Hester v. Fidelity & Casualty Co.

Smith, P. J.

pleadings. This is an action by the beneficiary on an accident life insurance policy. The petition alleged, amongst other things, that while the plaintiff was the wife of one Nicholas Smith, the defendant, in consideration of certain premiums to it paid by said Smith, issued to him a policy of insurance whereby it insured his life in the sum of $1,500 against bodily injuries sustained through external, violent, and accidental means, and agreed to pay plaintiff the sum of $1,500, if death should result to said Smith from such injuries ninety days from the time such injuries were sustained, etc. It further alleged that said “Smith died, leaving this plaintiff surviving him, from a gun shot wound having been received by him not more than five days before his death, to wit, on or about the twenty-third day of December, 1894; the said wound was made by a leaden bullet fired from a gun held and discharged by a person to the plaintiff unknown, and whose purpose in firing said gun was to plaintiff unknown, which bullet entered his neck and penetrated his pleura and one of his lungs, and the wound made by such bullet caused his death; that at the time of his death all the premiums then due on said policy were fully paid and that he in all respects had on his part complied with the *190provisions and conditions of the said policy of insurance. It further alleged the giving of timely notice, the furnishing of proofs of death and that plaintiff; had fully complied with all the conditions of the policy, etc.

The answer pleaded three defenses:

First] that it was provided by the terms of said policy that the insurance did not cover voluntary exposure to unnecessary danger and that the injuries complained of, and from which said Smith came to his death, were the direct and immediate result of his voluntary exposure to unnecessary danger, etc. Second, that it was further agreed in the application that said policy should be based upon the statement of facts therein contained which he, the said Smith, warranted to be true; that amongst the statements of fact therein made was one to the effect that “my habits of life are correct and temperate and I understand that the policy will not cover any accidental injury which may happen to me, either while under the influence of intoxicating drinks, or in consequence of my having beeu under the influence thereof.” It was further alleged that said Smith was of intemperate habits and a habitual drinker of' intoxicants and that his said statement was, therefore, false, etc. Third, that it was further agreed that in the policy that the said application and policy did not cover injuries, fatal or otherwise, received while, or in consequence of having been, under the influence of, or effected by, or resulting directly, or indirectly from intoxicants; that the injuries complained of were received by said Smith while he was under the influence of and effects of intoxicants and were the direct result of the influence of the same, etc.

Reply was a general denial coupled with the admission that the injuries mentioned in the answer were the same as those mentioned in the petition. There *191was a trial and at the conclusion of all the evidence the defendant interposed a demurrer thereto which was by the court disallowed. The verdict was for the defendant. The plaintiff filed a motion to set the same aside which was by the court sustained, and thereupon the defendant appealed. The defendant objects that the court erred in disallowing its demurrer to the evidence.

law. It is conceded by the pleadings that the said Smith died from the effect of a gun shot wound; and, therefore, it stood admitted that he came to his death from injuries sustained through external and violent means. Whether the injuries sustained were accidental within the meaning of the policy was an issue of fact made by the pleadings. Lovelace v. Travelers’ Protective Association, 126 Mo. 104, was where no one was left in charge of the office of a hotel, the proprietor being at the time absent on account of sickness, and Lovelace, a guest and friend of the proprietor, observing that one Graves was there making more or less noise and at times cursing, requested him to get out. Graves replied: “You had better put me out.” Lovelace then said: “I will do it in a pair of minutes.” Graves replied with an oath that “he would like to see him (Lovelace) put him out.” Lovelace• said: “I will do that-quick.” Lovelace then further said, with an oath: “Don’t you shake your han'd in my face.” They were then a few feet apart. Graves replied: “You put me out! You have not got any more to do with this than I have.” Lovelace then declared he would slap Graves and applied an opprobrious epithet to him. The former then slapped and pushed the latter back until he struck the wall. Whilst they were together Graves drew a pistol from his pocket and shot Lovelace several times in consequence of which he afterwards *192died. It was held that the killing of Lovelace was an accident in the popular and ordinary sense, in which the word was generally used and certainly so far as he was concerned, and that such should be the construction given the word in the contract in suit.

facts The evidence in the present case tends to prove that on the day of the homicide, that Smith went to Kansas City and returned home between 5 and 6 o’clock in the evening. He had some unpleasant words with Biggs, and went on to his, Smith’s, home. Supper was-not ready and he took his gun and started to the coal chutes. Smith lived just back and south of the home of a witness by the name of Brooks, with whom Biggs lived, Brooks’ back yard running back near Smith’s house. The Smiths were-not on good terms with Brooks and Biggs. The coal chutes were about a quarter of a mile northeast from where Brooks and Smith lived, and in going there Smith passed along by Brooks-’ house. Biggs, who-was in Brooks’ back yard when Smith passed along, saw that he was going toward the coal chutes. A short-time after Smith had gone, and after it was dark, Biggswent to his room in Brooks’ house, put his pistol in his-pocket and went in the direction of the coal chutes. He testified that he was going to the house of Mrs. Combs, which was in the direction of the coal chutes, for the purpose of taking a young lady to church, but-he did not stop there but followed the railroad tracks-beyond and on toward the coal chutes. He further-testified he found Smith within one hundred feet to two hundred feet of the coal chutes; that Smith drew his gun on him and that he then told Smith that he-had his pistol and that Smith then cocked his gun, that he (Biggs) pushed the gun aside and shot Smith. There was no other eyewitness to the shooting and it is uncertain where it occurred, for shortly before the-*193shooting Smith was seen in the neighborhood of the coal chutes, and there was blood found near there next day, and some minutes after the shooting he was seen going west on the railroad tracks toward his home. He was found wounded, lying on the railroad tracks about seven hundred feet from the coal chutes, which was about half way between the coal chutes and his home.

Accident insuranee: jury: instruction. In the light of the ruling in the Lovelace case, supra, we think the evidence was quite sufficient to authorize the submission of the case to the jury. Phelan v. Ins. Co., 38 Mo. App. 640; Supreme Counsel v. Garrigus, 104 Ind. 133. It was for the jury, under proper instructions, to say from the evidence in in*** . . -¶ whether or not the injuries were sustained , by said Smith through accidental means. The court should, in view of what is said in the Lovelace case, by an instruction, have defined the meaning of the term “accidental means” and then, in substance, directed the jury that if they believed from the evidence that the bodily injuries from which Smith met his death were sustained through accidental means, as therein previously defined, to find for the plaintiff, unless they further believed from the evidence that said Smith voluntarily exposed himself to unnecessary danger at the time he sustained the injuries which resulted in his death, or that his injuries were received while, or in consequence of his having been, under the influence of, or effected by, or resulting directly or indirectly from, intoxicants, or that the statement contained in his application for the policy in suit to the effect th at his habits of life were correct and temperate was false, then they should find for defendant. Such an instruction in its scope would have comprehended every decisive issue made by the pleadings.

*194, -: pleading: answer; evidence intructions. *193The defendant further objects that the court erred *194in granting a new trial on the ground assigned in its order therefor, to wit: That instruction number 3, given for defendant, was erroneous. This instruction was as follows: The court instructs the jury that the fact that the defendant issued the policy of insurance read in evidence, and the further fact that Nicholas Smith, the man named in said policy, was'shot and killed by Charles Biggs, do not of themselves entitle plaintiff to recover in this action. She must go further and show to the reasonable satisfaction of the jury that said Nicholas Smith complied with all the terms and conditions of said policy, and did not violate any one thereof. The direction contained in the first sentence of this instruction is perhaps well enough, but that contained in the latter part of it is grossly erroneous and misleading. Under our practice act, Revised Statutes, section 2079, a petition in a case like this is sufficient if it distinctly alleges that plaintiff has complied, on his part, with all the conditions of the policy. Richardson v. Ins. Co., 57 Mo. 413; Oakey v. Ins. Co., 29 Mo. App. 105. But it will not be sufficient for the answer to plead a general denial. The defense may arise from default in performance of some of the conditions; and»performance having been pleaded the denial ivould of coivrse theoretically bring into issue the defense relied upon. But the uniform practice of the courts requires that all matters of defense under the terms of the contract shall he specially pleaded. Ostrander on Eire Ins., sec. 415.

The plaintiff need not allege the truth of the statement contained in the application, nor performance or nonperformance of conditions subsequent, nor negative prohibited acts or exceptions or allege that he is within the excepted risks. May on Ins., sec. 59. Stipulations added to a principal contract which are intended to *195avail by way of defeasance or excuse must be pleaded in the answer. Coburn v. Ins. Co., 145 Mass. 226. It is said in Ins. Co. v. Rogers, 119 Ill. loe. cit. 485, “that it is not necessary for the plaintiff in an action on the policy to either allege or prove such matters as appear in the application only. To be availed of as a defense without regard to whether they are warranties, or representations, merely, their falsity or breach by the assured must be set up and proved by the defendant as matter of defense.” And to the same effect is Ins. Co. v. Ewing, 92 U. S. 377. In Benefit Ass’n v. Grannan, 107 Ind. 288, it was ruled that the burden is on the insurer to prove the untruth of the statements made by the deceased in his application for the policy. And of like effect in Ins. Co. v. Brown, 57 Miss. 308. In Balkenburgh v. Ins. Co., 70 N. Y., the policy by its terms provided that if the assured died of disease induced or aggravated by intemperance it was avoided. It was held that the burden of proof was on defendant to show a forfeiture of the policy under this condition. And in Biddle on Insurance, 557, it is' stated that though there are a number of warranties in the policy, the insurer must affirmatively show noncompliance. 119 Ill., supra, was a suit on a policy of life insurance. The court declared that the plaintiff was bound to allege and show in her declaration the making of the policy, the items, the payment of the premium, the death of the assured and the giving of the notice, the making of the proof thereof to the company. When these allegations had all been proved in so far as their proof had not been waived or dispensed with, a prima facie'right of recovery was made out against defendant, which the latter was bound to meet by some affirmative action, otherwise-plaintiff was entitled to judgment.

In the case at bar the court instructed the jury that the plaintiff was not only required to prove to the rea*196sonable satisfaction of the jury that the deceased complied with all the terms and conditions of the policy but did not violate any one of them. By reference to the policy it will be seen that it contains a great number of nnpleaded exceptions and that there are some distinct conditions printed on the back thereof-likewise unpleaded. None of such exceptions and conditions were in any manner put in issue by the pleadings. Ingenious counsel might very well have pointed the jury to the various exceptions, conditions, and warranties in the policy and then told them that the plaintiff had adduced no evidence showing that deceased had complied therewith, and, therefore, there had been no compliance with the terms and conditions of said policy. This instruction afforded counsel, in the argument to the jury, ample opportunity to mislead and confuse the mind of the jury in respect to the issuable facts they were required to determine. No distinction was made to appear between the conditions, exceptions, representations, and the warranties of the policy, nor between those put in issue by the pleadings and those that were not. The jury might have very well concluded that by this instruction they were told that the burden of proof was imposed upon plaintiff to show that the statement made by -her deceased husband in his application, in respect to his habits of life, were true; that the injuries from which he died were not received while or in consequence or as a result of having been under the influence of intoxicants; and that he did not voluntarily expose himself to' unnecessary danger at the time of the receipt of the injuries from which he died. According to the authorities to which we have, referred the burden was on the defendant to establish the alleged ground of forfeiture. This instruction was calculated to impress the jury with convictions to the contrary, and should not, therefore, have been given.

*197-: intoxication: instruction. The defendant’s fourth instruction is not entirely unexceptionable in expression. The language of that part of it which declares that if the jury believed from the evidence the intemperate habits of said Smith were the cause of the difficulty with Biggs, then the verdict should be for defendant, should be so modified as to read that if the injtiries of the said Smith %oere sustained in consequence of having been u/nder the influence of or effected by or resulted directly or indirectly from-intoxicants that the verdict should be for the defendant. The propriety of this modification will become apparent by reference to the terms of the exception in the policy on which the instruction was based.

-: pleading: petition. As we shall uphold the action of the court in awarding the new trial it is not out of place to here suggest that before the cause is retried that the petition should be amended since it does not expressly allege that the injuries from which Smith died were incurred by him through external, violent, and accidental means. It is even doubtful whether the facts alleged are sufficient to justify the inference that the injuries complained of were so incurred. An allegation to this effect is essential to support a judgment for plaintiff.

It results that the order of the circuit court setting aside the verdict and granting a new trial will be affirmed which is accordingly ordered.

All concur.