McCullough v. Liberty Life Insurance

264 P. 65, 125 Kan. 324, 57 A.L.R. 963, 1928 Kan. LEXIS 324
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedFebruary 11, 1928
DocketNo. 27,877
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 264 P. 65 (McCullough v. Liberty Life Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McCullough v. Liberty Life Insurance, 264 P. 65, 125 Kan. 324, 57 A.L.R. 963, 1928 Kan. LEXIS 324 (kan 1928).

Opinion

The opinion' of the court was delivered by

Hopkins, J.:

The action was one by the wife of Thurlow W. McCullough to recover on an accident insurance policy for his death, he having been killed by a bandit who robbed the Santa Fe railway station at Iola where McCullough was night operator and ticket agent. Plaintiff prevailed and defendant appeals.

The facts, related chiefly by the baggageman, Frank Marks, the only eye-witness of the tragedy, were substantially as follows: A train had arrived and departed about five o’clock on the morning of March 22, 1926. Marks had delivered the mail to the mail carrier and had gone into the baggage room to sleep or rest until the [325]*325coming of another train which was due at 6:30. The depot is east of the main track. He lay down on a truck, and after ten or fifteen minutes heard a noise or voices, he thought, on the east side of the depot or in the waiting room next to the baggage room. He got up, went out and found a man outside the waiting room a little distance from the west door. The man threw a flash light on him and then a gun and commanded him to go to the bay window of the ticket office, which is on that side of the depot, and open or break the window and get the money from the money drawer.

“Well, I walked up to about the center of the window and somebody shot a shot through that window right over" my head. ... I made a dive for the baggage room and when I got just about to the baggage room, he caught up with me. . . . He commenced punching me with the gun again and told me to go back there and break that window and get the money. . . .’’
“He says: ‘if you don’t bring me the money, I am going to kill you.’ It then struck my mind that if he was going to stay outside for me to bring him the money that would be the last he would see of me. Then when I opened the door and went into the waiting room, and when I just got a step or two inside I heard another shot. I don’t know who fired that shot and I don’t know from where it was fired. I made another step or two and this bandit then shot twice. He was leaning right through the door and shot twice toward the trainmen’s window.”

The trainmen’s window was in the ticket office where McCullough was then located. Marks, according to his story, then made his escape and ran to a near-by house (Ralston’s, the day ticket agent’s residence). He heard another shot as he was running away and still another after arriving at the house. The officers were summoned and several men within a few minutes returned to the railway station. McCullough was found lying on his back in the ticket office, the telephone in one hand, the receiver in the other, one bullet through his temple and another through his heart. The latter wound apparently had been inflicted when he was lying on the floor, as the bullet was found on or in the floor directly under his back where it had gone through his body.

The question for consideration is whether, according to the terms of the insurance policy, the death of the insured occurred by accidental means. A pertinent part of the policy reads:

‘Part 1. In the event the insured while this policy is in force shall sustain personal bodily injury, which is effected directly and independently of any other cause, through external, violent and purely accidental means, and which shall leave some visible mark and which injury causes . . .
“Part 2. For any one of the following specific total losses described in this paragraph which shall result solely from injury as described in Part 1, within [326]*326ninety days from the date of the accident, the company will pay in lieu of any other indemnity; life . . . The principal sum.”

The petition alleged that the insured “was without fault on his part, was by violent and purely accidental means killed by bandits and persons unknown to this plaintiff in an attempt to and a consummated robbery of the Santa Fe depot at Iola, March 22, 1926.”

The defense was that at the time of the killing, the insured “made an attack upon the bandit who was attempting to rob the office of the company by firing at him with a gun or pistol, and in making such attack the insured assumed the risk of death, and his death was the direct result of such attack.”

No evidence was introduced to support the allegations of the defendant’s answer. The only statements which at best might show by inference that the insured attacked the robber or offered resistance were made by the witness Marks to the effect that sometime before the tragedy he talked to the insured about a holdup, and insured had said that he would defend the place; that he would shoot them enough to hurt them; that they would know it when he got through 'with them although he would not kill them, and “that somebody shot through the window, right over his (Marks) head,” and that he (Marks) said to the robber he didn’t want to be killed by his best friend. This can hardly be said to have been evidence showing an attack by the insured. When he was last seen alive by the witness- Marks, McCullough was crouching behind the safe in the ticket office. No gun or pistol was observed to be in his hand. When he was next seen, he was lying on the floor of the ticket office with the telephone and receiver in his hands. There was no gun, pistol or weapon of any kind on or about his body or in the room. Marks also testified:

“I didn’t see McCullough do any shooting there that night or have a revolver or gun of any kind in his hands. The only time I saw McCullough during the trouble was when he was crouching down behind the safe.”

The plaintiff’s theory was that there were two bandits; that the one unseen by Marks was on the other side of the ticket office. On its part the defendant insistently argues that McCullough was the only person in the ticket office; that the shots came through the window in the ticket office and that two empty shells were found on the floor of the ticket office by the sheriff. The evidence, in our opinion, does not justify the conclusion of the defendant. Marks' testimony was that there was a shot (the first) through the window [327]*327over his head. The known bandit behind him could very well have shot over Marks’ head into the ticket office at McCullough; and so far as finding the shells was concerned, L. E. Brown testified that he went to the station and found McCullough dead in the ticket office; that he didn’t see any gun in the ticket office.

“I believe some of them found a couple of shells, but that’s just hearsay with me. I didn’t find any shells on the floor. I don’t know where the two shells were picked up. I saw them in the sheriff’s possession. I and Mr. Creason were the first ones to arrive there.”

If there was evidence of shells being found in the ticket office and the defendant deemed it material, that fact should have been shown. In any event, we do not deem the question of sufficient importance to reverse the case for the purpose of ascertaining the fact as to whether or not the insured offered resistance. The fact is clear that with the telephone in one hand and the receiver in the other, he could not have been offering much resistance at the time of the fatal shots.

The defendant complains of the refusal of the court to submit special questions as follows:

“1. What was the bandit’s purpose of killing McCullough?
“3.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
264 P. 65, 125 Kan. 324, 57 A.L.R. 963, 1928 Kan. LEXIS 324, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccullough-v-liberty-life-insurance-kan-1928.