Fidelity & Casualty Co. of New York v. Waterman

32 L.R.A. 654, 44 N.E. 283, 161 Ill. 632, 1896 Ill. LEXIS 1636
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedMay 12, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 32 L.R.A. 654 (Fidelity & Casualty Co. of New York v. Waterman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fidelity & Casualty Co. of New York v. Waterman, 32 L.R.A. 654, 44 N.E. 283, 161 Ill. 632, 1896 Ill. LEXIS 1636 (Ill. 1896).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Baker

delivered the opinion of the 'Court:

The accident insurance policy in suit in this cause was issued by the Fidelity and Casualty Company of New York on June 14, 1891, to James B. Marshall, the intestate of appellee, insuring him in the sum of $5000 against death through external, violent and accidental means for the term of twelve months, ending June 14, 1892. The policy also made provision for a weekly indemnity in case of bodily injury through like means but not causing death. The policy was afterwards renewed for an additional term of one year, from June 14, 1892. The intestate was asphyxiated by illuminating gas in the Northwestern Hotel at Aurora, Illinois, on the night of December 5, 1892. He was found dead in bed on the morning of December 6, and the room was full of gas. At the trial there was evidence tending to prove that the gas fixtures in the room were defective, and there was also evidence tending to prove that the deceased was intoxicated at the time of the accident, and that his death was attributable to such intoxication. The case was tried before the court without a jury, and a number of written propositions were submitted to it by appellant to be held as law in the decision of the case, but they were all refused and exceptions taken. The finding and judgment were for the plaintiff below, and that judgment was affirmed in the Appellate Court.

The principal defenses relied on by appellant are based upon provisions in the policy which read as follows: “This insurance does not cover disappearances; nor war risk; nor voluntary exposure to unnecessary danger; nor injuries, fatal or otherwise, resulting from poison or anything accidentally or otherwise taken, administered, absorbed or inhaled; nor injuries, fatal or otherwise, received while or in consequence of having been under the influence of or affected by, nor resulting directly or indirectly from, intoxicants, anesthetics, narcotics, sunstroke, freezing, vertigo, sleep-walking, fits, hernia, or any disease or bodily infirmity.”

One ground of defense is, that since the policy expressly states that the insurance does not cover injuries resulting from poison or anything accidentally or otherwise taken, administered, absorbed or inhaled, and the deceased came to his death by means of the illuminating gas which he inhaled while asleep, therefore, according to the true intent and meaning of the contract, appellant is not liable to the administrator for the sum of $5000, stipulated to be paid in case of the death of his intestate as the result of external, violent and accidental means.

In Travelers' Ins. Co. v. Dunlap, 160 Ill. 642, this court held, that drinking carbolic acid by mistake for peppermint is not within a clause of an accident insurance exempting the company from liability for injuries or death from ‘.‘taking poison,” as such words mean the voluntary, intentional taking of poison, and do not include cases of accidental poisoning by mistake, but do include injuries or death from voluntarily taking poison without any suicidal intent. And this court, in its opinion, referred with approval to the decision of the Court of Appeals of New York in Paul v. Travelers' Ins. Co. 112 N. Y. 472, and said (p. 645): “We think the rule established by the Court of Appeals of New York one better calculated to carry out the true intention of the parties when the contract of insurance was entered into, and one, too, more nearly in harmony with the current of authority bearing on the question.” In the Paul case, thus referred to, the policy provided that the insurance should not extend to any death or disability which may have been caused by the taking of poison, contact with poisonous substances or inhaling" of gas, and it appeared that the insured was found dead in bed in his room at a hotel, and that the gas had in some way been turned on and his death caused by breathing the atmosphere of the room filled with gas, and it was held that the death was not caused by “the inhaling of gas,” within the meaning of the policy, and that those words applied only to a voluntary and intelligent action on the part of the insured, such as in medical or surgical, treatment, for dental work, or with a suicidal purpose. And in the subsequent case of Bacon v. United States Mutual Aid Ass. 123 N. Y. 304, the Court of Appeals approved the decision in the Paul case, and said: “Upon the question decided the case is conclusive, and we have no disposition to alter our views as expressed therein.”

In Pickett v. Insurance Co. 144 Pa. St. 79, where there was a condition that the insurance should not cover death or injury resulting from or attributable partially or wholly to inhalation of gas, and the insured went down into a well to make repairs on a pump, and in a short time was found in the well dead from asphyxia caused by poisonous gas at the bottom of the well, it was held that the condition in the policy against “inhalation of gas” contemplated a voluntary and intelligent act by the insured,—not an involuntary and unconscious act,—and was inoperative to relieve the company from liability. See, also, Metropolitan Accident Ass. v. Froiland, (ante. p. 30.)

It is urged that the exception in the case at bar is broader and more sweeping than the words found in the cases heretofore decided, the words here being, “poison or anything accidentally or otherwise absorbed or inhaled,” and that these words necessarily include every possible way by which irrespirable gases can be got into the human system so as to cause death. The additional word “absorbed,” found in the language last above quoted, has no application to the case before us, for that word manifestly has reference only to the process of absorption by sucking up or imbibing through the pores of the body. The claim made is not well grounded, if the correctness of the point decided in the cases we have mentioned be conceded. That point, as we understand it, is, that the word “inhaling” or “inhalation” or “inhaled,” as used in exceptions contained in these policies of life or accident insurance, implies a voluntary and intelligent act, as distinguished from an involuntary and unconscious act. Read in the light of the decisions, the words now in question do not mean otherwise than if they explicitly read, “poison or anything accidentally or otherwise, consciously and by an act of volition, drawn into the system by inspiration.”

This view is fully supported by a late decision of the Court of Appeals of New York. That court had before it, in Menneilly v. Employer's Liability Ass. Corp. 23 N. Y. Supp. 230, the case of a provision in an accident policy that it does not insure against death or disablement from anything accidentally inhaled. The insured had died at night of asphyxia, caused by involuntarily and accidentally breathing into his lungs, while asleep, illuminating gas which had accidentally escaped into his room at a hotel. It was held that the case was not distinguishable, in principle, from the Paul case, and that the provision in the policy did not relieve the insurer from liability. And we may add, that this Menneilly case, which had then just been published, was cited by this court with approval in Travelers' Ins. Co. v. Dunlap, supra.

Appellant claims that to place the construction we have upon the policy is not to enforce the contract made by the parties, but to make a new contract for them. This can hardly be so.

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32 L.R.A. 654, 44 N.E. 283, 161 Ill. 632, 1896 Ill. LEXIS 1636, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fidelity-casualty-co-of-new-york-v-waterman-ill-1896.