Bryan v. Aetna Life Ins. Co.

130 S.W.2d 85, 174 Tenn. 602, 10 Beeler 602, 1938 Tenn. LEXIS 129
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1939
StatusPublished
Cited by78 cases

This text of 130 S.W.2d 85 (Bryan v. Aetna Life Ins. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bryan v. Aetna Life Ins. Co., 130 S.W.2d 85, 174 Tenn. 602, 10 Beeler 602, 1938 Tenn. LEXIS 129 (Tenn. 1939).

Opinion

Me,. Chibe Justice, Green

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This suit was brought by the beneficiary of a life insurance policy, excluding from its coverage death of the insured by suicide within two years from the date of its issue. The Insurance Company defended on the theory that the insured committed suicide. Issues were submitted to a jury and found in favor of the beneficiary. The chancellor rendered a decree upon the verdict, which decree was affirmed by the Court of Appeals. The defendant Insurance Company filed a petition for certiorari, which we have granted.

The policy in question was issued'on January 14, 1935. Insured met his death on January 3, 1936.

The insured was manager of a loan company located at Knoxville. He was apparently in good health, of cheer- *605 fnl disposition, and the evidence indicates that he was happily married. His widow, the complainant and the beneficiary of the policy, had two children by a former marriage, of whom the insured was said to have been fond. He also had contracted an earlier marriage hut had been divorced from his first wife.

The insured drew a salary of $200 a month. Evidence in the case indicates that he had accumulated some property and was worth about $5,000 a.t the time of his death. Other evidence introduced indicates that some discrepancies were discovered in his accounts after his death. These discrepancies, however, amounted to only $200 or $300, and it is possible that they resulted from irregularities rather than any conscious wrongdoing on the part of the insured. At any rate, these discrepancies had not been discovered during his lifetime, he was not being pressed about them, and he seems to have been abundantly able to adjust them.

The insured had lived in Knoxville but a short while at the time of his death. Previously he had worked in Chattanooga, in Tampa, Florida, and perhaps other places in the same line of business. There is proof indicating that he was not satisfied with his local employment at Knoxville and had made application to another loan company for a similar job shortly before his death without success.

So far as the record shows, there was nothing in the home life or the business life of the insured to make existence unbearable and we are not able to discover a motive for suicide on the evidence appearing in this record.

On the morning of January 3,1936, the insured left his home in good spirits according to his wife, and reached his office at about eight-thirty, according to the testimony *606 of employees there. These employees noticed nothing unusual in his demeanor. After being in the office for a few minutes, the insured left to inspect certain property upon which an application had been made for a loan.

Shortly after nine o’clock, at a point on the Ramsey Ferry Road, a few miles out of Knoxville, an automobile was seen by a witness Ford to stop for a few minutes, back up a short distance, and turn off on a road that led from this highway to a place known as the Kreis Dairy Farm. The automobile proceeded along this dairy road for a short distance and stopped on the side of the road. A little later in the morning, the insured was found in this automobile, shot through the head, with a pistol in his hand. An ambulance was summoned, insured still’being alive, but he died on the way to the hospital.

The witness Ford, who saw this car stop on the highway and then turn up the dairy road, noticed but one person in the car. The point at which the car came to rest was about 315 feet from tlie river and from á house boat in which the witness F!ord and his family lived. Ford said that the car was within his view during the time it stood on the dairy road. That he was sitting at the window looking at the car almost constantly, only getting up occasionally to go to the stove to spit. He was chewing tobacco. Ford did riot see anyone approach or leave the car and, as stated above, he noticed only one person in the car.

Obviously the insured could not háve’ operated this car in the manner in which Ford testified had he received this wound in the head before the car came within Ford’s vision. However, although he said he was looking at the car nearly all the time, and evidence'indicates that his house boat was a flimsy structure, Ford heard no shot *607 while the car was stopped on the dairy road or before— the distance of the ear from Ford being abont 100 yards.. The pistol found in the insured’s hand was a .32 caliber, long-barreled, Smith & Wesson.

Two witnesses, going to the Kreis Dairy Farm on business, passed the automobile in which the insured was found as that car stood on the side of the dairy road. These witnesses paid no attention to the car or the occupant as they passed. Shortly after they reached the dairy farm, a woman seems to have passed the parked car, noticed something that excited her very much, and came to the farm in a flustered condition. On her report, the witnesses who had previously passed the car went back to make an investigation. They stopped their own car, got out and went to the other car, saw the body of the insured slumped over, the pistol in his hand and pointing out the window. Seeing insured with a pistol, not realizing his condition, the witnesses summoned officers who arrived shortly.

The window on the driver’s side of the car was down. All the other windows of the car were closed. There was no broken glass or any sign of a bullet in the car. The clothing of insured did not appear to be disarranged. The proof tends to show that the insured did not own a pistol. Neither did he own an automobile. There is no evidence in the record tending to show to whom the pistol in the insured’s hands, or the automobile in which the insured was found, belonged. Nobody knows the owner either of the weapon or of the car.

The body of the insured was sent to his old home in Tampa, Florida, for burial. Some three weeks thereafter, it was disinterred ánd an examination made of his head by a pathologist, apparently of good qualifica *608 tions and experience. This doctor testified as to the course of the hall through the head. It entered on the right side and lodged under the sldn on the left side. The doctor removed the bullet and it seems to have been offered in evidence. This witness testified that there were no signs of powder burn about the point of entry of this bullet. That powder burn is a sort of tattoo and does not wash off when a body is prepared for burial. The witness further testified to certain discolorations about the face and eyes of the insured which he seemed to be of opinion resulted from violence, not disintegration. The path of the bullet through the head, in the opinion of the witness, negatived any idea that these discolorations resulted from the gunshot wound.

Evidence was introduced tending to show that the insured was a small man and that he could not himself have held a pistol of the kind found in his hand far enough away from himself to avoid powder burns when such pistol was fired into his head. Only one shot had been fired out of the pistol found and tests were made ■ with this weapon and ammunition showing the distance at which its fire would cause powder burns.

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Bluebook (online)
130 S.W.2d 85, 174 Tenn. 602, 10 Beeler 602, 1938 Tenn. LEXIS 129, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bryan-v-aetna-life-ins-co-tenn-1939.