The facts are not in dispute. The plaintiff- introduced in evidence a policy of insurance bearing date November 15, 1893, duly issued by the defendant, which purported to insure "one Joseph Porter against the effects of bodily injury caused solely by external, violent and accidental means, and. provided that if death resulted from such injury within ninety days from the date thereof the defendant would pay the sum of $3,000 to Ida 0. Porter, this plaintiff. The policy by its express terms relieved the defendant of liability for bodily injury to the insured and for his death resulting therefrom if caused by the “ voluntary or involuntary inhalation of *104any gas or any anaesthetic; (n)or injury, fatal or non-fatal, resulting from any poison .or infection accidentally or otherwise taken, administered, absorbed or inhaled.” It is not claimed that the clause quoted, alleged to exempt the defendant from liabilityj was not legibly and prominently set forth in the policy; neither is there any evidence to indicate that the insured did not fully understand and appreciate its meaning and effect.
It appears that the-insured died from the effects of gas inhaled by him while in a hotel in the city of Utica, H. T. It is not urged that he committed suicide, and it is practically conceded that death resulted from the involuntary inhalation of gas by the deceased. He retired to his room in the hotel, went to bed in the ordinary way, and because of his mistake or the neglect of some other person the gas was left turned on and the insured was found dead, his death resulting from having inhaled gas, concedeclly unconsciously. It must be conceded that an accident insurance company has the right to limit its liability in any reasonable manner; has the right to provide that in no case will it be liable if the death of the insured results from the effects of gas, inhaled voluntarily or involuntarily. We think that was the intention of the parties as indicated by the express language used in the p'olicy in question. The meaning is no different than if the policy provided that the defendant would not be liable if the death of the insured resulted from the effects of dynamite, a railroad accident or from yellow fever. The words employed in the exemption-from-liability clause quoted clearly indicate an intention to avoid liability where death is caused by the inhalation of gas. Concededly gas was inhaled by the deceased, and such inhalation caused his death. It was not voluntary, but non-liability for the death of the insured by the involuntary as well as the voluntary inhalation of gas was provided for. The words “ or any anaesthetic,”' which follow the clause above quoted, do not in any manner enlarge the scope or meaning of the words “ voluntary or involuntary inhalation of any gas.” The whole clause considered together must mean that"it the death of the insured resulted from the voluntary or involuntary inhalation of gas no recovery could, be had, and, also, that if death resulted from the inhalation of any anaesthetic, whether voluntary or involuntary, there would be no liability on the part of the insurer.
*105The courts have gone a long way in construing insurance policies so as to resolve every doubt and every ambiguity in favor of the insured, but in this case there does not seem to be doubt as to what was intended by the parties to the contract or any ambiguity as to the meaning of the language employed to express such intention. In the case of Paul v. Travelers' Ins. Co. (112 N. Y. 472) the policy provided that the insurance company should not be liable if the death of the insured resulted from the “ inhaling of gas, or by any surgical operation or medical treatment,” and the court held that the words “inhaling of gas” contemplated a voluntary and intelligent act by the insured, but in this case the involuntary as well as the voluntary act is provided against.
The case of Menneiley v. Employers' Liability Assurance Corporation (148 N. Y. 596) is clearly distinguishable from the one at bar. In that case the court said, referring to the alleged exemption-from-liability clause in the policy: “ The manifest purpose of the provision is to exempt" the insurer from liability where" the insured has voluntarily and consciously” inhaled, etc. In that case the policy did not provide, as is done in this, against the “involuntary inhalation of any gas.”
We think no case can be found which would justify a recovery under the provisions of the policy in suit upon the conceded facts. By the plain and unambiguous terms of the contract the insurer was not to be held liable for the death of the insured in case such death resulted from the voluntary or involuntary inhalation of gaé. The death of the insured concededly did result because of the involuntary inhalation of gas by him.
The nonsuit wasgight, and the judgment should be affirmed, with costs.'
All concurred, except Williams" and Nash, JJ., who dissented upon the ground that the inhaling of gas in the circumstances of this case was not covered by the exceptions in the policy in question. ...
Judgment affirmed, with costs.