Jones v. Hawkeye Commercial Men's Ass'n

Weaver, J.

(dissenting). The majority, while conceding that the death of the insured was produced by an accidental cause, deny plaintiff the right to recover, on the sole ground that the insurer is exempt from liability because of certain exceptions embodied in the contract of insurance. It is proper, therefore, at the outset, to look to the law governing an exception in an insurance policy which takes away or neutralizes a right of recovery which, but for such clause, would be indisputable, under the general terms of the contract. It is universally held (or perhaps I should say it was the universal holding until the majority in this case said otherwise) that, a policy of insurance being framed in language chosen by the insurer, every exception and condition embodied therein to relieve it from liability is to be given the construction most favorable to the insured. The precedents to this effect are too numerous and too familiar to call for citation; but see authorities collated in Goodwin v. Provident Sav. L. Ass. Assn., 97 Iowa 233; also, Burkhard v. Travelers’ Ins. Co., 102 Pa. St. 262. For illustration of the application of this rule to fact conditions, I call attention to the following: Not infrequently, accident policies provide exception from liability if death or injury is caused by voluntary exposure to danger; but this is construed by the courts to mean, not a voluntary act, in the ordinary sense, but an act done intentionally, knowing the risk, and recklessly taking the chances. It has also been held that such an exception does not include a case where the insured is injured or loses his life in attempting to save the life of another, even though he acts with knowledge of the danger to himself. Keene v. New England Mut. Acc. Assn., 161 Mass. 149; Da Rin v. Casualty Co., 41 Mont. 175; Tucker v. Mutual Ben. L. Co., 50 Hun (N. Y.) 50 (af*1305firmed 121 N. Y. 718); DeLoy v. Travelers’ Ins. Co., 171 Pa. St. 1 (50 Am. St. 787); 1 Labatt on Master & Servant (1st Ed.), Section 360; Thompson on Negligence (2d Ed.), 5435; 1 C. J. 447. A provision against liability where death has been caused wholly or in part by a surgical operation or treatment, does not apply where such operation or treatment is reasonably necessary. Westmoreland v. Preferred Acc. Ins. Co., 75 Fed. 244; Vernon v. Iowa St. Trav. Men’s Assn., 158 Iowa 597, 607; Travelers’ Ins. Co. v. Murray, 16 Colo. 296. An exception against death by suicide or from self-inflicted injuries does not relieve the insurer from liability for death of the insured by his own hand or act while temporarily insane. Accident Ins. Co. v. Crandal, 120 U. S. 527 (30 L. Ed. 740); Blackstone v. Standard L. & Acc. Ins. Co., 74 Mich. 592, 614. So, also, an exception against liability for injuries from “unnecessary exposure” to danger will not prevent recovery for an injury received in sport or play. Cornwell v. Fraternal Acc. Assn., 6 N. D, 201. Nor does an exception of death or injury “by the hand of the insured” exclude a right of recovery where the self-injury is unintentional. Northwestern Mut. L. Ins. Co. v. Hazelett, 105 Ind. 212, 213; Mutual Ben. L. Ins. Co. v. Daviess’ Exr., 87 Ky. 541; Healey v. Mutual Acc. Assn., 133 Ill. 556. Nor does a limitation of liability to cases where the injury is occasioned by external and violent means exclude such right where death results from poison, drowning, or asphyxiation. And yet none of these decisions could be logically upheld or defended, if tested by the narrow and rigid rule to which the majority opinion subjects the contract in this case. Fortunately, we are not without many and eminent authorities upon the precise question with which we have here to deal.' The exception of liability where death or injury has been caused by “poison or gases or anything accidentally or otherwise taken, administered, absorbed, injected, inserted, or inhaled” (or other words of *1306the same general effect), is one of frequent occurrence in accident policies; and the meaning and effect of such provision has been considered and determined in many cases. Paul v. Travelers’ Ins. Co., 112 N. Y. 472 (20 N. E. 347); Menneiley v. Employers’ L. Ass. Corp., 148 N. Y. 596; Pickett v. Pacific M. L. Ins. Co., 144 Pa. St. 79 (22 Atl. 871); Travelers’ Ins. Co. v. Ayers, 217 Ill. 390 (75 N. E. 506); Fidelity & Cas. Co. v. Waterman, 161 Ill. 632; Travelers’ Ins. Co. v. Dunlap, 160 Ill. 642 (43 N. E. 765); Metropolitan Acc. Assn. v. Froiland, 161 Ill. 30 (43 N. E. 766); Mutual Acc. Assn. v. Tuggle, 39 Ill. App. 509; Dezell v. Fidelity & Cas. Co., 176 Mo. 253 (75 S. W. 1102); McMillen v. Elder, 155 Mo. App. 662 (135 S. W. 496); Miller v. Fidelity & Cas. Co., 97 Fed. 836; Beile v. Travelers P. Assn., 155 Mo. App. 629; United States Mut. Acc. Assn. v. Newman, 84 Va. 52; Lowenstein v. Fidelity & Cas. Co., 88 Fed. 474; Fidelity & Cas. Co. v. Lowenstein, 97 Fed. 17; Dent v. Railway Mail Assn., 183 Fed. 840; 1 Corpus Juris 454; 4 Cooley’s Briefs 3196; 1 Cyc. 263. Each of these numerous cases was based upon a policy of accident insurance; in each, death had been caused by asphyxiation or by poison; and in each, the policy contained an exception or condition against liability by the insurer for death “resulting from poison, poisonous substances or anything accidentally or otherwise administered, absorbed or inhaled,” or other words of the same general import. In every one of these cases, representing the views of different state courts of last resort, the United States Circuit Court, and the Circuit Court of Appeals, the plaintiff has been allowed to recover. No case from any court of higher or equal authority is cited by counsel or by the majority in this case, holding to the contrary. Indeed, the majority concedes that these precedents do “fairly sustain the plaintiff’s argument,” and points to no authority whatever in support of its own conclusion, except the dogmatic expression of one judge in *1307a dissenting opinion in an intermediate court. On this frail foundation, the majority proceeds to brush aside all the precedents standing iii the way of the desired result, by denouncing them as “arbitrary,” and declaring that there is “no room for candid dispute” oxer the correctness of the defendant’s interpretation of the insurance contract. Were the charge of arbitrary and uncandid expression of opinion directed alone to the writer of this dissent, he would bow to the rebuke with becoming meekness; but he begs leave to suggest that for this court, without the support of a single authoritative precedent, to thus stigmatize the ability, candor, and fairness of the courts of New York, Pennsylvania, Illinois, and Missouri, and other tribunals whose recognized standing and reputation are guaranties of their competence to interpret contracts and recognize and properly apply legal principles, partakes, to say the least, of rashness which ought to be avoided,* and, indeed, ought to convince us of the wisdom and propriety of a re-examination of this case, to discover whether, after all, the failure of judicial vision is not due to the beam in the eye of this court. Were there any substantial conflict of view of courts which have so frequently considered this question, the position taken by the majority would appear less rash; but there is none. With one minor exception, the courts which have had occasion to pass upon it are unanimous in sustaining the principle announced in the Paul case. That there may be no mistake about what the authorities held, or about their application to the facts in the instant case, I beg leave to make a more particular statement concerning some of these precedents.

In the Paul case, as in this, the insured died by suffocation from gas in his sleeping room at a hotel. There was no evidence tending to show that the death was suicidal. The policy sued upon provided certain exceptions tp the liability of the insurer, and among these was enumerated “death or disability which may have been caused by the tak*1308ing of poison, contact with poisonous substances, or the inhaling of gas.” The insurer defended on the ground that, because of this exception, there could be no recovery on the policy. But the court, in overruling the defense, said:

“In expressing its intention not to be liable for death from ‘inhaling of gas,’ the company can only be understood to mean a voluntary and intelligent act, and not an involuntary and unconscious act. * * To inhale gas requires an act of volition on the person’s part, before the danger is incurred. Poison may be taken by mistake, or poisonous substances may be inadvertently touched; but whatever the motive of the insured, his act precedes either fact. * * If the exception is to cover all cases where death is caused by the presence of gas, there would be no reason for using the word ‘inhale.’ If the policy had said that it was not to extend to any death.caused wholly or in part by gas, it would have expressed exactly what appellant now says was meant by the present phrase, and there could have been no room for doubt or mistake. Policies of insurance are to be liberally construed; and, as in all contracts, conditions are to be construed strictly against those for whose benefit they are reserved.”

In the Menneiley case, the insured was found dead under very similar circumstances, and the insurer relied upon an exception in the policy which provided for non-liability for death from anything accidentally taken, administered, or inhaled, or from inhaling gas. The trial court held that this exception was more inclusive than the one considered in the Paul case, and sustained the defense. On appeal, the ruling was reversed, and the insurer held liable, reaffirming the construction which that decision placed upon the words, “inhaling gas.” To counsel’s contention that the added words, “anything accidentally taken, administered, or inhaled,” required a different construction, the court said:

“We think otherwise. That provision in the policy *1309clearly implies .voluntary action on the part of the insured or some other person. The insured must take or inhale, or another must administer. * * * We think that the particular accidents intended to be excepted by that provision are the accidental taking or inhaling into the system of some injurious or destructive agency .under the mistaken belief that it was beneficial, or at least harmless.”

In the Pickett case, decided by the Pennsylvania court, the insured descended into a well to repair a pump, and was suffocated by gas accumulated there. The exception in the policy on which the insurer resisted payment was to the effect that the insurance did not cover a case of death “from or attributable partially or wholly to inhalation of gas.” The court there reviews the New York cases directly in point, and other insurance cases involving analogous questions, and sustained a recovery. #

Fidelity & Cas. Co. v. Waterman, 161 Ill. 632, is another case of suffocation by gas. There, the policy, in listing exceptions to the insurer’s liability, included “injuries fatal or otherwise from poison or anything accidentally or otherwise taken, administered, absorbed, or inhaled;’-’ and here, the rule of the cases above cited is approved and followed. In Froiland’s case, 161 Ill. 30, the insured died from taking chloral by mistake for distilled water. The exception from the insurance was of death by poison “in any way taken, administered, absorbed or inhaled.” Much dependence was there placed by the insurer upon the clause “in any way taken;” but it was held that this clause had reference to the manner or mode in which the poison is taken, and not to the motive of the insured in taking it. A very similar rule is applied in Connecticut Mut. L. Ins. Co. v. Akens, 150 U. S. 468, where it was held that the words “self-destruction in any form” were not synonymous with “suicide, sane or insane.” In the Ayers case, the court had again to deal with a case of asphyxiation by gas, and an exception in an accident insur*1310anee policy fully as broad as the one in the instant case; and the rule of the Paul, Menneiley, and Pickett cases' was again approved. The decision of the United States Supreme Court in Accident Ins. Co. v. Crandal, 120 U. S. 527, though arising upon a different state of facts, is quite in point in principle. There, the policy provided that the insurer should not be liable because of self-inflicted injuries by the insured. He killed himself, while insane. Had that court adopted the theory of the majority opinion in this case, it would have pointed out the language of the exception, and held that, as the provision against liability for self-inflicted injuries is clear and explicit, and as death by suicide is a self-inflicted injury, there could be no recovery. On the contrary, it held, as did the courts of New York, Pennsylvania, Illinois, Missouri, and Virginia, that the reference in the policy to self-inflicted injuries must be interpreted as having reference to injuries so inflicted while the insured was sane, and capable of knowing and appreciating the nature of his act. Will the majority say that the court in that case arbitrarily disregarded the contract, or arbitrarily made a new contract for the parties? I take it for granted that the majority will not commit itself to such a holding; but it will require some very agile readjustment of its logic to enable it to say that, in the one case, the voluntary and intelligent act of a sane man is required, while in the other, it is not.

Without tracing further the individual cases upon this point, there is still another aspect of the question which is entitled to consideration, and this has reference to the rule which the majority concedes : that, if there be any doubt of the proper construction of the language of the policy, that doubt is to be solved in favor of the policy holder. Whether any doubt exists, requiring an application of this principle, is not to be determined simply by the way the question, as an original proposition, appeals to the minds of this court. *1311It may seem perfectly clear to us, or to a majority of our members; but if the courts of last resort in several different jurisdictions have ruled otherwise, and especially if such holding has been practically unanimous,' wherever such cases have been considered, the very least we can do is to say that such conflict between ourselves and other courts of equal rank and authority leaves the construction in such doubt as to require the application of the rule. Such was the view taken by the United States Circuit Court of Appeals of this district in the Lowenstem case, supra, where it is said that, when the insurance in that case was issued, the company must have known that:

“As interpreted by the courts of last resort in several states, the policy as drawn would not exempt it from liability if a poisonous gas was unconsciously, involuntarily, and accidentally inhaled by the insured, which occasioned his death or injury. It had knowledge, therefore, that,' by reason of such adjudications, its policies, if it continued to issue them in the old form, would, in all probability, be accepted by some, and possibly many persons, upon the understanding that the company intended to, and did in fact, assume the species of risk last described. If such was not its intention, its plain duty was to so modify the language of its policies as to make its purpose clear, inasmuch as a slight change in the phraseology theretofore employed would have left no room for doubt or speculation as to its meaning. We are unwilling to concede that an insurance company may continue to issue policies without modification of their terms, after certain provisions thereof have been construed by several courts of the highest character and ability, and be heard to insist, in controversies between itself and the insured, with respect to such subsequently issued policies, that they do not, in fact, cover risks that they had been judicially adjudged to cover, before they were issued. While it may not be accurate to say that, under such cir-*1312cum,stances, a technical estoppel arises in favor of the insured, yet the courts in such cases should rigidly enforce the rule requiring policies of insurance to be construed most strongly against the insurer, and they should not hesitate to hold that decisions construing a policy adversely to the contention of the insurer thereafter create a doubt as to its proper interpretation, of sufficient gravity to be resolved in favor of the insured.” . ■

For another illustration of this rule, see Davis & R. B. & M. Co. v. Jones, 14 C. C. A. 30. Indeed, even without any precedent to appeal to, it would seem evident to reasonable and fair-minded persons that a proposition upon which courts of reputable standing fail to agree, is one which neither of them is entitled to declare free from all doubt.

I further beg leave to say that the reasoning by which the majority endeavors to justify its radical departure from the admitted rule of the precedents is not only illogical and mistaken, but, as I shall soon demonstrate, is also wholly inconsistent with the unanimous holding of this court in a very recent case.

Preliminary to this appeal to our own precedents, I may say that the many cases I have already cited are united in pointing out and emphasizing the fact that, if the insurer, in framing its policy, intended to relieve itself from all liability for death from poison or gas, and desired the person receiving such policy to so understand it, it was an easy thing for it to so do, in terms wholly free from possible doubt. If the policy had said that the. insurance thereby provided should not extend to or include any injury or death from poison or gas, which is what the insurer now argues, no one could well misunderstand it. But instead of so doing, it avoids any such clear and comprehensive stipulation, and restricts its exception to cases of injury or death from poison “taken” or “administered,” or from gas “inhaled,” which is a vSry different proposition. But, says the *1313majority, in effect, this policy provides against liability for injury or death from poison or gas in any way taken or administered or inhaled, accidentally or otherwise, and to construe it as meaning death from an accidental, but voluntary, taking of poison, or voluntary inhaling of gas, is a “self-contradiction,” an “arbitrary distinction,” where none exists, and, if the gas is inhaled accidentally, it cannot possibly be said to have been inhaled voluntarily. But this is a palpable mistake. It certainly is not correct that a “taking” of poison or “inhaling” of gas may not be at once both voluntary and accidental. Though it may be true that the word “voluntary” is often used in a sense which excludes the idea of an accident, yet this is not always the case; and both words may properly be employed to characterize the same act. The physical act may be voluntary; yet if, owing to facts or conditions unknown to the insured, ,such act is productive of injury to himself, then such voluntary act is also, in a very just sense of the word, accidental. This truth is very well put by the Pennsylvania court, in Burkhard v. Travelers’ Ins. Co., 102 Pa. St. 262. In that case, the insured left the car in which he was riding, and, in descending from the platform to a bridge on which the train was standing, fell through an opening, and was killed. The insurer sought to escape liability by pleading an exception in the policy. Discussing the facts, the court says:

“It is true he voluntarily left the car; but a clear distinction exists between a voluntary act and a voluntary exposure to danger. * * * The act may be voluntary, and the exposure involuntary. The danger being unknown, the injury is accidental.”

There is still another allowable view which is equally, decisive against the appellee’s contention herein. An act may be neither voluntary nor involuntary; and injury from such act is not included in an exception which mentions only acts which are voluntary or involuntary. For the purpose of *1314this case, it makes little difference whether we treat the exception as applying only to the conscious, voluntary, and intelligent taking of poison and inhaling of gas by a sane person, or whether, the insured being suffocated in his sleep, without consciousness of his peril, and without contributing thereto by any act of his own, either voluntary or involuntary, it may be said to be outside of the scope of the exception. Approaching the facts from either angle, it is very clear that the demurrer to the petition was improperly sustained.

I conclude this dissent by recalling to the mind of the court the case of Riley v. Interstate B. M. Acc. Assn., 177 Iowa 449, in which some of the vital features are identical with those in this case. There, it will be remembered, the insured, being indisposed,' consulted a physician, who gave him a medicine which proved to be poisonous, and caused his death. His policy provided that the insurer should not be liable for the death of the insured resulting from the voluntary or involuntary taking of poison. Suit being brought, the insurer, adopting the philosophy and reasoning of the majority in this case, demurred to the petition, saying, in substance: “The insured took the poison; and, as his taking must have been either voluntary or involuntary, the petition discloses no cause of action.” At the outset, this court adopted that theory, and affirmed the rul- ‘ ing of the trial court in sustaining the defendants demurrer. A rehearing was granted; and, on further argument, we all united in ordering a reversal. The opinion was written by a distinguished jurist, who excels in keen and incisive criticism and exposition of the meaning and effect of language; and with a brief reference to the views there expressed, I am done. After citing the language of the exception in the policy, and noting the allegation of the petition that the taking of the poison was neither voluntary nor involuntary, but accidental, the opinion proceeds:

*1315“The words that single out the voluntary or involuntary taking of poison were put into the contract by defendant, and it must he assumed that they were intended to be effective, and to state the exemptions of defendant to the uttermost extent intended. Thérefore, they cannot mean that the naked fact of death by poison absolves from liability. It must have been intended that there could be some deaths from poison for which defendant is liable. Had it been the intention that the mere fact that the death was due to poison defeated recovery, a statement that defendant was not liable if death so resulted would have been plenary, and would have covered any death from poison, no matter how caused.”

The italics are my own, and I use them to mark the singular and apt adaptation of the words to the case now under consideration. It happily illustrates the rule — very frequently overlooked — that, in stating a proposition or a simple contract obligation, the shortest and simplest form of expression is the strongest which can be used. There are many, however, who proceed on the theory that, if they expand the brief, unmodified statement, by adding thereto various expressions of an adjective or adverbial character, they are increasing its scope, emphasis, and binding force, when, in fact, in almost every instance, every such addition serves only to narrow and restrict the meaning and effect which the principal sentence would have had without them. This, the writer of that opinion points out clearly, when he says that, had it been intended to exclude all liability for death by poison, a simple statement to that effect would have been all that was needed; but when the insurer proceeded to modify the statement, by adding “voluntary or involuntary,” it so narrowed its exception as to exclude therefrom all other deaths from poison. Applying'that rule to this case, which, like the Riley case, comes' to us from a ruling on demurrer to plaintiff’s petition, we cannot con*1316sistently avoid a reversal. No member of the court dissented in the final opinion in the Riley case, which, I assume, had passed from their minds; but now that I have quoted themselves to themselves, I trust they will at once recognize the controlling character of the authority, and be ready to join in holding that the judgment below ought to be reversed.

Salinger, J., concurs in this dissent.