Bennett v. Equitable Life Assur. Soc. of United States

156 So. 290, 180 La. 238, 1934 La. LEXIS 1514
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJuly 2, 1934
DocketNo. 32824.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 156 So. 290 (Bennett v. Equitable Life Assur. Soc. of United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bennett v. Equitable Life Assur. Soc. of United States, 156 So. 290, 180 La. 238, 1934 La. LEXIS 1514 (La. 1934).

Opinion

LAND, Justice.

Plaintiff, as beneficiary, sues to recover $3,941.16 on a life insurance policy for $5,- *240 000, issued by defendant on the life of Jack EL Bennett, plaintiff’s husband, who disappeared from his home in the city of New Orleans in March, 1924.

The suit was filed September 24, 1931.

The only issue involved is whether or not plaintiff's husband has been proved to be dead and plaintiff is therefore entitled to recover under the policy.

The facts alleged in the petition to support the presumption of death are substantially as follows:

That Jack H. Bennett left his home in the city of New Orleans on or about March 27, 1924, and has never been heard from since that time.

That he was 47 years of age when he left.

That he had been suffering from pulmonary tuberculosis, and had been under the treatment of a physician therefor from January, 1923, to December, 1923, but that, instead of improving, his condition steadily grew worse.

That the knowledge that he was afflicted with that disease and that his condition showed no improvement under - treatment made him melancholy and despondent, which was his condition at the time he left March 27, 1924, and during the time just preceding -his departure.

That the condition of his health from the ravages of the disease was such' that it would have been impossible for him to have survived as long as a period of seven years.

That at the time he left aiffl prior thereto he was on good terms with plaintiff, his wife. That he had always been kind, thoughtful, and affectionate towards her, and that his failure to have communicated with her since March, 1924, is irreconcilable with his previous conduct towards her.

That shortly before he left he had suffered a serious hemorrhage of the lungs, and his health was steadily growing worse. That the failure of plaintiff to receive any word from him during the period of more than seven years since he left home, in contrast with his previous thoughtful and affectionate disposition towards plaintiff, can be reasonably explained under no other hypothesis than that he is dead.

An exception of no cause of action was filed by the defendant, and, after argument, was overruled.

After trial on the merits, the court below dismissed plaintiff’s suit, and from this judgment plaintiff has appealed.

Dr. George S. Bel, of New Orleans, the principal witness for plaintiff, testified that he treated Bennett from January 12, 1923, until December 18, 1923, and that Bennett was suffering from pulmonary tuberculosis. He further testified that Bennett was not in the last stages of consumption, and that he never treated him at home, but that the patient came to-his office for all treatments.

The doctor testified:

“Q. Was his condition such that it would have been reasonably possible for it to have brought on his death within a period, say, of seven years after you saw him?
“A. Why, sure, possibly it could have brought on his death.
“Q. Well, would you have considered it very unusual or extraordinary if it brought on his death within that period?
*242 “A. The death of an individual of this type, the way we draw onr conclusions, would be if he followed out the proper directions and took a first class rest and all -such things like that, it is possible he would not have died.
“Q. The question is whether it is possible he would have died?
“A. Yes, sir, it was possible.
“The Court: Q. What are the probabilities, Doctor?
“A. It is just probable. I could not say whether the man is dead or alive or not.” Tr. p. 19.

In Hayes v. Berwick, 2 Mart. (O. S.). 138, 5 Am. Dec. 727, the court said: “By a maxim, consecrated by the best .authorities, every absentee, whose death is not clearly and precisely established, is presumed to live until the age of one hundred years; that is to say .the most remote period of the ordinary life of man. 1 Denisart, 13, Yerbo Absens.

“An absentee is presumed to live until the contrary is proved: otherwise the absence must be such, that the life of a man, who may live one hundred years, should be presumed to have ended. 1 Ferriere, 13, Yerbo Absens.

“Death is never presumed from absence, therefore he who claims an estate, on account of a man’s death, is always held to prove it. An absentee is always reputed living, until his death be proved — or until one hundred years have elapsed since his birth. 2 Fer: riere, 226, Verbo Mort.

“Although a man be absent, and there be no account of him, his death is not to be presumed: they do not proceed to the division of his estate, for he is presumed to live one hundred years. 2 Pigeau, 2.”

See, also, Succession of Herdman, 154 La. 477, 97 So. 664; Quaker Realty Co. v. Starkey, 136 La. 28, 66 So. 386, L. R. A. 1915D, 176.

In Iberia Cypress Co. v. Thorgeson, 116 La. 218, at page 222, 40 So. 682, 683, the court said: “The death of an absentee less than 100 years old is never presumed. Civ. Code, art. 70; Babin v. Phillipon’s Ex’rs, 3 La. 376; Martinez v. Succession of Vives, 32 La. Ann. 305; Rachel v. Jones, 34 La. Ann. 110. Hence the absence of J. H. Bergess from his usual place of residence during 7 years creates no presumption of his death.”

In Martinez v. Succession of Vives, 32 La. Ann. 305, it is said at page 307: “There are occurrences — as a wreck, a battle, or the like —which would authorize a court in presuming the death of one, known to have been exposed to the perils of either; but such a presumption ‘must be weighty, precise and consistent.’ The ascertained facts on which it is rested, must draw with them, as a necessary consequence, the unascertained facts sought to be established, ‘and exclude every other rational conclusion.’ ”

So, where the absentee had not been heard from for more than twenty years, and was last heard from about a year before the great earthquake and fire at San Francisco in the year 1906, and the house in which he was then living had been destroyed in the earthquake and fire, and some 1,200 corpses could not be identified, it was held that the reasonable conclusion was that the absentee was *244 dead. Marrero v. Nelson, 166 La. 122, 116 So. 722.

Where the absentee lived in the city of New Orleans and was shown to have left home on shipboard for a nearby port, where yellow fever was raging, and the boat was shown to have left there for some other distant port, and neither the boat nor the absentee ever returned or was heard of again, the lapse of thirty-five years and absence under such circumstances were held to be sufficient to justify the conclusion that the absentee was dead. Sterrett v. Samuel, 108 La. 346, 32 So. 428.

In Boyd v. New England Mutual Life Insurance Co., 34 La. Ann. 848, the absentee disappeared from a ship at sea.

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156 So. 290, 180 La. 238, 1934 La. LEXIS 1514, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bennett-v-equitable-life-assur-soc-of-united-states-la-1934.