Beers v. California State Life Insurance

262 P. 380, 87 Cal. App. 440, 1927 Cal. App. LEXIS 87
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 10, 1927
DocketDocket No. 3250.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 262 P. 380 (Beers v. California State Life Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Beers v. California State Life Insurance, 262 P. 380, 87 Cal. App. 440, 1927 Cal. App. LEXIS 87 (Cal. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

HART, Acting P. J.

This action was instituted by the plaintiff to recover on a life insurance policy for $1,000, issued by defendant to Nellie L. Beers, daughter of the *443 plaintiff, and in which policy the latter was the named beneficiary.

The cause was tried before a jury and a verdict returned in favor of plaintiff. Judgment was entered accordingly, from which the defendant prosecutes this appeal in conformity with the provisions of section 953a of the Code of Civil Procedure.

While complaint is made of certain rulings, involving the question whether certain evidence was or was not admissible, and also the legal integrity of the action of the court in allowing and disallowing certain proffered instructions to the jury is challenged, the point the most vigorously urged is that for the verdict and the judgment no claim can justly be made that they derive substantial support from the evidence.

It appears that on the third day of November, 1925, the defendant issued a policy of insurance on the life of Nellie L. Beers in and for the sum of $1,000, to run for a period of twenty years, in consideration of the annual payment by said Nellie L. Beers (to be referred to hereinafter as Miss Beers or “the deceased”) of a premium of #46.66; that, upon the issuance of said policy Miss Beers paid to the defendant said sum; that, as above stated, Miss Beers was the daughter of plaintiff, and the latter was made by her (Miss Beers) the beneficiary of said policy, to be paid upon the death of the insured within the term during which the policy was to run; that on the fifth day of March, 1926, and “while said policy of life insurance was in full force and effect,” said Miss Beers died, at Chico, Butte County; that, thereafter, and prior to the commencement of this action the plaintiff duly provided the defendant with proofs of the death of her said daughter, but the defendant, for reasons to be later explained, refused to pay the plaintiff the said sum of #1,000. These facts are, in appropriate language, alleged in the complaint.

The answer, by way of a plea of confession and avoidance, admits the salient averments of the complaint, and then alleges:

“That the said policy of life insurance number 45285, executed and delivered by defendant to Nellie L. Beers as set forth in the complaint herein, contained a clause reading as follows:
*444 ‘In. case of suicide of the holder, committed while'sane or insane, within one year from the date hereof, the limit of recovery hereunder shall be the total amount of the deposit paid, ’ and defendant further alleges that said policy of life insurance was executed and delivered by defendant to said Nellie L. Beers on the 3rd day of November, 1925, and that on the 5th day of March, 1926, at Chico, Butte County, California, the said Nellie L. Beers ended her life by taking and swallowing strychnine, with the intent and purpose then and there to commit and she did then and there commit suicide. That defendant hereby, in accordance with the terms of said policy of life insurance, offers to pay and tenders to plaintiff the sum of $46.66, in full satisfaction of the obligation of defendant, under the terms of said life insurance policy.”

The foregoing involves a statement of the ground upon which the defendant resists payment to the plaintiff of the sum which the policy issued to the deceased provided for, and constitutes the important point of this controversy.

It is admitted that the policy of insurance contains the provision that the self-inflicted death of the deceased within one year from the date of the issuance of the policy, whether committed while the insured was sane or insane, would operate to vitiate the force of the policy.

It is further admitted that, after the due proof of the death of the insured had been submitted to and filed with the defendant by the plaintiff, and demand by the latter was made upon the former for payment of the policy, the defendant tendered to plaintiff a check for $46.66, representing the amount of the premium paid to the defendant by the deceased upon the issuance and delivery by it of the policy to her, but that plaintiff refused to accept the check.

The testimony affords no reasonable ground for doubting that the deceased died from the effects of strychnine poisoning. Indeed, there was not at the trial any controversy upon that proposition. The single question submitted to the jury for decision was whether the poison was self-administered with a suicidal intent, and, the jury having arrived at and returned a verdict negativing the suicide theory, the question as to that issue which is submitted for decision here is whether this court is required to hold, as *445 a matter of law, that the result thus reached by the jury is devoid of sufficient support in the evidence. The evidence upon that question consists entirely of circumstances, certain of which, it must in frankness be conceded, with more or less directness lend color to the defendant’s theory of suicide, and yet, when those same circumstances are viewed in the light of certain other evidentiary considerations, disclosed by the evidence, it becomes, from the standpoint of a reviewing court, a problem, not free from difficulty, to account for the fact of the death of deceased upon the theory that it was purposely self-imposed. The situation so presented, therefore, seems to lead to the conclusion that the case, as to the evidence, is one in which a court of review is required to accept the conclusion arrived at by the jury. To be more explicit, upon the question whether Miss Beers took the poison by mistake or with the deliberate purpose of destroying her life, the evidence, taken as a whole, is of a character, as to its evidentiary significance and effect, that renders the deductions to be drawn therefrom necessarily, peculiarly and entirely subject co the interpretative function and discretion of the jury.

The general facts may and will be narratively stated herein, specific reference being given to such portions of the testimony as are deemed of special importance in their effect upon the conclusion herein arrived at.

At the time of her death Nellie L. Beers was between nineteen and twenty years of age. Her mother resided about two miles from the city of Chico. The deceased, however, had been for some time prior to her death residing at 434 Olive Street, Chico, with Mr. and Mrs. Ed Miller, the latter being her sister. Although devoid of preliminary educational training, she conceived an ambition to become a stenographer and concluded to attend part-time school at the Chico High School, taking special training in stenography, and took up her residence with her brother-in-law and sister, above named, because it was more convenient to the school. It appears that the Millers had been residing for some time in a rented house, but had in process of construction a home of their own at 1230' South Broadway, Chico. It further appears that the contractors engaged in constructing the house were slow in completing it and it was not ready for occupancy for some time after the *446

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Bluebook (online)
262 P. 380, 87 Cal. App. 440, 1927 Cal. App. LEXIS 87, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beers-v-california-state-life-insurance-calctapp-1927.