Court Opinion

ID: 7134365
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-24 15:22:20.323682+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:14:34.511047
License: Public Domain

Opinion oír the court by
JUDGE HOBSON
Reversing.
On July 24, 1888, appellant issued a policy of insurance on the life of James W. Tate, payable to his wife and children at his- death. The amount of the policy was $5,000, and it was to be a paid-up policy after fifteen annual payments. On' June 30, 1897, appellee, Edmonia Martin, filed this suit to recover of appellant the amount of the policy, alleging that she was the only surviving child of the insured; that his wife was dead. She also averred that the assured was dead, alleging that on the 16th of March, 1888, he had left his home in Frankfort, Ky., and gone from the State, and had not returned since, — a period of seven successive years¡; that his relations to his family were always pleasant and unusually happy, and there had been no- cause to change those relations.; that he was last heard from on December 12, 1888, and that his absence from the State without being heard from had been continuous from that time. Appellant filed an answer in which it denied that the assured was dead. It alleged that for many years prior to his leaving the State he1 had been Treasurer of the State of Kentucky; that as such he had embezzled a large amount of money belonging to the State, and in June, 1888, was indicted for the crime of embezzlement; that on account of this offense he had- fled from the State, in the full vigor of health, to avoid impending disgrace and punishment; *15that he had since concealed himself to avoid arrest as a fugitive from justice; that a reward of $5,000 had been offered for his apprehension and delivery to the jailer of the county, and that it was for this reason he had remained absent from the State. Appellant also relied on a clause in the policy forbidding the assured1 to reside in certain localities, claiming that thereby the policy had been forfeited. It was also stipulated in the policy that, should the assured survive July 1, 1898, t)he amount of $2,000 should be payable to him, his executors and.1 assigns. Appellant alleged that the amount due on the policy was, under this clause, payable to him or his assigns, and denied for this reason all liability to appellee. The issues formed by the pleadings were submitted to a jury, who found for the appellee, and judgment was entered by the court on the verdict
The proof introduced on the trial substantially established the facts alleged in the answer as to the circumstances under which Tate left the State. It also showed that he was then fifty-seven years of age; that, after leaving the State, he wrote to his wife and daughter regularly until December, 1888. The first of these letters was written from British Columbia; the next from a steamer on the way to Japan; several from Japan, where he seems to have remained for some time, and then to have gone to China. He finally returned to Japan, and fronr there, in November, 1888, he came to Tacoma, Wash. His last letter was written-from San Francisco, Cal., December 3, 1888. In this letter he speaks of having had a miserable cold; says he writes a few lines as he passes along, and will write 'again in a short time. He was then, according to his letter, going through California to the Territories, and said he would write them where to address him. After this he was not. *16heard of any more. He had written at regular intervals once or twice a month up to this time. His letters are full of affection for his wife, daughter .and grandchild, and exhibit the most devoted family relationship. It further appears from them that he had lost considerably in weight since leaving home, and was anxiously hoping to be able to return. The proof also showed that very recently an elaborate effort had been made by Tate’s friends to secure a pardon for him from the Governor; bust the appellee testified that .she had nothing to do with this, and1 then believed him dead. Appellee relied on section 1639, Kentucky Statutes, establishing a presumption of his death, entitling hep to recover. That section reads as follows: “If any person who shall have resided in this State, go from and do not return to this State for seven successive years he shall be presumed to be dead in any case wherein his death shall come in question, unless proof be made that he was alive within that time.” It is insisted for appellant that this statute has no application, because proof was made that the assured was alive up to December, 1888, and that the statute only applies where the person leaves the State, and does not return for seven successive years, and he is not shown to be alive after he left. We think this would be a narrow construction of the statute. If this is its meaning, it would not apply to any case where the party was heard from after he passed the borders of the State, though only the next day after his departure, as he was on his journey away. The common-law rule was that, after the lapse of seven years without intelligence concerning the person, the presumption of life ceased, and the burden of proof devolved on the other party to show that he was alive. 1 Greenl. Ev. section, 41. The statute must receive a reasonable construction with a view to promote its object. It *17is necessary to have some period when the presumption oí life ceases in this class of cases, and it seems to us a fair construction of the statute to apply it where the person leaving the State is absent for seven consecutive years after he is last heard from, and then to throw the onus of proving the person alive on the other party.
It is also insisted for the appellant that thé statute only applies to tho-se leaving the State who have no good reason for staying away, and. that a fugitive from justice, for whose apprehension there is a reward of $5,000 outstanding, is not within its spirit or purpose. We are referred by counsel to some authorities sustaining this position, but, on investigation, we do not find, the exact point to have been adjudicated. On the other hand, it is insisted for appellee that, if her father is not presumed dead now, sihe would have the same difficulty in suing on the policy ten years from' now, and that this was the evil the statute was intended to remedy. The question is not free- from difficulty, but we do not feel warranted in interpolating into a statute exceptions which it does not contain. Fugitives from justice are not the only class of persons who might have good reasons for not returning, and, if all these classes of persons were beld not within the statute as a matter of law, its purpose, in many cases, would be entirely defeated. Under our system of trying cases, if there is any evidence in support of an issue it must be submitted to the jury, and we think it a sounder and better rule to leave the question of death in all these cases to be found by the jury on all the facts of the case. When the plaintiff shows that a resident of the State has been absent seven successive years from the time, he left, or from the time he was last heard from, the burden of proof-shifts to *18the defendant to overcome the presumption of bis death. This proof may be direct, or it may be circumstantial, arising from the circumstances under which the person left, his reasons for leaving, or concealing his whereabouts, his age, condition of health, his motives for not returning or keeping in communication with his home, and the like. In this case it was a question for the jury, on all the evidence, whether the assured, J. W. Tate, was alive or dead when the action wras brought.
The court instructed the jury as follows: “If the jury believe from the testimony that the insured, J. W. Tate, while a resident of and living in Franklin county, Kentucky, left the State of Kentucky on the 16th day of March, 1888, and that for seven years continuously, from the 3d day of December, 1888, nor since that time, has returned to the State or been heard from since December, 1888, they ought to find for the plaintiff.” “The law presumes one dead who departs from the State, and is gone for seven consecutive years without returning, and has not been heard from since he left, unless it be shown- that he has returned to the State or been heard from within that time, or at any time since, or that he was alive during that time.” By these instructions the jury were, in terms, told to find for appellee if Tate had ‘been absent from' the Stale for seven years without being heard from since December, 1888. The question of whether he was in fact alive or dead was not sutmitted to the jury, nor were they authorized, by these instructions, to find for the appellant if they did not in fact believe him dead. Instead of the-instructions we have quoted, the court should have told the jury that they ought to find for the plaintiff if they believed from all the evidence that Tate was dead on June 80, 189T; otherwise, for the defendant. The *19court should also have told them that if Tate, while a resident of Franklin county, Kentucky, left the State of Kentucky on March 16, 1888, and that for seven years continuously from December, 1888, he had not returned to the State or been heard from, the law presumed him dead, unless it was shown that he was alive within that time; but that such presumption (like that of innocence or sanity) might be rebutted by the proof, and that the jury should consider, in connection with this presumption, all the circumstances shown by the evidence attending the departure of Tate, and the reasons for his absence, if any; and it was a question for them to determine on all the evidence whether Tate was alive or dead when the suit was filed. The court properly instructed the jury as. to the policy not being avoided by Tate’s going to China and Japan as the evidence was sufficient to show a waiver; and we are not inclined to think that Tate’s stay in China and Japan was longer than was warranted by the policy, which substantially allowed him to go there temporarily. The court also properly refused to instruct the jury that ap-pellee could not recover by reason of the provision of the policy that |2,000 was to be paid J. W. Tate if he survived July 1, 1898. It appears that Tate had paid none of the premiums on this policy since the year 1888, and that ap-pellee has kept it alive by paying them. She lost .no right ■by paying the full fifteen premiums, because she had to do this, or risk losing .the policy entirely, including all that she had paid. Tate by failing to pay his premiums, or apprise appellant of his existence or make any demand of it, has abandoned all claim under the policy, and, if he were alive, or should hereafter turn out to be alive after payment of the policy by appellant to appellee, he would be ■estopped to set up any claim against appellant. But for *20the error indicated in the instructions given by the court the judgment is reversed, and the .cause remanded for a new trial and further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
Judge Paynter dissents.
Petition for re-hearing filed by appellee and overruled.