Hefford v. Metropolitan Life Insurance

144 P.2d 695, 173 Or. 353, 1944 Ore. LEXIS 57
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 23, 1943
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 144 P.2d 695 (Hefford v. Metropolitan Life Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hefford v. Metropolitan Life Insurance, 144 P.2d 695, 173 Or. 353, 1944 Ore. LEXIS 57 (Or. 1943).

Opinion

LUSK, J.

As an employee of Frank Chevrolet Company in Portland Leo P. Hefford was insured in the sum of $2,000.00 under a group policy of life insurance issued by the defendant Metropolitan Life Insurance Company. His wife, the plaintiff Ethel I. Hefford, was named as beneficiary. By the terms of the policy the insurance was collectible only if death occurred while Hefford was in the employ of Frank Chevrolet Company or within thirty-one days after *356 termination of such employment. On November 9, 1933, Hefford disappeared under circumstances shortly to be detailed and has not since been seen or heard from. His employment terminated on November 8,1933, the day before he disappeared, and the insurance was in full force and effect on that date, and so remained for thirty-one days thereafter. In September, 1941, Mrs. Hefford commenced this action to recover the amount of the policy, alleging that Hefford was dead and that his death occurred within thirty-one days after the termination of his employment. A jury trial resulted in a verdict for the plaintiff, and from the consequent judgment the defendant has appealed.

Since the principal question for our determination is upon the sufficiency of the evidence — raised at the trial by appropriate motion for a nonsuit — a statement of the material facts becomes necessary.

At the time of his disappearance Hefford was forty-three years of age. He was by occupation an automobile mechanic, and was then earning about $135.00 or $140.00 a month. He was in normal health. He and Mrs. Hefford, the plaintiff, were married in 1914 and had a son, Franklin, who was seventeen years of age in 1933. He had been married once before. They had formerly lived in Montana, and came to Oregon in 1923, and ever since then he had pursued his occupation of a garage mechanic — most of the time in Portland. His employment with Frank Chevrolet Company commenced in 1928, and continued until the day of his disappearance. He was an industrious, steady worker, and liked by his fellow employees. He was blind in one eye as the result of an injury sustained at his work a number of years before.

*357 There is a good deal of testimony, coming from his wife, his son, and his close friends, tending to make a picture of a kind and thoughtful husband and a contented and harmonious home. There are frequent references to Hefford’s drinking, as frequent denials that he was ever intoxicated, and much positive swearing on the part of all concerned, including Mrs. Hefford, that his indulgences (whatever may have been their extent) were never a cause of complaint on her part. It was shown, by what seems to be credible evidence, that drinking never interfered with Hefford’s work, and, while he had no bank account and had not saved any money, he left behind him no debts of great consequence.

On the morning of November 8, 1933, Hefford departed from his home in his automobile to go to work. He was dressed in his working clothes. His wife kissed him goodbye and asked him to bring home some groceries. He went to the Frank Chevrolet Company and was there on the job until about four or half past four in the afternoon. His fellow employees noticed nothing unusual about his actions or appearance. Sometime after leaving his place of work he applied to a loan company for a loan of $15.00, and the money was advanced to him with an offer to let him have more if he desired it. He did not draw two days ’ wages owing to him by his employer. About one o’clock of the morning of November 9th he arrived in a taxicab at the home of a man named Gi-uy M. Rader, who lived at 4409 S. E. 89th Street. Hefford was intoxicated. The record does not use that word; it is our interpretation of Rader’s testimony that “Hefford was plenty full of liquor”. Rader had seen Hefford under the influence of liquor before and guessed that he “drank *358 whisky, mostly ’ ’. Hefford had at one time worked for Rader at the latter’s garage, and they were friends. He explained to Rader that his car was “stuck over town” and prevailed upon Rader to assist him. It was a night of dense fog. Together they drove in Rader’s car to the east approach to the Ross Island bridge, which spans the Willamette River at a point about four to four and one-half miles distant from Rader’s home, where Hefford got out to look for his car, but soon returned saying that this was not the right place. He then showed Rader a slip of paper on which was written the address of the place from which he had phoned for the taxicab before going to Rader’s house — a restaurant called “Mac’s Broiler”, located near the west approach to the Ross Island bridge — and they thereupon proceeded across the bridge to a place in the vicinity of “Mac’s Broiler”, where they stopped and Hefford got out of the car “and started at a little trot up the street”. Rader followed him in the car, and Hefford, discovering this, stopped and told Rader to keep the car there, that he wanted to know where it would be when he came back. Rader complied, and watched Hefford as he started off again. He testified:

“I pulled up so I could look right down the sidewalk and I seen him until he went under the arc light, and the minute he stepped on the curb on the other side he just faded out of the picture and I couldn’t see any more of him and I didn’t see any more of him.”

That was the last time that Hefford was seen by any one who testified in this case.

It was then about two o’clock. Rader waited in his car for Hefford until about four-thirty, and then went *359 to a gasoline service station on the corner and asked the attendant if he had seen Hefford, and the attendant said he had seen him earlier in the evening when Hefford had asked for help in getting his car ont of the mnd. Thereupon Rader began searching the streets, and finally found Hefford’s car stalled in the mud in a fill not far from where Hefford had left him. The car was not damaged but Rader was unable to remove it. He then drove to the Hefford home thinking that he might find Hefford there. He learned from Mrs. Hefford that her husband had not been home since leaving for work in the morning, and told her of his own experience with the missing man.

On cross-examination Rader gave the following testimony:

“Q Did he ever make any statements to you about his wife objecting to his drinking 1
“A Nothing that I remember about.
“Q Did he ever tell you that his wife did object!
“A I don’t remember of anything said like that now.
“Q Did he ever say anything about having trouble with his wife?
“A He didn’t say whether it was his wife or what it was about. That night we went down there he tried to tell me something.
“Q What did he say?
“A He said something about he didn’t know whether it was worth it or not, he told me that two or three times, and I was afraid that he was going to get on something I didn’t want to hear, and I told him to shut up, I didn’t want to hear it. ’ ’

On November 9th Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
144 P.2d 695, 173 Or. 353, 1944 Ore. LEXIS 57, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hefford-v-metropolitan-life-insurance-or-1943.