L.R. 185, annotation; Warren v. Pilot Life Insurance Co.,217 N.C. 705, 9 S.E.2d 479 (1940); New York Life Insurance Co. v.Gamer, 303 U.S. 161, 58 S.C. 500, 82 L. Ed. 726, 114 A.L.R. 1218 (1938). Commenting upon this case it is said:
"The effect of the decision in New York L. Ins. Co. v. Gamer (U.S.) (reported herewith) ante, 1218, is to place this court in accord with what is now the conventional view, that a presumption is not evidence and may not be given weight as such although the jury may, without giving them any artificial weight as a presumption, draw the natural and logical inferences from the facts which are the basis of the presumption." Note of annotator in 114 A.L.R. 1226.
Under the "majority doctrine" it would be unnecessary to instruct the jury concerning a presumption against suicide. The force of the procedural rule of law having spent itself when the case has gone to the jury, "the inference as a matter of reasoning may still remain," but as to such inferences "the jury may give to them whatever force or weight it thinks proper just as it may to other evidence." Wigmore on Evidence (supra).
As opposed to the majority doctrine, the minority rule asserts that a presumption of law is evidence, *Page 617 and in its extreme form it holds that a presumption of law, as law, must be given independent probative force of an evidentiary nature and treated as a make-weight in addition to and independent of the testimony and of the inferences of fact to be drawn therefrom. If a rule of law as such is to be given evidentiary weight, we suppose the jury should be so advised. The minority view finds support in cases from Illinois, Massachusetts, Montana, and perhaps Iowa and Indiana. Johnson v.Johnson, 187 Ill. 86, 58 N.E. 237 (1900); Graves v. Colwell,90 Ill. 612 (1878); Clifford v. Taylor, 204 Mass. 358,90 N.E. 862 (1910); but see Hobart-Farrell Plumbing Heating Company v.Klayman, 302 Mass. 508, 19 N.E.2d 805 (1939); In re Cowdry'sWill, 77 Vt. 359, 60 A. 141, 3 Ann. Cas. 70 (1904); Hockstedlerv. Dubuque and Sioux City Railway Co., 88 Iowa 236, 55 N.W. 74 (1893); Cleveland, Cincinnati, Chicago St. Louis Railway Co.v. Hadley, 170 Ind. 204, 82 N.E. 1025, 84 N.E. 13, 16 L.R.A. (N.S.) 527, 16 Ann. Cas. 1 (1907). But see contra: Kilgore v.Gannon, 185 Ind. 682, 114 N.E. 446 L.R.A. 1917E, 530 (1916). The decisions in California to the effect that presumptions of law are evidence rest upon statutes identical to ours which will be later considered.
The majority doctrine has exerted a powerful influence on this court which has on more than one occasion paid tribute to its apparent soundness, while expressing the opinion that we are committed to the contrary view by statute and stare decisis.Ward v. Queen City Insurance Co., 69 Or. 347 at p. 355,138 P. 1067 (1914), and see the concurring opinion of Mr. Justice LUSK in Bunnell v. Parelius, 166 Or. 174, at p. 183, 184,111 P.2d 88 (1941). The provisions of our statute have been thought to constitute an ultimate bar to the *Page 618 adoption of the majority view, and it is, of course, clear that the legislative mandate must be given effect by this court. What that effect may be remains for our determination.
The Oregon statutes concerning presumptions were enacted in 1862 before the Wigmore doctrine had been formulated. They were adopted verbatim by California in 1872 and by Montana in 1895. Our attention has not been called to similar provisions in any other state. The Oregon statutes provide that:
"Indirect evidence is of two kinds:
"(1) Inferences; and
"(2) Presumption." O.C.L.A. 2-401.
"An inference is a deduction which the reason of the jury makes from the facts proved, without an express direction of law to that effect." O.C.L.A. 2-402.
"A presumption is a deduction which the law expressly directs to be made from particular facts." O.C.L.A. 2-403.
"An inference must be founded:
"(1) On a fact legally proved; and,
"(2) On such a deduction from that fact as is warranted by a consideration of the usual propensities or passions of men, the particular propensities or passions of the person whose act is in question, the course of business or the course of nature." O.C.L.A. 2-404.
"A presumption, unless declared by law to be conclusive, may be overcome by other evidence, direct or indirect; but unless so overcome, the jury are bound to find according to the presumption." O.C.L.A. 2-405.
"All other presumptions are satisfactory, unless overcome. They are denominated disputable presumptions, and may be controverted by other evidence. *Page 619 The following are of that kind: * * *." O.C.L.A. 2-407.
The conflicting influence of the majority rule on the one hand, and of the Oregon statutes on the other, has resulted in a devastating confusion, as will appear from the following citations, which present concretely the nature and difficulty of the problem which now confronts us.
The following cases strongly reflect the influence of the "majority rule" at least to the extent that a presumption of law, as such, should not be given evidentiary weight by the trier of the fact when substantial evidence has been presented supporting the contentions of both parties. Speaking of the inference or presumption of agency from proof of ownership by the defendant of a car negligently driven by another, the court said:
"The presumption of employment recognized in Doherty v. Hazelwood Co., 90 Or. 482 (175 P. 849, 177 P. 432), has no proper place in this case; a presumption `may be looked on as the bats of the law, flitting in the twilight but disappearing in the sunshine of actual facts.'" Nash v. Baun, 124 Or. 485, at p. 493, 264 P. 846 (1928).
To the same effect see Kernin v. City of Coquille, 143 Or. 127 at p. 140, 21 P.2d 1078 (1933). In Hancock Land Co. v. Cityof Portland, 82 Or. 85, 159 P. 969 (1916), the issue was whether certain required notices had been posted. The defendant contended that the city was entitled to rely upon the statutory presumption that official duty had been performed. The court said:
"Rule 119 of Lawson's Law of Presumptive Evidence is as follows:*Page 620
"`A presumption cannot contradict facts or overcome facts proved.'
"A text-writer in discussing this subject observes:
"`There is some confusion in the cases upon the question whether a presumption is evidence and has probative force. Since the function of a presumption logically considered is merely to impose the burden of going forward with the evidence upon the party against whom it operates, when contrary evidence is adduced the presumption disappears, although the facts upon which it rested still remain as evidence in the case': 9 Ency. Ev. 885."In the absence of any other proof, a presumption is usually indulged as substantive evidence to substantiate or refute a material fact."
"The presumption can be relied upon `until the contrary is shown': Section 404, City Charter. The contrary having been established as thus stated, no foundation remained upon which to predicate the presumption." Hancock Land Co. v. City of Portland, (supra) 82 Or. at p. 89 and 90.
In French v. State Industrial Accident Commission, 156 Or. 443, 68 P.2d 466 (1937), the plaintiff had the burden of proving that she had entered into a common law marriage with the deceased in Idaho. There was evidence that she and the deceased had lived in that state as husband and wife. The jury found that they had not been married, and she appealed on the ground that the trial court had erred in failing to instruct in accordance with the statutory presumption, O.C.L.A. 2-407 (30), that a man and woman deporting themselves as husband and wife have entered into a lawful contract of marriage. The court said:
"Presumptions operate when the preliminary facts demanded by them have been established, and when the party to be favored has not himself negatived the fact which he asks judge and jury to presume. *Page 621 When the fact otherwise presumable is negatived by proof, free from question and contradiction, no room remains for a favorable presumption, and neither court nor jury are at liberty to engage in one: * * *." (Citing many cases.)"We realize that in the decisions just reviewed, with the exception of the last, the matter before the court was the propriety of engaging in an inference, or in what is sometimes called a presumption of fact; but we believe that the reasons mentioned in those authorities are equally applicable to a presumption of law."
"Justice cannot be facilitated by giving one side of an issue the benefit of a make-weight and by placing a handicap upon the other side." (Italics ours.) French v. State Industrial Accident Commission (supra) 156 Or. at pp. 455, 456.
In Consor v. Andrew, 61 Or. 483, at p. 491, 123 P. 46 (1912), the court quoted with approval:
"Presumptions served a most useful and indispensable part in the correct decision of many questions but they are out of place when the facts are known or are admitted."
See also McDowell v. Hurner, 142 Or. 611, 13 P.2d 600,20 P.2d 395, 88 A.L.R. 578 (1932), (set aside on rehearing);Holland v. Hartwig, 145 Or. 6, at p. 14, 24 P.2d 1023 (1933); Bunnell v. Parelius (supra) 166 Or. at p. 180. The so-called majority rule is fully set forth in the concurring opinion of Mr. Justice ROSSMAN in the case of Bunnell v.Parelius (supra) 166 Or. at pp. 188, 189, from which we quote a portion:
"But a presumption is only an expedient. It, therefore, vanishes when it has served its purpose. It is like a chrysalis which takes wings and is gone. Its purpose while it exists is to coerce the adversary to submit proof. When it has performed its full coercive mission it has become functus officio, and *Page 622 then the existence or the nonexistence of the questioned fact is ascertained by ransacking through the evidence."
On the other hand, based on the statute, this court has repeatedly laid down the rule that both inferences and presumptions are evidence. Doherty v. Hazelwood, 90 Or. 475,175 P. 849, 177 P. 432 (1919); Ward v. Queen City Insurance Co. (supra); Cox v. Royal Tribe, 42 Or. 365, at p. 374, 71 P. 73, 60 L.R.A. 620, 95 Am. St. Rep. 752 (1903); Caraduc v.Schanen-Blair Co., 66 Or. 310, 133 P. 636 (1913); Sather v.Giaconi, 110 Or. 433 at p. 440, 220 P. 740 (1923); City MotorTrucking Co. v. Franklin Fire Insurance Co., 116 Or. 102 at p. 107, 239 P. 812 (1925); Clark v. Shea, 130 Or. 195, at p. 205,279 P. 539 (1929); and see concurring opinion of Mr. Justice LUSK, in Bunnell v. Parelius (supra).
In view of this summary, it is not too much to say that the discordant judicial voices should, if possible, be harmonized, or, if impossible, that some of them should, except as dissents, be stilled. It is our belief that the decisions can in large measure be harmonized and that the difference between the majority view outside of Oregon and the statutory rule in Oregon is chiefly one of terminology.
In the discussion which immediately follows, we shall confine ourselves to that type of presumption of law defined in the statute, namely, a deduction which the law expressly directs to be made from particular facts. O.C.L.A. 2-403. It arises only when particular facts have been shown in evidence and when from those particular facts the law directs a deduction to be made. Most, but not all, of the statutory disputable presumptions are of this kind. *Page 623
The difference between the majority rule outside of Oregon and the statutory rule here is found in the respective definitions of a presumption. To Professor Wigmore and in the majority of jurisdictions, a presumption of law is defined as a rule of law having only procedural consequences. If a presumption of law is thus defined, it logically follows that when the procedural consequences have occurred the presumption is functus officio, and the authorities very properly have held that the presumption or rule of law cannot have weight as evidence.
We find an illuminating article by McBain of the California School of Jurisprudence, which contains penetrating comments on the Oregon and California statutory rule. (Smellie v. SouthernPacific Co., 212 Cal. 540, 299 P. 529 (1931)) to the effect that a presumption of law is evidenced. He is, of course, discussing presumptions of law as defined by Wigmore. The author speaks first of a case in which a presumption was employed defensively. The issue was insanity in a criminal case, the burden of proof of insanity being on the defendant. People v. Chamberlain, 7 Cal. 2d 257,60 P.2d 299 (1936).
"A jury empaneled to determine insanity may weigh the testimony of witnesses and other evidence and if the testimony of the witnesses and other evidence does not convince them of defendant's `defense' of insanity, they may reject the defense. They can rationally do this and only this. They cannot rationally weigh a rule of law against the testimony of witnesses. To tell a jury to weigh a rule of law is to command them to do the impossible — to employ sophistry of the rankest kind. * * * In what terms, it may be asked, would a trial judge frame an instruction for the guidance *Page 624 of a jury, that a presumption is evidence that may be weighed by them with or against all the evidence in the case?" 26 Cal. Law Rev. p. 544.
Concerning cases like the one at bar in which a presumption is invoked by the proponent, he says:
"The burden of proof may be placed upon a litigant to establish a fact. He may be aided by a presumption that the fact exists. If then he is further aided by a judicial fiat that it is probably true that the fact exists (regard a presumption as the equivalent of evidence) we have given to him an unfair advantage and started the law suit with contradictory positions. It is unfair to one of the litigants to say to him that `your opponent has the burden of proving that the fact he asserts is true but we declare to you at the outset that what he asserts to be true is probably true.'"
Under the majority doctrine, to instruct the jury that there is a presumption of law of the type now under discussion would be unnecessary, and to advise them that such a presumption is evidence would be improper.
But we have yet to consider another aspect of the doctrine as expounded by Wigmore and the majority rulings. Although they define a presumption as merely a rule of law and therefore not evidence, they fully recognize that the identical particular facts proved which give rise to the presumption (the rule of law) may and generally do also create an inference of genuine probative force. There is nothing in the majority rule which denies to such inferences of fact the probative or evidentiary weight to which they may be entitled at the hands of the court or jury. The narrow scope of the definition of a presumption and also the complete *Page 625 recognition of the probative force of inferences which arise from the very facts which produce the presumption is made clear in the following passage from Wigmore:
"So long as the law attaches no legal consequences in the way of a duty upon the opponent to come forward with contrary evidence, there is no propriety in applying the term `presumption' to such facts, however great their probative significance" 9 Wigmore on Evidence (3d Ed.) § 2491, p. 288.
In New York Life Insurance Company v. Ross, 30 F.2d 80, at p. 82 (1928), the court well stated the majority doctrine.
"This presumption, as such, would not survive the introduction of evidence tending to prove suicide or even motive for suicide. Thereafter it would have no place in the reasoning as a presumption (Brunswick v. Standard Accident Ins. Co., 278 Mo. 154, 173, 213 S.W. 45, 7 A.L.R. 1213; Von Crome v. Travelers Ins. Co. (C.C.A.) 11 F.2d 350); but, as a legitimate inference from human life, the effect would continue. This inference is sometimes loosely denominated a presumption. In nature it is as truly evidentiary as the true presumption is procedural. In practical application of these rules, and for the proper understanding of the jury, it would seem merely a question of words — a method of phrasing the established rule — whether the court charges the jury that the presumption continues after evidence to rebut it has been introduced, but is rebuttable, or whether the jury be charged that the presumption is destroyed but a natural and legitimate inference arises from the evidence, or lack of evidence, to be given such probative effect as the jury deems proper in determining the issue."*Page 626
The case of Wojcik v. Metropolitan Life Insurance Co. (supra) involved the presumption against suicide. The court said:
"The basis of any such presumption must be `the common knowledge, which may be noticed without proof by a judge and jury, that sane persons do not ordinarily kill themselves.'" (Citing cases.)"Whatever may be the holdings elsewhere, this fact would bring such a presumption within the category of those which under our law exhaust themselves as presumptions when substantial countervailing evidence is produced upon the trial, leaving merely the circumstances which give rise to the presumption to be considered with the other evidence in the case as a basis for any proper inferences." (Citing cases.) (Italics ours.)
In O'Dea v. Amodeo, 118 Conn. 58, 170 A. 486, at p. 487, (1934), the court said:
"It is also true that when the presumption rests upon common experience and inherent probability, it exhausts itself when the defendant produces substantial countervailing evidence. Clark v. Diefendorf, 109 Conn. 507, 510, 147 A. 33. Such presumptions differ, however, from those of which we have been speaking, in that as they are based upon the fact that common experience and reason justify the drawing of a certain inference from the circumstances of a given situation, it follows that, although the presumption as such disappears from the case when substantial countervailing evidence is produced, the facts and circumstances which give rise to it remain and afford the basis for a like inference by the trier, whether court or jury." (Italics ours.)
In Jefferson Standard Life Insurance Co. v. Clemmer,79 F.2d 724, at p. 730, 103 A.L.R. 171 (1935), the court said:
"When the case goes to the jury, they are at liberty to take into consideration the abnormality *Page 627 of suicide and to give such probative force, as their judgment dictates, to the fact upon which the presumption is based, that is, in a case of this sort, to the fact of death by violence; but `it is not weighed down by any artificial additional probative effect; they may estimate it for just such intrinsic effect as it seems to have under all the circumstances." (Citing cases.)
And see Beggs v. Metropolitan Life Insurance Co., 219 Iowa 24,257 N.W. 445, 95 A.L.R. 863 (1934).
The majority rule is well summarized by the annotator in 95 A.L.R. at p. 879, who says:
"The question is not whether the facts or actual evidence from which the presumption arises may be considered, it being well settled that such facts may be considered as evidence, but whether the artificial effect given to them by the rule of law, i.e., the presumption, may be given probative effect by the jury."
Thus, we see that as to presumptions of law which are deductions from facts proved, the majority rule recognizes that there are two separate and distinct consequences from the introduction in evidence of "particular facts": first, a rule of law having procedural consequences requiring the opponent to go forward with the evidence and, second, inferences of fact or deductions from the particular facts proved which are truly evidentiary, but by this view only the rule of law is described as a presumption, and so by definition a presumption is not evidence.
This brings us to a further consideration of the Oregon statutes. Wisely or otherwise they have adopted a different and far more comprehensive definition of a presumption, and within that definition they have *Page 628 included both of the legal consequences which may arise from the proof of "particular facts", i.e., the procedural rule and also the inference of fact which may logically be drawn from the particular facts proved. Under the Oregon statutes above quoted, a presumption is a deduction from particular facts. A deduction is another word for an inference. So the statutory definition of a presumption manifests the intent to include the logical inference or deduction as part of the presumption. An inference must be founded (1) upon a fact legally proved and (2) on such deduction from that fact as is warranted.
The distinction between the two views concerning presumptions is clinched by our statute which includes presumptions and inferences within the term "indirect evidence", whereas the majority view treats inferences as arguments or conclusions from particular facts proved. If a presumption includes a deduction or inference, and if an inference is evidence by statutory definition, then, of course, a presumption of law at least includes evidentiary matter. Take the alleged presumption of law against suicide. First, we seek the "particular facts" proved. They are that the deceased died by violent and external means. We then assume that from such proof a presumption of law arises against suicide. This requires the court to rule that a primafacie case of accidental death has been made, consequently to deny a nonsuit and to require that the defendant go forward with the evidence or lose the case. Thus far the result is the same if we apply the majority definition of a presumption or the Oregon statutory definition. Beyond this point, the two views lead by different roads to the same result. Under the majority rule the presumption *Page 629 of law is functus officio, but there remains in evidence the fact of violent death and a consideration of the usual propensities of men. The fact is evidence, and the inference from the fact, namely, the love of life and the unlikelihood of suicide, remains for the consideration of the jury. Under Oregon statutes the fact of death by violent and external means is evidence, and the inference or argument based on the usual propensities of men is also available for consideration by the jury as tending to show the improbability of suicide, but under the Oregon statute this inference or argument is treated as included within the meaning of the word "presumption." There is no necessity for saying that the procedural rule of law which is part of our definition of presumption constitutes evidence, and there is no objection to saying that the particular facts proved, i.e., violent death, and the inference therefrom constitute evidence for the consideration of the jury. Many presumptions of law become such because they evolved from inferences of fact supported by human experience and a consideration of the "usual propensities and passions of men." The Oregon decisions speak of a presumption of law as evidence, for it is so defined, but the Oregon rule is satisfied if the inference from facts proved is treated as having probative force. The mere rule of law controlling the procedure of the judge, which is a part of the statutory definition of a presumption, cannot be evidence. The statute cannot make law into evidence, nor can the mind of man weigh law against evidence any more than it can weigh distance against weight or yards against pounds.
We think that the view expressed is consistent with the actual adjudications in Oregon. The situations *Page 630 in which presumptions of law and inferences are invoked to support a proponent's case may be classified as follows:
(1) Where the proponent offers in evidence facts raising an inference and then rests and where the opponent offers no evidence, the case goes to the jury. The proponent has made aprima facie case carrying him past a nonsuit, but the inference is a "deduction which the reason of the jury makes from the facts proved." The result is that the jury may (not must) find for the proponent. Such was the case of Miller v. Semler, 137 Or. 610,2 P.2d 233, 3 P.2d 987 (1931). The case was submitted to the jury, which found for the plaintiff.
(2) Where the proponent proves facts raising a presumption of law and then rests and where the opponent offers no evidence, the verdict must go for the proponent. The proponent again has made aprima facie case carrying him past a nonsuit, but with this difference: here the law expressly directs that a deduction be made from the particular facts. O.C.L.A. 2-403 (supra). We distinguish the presumption of law from a mere inference of fact and hold that the jury must find for the proponent. As said by Mr. Justice ROSSMAN, specially concurring in Bunnell v.Parelius (supra), 166 Or. at p. 189, in distinguishing inferences from presumptions of law:
"The former * * * is a voluntary conclusion; the latter is a compulsory or mandatory conclusion."
Since the jury must in this instance find for the proponent, it is a clear case in which the court must instruct and direct, not because the presumption is *Page 631 evidence, but because of the procedural statutory rule.
(3) Where the proponent proves basic facts raising a presumption of law and rests and where the opponent offers contradictory but not conclusive evidence, the case will go to the jury whenever there is a rational connection between the basic fact and the inferred fact. In Coffey v. NorthwesternHospital Association, 96 Or. 100, 183 P. 762, 189 P. 407 (1920), the proponent offered evidence of the due mailing of notice. The opponent denied receiving it. The court said:
"There is a strong presumption that the letter so marked was received, and whether this presumption was overcome by the evidence of the defendant was a question of fact for the jury."
That presumption (O.C.L.A. 2-407 (24)) is based simply upon experience and logical probability. The likelihood of the receipt of the duly mailed letter is as well known to the jury as to the court. We see no need of instructing them concerning the presumption of law. They might, of course, be advised of their right to infer that the letter was received, but that they already know. See City Motor Trucking Co. v. Franklin FireInsurance Co., 116 Or. 102, 239 P. 812 (1925); Stadelman v.Miner, 83 Or. 348, at p. 378, 155 P. 708, 163 P. 585, 163 P. 983 (1917) (equity case); Jahn v. Commercial Travelers MutualAccident Association of America (supra).
(4) Where the proponent proves facts raising a presumption of law and rests and where the opponent presents contradictory evidence of a conclusive character, the verdict must go for the opponent. The court must direct a verdict, notwithstanding the presumption. The case is identical in principle to the *Page 632 Bee Hive case discussed infra. The force of the presumption of law spent itself when the proponent was carried past a nonsuit. The remaining logical inference, if there was one, is overcome by "proof free from question or contradiction." French v. StateIndustrial Accident Commission (supra). Illustrative of this class is the case of Kernin v. City of Coquille (supra).
(5) Where the proponent proves facts raising a presumption of fact (an inference) and rests and where the opponent presents contradictory evidence not, however, "free from question or contradiction" the case must go to the jury. The fact that there is a mere inference favorable to the proponent does not require the court so to instruct, and the inference favorable to the proponent will be weighed against the dubious evidence of the opponent. Miller v. Service and Sales, Inc., 149 Or. 11,38 P.2d 995, 96 A.L.R. 28 (1934) is of this type.
(6) Where the proponent proves facts raising an inference and rests and where the opponent presents convincing evidence free from question or contradiction, the court must direct a verdict for the opponent despite the inference. Here we encounter a series of cases which firmly establish the law as above stated. Most of them are actions against the owner of an automobile for the negligence of the driver. They establish that the proof of ownership of a negligently driven car raises an inference of agency, as distinguished from a presumption of law. The leading case is Judson v. Bee Hive Auto Service Co. (supra). The doctrine of that case has been extended and applied in Lehl v.Hull, 152 Or. 470, 53 P.2d 48, 54 P.2d 290 (1936);Kantola v. Lovell Auto Co., 157 Or. 534, *Page 633 72 P.2d 61 (1937); Brown v. Fields, 160 Or. 23,83 P.2d 144 (1938); Bunnell v. Parelius (supra); Allum v. Ball,168 Or. 577, 124 P.2d 533 (1942). In Brown v. Fields (supra) though the rule was applied, it was also recognized that
"* * * ordinarily, it is a question for the jury to determine whether the evidence refutes or overcomes the inference of agency which arises by reason of the ownership of the automobile." (Class 5, supra.)
In Bunch v. Standard Oil Co. of California, 144 Or. 1,23 P.2d 328 (1933), an inference arose sufficient to create a primafacie case of agency, but upon the whole evidence this court held that it was proper for the trial court to direct a verdict for the defendant. The court used this significant language:
"In order to avoid the consummation of an injustice, and when the facts are peculiarly within the knowledge of the opposite party litigant, the courts have relaxed as to the quantum of proof required of plaintiff to entitle him to have his case submitted to the jury, in the absence of any evidence on behalf of the defendant."
In Bunnell v. Parelius (supra) the decision was unanimous, but specially concurring opinions disclose some disagreement as to the proper basis of the decision. In one the view is expressed that there is an inference of agency which is evidence but that it is of such a weak character that it cannot stand in the face of "facts established by evidence which only an arbitrary judgment would reject." In the other concurring opinion, the view is expressed that there is a legal presumption of agency, not a mere inference. The "majority doctrine" following Wigmore is espoused, and it is argued that the presumption was *Page 634 not evidence and that it vanishes when it has performed its function of creating a prima facie case.
If we should hold in this type of case that the proof of particular facts raises a presumption of law of agency rather than a mere inference of fact, we would not thereby escape the problem which arises when such a presumption, standing alone, is opposed by conclusive evidence free from question or contradiction. If there be any logical inference of agency from proof of ownership of the vehicle (a debated question) that inference would still exist although the law also raised a presumption to the same effect. An inference is founded on a fact legally proved and on such a deduction from the fact as is warranted. O.C.L.A. 2-404. Now, the statute defines an inference as evidence. Assuming, then, that there is a logical inference of agency from ownership, the result would be the same in this class of cases, whether we say there is or is not a presumption of law, for the included inference as defined by statute would be evidence in either case. Inferences of fact, if they exist at all, are evidence, whether standing alone or growing out of proved facts which create a presumption of law, but they may arise to no greater dignity than a scintilla. If they stand alone and are controverted by convincing uncontradicted and unimpeached testimony, they must be deemed evidence but "insufficient evidence."
"That evidence is deemed satisfactory which ordinarily produces moral certainty or conviction in an unprejudiced mind. Such evidence alone will justify a verdict. Evidence less than this is denominated insufficient evidence." O.C.L.A. 2-111.
(7) Where the proponent offers evidence raising a presumption of fact, that is, an inference, and supports *Page 635 it with other substantial evidence, and where the opponent then offers substantial contradictory evidence, the case, of course, goes to the jury. Davis v. Underdahl, 140 Or. 242,13 P.2d 362 (1932); Fleming v. Ambulance Co., 155 Or. 351,62 P.2d 1331, 64 P.2d 519 (1937); Ellenberger v. Fremont Land Co.,165 Or. 375, 107 P.2d 837 (1940). It is not necessary to instruct a jury concerning mere inferences of fact although it may sometimes be permissible.
(8) Where the proponent offers evidence raising a presumption of law and supports it with other substantial evidence, and where the opponent offers substantial contradictory evidence, it is equally clear that the case must go to the jury. It is to this class that the case at bar belongs (assuming that there is a presumption of law against suicide). The only question which arises in this type of case is whether the court has a duty to instruct the jury concerning the presumption of law.
The decision in the case at bar depends upon the principles which we have illustrated. What we have said concerning cases of the Bee Hive type applies with even greater force to presumptions against suicide. In the case at bar, there was a jury question irrespective of any presumption against suicide. If the presumption against suicide, considered as a rule of law, must arbitrarily be given weight as evidence aside from the normal weight of inferences from the facts proved, then it would be the duty of the court to tell the jury so, but if, as we think, a presumption as broadly defined by our statute has a double aspect: (1) a rule of law relative to going forward with the evidence and (2) evidentiary inferences, then it follows that if the rule of law has spent itself and the case *Page 636 has gone to the jury, there is no need to instruct the jury as to the remaining inferences from facts proved, although the court could, of course, advise them that they may consider love of life and any proper inferences concerning the probability of suicide, along with the other evidence in the case. To summarize: Whenever the particular basic facts necessary to raise a presumption of law have been established by proof (pleadings, stipulations or the like) a presumption of law arises which has procedural aspects which concern the court alone. They relate to nonsuits and the duty of going forward with the evidence. If those basic facts also have a logical value as evidence of the presumed fact, then they and the inferences drawn therefrom constitute evidence for the consideration of the jury, not as rules of law, but as ordinary evidentiary matter. If, as in Oregon, presumptions are so defined as to include not only the procedural or administrative rule of law, but also the inferences from the basic facts, then, to be sure, a presumption as so defined has evidentiary weight, but it does not have evidentiary weight as a rule of law, but only to the extent that the basic facts have logical value as evidence of the presumed fact. When the court has accorded the procedural effect to the presumption, there is no more necessity for instructing the jury as to the remaining logical value of the basic facts and inferences than there is for instructing with respect to any other evidentiary matter.
This is fundamental, for if the basic facts proved which raise a presumption of law have no logical value tending to prove a fact presumed, then the court cannot accord evidentiary weight to basic facts and cannot so instruct the jury, statutes to the contrary notwithstanding. *Page 637 There may be presumptions of an exclusively procedural character adopted by the law to facilitate trials. They carry the proponent past a nonsuit, not because he has proved basic facts which tend to prove his case, but because it is just to require the opponent, who alone may have knowledge of the facts, to go forward with the evidence. St. Louis-San Francisco Ry. Co. v.Mangum (supra) is of that type. By an Arkansas statute, railroad companies are made responsible for all damages to persons or property done or caused by the running of trains. Ultimately there must be evidence of negligence, but proof of injury creates a presumption of negligence requiring the railroad company to present some evidence to the contrary.
The court said:
"Under the decisions of the Supreme Court of the United States and our own decisions, when one is shown to have been injured by the operation of a train in this state, it creates a presumption of negligence and the burden is then upon the railroad company to produce some evidence to the contrary. When it does that, however, the presumption is at an end and the question of negligence is one for the jury upon all the evidence; the presumption or inference cannot be considered by the jury as evidence, but it is at an end and the jury must then pass upon the question of negligence from all the evidence introduced.*Page 638"To permit the presumption to be considered as evidence after other evidence has been introduced, would, as stated by the Supreme Court of the United States, be unreasonable and arbitrary, and would violate the due process clause of the 14th amendment, U.S.C.A. Const." St. Louis-San Francisco Ry. Co. v. Mangum (supra) 199 Ark. 797, 136 S.W.2d at p. 160.
The unanimous opinion of the United States Supreme Court inWestern Atlantic Railroad v. Henderson, 279 U.S. 639,73 L. Ed. 884, 49 S. Ct. 445, is to the same effect. A Georgia statute provided that
"* * * a railroad company shall be liable for any damages done * * * by the running of the locomotives * * * unless the company shall make it appear that their agents have exercised * * * reasonable care * * * the presumption in all cases being against the company."
The United States Supreme Court said that as construed by the state supreme court, the statute "creates an inference that is given effect of evidence to be weighed against opposing testimony" and held that the statute creating the presumption violates the due process clause of the 14th amendment. The court said:
"Legislation declaring that proof of one fact or group of facts shall constitute prima facie evidence of an ultimate fact in issue is valid if there is a rational connection between what is proved and what is to be inferred. A prima facie presumption casts upon the person against whom it is applied the duty of going forward with his evidence on the particular point to which the presumption relates. A statute creating a presumption that is arbitrary or that operates to deny a fair opportunity to repel it violates the due process clause of the 14th amendment. Legislative fiat may not take the place of fact in the judicial determination of issues involving life, liberty or property. Manley v. Georgia, 279 U.S. 1, ante, 575, 49 Sup. Ct. Rep. 215, and cases cited."The mere fact of collision between a railway train and a vehicle at a highway grade crossing furnishes no basis for any inference as to whether the accident was caused by negligence of the railway company or of the traveler on the highway *Page 639 or of both or without fault of anyone. Reasoning does not lead from the occurrence back to its cause."
The doctrine is approved in Bandini Petroleum Co. v. SuperiorCourt of the State of California, 284 U.S. 8, 52 S. Ct. 103,76 L. Ed. 136, 78 A.L.R. 826, and see American Law Institute, Model Code of Evidence, Foreword by Edward M. Morgan, p. 60. Thus, it appears that our statute cannot give evidentiary value to a presumption unless there is a "rational connection between what is proved and what is to be inferred", i.e., between the basic facts and the inferred facts. Whenever there is such a rational connection it exists not because the statute created it but because it inheres in the nature of the evidence. That rational connection, when it exists, constitutes an inference, and it is for the jury like all other inferences (except when standing alone it is overwhelmed by conclusive contradictory evidence, as in the Bee Hive case, supra).
In adopting the majority view of presumptions as thus set forth, we do no violence to our statute. We deprive no one of the probative force of the presumption, if it has any, and if it has no probative force, we do but apply a rule supported by the due process clause when we decline to treat the presumptions as evidence. The conclusion to which we are forced is that presumptions of law arising from proof of particular basic facts having probative force need not be stated to the jury. We fully realize that the word "presumption" is one in common usage, which probably does not connote any rule of law to the common man. In its common use it means "ground for presuming or believing probable." It is most frequently used as meaning "inference." We cannot say that the frequent *Page 640 loose use of the term in instructions is always error or, if so, reversible, but as to the type of instruction now under discussion, we do say that it was not error to refuse to instruct concerning a presumption of law and that to instruct the jury that such a presumption of law is evidence would be erroneous, because such an instruction would tend to confuse the logical inferences from basic facts which the jury are at liberty to consider with a rule of law with which they are not concerned and which, as a rule of law, can have no evidentiary weight.
Again, it might be thought that our rule of law does violence to O.C.L.A. 2-405 (supra) which provides that disputable presumptions may be overcome by evidence, but unless so overcome are controlling. It is true that presumptions of law are controlling unless overcome by evidence, but the statute does not designate the quantum of evidence necessary to overcome a presumption of law. It may well be said that a presumption of law, as a rule of law, is overcome when substantial evidence to the contrary is introduced. This view has the support of the United States Supreme Court in New York Life Insurance Co. v.Gamer (supra). That court discusses the much misunderstood case of Travelers Insurance Co. v. McConkey, 127 U.S. 661,32 L. Ed. 308, 8 S. Ct. 1360. Speaking of that opinion the court said:
"It held that if the insured committed suicide, plaintiff had no claim; that, from the fact of death by violence, accident would be presumed, and that unless the presumption was overcome by evidence the law was for plaintiff. The opinion does not indicate the quantum of proof required to put an end to the presumption. It is consistent with, if indeed it does not support, the rule that the presumption *Page 641 is not evidence and ceases upon the introduction of substantial proof to the contrary." (Citing many cases.) New York Life Insurance Co. v. Gamer (supra) 114 A.L.R. at p. 1222.
Two states, Montana and California, have enacted statutes identical to those of Oregon concerning presumptions. 4 Revised Codes of Montana, 1935, §§ 10,600 to 10,606; California Code of Civil Procedure, 1941, §§ 1957 to 1963 and 2061. The decisions in both states reflect the same confusion which has prevailed here. The courts of both states have adhered to the view that disputable presumptions are evidence to be weighed against other evidence and have even indicated that such presumptions as those of due care and innocence which do not arise from proof of any basic facts are also to be weighed as evidence, notwithstanding the general rule to the contrary. 34 A.L.R. 942. Gagnon v.Jones, 103 Mont. 365, 62 P.2d 683 (1936); Smellie v.Southern Pacific Co., 212 Cal. 540, 299 P. 529 (1931). Yet the Montana court also speaks of a presumption of law thus: that it fades away in the face of contrary facts, and cites 5 Wigmore on Evidence, 2nd Ed. § 2493 in support. Johnson v. Kaiser,104 Mont. 261, 65 P.2d 1179 (1937). A recent well considered case from the Supreme Court of California has greatly weakened the doctrine of the Smellie case (supra) and has taken a long step toward the adoption of the rule which we have set forth in the case at bar. In Speck v. Sarver, 20 Cal. 2d 585,128 P.2d 16 (1942), the trial court instructed the jury in an automobile negligence case that there is a presumption of law that plaintiff was not guilty of contributory negligence, which presumption "is, in itself, a species of evidence." Upon appeal the Supreme Court said that an instruction as to the *Page 642 existence of the presumption may properly be given to the jury in certain situations, but the court added:
"Such an instruction, however, should not be given where the evidence introduced by the plaintiff discloses the acts and conduct of the injured party immediately prior to or at the time in question."
It was held that the instruction given constituted error. This recent decision is wholly inconsistent with any rule that a presumption is evidence, for if a presumption of law is evidence having probative force as such, it must remain so regardless of the introduction of other evidence on the same issue. Three judges concurred in the conclusion that the giving of the instruction was erroneous but was not prejudicial. Chief Justice Gibson concurred
"* * * for the reason that the rules as to the nature of rebuttable presumptions upon which the foregoing opinion is based have been fixed by many decisions of this court, and any modifications of such rules should be effected by the Legislature, and not by overruling at this time the cases establishing them."
Justice Traynor, with whom Justice Edmonds concurred, wrote a scholarly and convincing dissent, which strongly supports our conclusions in the case at bar. The dissenting opinion examines the California statutes (identical to our own) in detail and demonstrates, we think, that there is nothing in the statutes which requires that presumptions of law as such should be given evidentiary weight (though logical inferences from basic facts proved do, of course, have such weight). From the dissent, all of which merits consideration, we quote the following excerpts:
"The rule that rebuttable presumptions may be weighed as evidence is so arbitrary, and its consequences *Page 643 so mischievous that it becomes imperative to set forth to what lengths it has departed from the function and purposes of such presumptions."Lewis v. New York Life Insurance Co, 113 Mont. 151,124 P.2d 579 (1942) is a case similar to the case at bar. It arose under Montana statutes similar to our own. The trial court instructed the jury that there was a presumption of accidental death, employing language found in an instruction approved inTravelers Insurance Co. v. McConkey (supra) which *Page 644 was criticised in the later case of New York Life Insurance Co.v. Gamer (supra). The jury was instructed in part as follows: A presumption"It is pure ritualism that a precedent should gather as much respect from a long life of inconsistency as it would from a long life of certainty, and earn the right to survive merely because it has survived so long. One looks to precedent for certainty, the substance of its vitality. If instead it offers only confusion it loses its right to endure indefinitely. The confusion in the California cases as to the function of rebuttable presumptions can be eliminated only by repudiating the erroneous view that such presumptions may be weighed as evidence. Smellie v. Southern Pacific Co., supra, and the cases following it should be overruled.
"In the field of evidence and procedure everything is gained and little lost by overruling an irrational precedent. Nothing is taken away, as it might be in the substantive law of property and contracts, upon which one is entitled to rely. Certainly the parties in an automobile accident cannot reasonably contend that they operate their vehicles in reliance on the rule in the Smellie case. That rule was a judge-made rule and should be laid at rest where it originated. It would be most inappropriate to shift the responsibility for its demise to the Legislature, for it involves not questions of policy, but technical questions of procedure that are peculiarly within the province of the courts."
"* * * may be controverted by other evidence, direct or indirect, but unless so controverted by a preponderance of the evidence the jury is bound to find according to the presumption."
Such an instruction would certainly be disapproved in this court because of its tendency to indicate that the burden of proof is on the defendant to prove suicide. The Montana court, however, held that the instruction was not erroneous, relying on the McConkey case. Here, again, we find a strong and persuasive dissent which gives consideration to the relevant statutes and cites the Wigmore doctrine with approval. In view of the complete change in Vermont and the strong dissent in California and Montana, we think the trend is decidedly toward the view expressed here and that it was unnecessary to give the requested instruction concerning a presumption against suicide.
In Jefferson Standard Life Insurance Co. v. Clemmer (supra) 79 F.2d at p. 730, 731, the court said:
"Certainly the presumption is not based upon any difficulty of producing the evidence or the essential accessibility of the evidence to one of the parties, or upon the judgment of the courts as to what is socially desirable. Obviously, the presumption is not needed in order that justice may be done to the beneficiaries or the representatives of the deceased, for jurors do not need to be told that suicide is abnormal, or warned to be fair to the plaintiff on a suit on a life insurance policy."Ordinarily, it is not necessary to refer to the presumption against suicide in the charge to the jury. If the basic fact of death by violence is admitted, *Page 645 or proved, the presumption arises, and in the absence of countervailing evidence, the judge should direct a verdict for the plaintiff. If such evidence is produced, the judge should charge the jury in the usual fashion. He may of course refer in his discretion to the improbability of suicide as an inference of fact, based on the common experience of mankind, but the jury should be permitted to give the inference such weight as it deems best, undisturbed by the thought that the inference has some sort of artificial probative force which must influence their deliberations." (Italics ours.)
In the case of Wojcik v. Metropolitan Life Insurance Co. (supra) 1 A.2d at p. 133, the court said:
"The burden to prove that the death was by accidental means was upon the plaintiff and she was not entitled to have any presumption against suicide considered in determining that issue as the case was tried, though the `nonprobability of death by suicide' was a consideration to be weighed by the trial court with the other circumstances in evidence in arriving at its decision."
In the case of Rast v. Mutual Life Insurance Co. of New York,112 F.2d 769 (1940), the court said:
"Nor was it error in our opinion to refuse to charge the jury that the presumption against suicide has the weight of evidence. It is true that the Supreme Court of South Carolina has spoken of the presumption against suicide as sufficient to carry a case to the jury * * * but this is only another way of saying that when an unexplained death by violence is established, the legal inference is that the death was caused by accident rather than by suicide."
In Jahn v. Commercial Travelers Mutual Accident Association ofAmerica, 256 A.D. 835, 9 N.Y.S.2d 257 (1939), after holding that proof of death by *Page 646 violent and external means makes out a prima facie case of accidental death, the court said:
"They, however, should also have been charged that when the defendant adduced proof which indicated that the decedents death was due to suicide, the jury should then, from all the evidence which it credited, decide without regard to any presumption, whether the insured had died as a consequence of accident or as a consequence of suicide, and that on the whole case, the burden of proof to establish that the death was due to accidental means was upon the plaintiff."
In Honrath v. New York Life Insurance Co. (supra), there was evidence upon both sides on the issue of accident as against suicide. The court said:
"In view of the record as above disclosed, we believe, it was error for the trial judge to instruct the jury in this case regarding the presumption against suicide."
* * *
"The presumption, when the opposite party has produced prima facie evidence, has spent its force and served its purpose, and the party then, in whose favor the presumption operated, must meet his opponent's prima facie evidence with evidence, and not presumptions. A presumption is not evidence of a fact, but purely a conclusion."
In Buro v. Home Benefit Association (Texas) 28 S.W.2d 902 at p. 905 (1930), the court said:
"Appellant contends that the trial court should have specifically charged the jury that there is a presumption of law against a person committing suicide. We do not agree with this contention. Our courts uniformly hold that the trial judge should not charge on the weight of the evidence, neither should he charge upon legal presumptions unless the same are expressly defined by statute."*Page 647
In Jennings v. Soverign Camp. W.O.W. (Texas) 296 S.W. 961 (1927), the court said:
"Whether or not a man committed suicide is a fact question, and must be proved by preponderance of the testimony just as any other fact. Since the jury in this case has found that the deceased met his death by suicide their finding cannot be disturbed by this court unless it was against the great weight and preponderance of the testimony."
* * *
"We deem it best to state that it is improper for the trial court to charge on legal presumptions unless the same are expressly defined by statute." (Citing cases.)
In the case of First National Bank v. Commercial Assurance Co.,33 Or. 43, 52 P. 1052 (1898), the court had under consideration the presumption of innocence, but the statement of WOLVERTON, J., is highly persuasive.
"Presumptions of fact are the natural presumptions which rest upon experience and observation of the course of nature, the constitution of the human mind, the springs of human action and the usage and habits of society. The presumptions of law, many of them, rest upon the same ground which the law simply recognizes and enforces. Many of them, however, are only partially approved by reason, and the law from motives of policy attaches to the facts which give to it an artificial effect beyond their natural tendency to produce belief: Best, Ev. (A. ed.) §§ 303, 305. Just so far as the presumption or maxim, as it may be termed where it does not proceed from proof, is founded upon reason and the experience of human kind, it has evidentiary value; and, in the determination of such value, the artificial effect given it by the edict of law must be eliminated, — that is to say, strike off the edict, *Page 648 and what is left will constitute a natural presumption, or one of fact, and this will be the measure of its evidentiary value."
In Modern Woodmen of America v. Craiger (supra) 92 N.E. at pp. 114, 115, the court said:
"In determining the charge of suicide, the jury may properly consider the facts and circumstances bearing upon that question given in evidence in the light of their common knowledge and experience that mankind instinctively love life and generally shun death, although occasionally men, both sane and insane, take their own lives. The cause of death was directly in issue in this case to be decided not by a presumption of law, but as an inference of fact by the jury in the same manner as other facts are determined in civil actions." * * *"When the question of suicide is put in issue, as in this case, it devolves upon the party affirming such fact to establish the same; and this issue may be proved like any other fact in a civil action by a preponderance of the evidence given touching that question. If such evidence is equally balanced, the party having the burden must fail, not because of the presumption of law against suicide, but because he has not sustained his affirmative defense." (Citing many cases.)
The foregoing was said in a case in which suicide was pleaded as an affirmative defense.
In Domanowski v. Prudential Insurance Co. of America,116 N.J.L. 247, 182 A. 906 (1936), action was brought on a double indemnity policy for accidental death. Verdict was in favor of the defendant company. Upon appeal it was urged that the trial court had committed reversible error in refusing to instruct the jury as follows:
"The plaintiff, Stella Domanowski, is entitled to the benefit of the presumption that the death of *Page 649 the Insured was not caused by self destruction or suicide."
* * *
"Where a person is found dead the presumptions are that death was natural or accidental, and suicide will not be presumed."
Speaking of the requested instructions above quoted, and of one other which need not be noticed, the Court of Errors and Appeals said:
"The vice in these three requests is that they seek to substitute a presumption for evidence. The aid of a presumption may be invoked only to establish a prima facie case to entitle the party carrying the burden of proof to go to the jury or to require his opponent to go forward with the evidence. A presumption is applied by the court in a proper case to make that quantum of proof that, without which, the court would be obliged to nonsuit or direct a verdict. These requests are not amplified to instruct the jury that a presumption is not evidence and cannot be treated as evidence by the jury in reaching a verdict. These requests were properly refused. Kresse v. Metropolitan Life Ins. Co., 111 N.J. Law, 474, 168 A. 634."
In Walters v. Western Southern Life Insurance Co., 318 Pa. 382, 178 A. 499 (1935), the trial court instructed the jury in substance that there was a presumption against suicide. Upon appeal it was held that the court had not committed reversible error, but the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania said:
"In deciding not to reverse the judgment of the court below, we are not sanctioning the use of the word `presumption' as it was used by the court in its charge or as used in the excerpt cited above from the opinion of the superior court. The trial judge should have made it clear that in weighing the *Page 650 evidence in this case the jury had a right to consider the nonprobability of death by suicide, but that this nonprobability could not take the place of the evidence required to be furnished by plaintiff in order to prove her case."
See also O'Dea v. Amodeo (supra); Del Vecchio v. Bowers (supra); Watkins v. Prudential Insurance Co. (supra); Firsztv. Capitol Park Realty Co., 98 Conn. 627 at p. 645, 120 A. 300 (1923); Sackberger v. National Grand Lodge, 73 Mo. App. 38 (1898), and see New York Life Insurance Co. v. Ross (supra) in which the court criticised as erroneous an instruction on the presumption against suicide. The case of Warbende v. PrudentialInsurance Co. of America (supra) goes somewhat beyond the case last cited. It holds that there is no general presumption of law that death is accidental, but it recognized the existence of an inference to that effect and therefore properly held that there was sufficient evidence to go to the jury. See also 103 A.L.R. 185, where the annotator has collected cases both supporting and opposing the doctrine of the above cited cases.
We have concluded that there was no error in refusing to instruct as requested concerning presumptions against suicide. We again call attention to the fact that our reasoning and decision is limited to the case of a presumption in which the conclusion is essentially a reasonable deduction from facts proved. There are disputable presumptions of law which, by statutory mandate, go entirely beyond a mere assertion of probable consequences from facts proved, presumptions not based on experience or probability but upon public policy or necessity. There is a presumption of law that a person not heard from in seven years is dead. *Page 651 There may be a reasonable inference which would arise merely from long unexplained absence to the effect that a person is dead, but the statutory mandate which fixes seven years rather than six, eight or twenty as the point at which a presumption of death arises, is not based on experience or probability. The seven year provision is an arbitrary rule based on necessity. The conclusion at which we have arrived in this case does not necessarily apply to such a presumption. Both the history and nature of the presumption of death from seven years' absence indicate that it partakes somewhat of a rule of substantive law. The presumption concerning survivorship when two persons perish in the same calamity is of a similar nature. There will be time enough to classify other legal presumptions when they arise and appear in their specific context. The ruling here relates to the alleged presumption against suicide.
The case under consideration is also to be distinguished from such presumptions as "that a person is innocent of crime or wrong." O.C.L.A. 2-407 (1). That presumption cannot be brought within the statutory definition. It is not a deduction which the law expressly directs to be made from particular facts. He who relies upon it need prove nothing, for it arises without proof of any particular facts. It is not based on probability or necessity but upon broad considerations of public policy. It is not improper to instruct the jury on the presumption of innocence, but that presumption in its inherent nature is not evidence and is not made so by statute. It is a rule which properly serves to advise the jury that the burden of proof of crime or wrong is always on the party asserting it and that they must disabuse their minds from any prejudice *Page 652 arising from the fact that a charge has been made or an indictment returned. It conveys the idea that the cards are not stacked against accused persons and that they enter upon a trial surrounded by all the rights of free men. It is true that our statute provides that indirect evidence is of two kinds: (1) inferences, and (2) presumptions, but that is not the equivalent of saying that every presumption is evidence.
In Cox v. Royal Tribe (supra) the trial court instructed the jury that there was a presumption of law against suicide. No exception was taken to that portion of the instruction which referred to a "presumption of law." An examination of the bill of exceptions discloses that the only exception was as follows:
"Whereupon counsel * * * duly excepted to the following sentence in the first instruction requested by plaintiff and given by the court, to-wit: `And plaintiff is therefore entitled to recover unless the evidence introduced has overcome this presumption and satisfied you that death was voluntary.'"
This court said:
"There is a presumption that death is the result of natural causes, which inures to the benefit of the plaintiff, and should, as the first step, be satisfactorily overcome before the defendant could have a verdict." (Italics ours.)
The action in the Cox case was upon an ordinary life insurance policy, and the burden of proof was on the defendant company to establish suicide as an affirmative defense by a preponderance of the evidence. Unlike the case at bar, the presumption was employed defensively by the plaintiff. The trial court in its instruction said:
"* * * and in this case, if there was no proof as to the cause or manner of death of Mrs. Cox, or *Page 653 if the evidence as to whether her death was caused by accident or natural causes, and not by her own hands, was evenly balanced, you would find in favor of this presumption."
It is observed that both the trial and appellate courts were chiefly concerned with the burden of proof, and the jury was properly advised that if the evidence was evenly balanced the verdict should be for the plaintiff, since the defendant had asserted the affirmative defense of suicide. It is a very different matter when, as here, the plaintiff has the burden of proof of accidental death and requests an instruction which says to the jury in substance, "The plaintiff has the burden of proof of death by accident, but we now instruct you that, by reason of a presumption, his claim is probably true." In the Cox case, the appellant in its brief conceded that there was a presumption of law against suicide. The exceptions were based upon the claim that the presumption was improperly stated. In the court's discussion of the propriety of instructing on the presumption, it is difficult to tell whether it considered the presumption as a reasonable inference from facts proved or as a rule of law. It certainly did not say that the presumption as a rule of law was evidence. The holding of the case was that it was proper to instruct on the presumption. We think that the instruction as given amounted to little more than a statement concerning the burden of proof. In view of the multitude of recent decisions and texts which have appeared since the date of the Cox case, we think it must not be considered an authority for the proposition that it is prejudicial error to refuse to instruct that there is a presumption of law against suicide. A holding that it was not error to give the instruction which appears in *Page 654 that case is very different from a holding that it would be prejudicial error to refuse to give the request in the case at bar.
Reference may be made to the provisions of O.C.L.A. 2-204 to the effect that every witness is presumed to speak the truth. It is, of course, entirely proper so to instruct the jury in any case. The presumption that a witness speaks the truth is not one which arises from the proof of particular facts, but, like the presumption of innocence, it merely asserts that a witness in the first instance stands before the court as an honest man. There is nothing in that section of the statute which implies that such a presumption is evidence, nor do the courts so instruct. In fact, the presumption that a witness speaks the truth may be overcome without any contradictory evidence whatever. It may be overcome merely "by the manner in which he testifies" or "by the character of his testimony." O.C.L.A. 2-204.
We have indicated that the difference between the view here taken and the view that presumptions of law as such are evidence is largely one of terminology. In appellant's brief on rehearing the following Oregon cases are cited as supporting the view that a presumption is evidence: Bunnell v. Parelius (supra) (specially concurring opinion of Justice LUSK; Hansen v.Oregon-Washington Railroad Navigation Co. (supra); Caraduc v.Schanen-Blair (supra); Clark v. Shea (supra); City Motor Co.v. Franklin Fire Insurance Co. (supra); Sather v. Giaconi (supra); Dougherty v. Hazelwood Co. (supra); Peabody v. O.R. N. Co., 21 Or. 121, 26 P. 1053, 12 L.R.A. 823 (1891). It is significant that in every one of those cases the facts proved which are relied upon as raising a presumption *Page 655 were facts having probative value and a rational connection with the ultimate fact presumed or inferred. It follows that upon either view of the nature of a presumption, there was evidence in each of the cases which would normally be for the jury. In the same brief the following Oregon cases were cited as holding that the court should instruct as to the existence of presumptions:Cox v. Royal Tribe (supra); First National Bank of Portland v.Commercial Assurance Co., 33 Or. 43, 52 P. 1052 (1898); Peabodyv. O.R. N. (supra); Kern v. Pullen, 138 Or. 222,6 P.2d 224, 82 A.L.R. 434 (1931). The Cox case we have already discussed. First National Bank of Portland v. Commercial UnionAssurance Co. holds that the court should instruct on the presumption of innocence. We agree. Nothing is said in the Peabody case concerning the duty of the court to instruct the jury. Kern v. Pullen relates to the provision of O.C.L.A. 2-1001 which provides that the jury are to be instructed
"* * * on all proper occasions * * * that they are not bound to find in conformity with the declarations of any number of witnesses, which do not produce conviction in their minds * * * against a presumption * * *."
That case held that the trial of every case is a "`proper occasion' to give statutory instructions." Upon this point it was expressly overruled by Fitze v. American-Hawaiian SteamshipCompany, 167 Or. 439, 117 P.2d 825 (1941). We held that such an instruction is not required on all occasions but only on "proper occasions." Whenever a presumption is mentioned to the jury it will be a proper occasion to instruct them as provided in the section quoted above. Since the presumption of *Page 656 innocence and the rule that every witness is presumed to speak the truth applies in substantially all the cases, it may be assumed that all such cases are proper occasions for the statutory instruction. O.C.L.A. 2-1001 (2). Furthermore, most presumptions of law do include reasonable inferences of fact based on the probative value of the basic facts proved, and in such cases it is perfectly true that the jury, as stated in the statute, is not bound to find in conformity with the declarations of witnesses against such a presumption (unless, of course, the evidence is conclusive against a lone presumption).
Nothing we have said in any way limits or narrows the duty existing under the Fitze case (supra) to give the statutory instructions specified in O.C.L.A. 2-1001 on all proper occasions.
It may be urged that this opinion leaves the trial courts without guidance as to the proper procedure when a case involving presumptions of law goes to the jury. The first answer is that their difficulties are no greater than those of all the courts in the great majority of jurisdictions where the rule that a presumption of law as such is not evidence, now prevails. Furthermore, the existence of a presumption of law may be of aid to the jury even though not instructed concerning it as a rule of law.
The provision of O.C.L.A. 5-308, to the effect that in charging the jury the court "shall not present the facts of the case" has been held to restrain the court from commenting on the evidence, and under some decisions even a statement to the effect that the jury are at liberty to draw certain inferences from facts proved has been thought to invade the province of the jury. *Page 657 When, however, there is a presumption of law which warrants a deduction from facts proved, it is certainly within the power of the court to instruct the jury that they are at liberty to draw the appropriate inference if the basic facts which give rise to the presumption and the deduction are proved. In view of the presumption of law against suicide, it would be permissible to refer to the improbability of suicide as an inference of fact based on the love of life and the common experience of mankind.Jefferson Standard Life Insurance Co. v. Clemmer (supra);Kresse v. Metropolitan Life Ins. Co., 111 N.J. Law 474,168 A. 634. Upon proof of the due mailing of a letter the jury might be instructed that they may draw an inference of its due receipt.
In Peterson v. Grayce Oil Co. (Texas) 37 S.W.2d 367 at p. 376 (1931) the court said:
"It was also error for the court to tell the jury in the same definition that `malice' may be inferred from circumstances which show a reckless disregard of the rights of another, or a reckless disregard of consequences to another. In the absence of some statute prescribing that such an inference may be drawn, it was exclusively within the province of the jury to determine whether or not it was warranted; and the instruction so given was upon the weight of the evidence." (Italics ours.)
An instruction as to the appropriate inference which may be drawn from facts proved effectuates the only legitimate function of a legal presumption so far as the jury is concerned, and it contains no more comment on the evidence than the statute which creates the presumption warrants. Thus, the jury will learn of their right to give full evidentiary effect to basic facts and inferences therefrom, but will not be confused by *Page 658 an incomprehensible instruction that a presumption as such, i.e., as a rule of law, is evidence.
Based upon the foregoing considerations, the minority of the court have arrived at the conclusion that no error was committed by the trial judge in refusing to give the requested instructions and that the view here expressed does no violence to the Oregon statutes. It is a matter of satisfaction, from the standpoint of sound procedure and principle, that our views are supported by provisions of the Model Code of Evidence of the American Law Institute which read as follows:
"RULE 704. EFFECT OF PRESUMPTIONS.
"(1) Subject to Rule 703, when the basic fact of a presumption has been established in an action, the existence of the presumed fact must be assumed unless and until evidence has been introduced which would support a finding of its non-existence or the basic fact of an inconsistent presumption has been established."(2) Subject to Rule 703, when the basic fact of a presumption has been established in an action and evidence has been introduced which would support a finding of the non-existence of the presumed fact or the basic fact of an inconsistent presumption has been established, the existence or non-existence of the presumed fact is to be determined exactly as if no presumption had ever been applicable in the action.
"Comment on paragraph (1):
"This states the view of practically all text-writers, and is universally applied by the courts when they are using the word `presumption' carefully and not as a mere synonym of `inference.'"
* * *
"b. Application and reasons. A presumption, to be an efficient legal tool, must (1) be left in the *Page 659 hands of the judge to administer, and not be submitted to a jury for decision of the question when it is `rebutted' or ceases to have compelling force; (2) be so administered that the jury never hear the word presumption used since it carries unpredictable connotations to different minds; and (3) be embodied in a rule easy of application by the judge in the hurry of trial. This Rule meets these tests. * * *"
As a guide to the trial judges, if the foregoing principles should be adopted, the Model Code provides as follows:
"Except in situations where, regardless of rules governing presumptions, a mandatory instruction would be required, the application of this Rule at a trial is as follows:*Page 661"I. If the basic fact has not sufficient value as evidence of the presumed fact to support a finding and there is no other evidence that the presumed fact exists —
"A. When the basic fact is established without decision by the jury, then,
"(1) if there is no evidence justifying a finding contrary to the presumed fact, the judge instructs the jury that the presumed fact must be taken as true; but
"(2) if there is evidence justifying a finding contrary to the presumed fact, the judge instructs the jury that the presumed fact does not exist.
"B. When the basic fact has to be established by the jury upon evidence, then
"(1) if there is no evidence justifying a finding contrary to the presumed fact, the judge instructs the jury that if they find *Page 660 the basic fact, the presumed fact must be taken as true;
"(2) if there is evidence justifying a finding contrary to the presumed fact, the judge instructs the jury that the presumed fact does not exist.
"II. If the basic fact has sufficient value as evidence of the presumed fact to support a finding, the procedure is as follows whether there is or is not other evidence that the presumed fact exists —
"A. When the basic fact is established without decision by the jury, then,
"(1) if there is no evidence justifying a finding contrary to the presumed fact, the judge instructs the jury that the presumed fact must be taken as true; but
"(2) if there is evidence justifying a finding contrary to the presumed fact, the judge says nothing about a presumption, but leaves the jury to find the existence or non-existence of the presumed fact upon all the evidence exactly as if the presumption had never had any effect in the action.
"B. When the basic fact has to be established by the jury, upon evidence, then,
"(1) if there is no evidence justifying a finding contrary to the presumed fact, the judge instructs the jury that if the basic fact is established, then the presumed fact must be taken as true; but
"(2) if there is evidence justifying a finding contrary to the presumed fact, the judge says nothing about a presumption, but leaves the jury to find the existence or non-existence of the presumed fact exactly as if the presumption had never had any effect in the action."
Being of the opinion that no error was committed by the trial judge, the writer dissents.
Mr. Justice HAY joins in this dissent.