Boring v. Kansas City Life Insurance Company

274 S.W.2d 233, 1955 Mo. LEXIS 684
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJanuary 10, 1955
Docket44373
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 274 S.W.2d 233 (Boring v. Kansas City Life Insurance Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Boring v. Kansas City Life Insurance Company, 274 S.W.2d 233, 1955 Mo. LEXIS 684 (Mo. 1955).

Opinion

HOLLINGSWORTH, Judge.

This is an action to recover accidental death benefits under a $5,000 policy of insurance issued by defendant on the life of Eugene E. Boring, in which plaintiff, Lois M. Boring, the wife of insured, is the beneficiary. The insured was found dead from a gunshot wound on November 12, 1950, while the policy was in effect. Defendant, upon proof of death, paid the face amount of the policy, but denied liability under a double indemnity provision to the effect that if death of the insured resulted from accidental means as therein defined it would pay an additional sum of $5,000. The petition’ alleges vexatious refusal to pay said additional sum and prays judgment for $5,000, together with a penalty of 10% and attorney’s fees in the sum of $2,500, a total of $8,000.

Trial of the issues resulted in a verdict and judgment for defendant. Plaintiff appealed, alleging error in the refusal of the trial court to permit Dr. Gus C. Salley, an osteopathic physician, to give in evidence his opinion as to which of three gunshot wounds found in the body of insured was fired first, and in the refusal of an instruction declaring that there was a legal presumption that the death of insured was accidental and not self-inflicted or intentionally inflicted by another.

The pertinent provisions of the policy are:

“If the death of the Insured shall result, directly and independently of all other causes, solely from bodily injury, effected directly by external, violent and accidental means, * . * *, the Company will pay the sum of Five Thousand Dollars, * * *; provided that there shall be no liability under this provision for additional indemnity for death by accidental means for death resulting from self-destruction, while sane or insane, or from injury intentionally inflicted by another * *

Plaintiff placed in evidence the insurance policy and the official certificate of death and rested her case in chief. The certificate recites the cause of death as “(a) Shot through head by 16-gauge shotgun” and “(b) Also two other shots into abdomen by a 16-gauge shotgun.”

Defendant’s evidence:

The insured and plaintiff resided at Warsaw, Missouri, where insured operated a retail drug store. He was past 43 years of age at the time of his death .on Sunday, November 12, 1950. A deposition of plaintiff introduced in evidence by defendant revealed that on Friday, November 10th, insured seemed worried, was just worried; on Saturday morning, November 11th, at breakfast, he was extremely worried and said that someone was trying to blackmail him, but he made no further explanation of the matter. He was perfectly normal in his speech and manner. That evening, he and plaintiff ate supper with their children, at which time he again mentioned blackmailing and named a certain man. He had never been sick, was a cheerful man and successful in his business. At 8:30 a. m., on Sunday, November 12th, dressed in a business suit, insured left his home for his *235 place of business. Plaintiff went to church at 11 o’ clock. Upon her return, she found insured’s dead body, dressed in hunting clothes, lying on its side back of their garage.

Deputy Sheriff Ben Jenkins arrived at the scene at about 12:10 noon, where he found insured’s body lying on its right side. A 16-gauge Winchester pump shotgun was by his Side, almost parallel with his body, the muzzle close to the mouth of deceased. His left arm was extended “right toward the stock where the fingers of his left hand were within two inches of the trigger.” Two discharged 16-gauge shotgun shells were found near the body and a third discharged shell was still in' the chamber of the gun. The gun measured 32 inches from the trigger to the" muzzle. The body was dressed in hunting clothes. A light cloth jacket with zipper front, part-way zipped up, was on the body. The jacket was zipped up to a point that covered two wounds in the abdomen, which were not discovered until the body was undressed at the funeral home.

Jenkins examined the ground around the body for signs of a struggle or scuffle but found no such marks. ' The two emjity shells were picked up and the gun with one empty shell partly ejected was placed in Jenkins’ car.

Jack Reser, Sheriff of Benton County,saw insured’s unclothed body about 4 o’clock that afternoon at the Reser Funeral Home, where witness was also an embalmer. He completed the embalming óf the body. There were gunshot wounds in the left abdominal cavity and one' in the mouth. He did not recall seeing any marks, cuts or bruises on the lips or outside of the mouth. He and Deputy Sheriff Jenkins and State Patrolman Glen Means fired three or more shells from the shotgun found by the body of deceased. These fired shells, together with the fired shells found by the body and in the shotgun and the shotgun, were delivered to the state patrolman.

On cross-examination, the sheriff identified a 16-gauge shotgun handed him by plaintiffs counsel as being the shotgun found by deceased’s body and explained in detail its working parts. (We have found no direct admission in the record that the shotgun produced was the property of the insured, but the fact seems to be conceded.) It holds three shells. If there is a shell in the barrel chamber, it can be fired once without pumping, but cannot be fired again without a manual pumping action.

State Patrolman Glen Means saw the clothed body of deceased about 12:50 p. m. It was then being moved to the funeral parlor. Deceased had on hunting trousers, laced boots, a light zipper jacket and a hunting belt. The jacket was zipped up about halfway to the collar. There was blood on the barrel and inside the muzzle of the gun. The blood in the muzzle indicated that the barrel had to be in deceased’s mouth a short while after it was fired or in the corner of the mouth where it could run out into the barrel. Witness compared the length of his arm with that of deceased and found they had about the same reach. He then held the muzzle beside his mouth and was able to reach the trigger. Witness wrapped a paper around the gun, the fired shells were marked, and all were taken to the State Highway Patrol Headquarters Laboratory in Jefferson City., Witness also took deceased’s fingerprints at the funeral parlor and sent them to the laboratory.

John F. Williams, a graduate chemist in charge of the laboratory of the State Highway Patrol and extensively experienced in scientific investigation, examined the shotgun for fingerprints. Only two legible fingerprints were found. They were those of deceased. The three discharged shells found by the body of deceased and four shells fired from the gun by Trooper Means were found to have been fired from the same gun.

Dr. A. W. Moreland, an osteopathic physician and surgeon, Coroner of Benton County, saw the body of deceased at the Reser Funeral Home. The zipper on the jacket worn by deceased was zipped about halfway between the waist and collar. Witness unzipped the jacket and then no *236 ticed two gunshot wounds in the abdomen. These- wounds could not be seen before the jacket was unzipped. There were no holes in the jacket. Powder marks about the size of the shots were around the wounds and on the undershirt, which had only one hole in it, about the size of a half dollar. There was a similar hole in the outer woolen shirt, which also had powder marks around it.

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Bluebook (online)
274 S.W.2d 233, 1955 Mo. LEXIS 684, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boring-v-kansas-city-life-insurance-company-mo-1955.