Castens v. Supreme Lodge Knights & Ladies of Honor

175 S.W. 264, 190 Mo. App. 57, 1915 Mo. App. LEXIS 405
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 6, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 175 S.W. 264 (Castens v. Supreme Lodge Knights & Ladies of Honor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Castens v. Supreme Lodge Knights & Ladies of Honor, 175 S.W. 264, 190 Mo. App. 57, 1915 Mo. App. LEXIS 405 (Mo. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinion

NORTONI, J.- —

This is a suit on a certificate of life insurance. Plaintiff recovered and defendant prosecutes the appeal.

Defendant is a fraternal benefit society, and plaintiff is the beneficiary designated in the certificate sued upon. In September, 1905, plaintiff’s son, Albert H. Castens, affiliated with defendant order, and the certificate of insurance, in an amount not exceeding $1000, here sued upon, was issued to him in favor of his father, plaintiff. Among other things, the contract of insurance provides that if the insured shall, within five years after becoming a member of the order, die by an act of suicide, whether sane or insane at the time of the act, the relief fund certificate of such member shall become null and void and the payment of no part of the sum named therein shall be made.

In its answer, defendant invokes this provision of the contract, and pleads that the insured came to his death by his own act intentionally done — that is, that [61]*61he committed suicide — and, therefore, no recovery should be allowed. Plaintiff introduced the certificate of insurance in evidence, showed all of the dues and assessments were paid thereon, and that the insured member, Albert H. Castens, his son, died at the age of twenty-three years on the 13th day of November, 1908, which is within five years of the time he became a member of the order. After having thus made a primafacie case, defendant assumed the burden of defense and introduced an abundance of evidence tending to prove the suicide of the insured as pleaded by it. Among other things, defendant introduced the affidavit of a friend, made part of the proof of death, which recited that the insured came to his death as a result of suicide. However, under instructions given, the jury found the issue for plaintiff — that is, to the effect that Albert H. Castens came to his death from some cause other than suicide — and awarded a verdict for the amount of the insurance.

It is urged the judgment should be reversed because the evidence is conclusive to the effect that the insured came to his death by his own hand from a gunshot wound intentionally inflicted with a view of committing suicide, and that especially is this true in view of the admission contained in the proof of death which is in nowise contradicted or explained. It may be said that there is no evidence whatever in the .record tending to show that the insured came to his death from a natural cause, or from accident, except such as attends the situation by virtue of the usual presumptions which obtain in like cases. It is concede^ on both sides that he died from a pistol shot in his left breast on the day and date mentioned — that is, November 13, 1908. ■

It appears that plaintiff owns a roadhouse on the Gravois road near or about the outskirts of the city-of St. Louis. He resided there with his family and conducted a dramshop, restaurant, and wagon yard. [62]*62The insured, Albert H. Castens, plaintiff’s son, had given- a party at the roadhouse a night or two before, and was, during the while, admonished by his father to desist from drinking too much. The young man, it is said, took umbrage at this and went away, but returned the following afternoon. Shortly after his return and about four o’clock in the afternoon, a pistol shot was heard in the yard, and the insured was found lying at the entrance of a shed with a pistol beside him and a bullet wound in the left breast, from which he died. He was removed by a couple of men under the direction of plaintiff, from the place where he had fallen, into the waiting room of the roadhouse, immediately. The insured was still living at the time and one of those who assisted in removing him into the building, Mr. Stumpf, said he talked to his father about being sorry about killing himself. “He said he was sorry he tried to kill himself; that is all I paid any attention to.” Dr. William Baron, who was called in forthwith and administered treatment to the young man said: “After I made him as comfortable as I could, under the circumstances, the father came in and said, ‘My boy, why did you do this?’ The young man answered, ‘Father, forgive me for what I have done.’ ” The patient - was removed to St. Mary’s Hospital on the advice of Dr. Baron, and Dr. Rassieur was called in attendance as well. Dr. Rassieur, testifying from his minutes, made at the time while standing at the bedside of the patient, probably two hours after the shot was fired, said the young man stated to him in substance that he shot himself in a fit of alcoholic depression. At the time, he was still conscious, but died suddenly an hour or two later, between eight and nine o ’clock the same evening.' The young man told Dr. Rassieur, according to his testimony, that he had been drinking, and the doctor said he was run down from drink.

[63]*63In rebuttal, a police officer testified for plaintiff that b.e was present at tbe hospital all of the time ex-, cept about fifteen minutes when Dr. Rassieur was with the patient, and that- he heard the insured make no statement to the doctor to the effect that he had shot himself. Furthermore, in rebuttal, plaintiff testified that he did not know whether his son shot himself or not, but detailed the facts about having heard a pistol shot in the yard and finding the young man lying near the shed with the pistol beside him and the wound in his breast. Plaintiff denies that his son said, “Papa, forgive me for what I have done” and asserts that he said no more than “Papa, forgive me.” Plaintiff admits that he was questioned by the coroner on the following day, but says he did not appear at the coroner’s office, and gave his statement over the telephone only. This statement plaintiff signed a day or "two later, but said he did not read it before signing it. The purport of this statement is, that the young man had stayed away from home over night, returned, went into the kitchen of the house, had a pistol in his hand, swung it around, and went from the restaurant into the yard. “I went in the back, a shot fell, and he was standing in the yard by the shed and I seen him fall and I run up to him and said, ‘What have you done?’ and he said, 'Papa, forgive me.’ ”

Concerning the proof of death, it appears that such was made out and furnished at the instance of plaintiff, and, as parcel of it, an affidavit made by his friend,'Richard Kolle, stated the insured came to his death by suicide. Richard Kolle, it appears, was plaintiff’s friend, the driver of a beer wagon by occupation, and was godfather to the insured. He had no knowledge as to the cause of death of the insured except what plaintiff had told him. Concerning this matter, plaintiff testifies as follows:

“Q. You told Kolle what happened? A. I don’t know. Q. But you got him to make out the affidavit— [64]*64the death affidavit? A. Yes, sir. Q. You remember when he signed that paper you had to send to the lodge, don’t you? A. Yes, sir. Q. You remember that now? A. Yes, sir . . . Q. Richard Kolle is your particular friend? A. Yes, sir, he was godfather over my boy. Q. You told him about the death of your son and how it happened? A. Yes, sir. I don’t know how it happened. Q. But you told him about it, didn’t you? A. I guess I did; I don’t know; I am bound to do it, I guess. Q. You got him to make an affidavit, didn’t you, as your friend? He made an affidavit about the death of your son, didn’t he? A. I don’t know. Q. He proved the death, as it were? A. I suppose he did. Q. You remember that, don’t you? A. He was godfather for him. Q. And as godfather you had him make the proof of death of your boy? A. Yes, sir; sure. Q.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
175 S.W. 264, 190 Mo. App. 57, 1915 Mo. App. LEXIS 405, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/castens-v-supreme-lodge-knights-ladies-of-honor-moctapp-1915.