Cotter v. Royal Neighbors of America
This text of 79 N.W. 542 (Cotter v. Royal Neighbors of America) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
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This was an action brought by the beneficiary upon a certificate of membership issued by the defendant to one Mary Egan, now de[519]*519ceased. The facts stipulated on the trial were that Mary Egan came to her death by taking a quantity of carbolic acid, sufficient to cause death, administered by her own hands, not by accident, and that at the time she took said carbolic acid she was mentally insane, and did not understand the moral nature of her said act. The certificate of membership provided:
“If the member holding this certificate * * * shall die * * * by any means or act which, if used or done by such member while in possession of all natural faculties, would be deemed self-destruction, * * * then this certificate shall be null and void.”
The defense, of course, was that under this provision the certificate was, upon the stipulated facts, null and void. The trial judge, in his memorandum, says that this provision is susceptible of two constructions, — one in favor of the theory of the plaintiff, and the other in favor of the theory of the defendant, — and that, in accordance with a familiar rule in the law of insurance, he would adopt the construction favorable to the plaintiff; but he does not state what that construction was. If we could agree with the learned trial judge that the provision is reasonably susceptible of a construction favorable to the plaintiff, we would readily and even gladly concur in his conclusion. But, on the, contrary, we think that there is no ambiguity in the provision, and that it will admit of but one construction, and that the one contended for by the defendant.
It is difficult to find language in support of this view that will make it more plain than that used in the certificate itself. It was evidently adopted, in view of the decisions of the courts on the subject, so as to exempt the company from liability in case of the self-destruction of the insured, whatever might have been her mental condition at the time of the act. There can be no doubt that taking a deadly dose of poison by a person in possession of all his natural faculties, when administered by his own hand, not by accident or by mistake, would be deemed self-destruction. The contention of the plaintiff is that the true construction of this provision, or at least one of which it is reasonably susceptible, is that it means an act of the insured to be done by herself while sane. [520]*520We see no possible ground upon which any such construction can be sustained. The only ambiguity in the language which occurs to us as capable of being urged with any degree of plausibility is that there is no restriction as to the person by whom the means or act is to be used or done. But, taking the whole provision together, there is no ambiguity even on that point. The clause, “which, if used or done by such member while in possession of all natural faculties, would be deemed self-destruction,” sets that question at rest. We see no escape from the conclusion that upon the stipulated facts the certificate of membership was null and void.
The judgment is reversed and remanded, with directions to the court below to amend his conclusions of law in accordance with this opinion, and, upon the .facts found, to order judgment in favor of the defendant.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
79 N.W. 542, 76 Minn. 518, 1899 Minn. LEXIS 637, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cotter-v-royal-neighbors-of-america-minn-1899.