Buckley v. Massachusetts Bonding & Insurance

192 P. 924, 113 Wash. 13, 1920 Wash. LEXIS 761
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 18, 1920
DocketNo. 15874
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 192 P. 924 (Buckley v. Massachusetts Bonding & Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Buckley v. Massachusetts Bonding & Insurance, 192 P. 924, 113 Wash. 13, 1920 Wash. LEXIS 761 (Wash. 1920).

Opinion

Fullerton, J.

On January 21, 1916, the appellant, Massachusetts Bonding and Insurance Company, issued an indemnity policy to one Michael J. Buckley, insuring Buckley for a period of twelve months “against bodily injuries sustained directly and independently of all other causes through accidental means [15]*15(suicide or any attempt thereat, sane or insane, not included).” The policy provided for the payment of the principal sum of the policy to his estate in the case he should meet with an accident which resulted in death, and further provided for a renewal from term to term upon payment of the premium therein stated. At the end of the first period it was renewed for another term of twelve months.

In September, 1917, the respondent, Ellen Buckley, as administratrix of the estate of Michael J. Buckley, deceased, began the present action to recover upon the policy. In her complaint, after alleging the preliminary matters necessarily incident to a right of recovery, further alleged:

“That on to wit the 30th day of June, 1917, said Michael J. Buckley lost his life, resulting from bodily injuries sustained by him direct and independent of all other causes through accidental means, in this, that said Michael J. Buckley on said date accidentally fell into the Spokane river in Spokane county, Washington, and was either drowned by said fall which caused his death, or that, on or about said date, in said county and state, said Michael J. Buckley was murdered by persons to plaintiff unknown, by being struck on the head with some blunt instrument crushing his skull, the exact time and place of said murder being unknown to plaintiff. ’ ’

The appellant took issue upon the allegations of the complaint by answer. It denied the traversible allegations and interposed certain affirmative defenses, upon which the respondent took issue. After issue had been thus joined, a trial was had before the court sitting with a jury, which resulted in a verdict and judgment for the respondent. The appeal before us is prosecuted from this judgment.

The evidence on the part of the respondent tended to show the following facts:

[16]*16Michael J. Buckley, at the time of his death, was an unmarried man, thirty-seven years old, five feet, nine inches, in height, and weighed approximately one hundred and eighty-five pounds. He was of a good natured, jovial disposition, peaceably inclined, temperate generally in his habits, and in good health, save that he had complained at times of having some sort of stomach trouble. He was at this time, and had been for some years prior thereto, the sole proprietor of a restaurant known as the Buckley Brothers Cafe, conducted by him in the city of Spokane. The business was prosperous and profitable. There were no outstanding obligations against it of any kind. The employees were paid weekly on Mondays, and the current bills were paid as they matured. The restaurant was kept open for business at all hours and was given close attention by Buckley. Among other employees, he employed two cashiers, one of them a young woman, whose hours were from nine o’clock in the morning until five o’clock in the afternoon. The other went on duty at eight o ’clock in the evening and stayed until five o’clock in the morning. Between these hours Buckley usually attended to these duties himself. The young woman mentioned also acted as bookkeeper. She took charge of all of the cash received from the ordinary patrons of the restaurant, that taken in while others were on duty as well as that taken while on duty herself, and deposited it in a bank to the credit of Buckley Brothers. She also kept charge of the current bills of the restaurant, prepared for signature the checks issued for the payment of such bills, which Buckley from time to time signed. Certain receipts from the restaurant Buckley appropriated to his private uses. His restaurant was somewhat extensively patronized by soldiérs stationed at the government military post located near the city [17]*17of Spokane, and these paid for meals served them with some sort of credit checks issued by the government. Buckley would collect the checks and at certain periods would send them to military headquarters, when a government warrant would be issued in their payment. These warrants Buckley cashed personally, and would either carry the money received from them on his person or deposit it to his private account in a bank other than the one in which the general receipts from the restaurant were deposited. Seemingly, also, no account of these receipts were kept on restaurant books.

On the day before his disappearance, Buckley was seen to have on his person a considerable sum of money. A part of it was in gold and a part in currency. The gold was in a purse which he carried in the hip pocket of his trousers, and the currency was carried in an ordinary bill book. This book, it was testified, he sometimes carried in his hip pocket and sometimes in the inside pocket of his coat. Buckley was at the restaurant on the morning of Saturday, June 30, 1917, when the woman cashier came into the restaurant on that morning to take up her duties. He was at the cashier’s desk, performing the duties of cashier. “When the woman relieved him he went into the back part of the restaurant, from which place he returned in a few moments and told the cashier that he was going out to purchase a crate of berries. He did not return to the restaurant, in so far as any of the employees testifying knew, nor did he send in the crate of berries. He was later seen near the restaurant, the witness being unable to fix the exact time, although his remembrance was that it was near the noon hour. The record gives no account of his whereabouts between that time and nine o ’clock in the evening. At that time has was met on one of the principal streets of the city, not far from [18]*18his restaurant, by an old-time acquaintance. This acquaintance conversed with him for some fifteen minutes. He testifies that Buckley told him that he had an appointment with some men at a hotel with regard to a deal he was contemplating making for land in Montana; that they had not appeared, and that he was walking around killing time, expecting to meet them later. That Buckley inquired of him what he knew about land in the vicinity of Great Falls, Montana, and incidentally said, “I am carrying more money than I like to .earry, but I might have occasion to use it in the land deal.” He further testifies that Buckley did not tell him the name of the hotel at which he was expecting to meet the party, but that, at the time he met him, he was coming from the direction of a hotel known as the Staff. He also testified that Buckley’s appearance was perfectly normal; that he came up in his usual cheerful way, and that he was the same Mike Buckley he had always known; that he smelled liquor upon him, but could not discover that he was in any degree intoxicated; that among other things talked about than those above mentioned were business conditions generally; Buckley saying, with reference to his own business, that prices were going up so high that it was cutting into the profits. The witness says they compared time by their watches, during the course of their conversation, and it was then a quarter past nine.

Buckley was met near the same place on the same evening by another acquaintance, who had also known him for a number of years. This person was a grain dealer, having his headquarters at a town in an adjacent county.

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Bluebook (online)
192 P. 924, 113 Wash. 13, 1920 Wash. LEXIS 761, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/buckley-v-massachusetts-bonding-insurance-wash-1920.