Defendant in error’s case as it was tried , depended upon his proving that Russell L. Palmar died within five years of the time of the bringing of the suit.
The evidence of absence from his home without any intelligence from or concerning' him for seven years, raised the presumption that he. died at the expiration of said seven years; while such presumption was a legal presumption, it was but prima facie evidence of his death at said time (Youngs v. Heffner, 36 Oh St 232); if there was evidence from which the jury might reasonably infer that he died at a time more than five years before the bringing of the suit, then the time of his death was a question for the jury to determine, after considering said legal presumption and all of the facts and circumstances shown by.the evidence in the case, and the court could not properly decide the question of the' time of his death.
As we read the record, there was evidence from which the jury might reasonably infer that he died more than five years before the bringing of the suit — to wit, at the time of his disappeaiance; and therefore the question of the time of death should have been submitted to the jury under proper instructions.
If the pleadings are amended so as to present the question of whether the company waived the payment of premiums conceming which there was evidence pro and con, that question should be covered by the instructions.
The question of waiver becomes im.portant only in the event the date of death is found to be at the expiration of the seven years from the disappearance; if found to be before August 14, 1928, the premiums were paid, but if found to be after said date, the'premiums were not paid and there would be no liability unless payment of premiums was waived; and if found to be more than five years before suit was brought, there would be no liability under the provisions of the policy unjess the company waived the requirement that suit be brought within five years after the dggth.
Thus, while the fact of death was an issue upon which there was ample evidence, ¿he time of death was the all-important question in the case, and as to that issue the evidence was meager; but there ’was some evidence justifying an inference that the death occurred on one of two different dates, and it was for ¡bhe jury, and not the court, to determine the date of death, which, as has been said, was an important question in, the case.
For error in failing to submit the case to the jury, the judgment is reversed and the cause remanded for a new trial; no no doubt the parties will desire to file amended pleadings clarifying the issues.
Funk, FJ, Pardee, J, and Washburn, J, concur.