Gavin v. Des Moines Life Insurance

126 N.W. 906, 149 Iowa 152
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJune 16, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 126 N.W. 906 (Gavin v. Des Moines Life Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gavin v. Des Moines Life Insurance, 126 N.W. 906, 149 Iowa 152 (iowa 1910).

Opinion

Sherwin, J.

In October, 1907, tbe defendant insured the life of Patrick Gavin in the sum of $1,000, payable to Bridget Gavin, his mother,- the plaintiff herein. The policy contained a provision as follows: “This policy shall cease and be null and void and of no effect, (1) if within two years from the date hereof the insured shall commit suicide or die by his own hand or act, whether sane or insane at the time.” The insured was killed by a gunshot on the 10th day of August, 1908, and the only fact question in the case is whether he purposely shot himself.

1. Insurance: suicide.- evidence. At the time of his death the insured was nearly nineteen years old. He lived at home with his father and mother, and for nearly four years prior to the 1st of August, 1908, he had been in the employ of a. Des Moines firm as a delivery boy. On the 1st of August he laid off because he was sick, and from that time until his death he remained at home. The plaintiff testified: That he was not confined to his bed all of the time, but was up and down. That he complained of being ill, but did not say what his trouble was, only that he was run down and tired out. She said: “He complained of no ache or pain, simply complained of being run down and tired out. . . . His movements were quiet. He laid still in bed until about eight o’clock, and then he would get up and lay on the sofa and read.” “Some days” he would go back to bed “and some days he did not.” , No -physician had been called for the deceased up to the morning of the 10th of August. Nor had he taken any medicine during such time, so far as the record discloses. The plaintiff further testified that “the last few days he looked lots better and pleasanter. When he was at himself he was strong.” Coming now to the morning of the 10th of August, the evidence touching his condition is substantially as follows: His [154]*154father says that he saw him in his bedroom at about half past seven o’clock in the morning. That “he seemed to sit up in bed, and I asked him was he going to work, and he said he thought he was.” The father then left the house, and did not again see his son alive. The plaintiff says as to his condition that morning: “lie intended to go to work that morning, and he felt cold he said and told me to put a cover on him, and I did, and later on I went up and straightened up the room. I asked him if he was feeling some better, and he thought he was, and I thought I would not let him lay there sick, I would get a doctor, and I went to Mercy Hospital and the Sisters told me Dr. Priestly was coming, that they expected him, and I told them to send him down. I do not know what time I was last up in his room before going to the hospital. It was after the usual time that he would get up and go to his work. That morning I asked him if he was going to work, and he said he did not think so. He said he was cold and to put a cover on him. He said nothing else. I did not ask him what the trouble was.”

The plaintiff and the insured were alone in the house immediately before she went, to the hospital and after her return therefrom. She testifies as follows as to what occurred after she returned from the hospital:

I began straightening up the house, and was raveling some ravels that was on the carpet sweeper and I heard a noise that I thought was a neighbor’s screen door, and I did not pay any attention for quite a while, and, after a while, I went up and you could smell the powder smoke all over the room, and I went to his room and found him moaning twice. I did not go upstairs until about ten minutes after the noise. I did not go in response to the noise. When I went into the room, he was lying on his right side. The bed was a little from the south wall. The bed was lying east and west. It was not quite into the wall. There was nothing between the bed and the west wall. The dresser was to the east of the bed. I [155]*155can not tell whether he was covered, up when I went up there. lie was lying on his right side, facing the wall toward the south. I put my hand around his head and turned his face toward me, and I thought he smiled up in my face, and that was all. I aslced him, I says, ‘Patrick, can you tell how it was done?’ and I got no answer, of course. I can not tell whether I noticed the wound or not. I afterwards saw where he was hurt. Do not know whether I pulled the cover back over him or not, but I found the revolver lying on the south side of the bed. I took the revolver and laid it on the dresser, did not throw it. I can not say where from the body the revolver was. It may be it would be fifteen inches away from his body.

The plaintiff further testified that she at once called a neighbor, and that the neighbors and officers came; that she did not know where her son’s hand was with reference to the revolver, and did not know where his hand was, “whether lying on top of the cover” or not. “I saw the revolver ... on the covers.”

The coroner, a physician, and two or three officers from the police department were at the home soon after the death, and their testimony is, in substance, as follows: Dr. Morris says: “I found the man lying flat on his back about the middle of the bed, his face on the pillow. I know the body was covered, but do not recollect where the covers were. I think it was pulled down over the chest. The wound looked like a bullet wound about an inch above the nipple on the left side right into the heart. The flesh was discolored around the opening.” Mr. Newlen, the coroner, testified: That he found the body lying about the middle of the bed on its back. That he found “a hole in the left side above the nipple. I should judge about an inch, directly over the right auricle of the heart. It was burned around the hole in the breast about the size of a half dollar. He had on a thin undershirt, kind of gauze. ... I looked to see if the bullet had gone [156]*156through the body. It had not, and we did not trace the course of the bullet.” Witness Jackson testified that the deceased was lying on his back about the middle of the bed, and that the flesh around the wound was discolored. Witness Skinner says that “they turned his undershirt back and it was powder marked all around there, a black space there. The garment he had on had a black spot where it was burned. . . . The body was covered up when I got there.” The revolver found on the bed with the insured was one that he had owned for some time and kept in the dresser at the foot of his bed when not carrying it. When taken from the bed, all of the chambers except one contained loaded cartridges, and this one contained an exploded shell.

A separate and- careful examination of the evidence leaves no doubt in our minds that this unfortunate young man took his own life. He had been too ill to work for ten days. No physician attended him or prescribed for him. On the morning of his death, when his mother went to his room, he complained of being cold, asked her to place more cover over him, and told her that he would 'not go to work. lie did not get up that morning, and it is evident that he was very ill. It is equally as apparent that the plaintiff vras then alarmed over his condition, for she at once concluded that the time had come when a physician must be called to attend him. The plaintiff put additional cover on the bed and went for Dr. Priestly, and while the record is silent on the subject, it is not unfair to presume that she communicated her purpose to her sick boy, for such would be the natural thing for a mother to do.

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Bluebook (online)
126 N.W. 906, 149 Iowa 152, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gavin-v-des-moines-life-insurance-iowa-1910.