Metropolitan Accident Ass'n v. Taylor

71 Ill. App. 132, 1896 Ill. App. LEXIS 213
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJune 16, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 71 Ill. App. 132 (Metropolitan Accident Ass'n v. Taylor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Metropolitan Accident Ass'n v. Taylor, 71 Ill. App. 132, 1896 Ill. App. LEXIS 213 (Ill. Ct. App. 1897).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Pleasants

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Appellant is a mutual benefit association, organized under the act of July 18, 1883. On the 9th of January, 1894, it issued its certificate of membership to Homer E. Taylor, of Brockton, Illinois, who is alleged to have been killed by an engine of the C. & ET. W. E. E. Co., near the city of Clinton, Iowa, on the 5th of August, 1894. Appellee, his mother, named in said certificate as ' beneficiary in case of his death, brought this action thereon, which was tried by the court ivithout a jury, and resulted in a finding and judgment in her favor for $1,053.33; from which judgment on exceptions duly taken, this appeal is prosecuted.

The case was submitted on a stipulation, together with depositions of the engineer and coroner, showing the facts to be as follows:

About seven o’clock in the morning of the day mentioned, deceased, with two companions, started from Clinton to go to the next town, walking upon the railroad track, and so continued for about three miles, when his companions left him upon the track to go to a farm house about an eighth of a mile distant, for something to eat. He declined to go with them, but said he would wait for them, and the intention was, upon their return, to prosecute their journey together. He then appeared to be in good health. They left him at about the place where a few minutes afterward he was struck by the locomotive and found dead. He was not again seen until discovered by the engineer on the train coming from the west with a speed of forty or more miles per hour. '

The place of the accident was on the main line of the Iowa Division, between Clinton and Council Bluffs, over which, double tracked, thirteen regular trains each way passed every day, and often as many extras, all of those going east running on one track and of those going west on the other, unless through' special orders. For a mile each way from that place the tracks are straight, with, nothing on or very near the right of way to obstruct the view for that distance in either direction. It was fenced on both sides, the nearest opening being a highway crossing five or six hundred feet distant.

On the occasion in question the approaching train was on the north track. When about three-quarters of a mile away, the engineer first observed something on the track ahead, but until he was within four hundred feet of it, he did not know it was a man. Taylor was then sitting on the north rail and facing southeast—not directly across the track, but with his back partially turned in the direction from which all trains on that track approached—his legs stretched out, his arms on his knees and his head hanging down between his legs. The engineer did not notice that he looked toward the engine or raised his head, or moved in any way.

The coroner, a physician oí twenty-two years’ practice, upon a personal examination within three hours after the accident, found both legs and the back of deceased broken, - his skull crushed and bowels exposed, injuries which, being quite sufficient, he very naturally understood to have caused his death, and that “ his system and person were entirely free from intoxicating^ beverages.”

By the terms of the certificate, the application therefor and the by-laws of the association are made a part of it; and the by-laws declare that “ the certificate shall provide against all forms of bodily injuries induced by external, violent and accidental means, except as follows:

The benefits under the certificate * * * shall not extend to * * * death or disability happening directly or indirectly in consequence of disease or bodily infirmity, * * * or by voluntary exposure to any unnecessary danger * * * "

The following hazards are risks not contemplated or covered by this insurance, and no sum whatever shall be paid for any injury received while thus exposed or in consequence of such exposure, to wit: walking on the road-bed or bridge of any railroad,” and others specified.

The technical points against the judgment, based on provisions of the certificate, and by-laws relating to notice and proofs of injury, surgeon’s certificate, and time of bringing suit, were so well answered that we think it unimportant to refer to them particularly. Hor do we see any material error of the court as to the law. But we do not concur in "the finding of the issues on the evidence. Since it was all in writing the trial judge had no better means of determining its weight than has this court.

The first question arising upon it is whether Taylor’s death was due to “ external, violent and purely accidental ” causes. '

Upon the assumption that he was alive until the engine struck him, the coroner’s statement would be a conclusive and affirmative answer. And that assumption on his part was entirely natural. But was it warranted % His examination of the body was made within three hours after the accident, and it does not appear, nor is it to be presumed, that either at any time before, or when his deposition was taken, he had any knowledge or information of the facts testified to by the engineer, who doubtless went on with his train. How are these unquestioned facts to be explained ? Suicide, of which there is neither claim, proof nor legal presumption, is out of the question. Was he asleep % He was a young man, apparently in good health—according to his application—by occupation a farm hand and tile ditcher, and handled, in business, agricultural implements and horses. Such men usually go to bed early and sleep soundly. They are not apt to be drowsy at eight o’clock in the morning of an August day. That he did not go with his companions for food was probably because he had breakfasted at Clinton, and was ready for work until noon. "A walk of three miles ought not to have fatigued him or made him drowsy. Had he felt inclined to take a nap while they were gone, would he have chosen a sitting posture on the rail of a track upon which he must have known that trains frequently passed, rather than to lie down in the shade of a fence, when the morning was bright and clear and the grass probably dry ? Moreover, had he so strangely chosen, and been drowsing or asleep, it is well nigh certain that he would have been aroused sufficiently to make some visible motion, if not to get off the track, by the noise of the coming train, the vibration of the rail on which he sat, and the whistle blown for the highway crossing five or six hundred feet east of him.

If he was awake, but paralyzed, it would seem to have been a case of paral)7sis instantly so complete and total as to deprive him of all power of motion in every part—head, trunk and limb; which we apprehend is quite as seldom met Avith in temperate men of his age and mode of life as apoplexy, or failure or organic affection of the heart, causing sudden death.

In cases of transient fainting or prostration, consciousness ig very rarely if ever lost Avithout some warning, and is soon recovered, with power to move. How long it was before the engine struck him that Taylor lost it, the evidence furnishes no means of determining.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Osgood v. United States Health & Accident Insurance Co.
84 A. 50 (Supreme Court of New Hampshire, 1912)
McClure v. Great Western Accident Ass'n
110 N.W. 466 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1907)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
71 Ill. App. 132, 1896 Ill. App. LEXIS 213, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/metropolitan-accident-assn-v-taylor-illappct-1897.