Dushan v. Metropolitan Life Insurance

4 Tenn. App. 614, 1926 Tenn. App. LEXIS 205
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedDecember 4, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 4 Tenn. App. 614 (Dushan v. Metropolitan Life Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dushan v. Metropolitan Life Insurance, 4 Tenn. App. 614, 1926 Tenn. App. LEXIS 205 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

CROWNOVER, J.

This was a suit to recover the amount of two insurance policies, $712, issued by the insurance company on the life of Henry R. Smith, the former husband of complainant. The bill alleged that the insurance company had issued the policies on the life of Henry R. Smith, payable to others, but upon his marriage to complainant he had the names of the beneficiaries changed making them payable to complainant, and that premiums on said policies had been regularly paid up until the bill in this cause was filed, and that Henry R. Smith disappeared in the year, 1918, and had not been heard of or from since that date, although diligent search and inquiry had been made, and that his unexplained absence for the term of seven years ean be accounted for on no other hypothesis than death, and she therefore, charged that he was, dead and that she had made demand on the insurance company for the amount of the two policies, which the company had refused to pay, therefore, she instituted this suit.

The defendant answered and denied liability on the ground that the circumstances, set out in the answer, are such as to account for his absence other than by death.

Several depositions were taken and read to the Chancellor, who held that evidence had been adduced sufficient for a presumption of death of Henry R. Smith, that his absence for seven years was not accompanied by circumstances accounting for such absence on any other hypothesis than death, and he therefore, rendered a decree against the insurance company for the. amount of said policies. The defendant filed a petition for an additional finding of fact, which the Chancellor overruled, and he has appealed to this court and has assigned two errors:

(1) That the court erred in rendering a decree for complainant for $766.94 on said policies because the evidence does not justify the presumption of the death of Henry R. Smith.
(2) The court erred in dismissing appellant’s petition for additional findings of fact, set out in the petition.

The material facts found by the Chancellor were that the two policies, totalling $712, were issued by the defendant company to. Henry R. Smith, and after his marriage the beneficiaries were changed so that the policies were made payable to complainant; that Henry R. Smith left Nashville and went to Cincinnati and was followed by his wife in the year, 1918, and that while there he disappeared and has not been seen or heard of since, and that complainant had made *616 diligent search and inquiry, and investigation of all reasonable sources to ascertain his whereabouts, and in those places where information of him would likely be obtained; that she had made inquiry through the Police Department of Cincinnati, the Red Cross, Army Circles, Pressmen’s Union, relatives, friends and acquaintances of Henry R. Smith, at his last places of residence, and could obtain no information through any source as to him, and that his unexplained absence for seven years could not be accounted for on any hypothesis other than death.

This court agrees with the Chancellor in his findings of fact with respect to the absence of Henry R. Smith and as to the diligent search and inquiry made by the complainant below, in so far as he goes in his original written opinion, and had there been no other or additional facts in the record, his decree undoubtedly would have been correct; but the defendant filed a petition for the finding of additional facts, as required by the statute section 12 of chapter 100 of Acts of 1925), which the Chancellor declined on the ground that the facts requested were 'either covered by the facts already found by the court, or were not material, or not supported by a preponderance of the testimony, or were not controlling* and determinative of the questions adjudicated. In this we think the Chancellor erred.

"We think that preponderance of the proof showed that Henry R. Smith was married to complainant in the year, 1908, and that she had one child by him on September 5, 1910, and that he lived with her until shortly after she was injured in a street ear accident, and then he became "tangled up with another woman” on Broad street in Nashville, while his wife was paralyzed, deserted her in 1913, while destitute, and left Nashville. That he, being a printer or pressman, went to Chicago and other places, and later to Cincinnati, where he was visited by his wife and promised to live with her; that she returned to Nashville and later learned that he was living in open adultery with one Goldy Webster, representing her to be his wife, and that they resided in a house in Dockland, Ohio, a suburb of Cincinnati; that complainant went to Cincinnati in February, 1918, and had him arrested for nonsupport, that he was arrested while in bed with Goldy Webster at one o’clock at night, and was locked up in jail; that at the trial on next day, he agreed to return to complainant and live with her as man and wife, and to pay $8 per week for the support of their minor child until she became sixteen year’s of age, and, upon these promises, he was discharged from custody, and lived with complainant three weeks, when he disappeared and has not been heard from since; that Goldy Webster was notified by the police that she must leave town, and she has also disappeared; that Smith’s father tried to persuade him to return to his wife but he *617 refused, and said that he was going to join the army; that he showed no affection for his wife and child; and that his brother said that he was afflicted with “too much mother-in-law;” that complainant obtained a divorce from him and the custody of the child in May, 1918.

We think there are three reasons which explained his disappearance): (1) He had no affection for his wife and child, and none for his mother-in-law. (2) He was infatuated with another woman with whom he had been living in open adultery under the pretense that she was his wife, and evidently desired to so continue. (3) He wanted to avoid the support of his wife and child, and the criminal prosecutions incident thereto.

We think these are the reasons for his disappearance rather than death.

There is some confusion in the earlier cases about the presumption of death from absence of seven years. Nothing is more common in public statement and belief than that if a man is absent for seven years the law presumes he is dead. This, without more, is an erroneous idea. In analogy to certain English statutes the courts have adopted the rule that ‘ ‘ a person shown not to have been heard of for seven years by those who, if he had been alive, would naturally have heard from him, is presumed to be dead, unless the circumstances of the case are such as to account for his not being heard of without assuming his death.” The principle has been developed by a process of judicial legislation.

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Related

Armstrong v. Pilot Life Insurance Co.
656 S.W.2d 18 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 1983)
National Life & Accident Ins. v. Grizzard
145 S.W.2d 800 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 1940)
Dushan v. Metropolitan Life Insurance
14 Tenn. App. 422 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 1931)

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Bluebook (online)
4 Tenn. App. 614, 1926 Tenn. App. LEXIS 205, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dushan-v-metropolitan-life-insurance-tennctapp-1926.