Hall v. ætna Life Ins. Co.

85 F.2d 447, 1936 U.S. App. LEXIS 4143
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedAugust 12, 1936
Docket10420
StatusPublished
Cited by41 cases

This text of 85 F.2d 447 (Hall v. ætna Life Ins. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hall v. ætna Life Ins. Co., 85 F.2d 447, 1936 U.S. App. LEXIS 4143 (8th Cir. 1936).

Opinion

SANBORN, Circuit Judge.

Kanady M. Hall, fifty-four years of age, a resident of Little Rock, Ark., and the insured under a $5,000 life policy issued by theÆtna Life Insurance Company, which policy contained a provision for monthly benefits in case of total and permanent disability, and a provision for double indemnity in case of accidental death, died on March 26, 1934. While intoxicated, he was a visitor at a lumber mill. A young man named’ Parker, who was employed there, in fun suggested throwing a pail of water on Hall to sober him up. He picked Hall up and laid him on a table. Hall got off the table and threw water from a pail at Parker. Hall drew a pocketknife with a blade about inches long and rushed at Parker, who ran, but slipped and fell. Hall then stabbed him in the back. Parker got up and ran outside to escape from Hall, and then attempted to get the driver of an approaching automobile to take him to the hospital to have his wound dressed. Hall followed him. The owner of the mill, who appeared on the scene, told Hall to put away his knife. Hall put it away for a moment, but, as he again approached Parker, he drew it out and attempted to attack Parker, who, in self-defense, struck Hall in the jaw. Hall fell, hit his head upon a rock, fractured his skull, and shortly thereafter died. That Hall brought about the altercation which ended with his death is undisputed. Parker, a much younger and stronger man, tried to avoid injuring Hall, realizing that Hall was irresponsible from drink.

Mrs. Hall, the appellant, who was the beneficiary named in the policy, claimed double indemnity on the ground .that the insured’s death was accidental. The company paid her the face of the policy, but denied liability for double indemnity. She then brought this action at law to recover an additional $5,000, asserting that the insured’s death was accidental. The company in its answer alleged that the insured died as the result of injuries sustained in an altercation in which he was the aggressor. In her reply Mrs. Hall denied that the insured was the aggressor, but alleged that on March 26, 1934, and long prior there *449 to, the insured was of unsound mind “and incapable of understanding the consequences and effect of his own acts.” The case was tried to a jury, which returned a verdict for the defendant insurance company, and from the judgment entered thereon this appeal is taken.

Mrs. Hall (who will be referred' to as plaintiff) challenges certain rulings upon evidence and the refusal of the court to give instructions to the jury requested by her.

The evidence as to how the death occurred was undisputed. The issue of fact was a simple one — whether the insured was insane at the time he attacked Parker.

To establish the insanity of the insured, the plaintiff introduced a certified copy of an order of the probate court of Pulaski county, Ark., dated February 1, 1934, adjudging the insured to be “a person of unsound mind and mentally incompetent,” and appointing plaintiff his guardian. There was evidence tending to show that the adjudication was procured to enable Mrs. Hall to obtain the monthly payments being made to the insured under his policy of insurance because of total and permanent disability and to establish a basis for setting aside a contract which the insured had made with a lawyer, by the terms of which the lawyer was to receive one-half of such disability payments in consideration of services in establishing the total and permanent disability of the insured' under the policy. The evidence indicated that the insured had at one time been a successful lumberman, but that intoxicating liquor had virtually destroyed him both physically and financially. Pie was frequently intoxicated, squandered his money in drinking and gambling, and neglected his wife and family. There was testimony tending to prove that the insured’s mental condition was such during the period shortly prior to his death that he did not understand the consequences of his acts. One medical expert expressed the opinion that he was in that condition at the time of the altercation, saying: “If this individual had been a child we would say he didn’t know what it was all about, didn’t know any better because he didn’t know the effects of his acts. He didn’t know what it was all about. This man’s condition was very similar, he didn’t know what it was all about.” There was testimony, on the other hand, that when sober the insured was sane and would know that it was wrong to stab a man in the back. The test of insanity which plaintiff adopted throughout the trial in the examination of witnesses was failure to understand consequences, while that used by the defendant was failure to understand the difference between right and wrong. Up to the close of the testimony, no dispute had arisen between the parties as to the proper test of insanity.

Plaintiff made nine requests for instructions. The requests for instructions in so far as they are of importance on this appeal were in words or substance as follows:

(1) That “the sole issue to be determined is whether or not the reasoning faculties of the said Kanady M. Hall were so impaired on the date he became engaged in said affray that he was unable to understand or comprehend the moral character, the general nature, consequences and effects of the act he was about to commit.”

(2) That, “when the reasoning faculties of an insured are so far impaired that he is unable to understand the moral character, the general nature, consequences and effect of the act he is about to commit, or when he is impelled thereto by an insane impulse, which he has not the power to resist, he is incapable of becoming the aggressor in an affray.”

(3-5) That, if the insured’s insanity was caused’ by drinking of liquor over a long period of time, the verdict should be for her, and that such insanity would have the same effect as insanity from any other cause.

(6) That the adjudication of the insured as an insane or an incompetent person was prima facie evidence of insanity, and that, after proof of such adjudication, the burden of proof was upon the insurance company to show that the insured was of sound mind at the time of his death.

(7) That the term “accidental” is used in the policy in its ordinary sense, in which sense it means happening by chance, unexpectedly taking place, not according to the usual course of things.

(8) That, if the insured “was of unsound mind and not responsible for his acts, then he did not voluntarily commit an assault upon J. E. Parker, or become the aggressor in the affray, not being responsible for the consequences of his acts, his death was caused by accidental means within the meaning of the policy.”

(9) That, if the death of the insured was due to an affray with Parker in which the assured “was the aggressor, but at a time when the reasoning faculties of said *450 Hall were so far impaired that he was not able to understand the moral character, general nature or consequence or effect of the act he was about to commit, or that he was impelled thereto by an insane impulse which he had not'the power to resist, such act of aggression was an involuntary act •of the said Kanady M. Hall and your verdict will be for the plaintiff.”

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Bluebook (online)
85 F.2d 447, 1936 U.S. App. LEXIS 4143, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hall-v-tna-life-ins-co-ca8-1936.