Hodgson v. Preferred Accident Insurance

182 A.D. 381, 169 N.Y.S. 28, 1918 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 4389
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedFebruary 15, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 182 A.D. 381 (Hodgson v. Preferred Accident Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hodgson v. Preferred Accident Insurance, 182 A.D. 381, 169 N.Y.S. 28, 1918 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 4389 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1918).

Opinion

Mills, J.:

The action was brought by the plaintiff under a policy of accident insurance to recover for the death of Willard H. Hodgson, she being the beneficiary thereunder. The complaint, as was necessary, alleged that the death was caused by external, violent and accidental means,” which cause was within the terms and obligations of the policy. The answer denied such allegation and pleaded certain defenses — that is, that the death was caused by disease and as well by the inhaling of gas or taking of poison, both being within exceptions named in the policy. The theory of the plaintiff was that the death was caused by an overdose of some poison, probably opium or morphine, accidentally taken, although the immediate cause was pneumonia.

The evidence for the plaintiff was given by the decedent’s physician and was to the effect that the physician, who had previously attended him for various slight illnesses, was on [383]*383April 6, 1915, called to him and found him in a condition (describing the symptoms) which indicated that he had taken an overdose of opium or morphine; that the physician treated him., but that pneumonia set in on the eighth of that month and he died on the eleventh; and that the physician was certain that the death was caused by the taking of the poison.

The defendant offered no evidence.

The charge placed upon the plaintiff the burden of proving that the death was accidental — that is, that the morphine or opium, if taken, was taken accidentally, and the court left it to the jury as a question of fact for them to determine that issue. The ■ jury returned a verdict for the defendant in the late afternoon of October 19, 1916, and the court adjourned until the following morning, the jurors apparently being dismissed and allowed to separate after plaintiff had moved for a new trial. When the court reconvened the following morning, there was discussion between court and counsel with the result that the court, over the objection and exception of defendant’s counsel, recalled the jurors into the box and submitted to them three questions, with the direction that they should retire, consider and answer each of them in the affirmative or negative, and return their answers in writing to the court, but not reconsider their verdict already rendered. The jury so acted, and after some hours returned into court and filed a paper, which was received as a special verdict over the objection, and exception of defendant. The questions so submitted were the following:

“ No. 1. Did the deceased die of a disease not caused by a narcotic poisoning? .
“ No. 2. Was the taking of poison the proximate cause of the death of deceased?
“ No. 3. If you find poison was taken by deceased, was It done accidentally or intentionally? ”

And the special answer or verdict was the following:

We, the undersigned Jurors, are unable to reach a unanimous decision as to all the questions submitted, the majority believing, without knowing, that the poison was the proximate cause of the death of the deceased, the minority believing, without knowing, that the pneumonia was not induced by the poison.
[384]*384“As to the third question, we all agree that in the absence of any evidence that the deceased took the poison, either accidentally or with the intent to commit suicide, it is impossible for us to answer it, either in the affirmative or in the negative. In other words, there being grave doubts in everybody’s mind whether the poison was taken accidentally or not, we understood from the charge of the Court that a verdict for the defendant had to be rendered.”

The plaintiff renewed her motion for a new trial, and some days later the learned trial justice filed an opinion granting the motion. From the opinion it is evident that he granted the motion for the reason that he thought that the comments of the court and counsel had probably confused the jury upon the question of suicide, as the defendant had not pleaded suicide or attempted to prove it. (100 Misc. Rep. 155.)

Upon this appeal appellant contends that while it is true that it did not plead suicide as a defense under the exception in the policy, yet, as the burden was upon the plaintiff to establish that the death was accidental, i. e., not suicidal, there was no possible harm to the plaintiff in the submission to the jury of the question of suicide — in other words, that that issue was necessarily involved in the comprehensive one of accidental death.

I think that this contention is entirely sound, and that the learned trial justice was unnecessarily apprehensive that he had upon that point misled the jury. I think, in other words, that that objection was after all merely technical and not substantial. Still, I think that his decision in granting the motion for a new trial was right for another reason, viz., that the special verdict revealed a disagreement of the jury upon the vital issue whether or not the death was caused by “ accidental means.” It is, of course, plain that the response by the jury to the first and second questions was merely the statement of the disagreement of the jurors thereon. Their response to the third question is not so clear, but I thfnk that it should be regarded also as a mere disagreement. The controlling statement therein is: “ It is impossible for us to answer it, either in the affirmative or in the negative.” The rest of the response is merely an attempt to give the reason for such inability and why, on account [385]*385of such inability, they, under their conception of the charge, had brought in their general verdict for the defendant. Of course, it was a misconception of the charge for them to consider that, if they were unable to agree upon either an affirmative or a negative answer to that question, they should give a verdict for. the defendant. In order to do that they must agree to answer at least one of the three questions submitted in the negative. Their written response was a statement that they were unable to answer either of the three either way. Of course, want of sufficient affirmative proof would be ample ground for a negative answer to either, but the statement that there were “ grave doubts in everybody’s mind ” as to one of those questions, did not convert their explicit statement that they were unable to answer that question either way into a negative answer thereon.

The special verdict should have been permitted to prevail over the general. I conclude, therefore, that the trial court properly set the latter aside and granted a new trial, for the reason that really no verdict had been reached.

As to the action of the trial justice in sending the jury out to reconsider the case and find a special verdict after they had agreed upon a general verdict for the defendant, the appellant here presents no point claiming that such action was unauthorized, although it did at the trial object to it. I think that such action, although very extraordinary, was within the discretion of the trial justice.

The appellant also contends that its motion to dismiss should have been granted for the reasons, (a) that there was no affirmative proof that the decedent took the poison accidentally; and (b) that even in the view that he did so take it, the case falls within an exception in the policy against death caused by the taking of poison.

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Bluebook (online)
182 A.D. 381, 169 N.Y.S. 28, 1918 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 4389, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hodgson-v-preferred-accident-insurance-nyappdiv-1918.