Knight v. Metropolitan Life Insurance Company

437 P.2d 416, 103 Ariz. 100, 1968 Ariz. LEXIS 212
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 8, 1968
Docket9064-PR
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 437 P.2d 416 (Knight v. Metropolitan Life Insurance Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arizona Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Knight v. Metropolitan Life Insurance Company, 437 P.2d 416, 103 Ariz. 100, 1968 Ariz. LEXIS 212 (Ark. 1968).

Opinion

UDALL, Vice Chief Justice:

This matter is before us on petition to review the decision of the Court of Appeals, Div. 2, 5 Ariz.App. 473, 428 P.2d 137. The judgment of the Court of Appeals is vacated.

At the time of his death on June 28, 1964 Jackie E. Knight was one of the named insured in a Metropolitan Life Insurance Company policy which provided: “If, while insured under the Group Policy for Insurance for Death or Dismemberment by Accidental Means, the Employee sustains bodily injuries solely through violent, external and accidental means, and within ninety days thereafter suffers any of the losses specified in Section C hereof as a direct result of such bodily injuries independently of all other causes, the Insurance Company shall pay the amount of insurance specified for such loss * * * Named beneficiary under the policy was the appellant, Bernice M. Knight, mother of the decedent.

Jackie Knight, then 22 years of age, suffered his death almost immediately following a voluntary dive from atop Coolidge Dam in Gila County. In denying his beneficiary, Bernice M. Knight, recovery under the policy the trial court concluded as a matter of law:

"Conclusions of Law
“The deceased as a reasonable man under the circumstances should have anticipated that death or serious bodily injury would result as the natural and probable consequence of his own voluntary act. Such is not accidental.
*102 “Applying this test to the evidence there can he no recovery against the said Metropolitan Life Insurance Company.”

It is conceded in the evidence and the trial court made an express finding of fact that “Jackie E. Knight was an experienced «Ever.” The record is replete with testi:mony of many dives from high places .Jackie had made over a period of years. 'JHe had made dives of 15, 25, 40, 50 and Tipwards of 75 feet from diving boards, railroad trestles, ship decks, rocky ledges and box canyons; and he had in fact (together with a friend who testified) jumped from atop Coolidge Dam in years past. It appears from the testimony of those who knew him that he was a very experienced and good diver, that he was extremely confident in his own ability, and that he had an abiding idiosyncracy or compulsion to prove that ability to himself and others by executing, over a period of years, successively higher dives.

Then, in the early morning of June 28, 1964, when Jackie, with several buddies was at Coolidge Dam he confidently entered into the execution of what was to be his last dive. The testimony of a witness is set out below. 1

The primary question presented for review is whether Jackie E. Knight’s death was accidental within the meaning of the policy provision, supra. In California State Life Ins. Co. v. Fuqua, 40 Ariz. 148, 10 P.2d 958 (1932) we examined the meaning of the word “accidental” as used in insurance policies of this nature. In that case the insured was shot to death by police while he held a gun in his hand and may have been attempting to resist arrest. In holding that his policy beneficiary was entitled to recover this court said:

“Defendant claims, and supports its claim by many authorities, that ‘an effect which is the natural and probable consequence of an act or course of action cannot be said to be produced by accidental means.’ Giving the language of *103 this definition its ordinary meaning, it cannot he held true, for it is, taken literally, a denial of the possibility of an ‘accident,’ unless we assume that the attack recently made by some theorists upon the law of cause and effect has been successful. All effects are the natural, probable, and indeed inevitable consequences of definite acts or courses of action, or we must abandon our entire present system of epistemology. The so-called ‘accident’ is as much the inevitable consequence of one specific act or course of action as is a mathematical conclusion the inevitable result of certain premises.
“If the cases supporting defendant’s definition are analyzed carefully, it will be found that what they really mean is that an effect which was or should have been reasonably anticipated by an insured person to be the natural or probable result of his own voluntary acts is not accidental. Or to put it in the affirmative form, if the result is one which in the ordinary course of affairs would not be anticipated by a reasonable person to flow from his own acts, it is accidental. The test is, what effect should the insured, as a reasonable man, expect from his own actions under the circumstances. Let us apply this test to the evidence. (Emphasis added)

The Fuqua test was recently reaffirmed in Malanga v. Royal Indemnity Company (1967) 101 Ariz. 588, 422 P.2d 704. In Malanga the insured died from a self-induced overdose of drugs (not sufficient enough in itself to cause death) and a consumption of alcoholic beverage (the quantity of which in like manner would not have caused death). If we were to apply the Fuqua test to the facts now before us we believe the result obtained would concur with the holding hereafter set out. However we have chosen this case as a vehicle to re-examine the meaning of “accidental,” “accidental means,” “accidental results,” and similar terms used in health and accident policies and life policies providing double indemnity for “death by accidental means.”

After the Fuqua case, the U. S. Supreme Court decided Landress v. Phoenix Mutual Life Ins. Co. (1934), 291 U.S. 491, 54 S.Ct. 461, 78 L.Ed. 934, in which the majority held that to establish liability under an accident policy covering death effected through external, violent and “accidental means” it is insufficient that death or injury was accidental in the sense of being extraordinary and unforeseen; but the means effecting such bodily injury must in themselves be external and accidental. In an oft-quoted dissent which has now become the majority rule throughout the states, Justice Cardozo said:

“ * * * The attempted distinction between accidental results and accidental means will plunge this branch of the law into a Serbonian Bog. ‘Probably it is true to say that in the strictest sense and dealing with the region of physical nature there is no such thing as an accident.’ * * * On the other hand, the average man is convinced that there is, and so certainly is the man who takes-out a policy of accident insurance. It is his reading of the policy that is to be accepted as our guide, with the help of the established rule that ambiguities and uncertainties are to be resolved against the company. * * * When a man has died in such a way that his death is spoken of as an accident, he has died because of an accident, and hence by accidental means. * * * If there was no accident in the means, there was none in the result, for the two were inseparable.

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Bluebook (online)
437 P.2d 416, 103 Ariz. 100, 1968 Ariz. LEXIS 212, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/knight-v-metropolitan-life-insurance-company-ariz-1968.