Bertschinger v. New York Life Insurance

111 P.2d 1016, 166 Or. 307, 1941 Ore. LEXIS 73
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 20, 1941
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 111 P.2d 1016 (Bertschinger v. New York Life Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bertschinger v. New York Life Insurance, 111 P.2d 1016, 166 Or. 307, 1941 Ore. LEXIS 73 (Or. 1941).

Opinion

*309 LUSK, J.

The defendant, New York Life Insurance Company, has appealed from a judgment in favor of the plaintiff in an action upon a policy of life insurance which provided for payment to the plaintiff, the beneficiary therein, of double the face of the policy in event of the death of the insured resulting directly and independently of all other causes from bodily injury effected solely through external, violent and accidental cause. The insured, the plaintiff’s husband, came to his death by drowning while the policy was in effect. The company paid the plaintiff the face of the policy, $5,000, but refused to pay the additional sum of $5,000 for the reason that, as it claimed, the insured’s death was caused by self-destruction and not by accident. A trial by a jury, in which that was the sole issue of fact, resulted in a verdict for the plaintiff.

The defendant has brought to this court five assignments of error which, however, raise substantially but two questions — the first relating to a ruling of the circuit court excluding certain testimony offered by the defendant, and the second based upon alleged errors in the instructions.

A brief statement of the pertinent facts becomes necessary.

The insured, Adolf Bertschinger, was a naturopathic physician residing in Portland. The policy was issued to him in September, 1922, and his wife, the plaintiff, was named beneficiary. On April 28, 1938, Bertschinger was convicted in the circuit court for Multnomah county on a charge of practicing medicine without a license, and on May 2nd was sentenced to imprisonment in the county jaü for a term of six months and to pay a fine of. $250, the judgment providing, *310 however, that upon payment of the fine he would be paroled to his attorney. He paid the fine and the provision for parole became operative. On May 16th Bertschinger left Portland on a trip down the Willamette valley for the dual purpose, as the plaintiff claimed, of fishing and soliciting financial aid from naturopathic physicians of Bertschinger’s acquaintance in prosecuting an appeal to the supreme court from his judgment of conviction. He went first to Silverton and then to Mehama on the North Santiam river. He was last seen alive about a mile from Mehama, properly clothed and equipped for fishing, going in the direction of the river. The following morning a searching party found a fishing rod and a jar of salmon eggs, claimed to have belonged to Bertschinger, on the banks of the stream in the vicinity of the place where apparently he had gone to fish. His body was found in the river on June 5, 1938, about nine miles down-stream from Mehama.

The proof on the question of whether Dr. Bertschinger came to his death by accident or by suicide was of necessity entirely circumstantial. On the part of the plaintiff the effort was to show that he was not the character of man to take refuge from the difficulties of life in self-destruction, that his actions and demeanor on the last day that anyone saw him were those of a man looking forward to life rather than death, and, finally, that the conditions at the place where Bertschinger supposedly had been fishing — the steep and slippery river bank where the rod was found, the position and condition of the rod, and the swift current of the stream — all tended to make a case of accidental drowning. On the part of the defendant the contention, mainly,..was that Bertschinger’s con *311 vietion of practicing medicine without a license and other misconduct, presently to be mentioned, supplied the motive for suicide.

In support of this theory the defendant called as a witness Mr. T. B. Handley, deputy district attorney for Multnomah county, who had prosecuted the criminal case against Bertschinger, and offered to prove by him that at the time of passing sentence, Handley, in open court and in the presence of Bertschinger, had made the following statement to the court:

“If the Court please, I think it necessarily follows from this jury’s verdict and from the evidence, while it is true that the indictment charges a surgical operation, the evidence showed and I believe the jury was convinced, that the surgical operation was an abortion or an attempt at an abortion. The facts surrounding it would indicate, taken in a private home, done secretly, and all of the evidence would be circumstances significant of the fact there was a tendency to use abortion, and this girl has positively testified an abortion was performed and a jury has found him guilty by ten to two when they necessarily had to take into consideration such an operation. And this defendant, I might say — I am so informed — has been a subject of complaint to the district attorney’s office along this very line, and right at, within the last few days, another case in which he is represented to have taken part in the same kind of case, now pending, and the investigation of a case that has resulted in serious consequences leading to a fatality, and we regard him as one who has been engaged in the practice of performing abortions and we believe that this Court has established the fact that he has, and under the circumstances and conditions I am satisfied that he should not be temporized with in this case at all but that a severe penalty should be imposed, because this is a matter of a serious nature and something that must be stopped, and from the evidence in this case and the verdict of the jury and the other information we have, we believe that *312 this man has been indulging in this kind of practice, that should be stopped, and under the circumstances the State believes in a severe penalty being imposed, which can’t be very severe under the charge of which he was found guilty. He was fortunate that he was only -tried upon a misdemeanor, and the district attorney’s office recommends a maximum sentence.”

The plaintiff’s objection to the foregoing offer of proof was sustained by the court. It is the defendant’s position that the effect of the ruling was to exclude evidence tending to disclose Bertschinger’s state of mind and a motive for suicide. To deal properly with this contention further reference to the record must be made.

It is in evidence that a great deal of the testimony in the trial of Dr. Bertschinger for practicing medicine without a license related to an alleged abortion.

While the defendant was not permitted to introduce the entire statement of Mr. Handley above quoted, it was permitted to prove by Handley that he stated to the court in Bertsehinger’s presence that at that time the district attorney’s office was investigating a charge of abortion against Bertschinger, the case being a different one from that in which sentence was then being passed.

The attorney who represented Bertschinger in that case testified that several days after sentence was passed Bertschinger made the statement to him that “before he would go through a thing like that again he would rather jump in the river.”

The defendant introduced evidence tending to show that on the 10th or 11th of May, 1938, Bertschinger performed, an abortion on a young woman, who, after her operation, became desperately ill and was admitted to a hospital; that Bertschinger told a. sister of the *313

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Bluebook (online)
111 P.2d 1016, 166 Or. 307, 1941 Ore. LEXIS 73, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bertschinger-v-new-york-life-insurance-or-1941.