Connecticut General Life Ins. v. Maher

70 F.2d 441, 1934 U.S. App. LEXIS 4182
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedApril 13, 1934
DocketNo. 6937
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 70 F.2d 441 (Connecticut General Life Ins. v. Maher) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Connecticut General Life Ins. v. Maher, 70 F.2d 441, 1934 U.S. App. LEXIS 4182 (9th Cir. 1934).

Opinion

NORCROSS, District Judge.

From a judgment rendered upon verdict of jury in favor of appellee as beneficiary of a policy of accident insurance issued by appellant, defendant below, the latter appeals. The policy was issued on March 3, 1930, to Helen M. Rohrer, the insured, who was a sistei' of appellee. By the terms of the policy appellant agreed to pay the beneficiary therein named the principal sum of $7,500 in the event of the death of the insured "resulting directly, and independently of all other causes, from bodily injuries effected solely through accidental means." The policy further provided: "This insurance does not cover loss resulting from suicide, or any attempt thereat, sane or insane `~ or by disease or bodily or mental infirmity. * ~` On August 17, 1930, the, insured was killed as a result of falling to the pavement below from a window of an apartment on the sixth floor of an apartment house located on Pacific avenue, San Francisco, in which she was then residing. At the time of her death the insured was the wife of J'. H. loge to whom she was married June 20~, 1930. Appellant by its answer denied that the insured came to her death by accidental means. Upon the [442]*442conclusion of the evidence defendant moved for a directed verdict upon the ground “that the evidence was not sufficient, and in par-tieular that there was no evidence to show that the decedent Mrs. Hoge came to her death by accidental means, but, on the eon-trary, there is affirmative evidence sufficient to justify a directed verdict that she actually committed suicide.” Appellant’s speeifiea-tions of error relied upon on this appeal are as follows:

(1) The verdict of the jury finding that Helen Hoge met her death by accidental means, as required by the policy, is unsupported by the evidence.
(2) The verdict of the jury finding that Helen Hoge did not commit suicide, while sane or insane, is unsupported by the evidence.

The testimony and documentary evidence submitted upon the trial establishes the'following facts: On Sunday night, August 17, 1930, a, special police officer found the body of the insured on the pavement of the apartment house court. Her skull was crushed as a result of a fall. She was fully dressed except coat and hat. In one of her hands was a lady’s handkerchief which was tied in knots. The officer observed an open window above on the sixth floor, which proved to be in the apartment occupied by the decedent and her husband. The window sill was 2 feet from the floor, 35 inches wide, and measured 7 inches across from inside to outside. The lower window sash opened about 21^4 inches. There was found beside the open window a chair. The insured was thirty-two years of age at the time of her death. She was about 51/2 feet m height and weighed • about 130' pounds. She was married in October, 1923, to a Mr. Rohrer from whom she obtained a final decree of divorce five years later. She had been a schoolteacher since the age of eighteen, and continued m such profession until her second marriage.

William Curtis, the police officer who found the body of the insured, testified con-eeming the location of the window of the apartment and the view therefrom, as follows:

“I recall that the fleet came into the harbor the day before. From the bedroom you could look right through that window and see the fleet coming in. And the further you leaned out the further you could see, because there is one wing of that house to the right and one wing to the left. There is a courtyard and outside of the courtyard there was a wall of brick or concrete intersecting a little space. It was the lightwell of the basement. * * * ”

A number of witnesses called by the plain-testified concerning the normal character ail¿ disposition of the decedent as they had known her for many years prior to a time within a few weeks or months of her death, and prior to a time testified to by Dr. Reissel G. Ryan; a witness for defendant. The testimony of these several witnesses for plaintiff negatives any view of mental disorder or suicidal mania during any of the time eovered by their testimony.

Plaintiff, appellee, testified that a few days following the death of the insured he called upon Mr. Hoge and requested the insurance policy; that he asked Mr. Hoge if she had left any papers there or anything and he said, “No”; that Mr. Hoge said “there were no suicide letters or notes or anything.”

Dr- Eyail; a witness for defendant, testi-^e(j be Was a surgeon, duly licensed to praetice. that he Was a friend of the de-gedggPg husband, and with his mother called upon Mr> and MrS- Hoge shortly a£ter theil, marrjage- He testified he observed the demeanor 0f Mrs.' Hoge at that time; that “it was reserved, but within the normal range.” Some “two or three weeks later,” £jle witness testified decedent called at his offic6j «very nervous and very much upset, * * * She had to get up and walk up and doWn my office and telling my nurse and my-se|£ ‘pjjig is terrible ’ * * * I couldn’t do anything with her. I gave her some nerve me¿icine and she went home. Two or three o£ber) 0r probably four times, she came to my offle6) and aeted in about tbe same manner. * * * Mrs. Hoge mentioned her intention £o commtt suicide many times, practically every time I saw her. She always contended it was necessary. She insisted that her do-mestie relations were perfectly happy, but gaid tbig was awful and there must be an end £o j never did find what the trouble was; hut I believe there was some mental eondition. That was both professionally and personally. I am a surgeon and not a mental specialist, but there was something abnormal at least temporary.”’ The witness . further testified that he sent the patient to the St. Francis Hospital for examination or “diag-nostie euretage”; that he “curetted her, and sent a specimen to the laboratory, and Dr. Moody, the pathologist, returned a report of chronic endometritis.”- This was described by the witness as “not a serious condition. It simply means we are dealing with a condition of the uterus, and not an acute infection.”

[443]*443On the forenoon of the day preceding the death of Mrs. Hoge the witness made a professional call at her apartment. Concerning this call he testified:

“I offered her some medicine. She said ‘No, when I get out of the influence, things will be just the same as before.’ She intimated she was going to do away with herself. * * * I gave her some luminal, which we sometimes give to nervous and excitable patients, and then I started to leave and she said: ‘Well, I will end it all. I am going to finish this business; going to kill myself.’ So I went back and had another talk with her; tried to reason with her, and the luminal began to work then, and she became quiet, and I went back to my office.”

The witness testified upon his return to his office he sent for her husband, and that the testimony of the witness given at the inquest respecting that meeting was correct as follows:

“I told him of her threat, and of her condition, and talked the case over; and I told him that it was my opinion that women who made those threats make them so frequently that the ones who usually make them do not carry them out, and as she was so solicitous regarding her condition and coming with trivial complaints, I thought she really wanted to live, and that it was a nervous outburst, but we wanted to observe her.”
“Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
70 F.2d 441, 1934 U.S. App. LEXIS 4182, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/connecticut-general-life-ins-v-maher-ca9-1934.