Gaunt v. John Hancock Mut. Life Ins. Co.

160 F.2d 599, 1947 U.S. App. LEXIS 2647
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedMarch 31, 1947
Docket190, Docket 20447
StatusPublished
Cited by124 cases

This text of 160 F.2d 599 (Gaunt v. John Hancock Mut. Life Ins. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gaunt v. John Hancock Mut. Life Ins. Co., 160 F.2d 599, 1947 U.S. App. LEXIS 2647 (2d Cir. 1947).

Opinions

L. HAND, Circuit Judge.

The plaintiff appeals from a judgment, dismissing her complaint after a trial to the judge, in an action, brought as beneficiary, to recover upon a contract of life insurance upon her son’s life. There are only two questions: first, whether the defendant insured the son at all; and second, if so, whether he was intentionally shot, in which event a provision for “double indemnity” did not apply. The judge made detailed findings, the substance of which, so far as they are material to this appeal, is as follows. One, Kelman, a solicitor for the defendant authorized to take applications from prospective customers and to give receipts for first premiums, after two preliminary interviews with Gaunt, the insured, on August 3d, procured from him the signed “application,” which is the subject of the action. This was a printed document of considerable length and much detail, the only passage in which here relevant we quote in full in the margin.1 The important words were: “if the Company is satisfied that on the date of the completion of Part B of this application I was insurable * * [600]*600and if this application * * * is, prior to my death, approved by the Company at its Home Office, the insurance applied for shall be in force as of the date of completion of said Part B.” Number 12 of the answers which the insured was to make in the “application” was in the alternative; it read: “Insurance effective: (Check date desired) Date of Part B □ Dated of issue of Policy When Gaunt signed the application he had not checked either of these answers; but after he had delivered it to Kelman, Kelman checked the second, so that, as the “application” read, Gaunt was to be insured only from the issuance of the policy. The judge found that “Both Gaunt and Kelman intended that Gaunt should be covered from the date of the completion of the medical examination”; and that Kelman’s checking of the wrong answer’ “was due to. a mutual mistake on the part of Gaunt and Kelman.” ■

At the time of signing the “application” Gaunt paid the full first premium and Kelman gave him a receipt containing the words we have just quoted without substantial change: both the “application” and the receipt were upon forms prepared by the defendant for use by solicitors such, as Kelman. On the same day Kelman took Gaunt to the defendant's local examining physician who found him insurable under the rules and who recommended him for acceptance. Kelman delivered the “application” and the premium, and the physician delivered the favorable report, to one, Wholey, the defendant’s local agent for Waterbury, Connecticut, who prepared a report recommending acceptance, signed by himself and Kelman, which he sent with the “application” and thp physician’s report to. the “home office,” where the documents were received on the 9th. Since it appeared from the papers that Gaunt had been classified as “4F” in the draft because of defective eyesight, the “medical department” at the “home office” required another physical examination in Waterbury. This took place on the 17th; on the same day the local physician wrote to the “home office” again passing Gaunt; and on the 19th “a lay medical examiner” for the “medical department” at the “home office” approved the “application.” Nevertheless the “home office” on the 20th wrote to Wholey asking further information as to Gaunt’s classification in the draft; Wholey answered satisfactorily on the 24th by a letter received on the 25th; and on the 26th one of the “doctors of the medical department * * * approved” the application “from a medical standpoint.” The “home office” received news on that day of Gaunt’s death, and never finally approved the “application,” although the judge found that, if Gaunt had lived, it would have done so.

Gaunt left Waterbury on August 19th. He was going to the Pacific Coast or to Alaska in search of’work; he arrived at Chicago on the 21st; and.on the 24th he had reached Montevideo, Minnesota, where he was seen traveling in an “army bus”’ that had been loaded upon a flat car of a west-bound freight train. The only other occupant of this bus was one, Rasch, about whom nothing was learned except that he was later traced to the wheat fields of Wyoming as a casual worker. On the 25th. Gaunt’s body was found beside the westbound track of the railroad at Milbank,. South Dakota, with a hole in his head made by a 38 or 45 calibre bullet, which had! entered his right jaw near the ear and had come out at the top of his skull; and although the record contains no evidence on the subject, we may take judicial notice that this must have caused substantially instant death. There was blood inside and! outside the bus, and the bullet was found inside which had killed him. On the testimony the judge found that Gaunt had been-intentionally killed, which, as 'we have said, was an exception to the “double indemnity”’ provision covering “accidental death.” The plaintiff asks us to reverse this finding: i.e., to find it “clearly erroneous”; but we should not be warranted in doing so. Neither side contends that Gaunt killed himself ; the issue is whether Rasch killed him accidentally or intentionally; and upon that the plaintiff argues that the defendant had the burden of proof. We hold that the [601]*601evidence justified the finding, even if it did have the burden. It is apparent that Rasch, after he had shot Gaunt, must have dragged him out of the bus and placed him beside the track; and that he then fled, obviously to escape detection. The most reasonable inference is that he did this, hoping that the train would move on and that his presence in the bus with Gaunt would not be remembered, for, although no one saw him in it, one witness had talked with him at Montevideo and had learned that he was travelling in. the bus. It is true that the blood stains inside the bus were in any event a tell-tale circumstance of which he must have been aware — although not the presence of the bullet — but they were nothing like as incriminating as the body itself would have been where it was shot. That Rasch should have pulled out his revolver, shot Gaunt while merely examining it, and then have gone so far to escape implication, while possible, seems to us most unlikely. The evidence might not satisfy a jury in a trial for homicide, but there was certainly enough to support the affirmative finding.

The first question is whether Gaunt was covered at all at the time of his death. Curiously, neither party has incorporated in the record “Part B,” and we do not know what was the date of its “completion.” If it was the approval “from a medical standpoint” as “advised by one of the doctors of the medical department,” it was not “completed” before Gaunt’s death. On the other hand the judge found that “Gaunt was, at the time of the completion of Part B, insurable in accordance with the rules of the defendant company for the plan and the amount applied for,” and that is consistent only with the understanding that “completion” was earlier than the 25th. The defendant has not argued to the contrary and we shall so assume. Thus the question becomes whether the words: “if the application, including Part B, is prior to my death, approved by the Company, at its Home Office,” must inescapably be read as a condition precedent upon the immediately following promise: “the insurance * * * shall be in force as of the date of the completion of Part B.” It is true that if the clause as a whole be read literally, the insured was not covered if he died after “completion of Part B,” but before “approval” ; and indeed he could not have been because there must always be an insurable interest when the insurance takes effect.2

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Bluebook (online)
160 F.2d 599, 1947 U.S. App. LEXIS 2647, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gaunt-v-john-hancock-mut-life-ins-co-ca2-1947.