Collins v. Woodmen of the World Life Insurance Society

19 S.E.2d 586, 124 W. Va. 195, 1942 W. Va. LEXIS 67
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 24, 1942
Docket9242
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 19 S.E.2d 586 (Collins v. Woodmen of the World Life Insurance Society) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Collins v. Woodmen of the World Life Insurance Society, 19 S.E.2d 586, 124 W. Va. 195, 1942 W. Va. LEXIS 67 (W. Va. 1942).

Opinions

Riley, Judge:

Fritz Collins instituted this action in the Circuit Court of Mercer County against Woodmen of the World Life Insurance Society, a fraternal benefit corporation, to recover the double indemnity benefit of one thousand dollars provided in a certificate of insurance issued by the defendant on the life of her husband, Thomas D. Collins. Defendant prosecutes this writ of error to a judgment in plaintiff’s favor based upon a jury verdict.

The policy recites that the defendant is a fraternal benefit society incorporated under the laws of Nebraska. A supplementary agreement to the policy provides for payment of double indemnity benefit upon proof that “the death of the member occurred in consequence of bodily injury effected solely through external, violent and accidental means, of which, * * * there is a visible contusion or wound on the exterior of the body, and that such death occurred * * * as the direct result thereof, independently of all other causes, * * *” and that the benefit therein does not cover "* * * death resulting from any violation of law* *

The decisive question in this case is two-fold: (1) Did insured’s death result ‘from any violation of law; and (2) *197 if so, was it such as was contemplated by the parties to the insurance contract as an excepted risk?

About six o’clock in the evening of November 30, 1940, insured was riding on a motorcycle in the direction of Peterstown, West Virginia, on the public highway in Giles County, Virginia, between Rich Creek, Virginia, and the Virginia-West Virginia line. Inez Suttle, a neighbor girl, fifteen years of age, was seated on the motorcycle behind insured. As the result of a collision between an automobile being driven in the opposite direction by one Gwinn, insured was killed. Gwinn’s wife and children were with him in the car. The collision occurred after dark on a dry macadam road, where the road had about an eighteen-foot width and a descending grade of two and one-half per cent in the direction the automobile was traveling. To the right of the paved road in the direction of Peters-town there was an earth berm, varying from 6 feet to 7.3 feet, and a berm about eight feet wide on the opposite side at the point of the collision. The road was straight in the direction of Peterstown for a distance of three hundred and forty-five feet and seven hundred and ninety feet toward Rich Creek.

The testimony of the eyewitnesses bearing on the question of how the collision occurred conflicts sharply. Inez Suttle testified that the motorcycle was being driven about forty miles an hour; that, though dark, she saw it was being propelled to the right of the white center line; and that Gwinn’s car, headed toward Rich Creek, was being driven on the wrong side of the road and into the motorcycle. To the contrary, Gwinn testified that while he was proceeding with his wife and children along the road in the direction of Rich Creek, at a speed of about thirty-five miles an hour, insured’s motorcycle, coming at a high rate of speed on the wrong side and in the opposite direction, caused him to swerve so that the right wheels of his automobile were three feet on the berm, struck his car, broke off the left front wheel and headlight, and rendered ineffectual the foot-brakes. He further testified that because of the grade of the road and the loss of his left front wheel his car swerved to the left and *198 onto the opposite side of the road. Mrs. H. E. Davis testified that she was standing on her porch a short distance away, and had a full view of the accident; that the motorcycle was being driven at a high rate of speed; and that from the headlights she saw it was on the wrong side of the road. Mrs. Gwinn, who was ill at the time of the trial, did not testify, and the Gwinn children were too young to be of any avail.

Defendant’s counsel says that the record discloses undisputed “physical” facts sufficient to override any reasonable inferences which may be drawn in plaintiff’s favor from the testimony of the eyewitnesses. Several witnesses, including a Virginia state police officer, Stoutamyer, whose statement was taken in lieu of testimony, stated without contradiction that immediately after the accident both vehicles came to rest on the left side of the center line looking toward Rich Creek. Gwinn testified that after the collision, he observed “There was a sort of a digging in the hard surface where my wheel was knocked off that the car did and also a digging from this point to where the motor-cycle stopped.” Stoutamyer stated that he visited the scene of the accident about a half hour after it occurred; that “The automobile was at rest on left hand side of road looking towards Rich Creek, and marks on the pavement ran from its location back towards Peterstown obliquely across the road to a point about two and one-half feet from the edge of the hard surface on the left hand side looking towards Peterstown.”; and that he noticed dirt ón the pavement about two feet from the edge on the left hand side looking toward Peterstown, and the marks apparently from an automobile tire and about three feet off the hard surface and on the berm of the road.

The witness Ballard testified that he visited the scene shortly after the accident and observed that “There was a mark, a single mark, leading from over on the left hand side of the white line over to the motorcycle, over to where the motor-cycle was, and there was another mark, and these marks were indented into the hard surface of the road, leading in a kind of circular fashion over to where the automobile was on the right hand side of the *199 white line,” and further that the two marks led from the motorcycle and automobile, respectively, back to the same point, which point was on the right side of the white line looking toward Rich Creek.

Linville Rowe, who accompanied Ballard to the scene of the accident, on direct examination, substantially corroborated Ballard but, on cross-examination, he testified that the marks that he saw were on the right hand side of the road looking toward Rich Creek, and that there were no marks on the right hand side of the road going from Rich Creek to Peterstown “that I saw.”

Plaintiff’s counsel say that Rowe’s testimony conflicts with that of Stoutamyer, Ballard and Gwinn. It is asserted strongly that, because Rowe saw no marks on the right side of the road in the direction in which the motorcycle was running, the jury had a right to say none was there. It is further asserted that because this witness saw no dirt on the road or tire marks on the berm, as Stoutamyer stated, the jury could infer also that Stoutamyer’s statement in that regard and Gwinn’s testimony that he drove his car onto the berm on his right are untrue. This, in all deference to counsel, does not follow. The evidence discloses that all witnesses who testified to the position of the vehicles at rest and the marks on the road and berm viewed the scene after dark. Under these circumstances the fact that a witness fails to see marks on the berm is of little moment. Of course, negative evidence is entitled to jury consideration, but such evidence does not necessarily conflict with the positive testimony of disinterested witnesses. The fact that Rowe noticed no marks on the left of the center line in the direction of Rich Creek does not prove that none was there.

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Bluebook (online)
19 S.E.2d 586, 124 W. Va. 195, 1942 W. Va. LEXIS 67, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/collins-v-woodmen-of-the-world-life-insurance-society-wva-1942.