Crandal v. Accident Ins.

27 F. 40
CourtUnited States Circuit Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 27 F. 40 (Crandal v. Accident Ins.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Crandal v. Accident Ins., 27 F. 40 (uscirct 1886).

Opinion

Dyer, J.

On the twenty-third day of May, 1884, the defendant company issued to Edward M. Crandal, since deceased, an accident [41]*41policy of insurance, by whicli it promised to pay to the plaintiff, who was the wife of the insured, the sum of $10,000, within 30 days after sufficient proof that the insured, at any time within the continuance of the policy, had sustained bodily injuries, effected through external, accidental, and violent means, within the intent and meaning of the contract, and the conditions thereunto annexed, and such injuries alone had occasioned death within 90 days from the happening thereof. ■ It was provided in the policy that the insurance should not extend to death or disability “which may have been caused wholly or in part by bodily infirmities or disease.” Further, that no claim should be made under the policy if the death or injury should be caused by suicide or self-inflicted injuries.

While this policy was in force, the insured, Edward M. Crandal, took his own life by hanging, and the jury to whom the case was submitted for a special verdict on the facts, has found that at the time of the act of self-destruction he was insane. The question reserved for consideration by the court, and now to be determined, is whether the death was one covered by the policy. The question of liability, as it here arises, upon an accident policy of insurance, seems to bo one of first impression. Unaided by direct authority, the court is called on to determine, first, whether, under such a policy as this, death from self-destruction, occurring when the insured is insane, may be said to have been caused by bodily Injuries effected through accidental means. This question, it will be understood, is here to be considered quite independently of the question whether disease or physical infirmity was a promoting cause of death.

The verdict of the jury was unquestionably right. The case was one in which the evidence clearly established the fact of insanity. The symptoms of a disordered mind were manifested in the countenance, conduct, and conversation of the insured. He was sleepless, was sometimes unduly excited, then unnaturally depressed. He suffered to such an extent from melancholy that he abandoned his accustomed habits and pursuits. Fondness for family and friends changed to indifference; and, in short, his reasoning powers and self-control appear to have been prostrated by the fear of want and by morbid impulses and delusions, such as, in this species of insanity, impel to self-destruction. Upon the facts shown, the jury might well find that his judgment, his volition, his will, were overthrown, so that, in the language of Mr. Justice Nelson, when chief justice of New York, in the case of Breasted v. Farmers’ Loan & Trust Co., 4 Hill, 73, 75, the act of suicide “was no more his act, in the sense of the law, than if he had been impelled by irresistible physical power.”

Upon the verdict and the facts which sustain it, it may then be assumed that when the deceased took his life it was not his voluntary, rational act. He could not exercise his natural powers of volition, and thereby control his judgment upon the act he was about to commit. The physical violence, therefore, which terminated his life [42]*42was the same as if it had come upon him from sources outside of himself, and for which he was not responsible. It was force emanating, not from the brain and hand of Edward M. Crandal, as a responsible, voluntary agent, but force which was uncontrollable, so far as he was concerned. The means employed to produce death were external and violent. Were they not also, in a just and true sense, accidental, if the deceased was so far bereft of his reasoning faculties that his act was not the result of his will, or of a voluntary operation of his mind ? If, in consequence of his condition of irresponsibility, the violence which he inflicted upon himself was the same as if it had operated upon him from without, then why was not the death an accident within the definition of that term as given by Bouvier, namely; “An event which, under the circumstances, is unusual and unexpected by the person to whom it happens; the happening of an event without the concurrence of the will of the person by whose agency it was caused ?”

No case has been cited where the question, as here presented, was directly in judgment, but there are dicta which afford some aid in reaching a conclusion. In 7 Amer. Law Bev. 587, 588, various definitions of an accident, as the term is used in insurance policies, are given, namely:

“An accident is ‘ any event which takes place without the oversight or expectation of the person acted upon or affected by the event.’ Ripley v. Railway Passengers' Assur. Co., 2 Bigelow, Cas. 758; Providence Life Ins. Co. v. Martin, 32 Md. 310. It is ‘ any unexpected event which happens as by chance, or which does not take place according to the usual course of things.’ North American Ins. Co. v. Burroughs, 69 Pa. St. 43. ‘ It is something which takes place without any intelligent or apparent cause; without design, and out of course.' Mallory v. Travelers' Ins Co., 47 N. Y. 52. ‘Some violence, casualty, or vis major is necessarily involved ’ in the term accident. It means, in short, in insurance policies, an injury which happens by reason of some violence, casualty, or vis major to the assured, without his design or consent, or voluntary co-operation. ”

Similar definitions are given by Mr. Justice Paine in his discussion of the question in Schneider v. Insurance Co., 24 Wis. 30.

In Scheiderer v. Insurance Co., 58 Wis. 14, S. C. 16 N. W. Rep. 47, it was alleged in the pleading that while the insured, who was traveling in a railway car, “was in a dozed and unconscious condition of mind, and not knowing or realizing what he was doing, ” he involuntarily arose from his seat, and walked unconsciously to the platform of the car, and fell therefrom to the ground; and it was held that this constituted a good cause of action upon a policy of accident insurance. Here, it is true, the injury resulted from'falling from the car; but since the moving cause was the involuntary act of leaving the seat and walking to the platform, the case suggests the inquiry, if, for example, a person in a fit of somnambulism, or in delirium, not knowing or realizing what he is doing, involuntarily inflicts injury upon himself,—that is, by means of his own hand,—and death en[43]*43sues, is not such an injury as much the result of accident as if, in the same circumstances, the injury results from other external forces, such as falling from the platform of a moving train ?

In Hill v. Insurance Co., 22 Hun, 189, the insured took poison by mistake, and died suddenly. The court said that death occurred through accidental moans. The taking of the poison was not the result of the will or intention of the person, and was therefore not his voluntary act. It was adjudged, however, that the plaintiff could not recover, on the ground that the policy contained a clause that the company should not be liable if death should be caused by taking poison; and this clause was held to exempt the company from liability, whether the poison was taken intentionally or by mistake.

In Pierce v. Travelers’ Ins. Co., 34 Wis. 395, Mr.

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27 F. 40, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crandal-v-accident-ins-uscirct-1886.