Court Opinion

ID: 7134916
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-24 15:22:52.318704+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:14:35.658634
License: Public Domain

Opinion of the court by
JUDGE O’REAR —
Reversing.
The life of George F. Beard was insured by appellant by a policy issued August 30, 1898. / The assured died September 10,1899, while the insurance was in effect. The policy contained -this provision: “If within two years the insured die by his own act, sane or insane, this policy shall 'be void,- and all payments made upon it shall be forfeited to the company, except' that the company will, in that case, pay for its surrender the legal net reserve at the time of death. Any indebtedness of the company, together with the balance, if any, on the current year’s premium, will be deducted in any settlement of this policy.” The circumstances attending- the death of the insured indicate that it was «caused by an excessive dose of morphine taken with suicidal intent. Evidence as to the sanity of the insured was introduced upon the trial. It tended to show-eccentric conduct at times, which some of the -witnesses thought was due to insanity, but which appear as probably to have been due to his intemperate habits, and a generally demoralized «condition, resulting from being out of employment and involved in some financial embarrassments.
The principal question presented by this appeal is involved in the instructions given and refused. Those given precluded a finding for the company unless it made it to appear satisfactorily that the assured “by his own voluntary ,act came to his death by committing suicide with the intent and purpose of destroying his own life.” And the *460jury were further instructed: “And before you can find for the defendant you will have to further believe frolm the evidence that if such assured destroyed his life, that he possessed at the time sufficient mind and understanding to know the nature of the physical act he was about to commit, and that he possessed sufficient will power at the time to refrain from taking his own life.” The company presented two theories upon which it asked' instructions, respectively: (1) That if the assured purposely destroyed his own life while sane or insane, the recovery was limited to the legal net reserve due on t'he policy at the date of the. death; and (2) that -if the assured, “while sane or insane, took and swallowed a large quantity of morphine, with the intention of killing hitmself, and that he had sufficient mental power at the time to know that it would cause his death, and took it with that intention,” then the law was for the defendant company. These were refused.
The “suicide” or “self-destruction” clauses of life insurance policies have received not a harmonious construction by the various courts of last resort. The cases may be classified under three general head's. The first and earliest involved the construction of such clauses as vitiated the policy in event the assured took his own life by “suicide,” “at his own hands,” or “self-destruction.” However the courts may differ as to the correct construction of such clauses, in this State we are committed to what appears to be the most universal rule, and the one applied by the United States supreme court, which is that self-destruction in such provisions means such destruction by a sane person. Insurance Co. v. Craves, 6 Bush, 268; Insurance Co. v. Terry, 15 Wall., 580, 21 L. Ed., 236; Insurance Co. v. Broughton, 109 U. S., 131, 3 Sup. Ct., 99, 27 L. Ed., *461878; Ritter v. Insurance Co., 169 U. S., 140, 18 Sup. Ct., 300, 42 L. Ed., 693.
To obviate the effect of suob construction, the insurers lately added a new clause to their policies, which may be designated as forming the second class of these cases, in which it is provided that self-destruction or .suicide by the insured, while sane or insane, vitiated the contract, or at least reduced the sum payable to such item as the reserve fund apportiona'ble to the policy, or to a refunding of the premiums collected on it. This second class of ease has also been before this court for consideration. Insurance Co. v. Davies’ Ex’r, 87 Ky., 541 (10 R. 577) 9 S. W., 812. In the case just cited the policy provided, “in case he shall die by his own hand while insane,” the company agrees to refund the premiums. Following and approving Biglow v. Insurance Co., 93 U. S., 284, 23 L. Ed., 918, thi? court held: “It may now be regarded as well established that intentional self-destruction will avoid a policy containing conditions like this, whether the act was committed voluntarily or from irresistible impulse, unless the mind of the insured was so far gone when he took his life as to render 'him unconscious that he was taking his life at the time he committed the act.” We do not deem it necessary to restate the reasonings upon which these decisions are based. They are elaborately discussed in the opinions. It is sufficient to determine the class to which the policy in question belongs, and then apply the doctrine setting apart that class. The third class arises out of constructions to be placed upon additional clauses added to the suicide proviso, e. g., whether the self-inflicted injury were “voluntary or involuntary, while sane or insane.” Haynie v. Indemnity Co. (Mo.) 41 S. W., 464. The case at bar, in our opinion, belongs to the second class herein *462described. It is therefore unnecessary to now consider the validity of such clause as that last quoted. It is not here. Therefore the court properly refused to give an instruction apparently predicated upon the idea involved in that clause (instruction Z offered by defendants).
The instructions given, though, were such as would have been proper in, and as are sustained by authorities' under, the first class of cases named. They preclude a forfeiture of 'the insurance if the self destruction occurred during, or was the result of, an insane impulse. So do these instructions. Their effect is to destroy one feature of the contract, which this court has held (87 Ky. 541), supra, was a legal provision; that is, the feature of self destruction while insane. The court construes the term “self destruction,” or “death by his own act,” to mean that the act is not his if he has not mind enough to know wha.t he is doing. In such event the act is to be regarded as an accident. But, although the insured may not be ■ able from mental derangement to know the extent of his offense, tihat it .is a crime, or even that it is wrong, and although his will power may be for the time subverted by one or more of his other faculties, whether by their derangement or not, if he has mind enough to know that the act would probably result in his death, and he inflicts it with thát intention, it is a cause against which the company has not insured.
There are various degrees of insanity recognized by medical men and by the courts. Partial insanity may be such as to leave the mind capable of fully comprehending the nature of an act, and of its moml effect, and with the will to do or abstain from it. Excessive morbidity may so far affect the disposition as to overcomei the instinctive desire to live, yet leave the patient with mind to under*463stand the nature and consequences of the act of . self destruction, and with will power to execute his resolves. Hallucinations may indicate a degree of insanity. They need not necessarily derange the understanding of the act of suicide, or impair the will with reference thereto; yet they may be such as to impel the subject to brave all the consequences of his act, which are fully realized, rather than suffer the ills conjured by his diseased imagination. The normal nature instinctively desires life. Such lives are sought as the subject of insurance. We perceive no reason why the parties might not contract that if the disposition of the insured becomes abnormal by mental derangement, thus increasing the probabilities of self-destruction to the extent that his instinct for life may be subordinated by his disease, the insurance shall cease. The insured is not bound to accept such a contract. But, if he does, why should it not be enforced? We,are of opinion that the instructions offered by appellant, presenting this view' of the law should have been given in lieu of those given by the court.
On the trial the widow of the deceased, the beneficiary under the policy, was permitted to testify to numerous conversations with her husband, to facts learned from him, and to the contents of letters written from one to the other. Under subsection 1, sec. 606, Civ. Code Prac., providing: “Neither a husband nor a wife shall testify, even after the cessation of their marriage, concerning any communication between them during marriage,” — ¡all the foregoing testimony was incompetent; and, under subsection 2 of section 606, she was likewise incompetent as a witness to testify in her own behalf as to acts done by, or transactions with, the decedent.
The circumstances about the death of the insured were *464such as to admit of the theory of suicide. It might, though, have been an accident. On the trial, a physician introduced as an expert on the subject of insanity, after testifying about the indication of certain symptoms of insanity, and that in his opinion, if the deceased showed' these symptoms, he was insane, was asked whether, in his opinion, the death was the, result of accident or design, and was permitted to answer. This was error. The witness did not see the body, nor was he in attendance on his sickness. It was competent for him to say. what was the probable 'effect of certain drugs', and what state of mind, as to sanity or insanity, certain symptoms would indicate. But whether, the act of the deceaed in taking the drug was by design or accident was not the subject of expert testimony. That aot was an issue to be solved by the jury upon all the evidence.
For the reasons indicated, the judgment is reversed, and cause remanded for a new trial not inconsistent herewith.