This action was brought by Edgar Hodgson Holbrook, defendant in error, against the Western Travelers’ Acci*476dent Association, plaintiff in error, in the district court for Douglas county. The case is here upon rehearing, the prior opinion being found on page 469, ante. We have reexamined the evidence, and will restate the facts, in connection with the discussion of the questions presented, so far as may be necessary.
In the prior opinion, it is said: “When it has been sufficiently established by circumstantial evidence that a person has suffered injury by reason of falling from a dangerous height, it will be presumed, in the absence of evidence to the contrary, that the fall was accidental.” The accident for which recovery is sought in this cáse, is alleged to have occurred January 8th, 1898. According to the testimony of defendant in error, at 10 o’clock in the forenoon of that day he had an appointment on the fourth floor of the building No. 346, Broadway, New York. While waiting, he leaned against the balustrade surrounding the stairway, and, as he says, “in some manner lost my balance and fell over the balustrade to the steps below, sustaining fractures of both legs.” The balustrade was about three feet high. Defendant in error leaned against it with one leg resting against it and the other resting on the floor. He had never been afflicted with vertigo, fits or dizziness, or any similar affliction. He was not conscious of any dizziness preceding the fall. He did not recollect his flight through the air, or any sensation presumably produced thereby. Plis first sensation after the remembrance of leaning against the balustrade was when a physician called to attend him applied stimulants to his nostrils. This was at the landing where he alleged he had fallen. There is no further testimony as to the manner in which the injury was sustained. There is likewise no testimony tending to explain the injuries upon any other hypothesis than that given by defendant in error. As we understand contention of plaintiff in error, it is that defendant in error must prove that he suffered the injuries complained of by accidentally falling over the balustrade of the New York Life Building, and that the *477evidence is insufficient to establish this allegation. This contention is based upon the following analysis of the proof: (1.) The fall from the balustrade to the steps beneath is proved by circumstantial evidence; hence, it is an inference. (2.) If plaintiff fell from the balustrade to the steps beneath, the fall was either accidental or it was not. There is no direct or positive proof that it was either. Therefore, to say that it was accidental is to base an inference of the accidental character of the fall in part upon the inference that there was a fall, thus contravening the rule that an inference or presumption can not be based upon an inference or presumption. Counsel say: “Should we grant that there are sufficient proved circumstances from which to infer that Holbrook fell over the balustrade, he is faced by the legal impossibility, as shown above, of using this inference as a basis upon which to rest the ultimate fact necessary to be proved, — that the fracture was caused by accidentally falling over the balustrade. He can arrive at this ultimate fact only by using this inference as one of the stepping stones.” Under this state of the proof, counsel strenuously insist that defendant in error can not recover without contravening the rule referred to. This rule, we may freely concede, where applicable, is well grounded. The layman, in the ordinary course of human conduct, may safely, and even prudently, act upon a chain of inferences. But as suggested, courts are not guessers, and legal presumptions are required to be based upon proved facts. In our view, however, the reasoning of counsel in which it is sought to interpose this axiom as an insurmountable barrier to recovery is only apparent. .The evidence set out, we think, proves a fall; and, although this fall is purely an inference from circumstances proved, it is nevertheless so certain that we do not believe that any court would hesitate to accept it as conclusive. Counsel suggest the absence of all proof as to the time intervening between 10 A. M., January 8, when defendant in error stood at the balustrade, and the time when he was found on the steps beneath, and also the ab*478sence of any person who saw him fall. The evidence, in brief, is that at the hour named, he stood at the balustrade —that being a fact cognizable to his own consciousness— and that the next succeeding impression upon his mind was a sense of intense pain, and the application of stimulants to his-nostrils by a physician who Avas attempting to revive him, and a realization that he was on the stairs beneath. Assuming the truth of the facts actually testified to, the inference folloAvs that he fell. This testimony convinces our minds; it convinced the mind of the trial court; and Ave believe that defendant in error himself believed that he fell, as he alleges. The experience of falling through a space of four stories, and living afterAvards to tell of it, is so rare that we do not believe the probable workings of the human mind during the flight can be the subject of any safe or fairly accurate generalizations, and, consequently, are not prepared to say that defendant in error’s testimony that he has no recollection of falling is inconsistent with the, assumed fact that he fell, and Ave are strongly inclined to think that to so hold would be, indeed, harsh, and. well calculated to make recovery upon accident insurance policies in many instances Avholly impossible, Avhen in truth the facts shoAvn are sufficient to convince any sane man that there Avas an accident.
Was the fall thus proved accidental? We do not understand counsel to deny that it was, but they do certainly deny that the accidental character of the fall is proved by competent evidence. The logic of counsel seems to be: Conceding that the circumstances shoAv a fall, they sIioav that, and nothing more. To say that it was accidental, is to base an inference in part upon the inference of a fall. We think the fallacy is apparent. It Avas accidental or it Avas not. It is impossible to exclude the one predication Avithout adopting the other. Adopting counsel’s logic, we might say that Ave can not arrive at the ultimate fact that it was not accidental without using the inference of a fall as one of the stepping stones. Yet this inference *479is highly artificial, while the inference that it was accidental is natural, and in harmony with accepted premises. There are perhaps tiro hypotheses that the fall was not accidental: {a) He intended to end his life by dashing himself to the floor beneath; (b) some one with malicious intent secretly pushed him over the' balustrade. The impulse of self-preservation, the desire to prolong life, is so rarely absent in any individual, the vast majority of mankind possessing it in all of its vigor, that, in the absence of proof to the contrary, defendant in error is entitled to the presumption that he did not fall intentionally. The defendant charged with a crime is mantled about with a presumption of innocence. But this same presumption attaches alike to all men everywhere, and in the absence of some proof, we fail to see how it could be presumed that some one maliciously pushed defendant in error over the balustrade. There is, perhaps, another hypothesis under the terms of this contract, namely, that he was seized with an uncontrollable suicidal impulse. But we do not see that his position is thereby altered. Insanity would be matter of defense to be affirmatively pleaded and proved. There would be no burden on defendant in error to prove his sanity until a case were made that he was insane. It is not evidence of insanity that one leans against a balustrade three feet high, albeit to do so is imprudent. There is no alternative but to admit that it is impossible to say that there was an accidental fall Avithout saying that there Avas a fall. We can not deny that there Avas a fall, and hence, in the absence of any evidence tending to shoAV that it Avas the result of design or insane impulse, the legal presumption is that it Avas accidental. As a basis of all legal reasoning, the normal is presumed; the abnormal must be proved. The circumstances proved in this case fully warrant the conclusion of fact that defendant in error accidentally fell over the balustrade. An accident is an event that takes place without one’s foresight or expectation; an undesigned, sudden and unexpected event; “often an undesigned and unforeseen occurrence of an *480afflictive or unfortunate character” (Webster’s Dictionary) ; and it is to be assumed, therefore, that one who suffers an accident will, in many cases, be without the po wer to narrate all the circumstances leading up to or resulting in the accident. Accordingly, the inability of defendant in error to testify to all the circumstances of his accident is due in part to the fact that it was an accident; that it was unforseen, unexpected, undesigned and certainly sudden. If it had not been unforeseen and undesigned, he might have arranged for witnesses; but we decline to hold that being unable to call any Avitness to the fact of his fall, Avhose testimony might affirmatively shoAV that it was accidental, he is not entitled to the presumption of innocence, the presumption of sanity, and the presumption that no one violently hurled him over the heights, the circumstances actually shoAvn being sufficient, and Ave hold that they show that he accidentally fell, sustaining the injuries.
A further question for consideration at this hearing is whether defendant in error furnished proper and timely proofs of injury, and its duration and extent, as required by the contract. This question involves an examination of the evidence as to Avhat defendant in error did in compliance Avith a letter of the plaintiff in error addressed to him January 26th, 1898, a few weeks after the accident, stating that certain blanks for final proof Avere enclosed, “which you will please return, properly executed, as soon as you have recovered.” The blanks referred to were a final statement of claimant’s physician and claimant’s own final statement. On January 16, 1899 — a year and eight days after the injury — claimant’s disability continuing throughout that period, he sent to the company the following letter: “I enclose herewith physician’s final report in my case, my OAvn report, and physician’s first statement having been forwarded to you shortly after the accident.” On January 20, 1899, the company replied, acknoAvledging the receipt of physician’s final statement or report, but stating that claimant’s OAvn final report had not been *481received. From defendant in error’s letter of the 16th, it would seem that he understood that no final report, namely, a report subsequent to the termination of the period of indemnity or the period of disability, was required. However, on January 23, 1899, defendant in error promptly replied to the company’s letter of the 20th, stating that he had filled out all the blanks received from the company, but that if further proof of any description were required, the company should send the necessary blanks to him at once, and he would return them properly executed. Some three months after the accident, defendant in error, who had made a request upon the company for certain advances under the contract, assuming that the contract entitled him to payments from time to time, employed an attorney in Chicago to look after' his claim against the insurance company, evidently growing suspicious because of the attitude assumed by the company as indicated by its reply to his request for advance payments. This fact explains the letter of the company dated January 28, 1899, referring to defendant in error’s letter of the 23d of that month, in which defendant in error expressed his readiness to fill out any blanks which might be required, in which the company stated, “As per your instructions of last year, we have addressed communications with reference to your claim to your attorney, Mr. Edward O’Bryan, of Chicago.” This, then, was the answer to Holbrook’s request for the necessary blanks which had not yet been executed. On January 28, the same day on which the company sent this letter to Holbrook, it sent a letter to O’Bryan, stating that claimant’s final report had not been received, but did not enclose any blank. On February 10, 1899, the attorney replied that if the blank or blanks were sent to him, he would see that claimant filled them out at once. On February 17 the company sent the blank referred to, but distinctly stated that no conditions of the policy were thereby waived. This blank was thereupon executed with reasonable diligence. When it is remembered that defendant in error was at German-*482town, Pennsylvania, the attorney at Chicago, and the office of the company at Omaha, and that the thirty days from the expiration of the period of indemnity would expire on February 8, 1899, the evasive communication of the company to Holbrook on the 28th of January, and its failure to enclose in its letter of that date to the attorney the blank referred to, are significant facts. If the company had sent the blank directly to Holbrook on the 28th, there would have been ample time to get it to the office of the company before February 8. Holbrook filled out all the blanks that he received. He clearly indicated his readiness to do anything further required. Nothing by him done shows any effort to mislead or evade. The same certainly can not be said regarding the conduct of the officers of the company. Holbrook could not fill out a blank which he did not receive. It is true that he testifies to the receipt by him of the blank known as claimant’s final statement; but if, as he testifies, this was filled out shortly after the accident and sent in at once, then he did not have such blank at the time it was needed, and he made known its absence in time for the company to supply it. The failure of the company to supply it, either to him or his attorney, after notice that he did not have it, we must hold sufficient to excuse him for not making the proof sooner. We think the true rule applicable here is that literal compliance with provisions like that under consideration will not be required when to do so would involve an impossibility. It is the doctrine of this court that a more liberal construction will be given to such provisions than to conditions to be complied with prior to the injury for the purpose of keeping the policy in force. The beneficiary in this case acted with diligence, and with no laches on his part. It was easily within the power of plaintiff in error to have enabled Holbrook to obviate its objections to the sufficiency of his final proof. Woodmen Accident Ass’n v. Pratt, 62 Nebr., 678. Under the facts and circumstances thus clearly shown, we are of opinion that there was no forfeiture under the contract, and that the contract was sufficiently complied with.
*483It is recommended that the former decision in this case be adhered to, and the judgment of the district court be affirmed.
Hastings and Lobingier, CO., concur.By the Court: For the reasons stated in the foregoing opinion, the former decision in this case is adhered to, and the judgment of the district court is
Affirmed.