Court Opinion

ID: 3269255
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 16:37:38.345919+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:41:18.840280
License: Public Domain

This suit was brought in the circuit court of Saline county by appellee against appellant to recover $500 as a designated beneficiary out of a death benefit fund maintained by appellant to pay a designated beneficiary of one of its members who should die in good standing unless the death of said member occurred by suicide or the use of alcohol.
The answer filed by appellant admitted that R. L. Page, the husband of appellee, was a member of its organization in good standing from the year 1919 to the *Page 503 
day of his death, May 12, 1936, and that appellee was his designated beneficiary; but denied any liability to her for the reason that its constitution and by-laws provided that if deceased met his death by suicide no benefits would be paid and alleged that R. L. Page, deceased, met his death by suicide.
The cause was submitted to a jury upon the issue joined of whether R. L. Page committed suicide under the evidence adduced, resulting in a verdict for appellee for $500, from which verdict and consequent judgment is this appeal.
At the conclusion of the evidence appellant requested the court to instruct a verdict for it, which the court refused to do, over appellant's objection and exception.
Appellant contends for a reversal of the judgment on the sole ground that the evidence is insufficient to support the verdict.
The evidence, stated in the most favorable light to appellee is, in substance, as follows: R. L. Page had been an employee of a railroad company for a number of years. His health failed in August, 1935, and he quit work for a while for treatment, but went back to work for the railroad company in January, 1936; but on account of continued sickness gave up his job. He did not work after that time and was worried and nervous. About a week before his death he went to the state hospital for nervous diseases for examination. Nothing appears in the record as to the result of the examination. On May 12, 1936, he and his wife, the appellee herein, went to visit his daughter in Benton, Arkansas, Mrs. Jim Mormon, and arrived at her home about two o'clock in the afternoon. He remained in his room and his wife went down town. He requested his daughter to get him a fresh drink of water and she went to the well a short distance from the house to do so. When returning with the water she heard a noise in the house and was told by a passerby that it was a gun shot. She hurried in and found her father in a dying condition lying on the floor with his head resting against the wall and a discharged pistol lying on the floor a short distance from his right *Page 504 
hand and about two feet from his body. She took hold of his shoulders and laid his body down on the floor and then called for help. He lived only a short time and did not regain consciousness. The pistol belonged to the daughter of deceased and had been left on a shelf in a corner of the room which was about three feet from the floor. It was easy on the trigger and, according to the testimony of his daughter, would go off from a jar or the slightest touch of the trigger. There were a few powder burns near the wound in his head. The ball had entered about halfway between the right ear of deceased and the top of his head and was slightly to the rear and the ball according to the probe made took a downward course. The ball remained in his head. There was a mirror hanging on the wall to the left of the door resting on a shelf about five feet from the floor and one witness said there were some splotches on the wall to the right of the mirror that looked like blood. No examination was made to ascertain whether the splotches were blood splotches. There was no evidence of a struggle and deceased had his clothes on, but no hat. The body was lying at an angle out from the mirror and no one was in the room when it was entered by the daughter with the water which she had brought for her father. The coroner who had been sent for testified that appellee and her daughter stated that deceased was nervous and had cried at some time during the day. The daughter denied that she told the coroner her father had cried. There is no evidence in the record showing that appellee was in financial straits or that during his illness he had ever threatened suicide. The deceased had never seen the pistol or handled it before entering the room. The deceased was given to having spells, but the record is silent as to the nature of them save that of his foreman who said when he had spells he would "fall out." Just what the foreman meant by "falling out" is not clearly revealed. Appellant says that the witness meant to say that he would quit work, but it might have meant that he would fall down when he had one of these spells. Just what interpretation the jury put on this piece of testimony is not for this court to say. *Page 505 
The legal presumption is against the theory of suicide and the presumption is such a strong one that this court has said in the case of Grand Lodge of the A. O. U. W. v. Banister, 80 Ark. 190, 96 S.W. 742 (quoting syllabus No. 3), that: "The presumption against suicide or death by a wrongful act arises even where it is shown by proof that death was self-inflicted; it being presumed that death was accidental until the contrary is made to appear." The court also said in the case cited that the burden of proving that one committed suicide is upon the one alleging that fact and also that if men of reasonable intelligence may honestly draw therefrom different conclusions on the question in dispute it became a question for determination by the jury and not by the court. These declarations of law run through many subsequent cases decided by this court and will be found thus announced in the cases of: Industrial Mut. Indemnity Co. v. Watt,95 Ark. 456, 130 S.W. 532; New York Life Insurance Co. v. Watters, 154 Ark. 569, 243 S.W. 831; Mutual Life Insurance Co. of New York v. Raymond, et al., 176 Ark. 879,4 S.W.2d 536; New York Life Insurance Company v. Redmon, 191 Ark. 1003, 88 S.W.2d 324; and Ancient Order of U. W. of Kansas v. Duensing, 192 Ark. 919,95 S.W.2d 900. In most of the cases mentioned above in applying the declarations of law announced the question of intentional self-destruction was held to be a question for determination by the jury.
Appellant's theory of the instant case is that the deceased had a motive for killing himself and that in order to accomplish his purpose he took the pistol off the shelf in the corner of the room and walked to the mirror so that he might see what he was doing and placed the point of the pistol near his head about halfway between his ear and the top of his head and just to the rear of a line between his ear and the top of his head, pulled the trigger and killed himself. They based their conclusion that he was standing in front of the mirror on the fact that some splotches supposed to be blood were on the wall just to the right of the mirror and because his body was found lying face up with his head and shoulders against the opposite wall and his feet extending in the *Page 506 
direction of the mirror. The trouble with this theory is that the splotches on the wall were not proven to be blood splotches and because the bullet took a downward instead of an upward course. It is mere surmise or speculation under the evidence to say that the splotches on the wall were blood from the man's body and it is extremely doubtful that under the circumstances the bullet would have taken a downward course instead of an upward course. In order to explain the course the bullet took appellants say that it must have struck some bone or hard substance that deflected the upward course that it would naturally have taken. Whether it struck such a substance is speculation pure and simple. The evidence is entirely circumstantial as to whether appellant killed himself intentionally or accidentally. This court said in the case of Mutual Life Insurance Company of New York v. Raymond, et at., 176 Ark. 879, 4 S.W.2d 536, that "there is a presumption of law against a man taking his own life intentionally, even where it is shown that he came to his death at his own hands, the law presuming that the death was accidental rather than suicidal." It may be that the deceased took the pistol off the shelf for the purpose of examination and that in some way it went off accidentally and killed him. The jury might have found that after picking the pistol up and while examining it he had one of his spells and in falling to the floor he threw his hand up in the direction of his head at which time it fired and accidentally killed him. There were only a few powder burns near the wound and they might have been found there even if the deceased accidentally killed himself.
In the first place there is very little evidence tending to show any motive for suicide. The deceased was not in financial straits. He was simply out of a job which is the case with many men. He was ill, but nothing to show that he was incurable and nothing to show that he ever threatened to take his life or had any intention of taking his life before his death. The physical facts do not point unerringly and with certainty to a suicide.
It is argued that he remained in his own room, but this is not an unusual thing for a man feeling badly to do. *Page 507 
It is argued that he was alone in the house after his wife went down town and after he asked his daughter to go to the well and get him a drink. It is quite probable that he was thirsty after being in the house as long as he was and that his real purpose was to get a cool drink of water instead of getting his daughter out of the house so that he would be alone. The probability is that if he had been overly nervous or very sick his wife would not have gone down town and his daughter would not have gone out of the house even to draw a bucket of water. There is nothing in the entire record that indicated this man had planned prior to his death to take his life and the motive assigned for the act is so slight that it is hardly appreciable. I think the facts and circumstances in this case are not sufficient to overcome the legal presumption against sane persons committing suicide and to meet the burden of proof resting upon appellant to show that he did commit suicide, and hence, this court should not say as a matter of law that he did commit suicide. I think under the facts and circumstances in the instant case that men of reasonable intelligence might honestly draw therefrom different conclusions on the question of whether the deceased committed suicide or whether he killed himself accidently [accidentally] and, in view of this conclusion, I think it was proper to submit the issue to the jury for determination and, as there is substantial evidence in the record to support the verdict of the jury, the court should affirm the judgment instead of reversing it and dismissing the case.
Mr. Justices MEHAFFY and BAKER authorize me to say they concur in my views and this dissenting opinion.