Coles v. New York Casualty Co.

87 A.D. 41
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 1, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 87 A.D. 41 (Coles v. New York Casualty Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Coles v. New York Casualty Co., 87 A.D. 41 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1903).

Opinion

Hirschberg, J.:

The action is brought to recover the indemnity stipulated in a policy of accident insurance, issued by the defendant to the plaintiff. At the close of the plaintiff’s evidence the learned trial court granted the defendant’s motion to dismiss the complaint, which motion was made upon the ground that the plaintiff has shown by his own testimony that he violated the terms of the policy at the time of the injury.”

The plaintiff’s occupation is that of bartender. On the occasion of his receiving the injury of which he complains he had opened the door of the bar room where he is employed, and ordered an individual to leave the place because of some disturbance he was creating in the course of a noisy quarrel with some other person or persons. This individual grappled the plaintiff, causing him tó fall, and thereby the injury was inflicted. The plaintiff testified : I asked him not to use such abusive language to these other two peo[43]*43pie and he kept on getting more abusive, and so I went to the door and opened the door and told him to get out. When I walked back toward him he grappled me, and during the struggle there we both fell down and I injured my hand so 1 was laid up several weeks with it. * * * I went to the door and opened the door and said, I want yon to go out, and as I was coming back toward him he grabbed me and we struggled there and fell down together and fell out of the door, and that is the time I injured my hand. As I was going toward him he grabbed me and I protected myself. The scuffle kept up a minute or two before we went outside. The two of us finally fell through the doorway. We both went .out together. The accident was the result of the fall and riot because I put him out. We were struggling there. I was pushing him toward the door. * * * I was not quarrelling with this man, simply protecting myself. He ' jumped into me. I was, perhaps, five or six feet from the door when he did it. When 1 opened the door I ordered him out and I intended he would walk out. * * * Q. I did not understand whether you stated or not that you used any more force than was absolutely necessary to defend yourself against the attacks of this person ? A. I used force enough to protect myself; I wasn’t going to let him throw me down. I was simply defending myself. • I told him to go out and he grabbed me. Q. At that time you had no idea of putting him out? A. I ordered him out. Q. I mean after he took hold of you ? A. No, sir.”

The only terms of the policy which the plaintiff can possibly be deemed to have violated are those which provide that the insurance does not cover injuries “resulting, directly or indirectly, wholly or in part,” from “ fighting, wrestling, scuffling, altercation, feud, quarrel or assault,” or from “ voluntary or unnecessary exposure to danger.” ■ I do not think the dismissal of the complaint can be sustained,- The plaintiff was insured as a bartender, and while his version of the occurrence occasioning the injury is not consistent in every detail, a jury might have concluded from the evidence that he was not injured while actually engaged in an ..attempt to forcibly eject the person who assaulted him; that he was lawfully entitled to insist that such person should leave the place because of his offensive and violent behavior; that he had no reason to apprehend bodily harm as a consequence of ordering such person out of the [44]*44room; and that the assault was not provoked by hostile demonstra-, tion or otherwise. I do not mean to intimate that there can be no recovery where 'the insured is injured while lawfully, engaged in using force upon the person of another. That question is not necessarily involved in the determination of this controversy. But the fact that the plaintiff was injured, if it be a fact, while forcibly resisting the assault which he testified was made upon him, and even the fact, if it be a fact, that he was injured while pushing the aggressor from the room in the course of such resistance, does not necessarily as matter of law operate to deprive him of all claim under the policy, for it cannot be deemed within the contemplation of the contract, in the absence of an express provision to that effect, -that the-, insured should submit without opposition to whatever, violence may be offered him. . The' interests of the insurance company as welt as. his own require that he should avail himself of such reasonable means of self-protection from unjustifiable injury as may be at his command. Nor can the mere fact that he ordered his assailant from the room, assuming that it was his duty to do so, be regarded in law,, under the circumstances of the case, as either inviting or commencing a fight, quarrel or altercation. In the absence of any contrary qualification in the language of the policy, it is reasonable to assume that the fighting, wresting, scuffling, etc., which are guarded against by the provisions in question, refer to altercations for which the insured is in some degree to blame and. in which lie is, to some extent at least, a voluntary participant, and not to those which are unavoidable and beyond his control, or which have not been occasioned by any improper conduct pn his part. The terms of the policy are to be strictly construed against the insurer, and all questions of doubt resolved in favor of the insured. (Marshall v. Com Travelers' Mut. Acc. Assn., 170 N. Y. 434.) If the provisions; in question were designed to cover every case of injury sustained while the insured was endeavoring to resrst a personal attack, which he did not invite and could not prevent, precise language conveying that idea should have been employed.

' In Insurance Company v. Bennett (90 Tenn. 256) it was held that a provision in an accident policy that “ if death occurs from assault provoked by quarreling no recovery can be had,” must have a reasonable construction, and that the death of the insured cannot [45]*45be regarded as coining within its meaning, unless it occurred as the result of a quarrel provoked by himself, and of so serious a nature that he might reasonably have expected that anger would be thereby aroused and injury inflicted.

In Robinson v. U. S. Mutual Acc. Assn. (68 Fed. Rep. 825) it was held that where the insured, who was unarmed, was shot while engaging in an altercation, his death was accidental within the meaning of the policy, and was not within the exception against death from dueling or fighting. The court said (p. 827): “ The meaning of the word as employed in the contract must have reference to such disasters as are brought about through the culpable intention or designing of the assured. In one sense —r that of scholastic philosophy — nothing is accidental, but we cannot employ such refinements in the interpretations of contracts of indemnity against casualties. Nor do I find that the assured was engaged in fighting or violating the law in that sense which would invalidate the policy.”

In Supreme Council of the Order of Chosen Friends v. Garrigus (104 Ind. 133) it was claimed that the insured was shot while engaged in an affray,” contrary to the provisions of the policy. The court said (p. 140): The charge that appellee was engaged in an affray is, moreover, the statement of a conclusion. * * * If the. facts were stated instead of the conclusion, * * * it might appear that the only part appellee took was in defence of his person against the assaults of his adversary or adversaries, and that thus, whatever injuries he received were received without any fault or wrong on his part.”

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Bluebook (online)
87 A.D. 41, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coles-v-new-york-casualty-co-nyappdiv-1903.