Barber v. Travelers' Insurance

165 Ill. App. 239, 1911 Ill. App. LEXIS 163
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedNovember 2, 1911
DocketGen. Nos. 15,693—15,694
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 165 Ill. App. 239 (Barber v. Travelers' Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barber v. Travelers' Insurance, 165 Ill. App. 239, 1911 Ill. App. LEXIS 163 (Ill. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Brown

delivered the opinion of the court.

These causes were consolidated for hearing in the court below and in this court. Upon the same evidence (except in purely formal matters concerning the separate policies involved) a finding was made by the Municipal Court of Chicago, sitting without a jury, in favor of Marion Belle Barber against the Travelers Insurance Company, and a judgment entered on the finding for $5,270 and costs, and a like finding and judgment for the same amount against the same company in favor of Bert S. Barber.

Marion Belle Barber and Bert S. Barber were the children of Lyman W. Barber. Lyman W. Barber on July 10, 1907, took out two “accident” policies in the defendant company. They differed only in number and in the name of the beneficiary. In one the beneficiary named was Marion Belle Barber, in the other, Bert S. Barber. The terms of the policies, affecting these causes, follow:

“The Travelers Insurance Company of Hartford, Connecticut, does hereby insure Lyman W. Barber against bodily injuries effected directly and independently of all other causes through external, violent and accidental means as specified in the following schedule:
The principal sum of this Policy in the first year is $2500, with 5% increase annually for ten years amounts to $3750.
*******
SCHEDULE OE INDEMNITIES.
Part A. Single Indemnity—Death—Dismemberment and Loss of Sight.
If any one of the following disabilities shall result from such injuries alone within ninety days from the date of the accident, the Company will pay in hen of other indemnity.
For Loss of Life other than specified in parts D. and E.
The Principal Sum.
*******
In the event of death the principal sum insured shall be paid to (Bert S. Barber in one policy—Marion Belle Barber in the other), The Beneficiary if surviving, otherwise to the Executors, Administrators or Assigns of the Insured.
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The amount to be paid for claims under Parts A. and B. shall be double the sum specified in this Schedule if such injuries are sustained while riding as a passenger and being in or upon any railway passenger car using steam, cable or electricity as a motive power,
*******
but any accident or injury, fatal or otherwise, sustained while getting on or off or being upon the step or steps of any railway or street railway car shall be covered only by single indemnity.
*******
This insurance shall hot cover disappearance or suicide, sane or insane, nor shall it cover accident, injury, death, loss of limb or sight or disability resulting wholly or partly, directly or indirectly, from intoxication or while intoxicated, * * * or from voluntary exposure to unnecessary danger * * * Nor (except as incident to the occupation of railway employes insured as such) shall this insurance cover accidents, injuries, death, loss of limb or sight, or disability, resulting directly or indirectly from entering or trying to enter or leave a moving conveyance using steam as a motive power, (except cable and electric street cars), or happening while being in any part thereof not provided for occupation by passengers or while being on a railway bridge or road-bed.
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That all of the warranties following made by the insured upon acceptance of this policy are true, viz:
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M. My habits of life are correct and temperate.
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11. The warranties and provisions abové are a part of the contract which is made subject thereto, and to the payment of the premium of Twelve and 50/100 Dollars.
The term of this Policy is Twelve months, beginning at twelve o’clock noon, standard time, on the 10th day of July, 1907, and ending at the same hour.” * * *

There were the usual provisions in the policies as to notice and proofs of loss, but no question is made that all proper steps were taken by the plaintiffs thereunder and they do not, therefore, require transcription. The contentions in these causes are directly on the merits of the claims and not on technicalities.

Lyman W. Barber was last seen alive, so far as the evidence shows, on the front platform of the rear car of a train of the South Side Elevated Railroad in Chicago as it was leaving the Van Burén and Dear-born street station at 3:29 a. m., January 5, 1908, on a south-bound trip. His body was found at about seven o’clock that morning on the south-bound track of the Elevated Railroad where it runs through the station at 26th street. A coroner’s jury found that he came to his death on January 5, 1908, “from shock and injuries received by falling from the platform of the South Side Elevated R. R. Co. at 26th street, coming in contact with the Sprague (or third) rail, and then being run over by a train consisting of motor car No. 72 and coaches 376 and 323 belonging to the South Side Elevated R. R. Co. and south bound on their tracks at the said 26th street station, on the early morning of Jan. 5, 1908. But from the testimony presented we, the jury, are unable to determine how or in what manner deceased met with said fall.”

The respective beneficiaries under the policies sued the Travelers Insurance Company on them in the Municipal Court in a case of the first class, alleging in the first count of their respective declarations that Lyman W. Barber “was killed by receiving bodily injuries effected on the said 5th day of January, 1908, directly and independently of all other causes through external, violent and accidental means,” by reason of which the defendant became liable to pay to the' plaintiff upon said policy the sum of $2,500.

In the second count they alleged that the said Barber “was killed while riding as a passenger and being in or upon a railway passenger car using electricity as a motive power by receiving bodily injuries effected on said 5th day of January, A. D. 1908, directly and independently of all other causes through external, violent and accidental means,” by reason of which the defendant became liable to pay the plaintiff upon said policy the sum of $5,000.

The Insurance Company in each case filed six pleas to the declaration. On these pleas, which concluded to the country (inartificially, it appears to us, in the case of all but the first), issue was directly joined by similiters and the causes submitted to the court without a jury.

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Bluebook (online)
165 Ill. App. 239, 1911 Ill. App. LEXIS 163, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barber-v-travelers-insurance-illappct-1911.