Armstrong v. Travelers Insurance

4 Ohio App. 46, 22 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 129, 22 Ohio C.A. 129, 1914 Ohio App. LEXIS 128
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 26, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 4 Ohio App. 46 (Armstrong v. Travelers Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Armstrong v. Travelers Insurance, 4 Ohio App. 46, 22 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 129, 22 Ohio C.A. 129, 1914 Ohio App. LEXIS 128 (Ohio Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

Jones, Thomas A., J.

The jury returned a verdict on the issues joined in favor of the defendant. This verdict was signed and concurred in by eleven of the twelve jurors.

The court, in its general charge to the jury, had said that a verdict might be returned by three-fourths of the members of the jury or more.

The contention is now made by the plaintiff in error that this action of the court was erroneous; that the amended jury law did not apply to the case at bar and the verdict should have been unanimous.

I. The act (103 O. L., 11) providing for a verdict upon the concurrence of three-fourths or more of the jury was passed February 6, 1913, approved by the governor February 12, 1913, and became effective as a law on May 14, 1913.

This amending act did not expressly provide that existing causes of action should be affected thereby. Section 26, General Code, provides:

“Whenever a statute is repealed or amended, such repeal or amendment shall in no manner affect pending actions, prosecutions, or proceedings, civil or criminal, and when the repeal or amendment relates to the remedy, it shall not affect pending actions, prosecutions, or proceedings, unless so expressed, nor shall any repeal or amendment affect causes of such action, prosecution, or proceeding, existing at the time of such amendment or repeal, unless otherwise expressly provided in the amending or repealing act.”

This action was not begun until September 15, 1913, and was therefore not a pending action when the act became effective.

[50]*50The contention of plaintiff below is that she had an existing cause of action which did not become amenable to Section 26, General Code, because of the fact that it arose and accrued to her prior to the time when the act became effective. The contention of her counsel is that since Armstrong died on the 27th day of February, 1913, an existing cause of action upon the policy accrued to plaintiff below immediátely upon the death of her husband.

While the death of Armstrong occurred February 27, 1913, there was' a provision in the contract of insurance providing that no legal proceedings for recovery under the policy should be brought within three months after the receipt of the proofs of death.

Since the proofs of death were not made until March 18, 1913, a right of action upon the policy did not accrue to plaintiff until three months thereafter, or until June 18, 1913. She had no existing cause of action until that time.

A cause of action does not accrue until a breach of the contract is made and a right to sue thereupon exists.

This definition of “cause of action” is discussed by Davis, J., in The B. & O. Rd. Co. v. Hollenberger, 76 Ohio St., 177, 182.

The case decided by Kinkead, J., The Citizens Savings & Trust Co. v. Gibson-Spence Coal Co., 16 N. P., N. S., 273, is consistent with this view, as the right to sue in that case did not accrue until the notes became due, which was in March and April, 1913, and before the act became effective.

In this -case, under the contract of insurance, the right to sue, or the cause of action, did not accrue [51]*51to the plaintiff below until three months after the submission of proofs of death.

II. The facts in this record disclose that the deceased, William H. Armstrong, about eight o’clock on the morning of his death, went aboard a ferryboat at Ripley, O., for the purpose of crossing to the Kentucky side. Just before the ferryboat reached the Kentucky side the last seen of the decedent was when he was in the ladies’ cabin of the boat and about to enter the toilet room connected therewith. He had started from home in apparently good health. No eyewitness saw the accident, if accident there was, but it appears from the evidence that from three to five minutes after the ferryboat had cast off from the Kentucky shore Armstrong was seen in the water, floating with his face submerged in the water but with his head and shoulders unsubmerged. The captain of the boat went to his succor and brought him aboard the boat, where an attempt was made to resuscitate him, without avail. The boat immediately crossed over to the Ohio side, where physicians were summoned to attend him. On the afternoon of that day he was embalmed, and later buried. Seventeen days later, upon initiative of the defendant below, the body was exhumed for the purpose of post mortem examination. An autopsy was held in the presence of eight physicians and four laymen, each of whom signed the findings made by the autopsy.

Upon the trial of the case all of the physicians who were present and signed the autopsy, except one, testified; and two of the laymen who were present and signed the autopsy also testified in the [52]*52case. One Doctor Carothers and two laymen, viz., B. E. Waite and J. E. Morehead, were not witnesses at the trial.

Doctor Foertmeyer, the physician who presided over the autopsy, was called by defendant as a witness. In his examination in chief he was asked in detail as to the examination he made of the vital organs, refreshed his recollection by the use of the autopsy paper, and in connection with his examination in chief counsel for defendant offered and the court permitted the autopsy paper to be admitted in evidence.

In the opinion of this court the action of the court below in this regard was erroneous. The autopsy should not have been admitted as substantive evidence in the case. It purported to have been signed by at least three persons who were not present as witnesses at the trial, and therefore the plaintiff below was denied the privilege of cross-examination of these men under oath.

It has been held that a post mortem examination made by a coroner is a semi-judicial proceeding and can not be used as substantive evidence to prove the cause of death. It would seem to us that it would be a greater abuse of the rule of evidence to admit a paper of this character to be introduced as substantive evidence, where the signatories to the paper had not been placed under oath at the time and the privilege of cross-examination, as in this case, denied the plaintiff.

While we adhere to this as the proper rule of evidence, in view of the record made in this case we are not inclined to hold that the action of the court was so prejudicial as to require a reversal.

[53]*53This autopsy was made' for the purpose of obtaining the expert knowledge and opinion of the physicians present. So far as the laymen were concerned it would have been of little value. Of the physicians who were present and signed the autopsy all testified except one, Doctor Carothers. The autopsy paper had been used throughout the case, in connection with the evidence of' the expert witnesses, to show the physical condition of the deceased and to ascertain the cause of his death. Every one of the seven physicians went into a detailed explanation of the autopsy and testified in detail as to the matters contained in the paper.

It would seem to us that, under this state of facts, there could be no serious prejudice to the plaintiff below in allowing the autopsy to be introduced as evidence in the case.

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Bluebook (online)
4 Ohio App. 46, 22 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 129, 22 Ohio C.A. 129, 1914 Ohio App. LEXIS 128, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/armstrong-v-travelers-insurance-ohioctapp-1914.