Mutual Life Insurance v. Kelly

197 N.E. 235, 49 Ohio App. 319, 3 Ohio Op. 226, 19 Ohio Law. Abs. 422, 1934 Ohio App. LEXIS 365
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 28, 1934
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 197 N.E. 235 (Mutual Life Insurance v. Kelly) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mutual Life Insurance v. Kelly, 197 N.E. 235, 49 Ohio App. 319, 3 Ohio Op. 226, 19 Ohio Law. Abs. 422, 1934 Ohio App. LEXIS 365 (Ohio Ct. App. 1934).

Opinion

Sherick, P. J.

The Mutual Life Insurance Company of Baltimore, defendant in the trial court, here seeks reversal of a judgment entered against it and in favor of Blanche Kelly, the beneficiary named in a life policy upon the life of one Harold Farson; and also an additional sum upon an accidental death provision thereof.

The petition avers that the insured was accidentally shot on the 19th of April, 1933, by a trap gun which had been placed bn the inside of a cottage located on the banks of the Muskingum river, and that the insured died as a result thereof.

To this petition the insurer interposed three defenses, the first being a general denial; the second averred a condition of the policy of non-liability in the event that “insured dies in consequence of his or her own criminal action”, and that insured did die in consequence of his own criminal act; the third defense plead a further contractual provision, in that “no accidental death benefit will be paid if the death of the insured resulted * * * from violation of law by the insured,” and that he, the insured, did die as a result *321 of violating the law. The reply filed is a general denial.

The facts disclose that the insured and another had purchased a pair of pliers, and had thereafter proceeded to hunt mushrooms, and on their return home entered an enclosed lot belonging to one Brown. It is in evidence that four or five “keep out” notices were posted in conspicuous places about the premises, which notices the companion of the insured says he did not see. There is evidence of the fact that the cottage had a screened-in porch; that a few days prior to the happening the screen door was intact, closed, and hooked in two places with nails bent over the hooks; that after the happening this door was found open, the nails bent and broken, and the screen torn in two places convenient to the hooks. It further appears that the insured called his associate to the porch window to see a canoe that was inside the cottage, and that while he stood there admiring the canoe, he heard a shot and saw the deceased run off the porch; further than this he knows little or nothing of the transaction.

It is affirmatively in evidence as a part of the company’s case that a readable sign was glued on the inside of the glass in the door through which the insured was shot. It read “Friendly warning, Keep out.” This fact is negatively denied by several of the plaintiff’s witnesses who were called in rebuttal. It is further proved and not denied that the gun set upon a tripod near the door had an iron rod attached to the trigger of the gun, which rod extended to within three or four inches from the lower part of the door, and that the door was bolted at the top. The almost conclusive inference is that the insured must have pushed in the door sufficiently at the bottom to spring the door, and thereby caused the gun to be discharged. The further evidence is, from one of the first arrivals on the scene, that the door “burst at the top” when *322 he applied pressure, and that he then entered thereby. There is some evidence pro and con concerning a strip nailed to the floor at the bottom of the door, but whatever the fact may be as to that seems to us to be immaterial. It is further in evidence that a box of fishing tackle that had belonged to Brown, which had reposed on the window ledge inside the porch, was afterwards found in the insured’s pocket, along with the recently purchased pliers, which showed jaw marks like those on the nails found broken off at the screen door.

In view of this chain of circumstances we are unable to conceive how the jury could have arrived at the conclusion that the insured’s trespass was but a technical trespass, and not a criminal trespass; unless it be that the jury was influenced by certain testimony which we feel was improperly admitted in evidence over objection.

We have painstakingly read every word of the evidence in this case to discover whether the company introduced any evidence which would place in issue the character of the insured. Such was not done by the pleading; nor was it done by the proof offered. No attempt was made to show that the insured had ever done a prior similar act, and the truth is that only facts and circumstances pertaining to this affair were placed in evidence.

In rebuttal the beneficiary was permitted to call a number of character witnesses, who testified that the deceased bore a good reputation and was a peaceable and law-abiding citizen. In this we think the court erred to the prejudice of the plaintiff in error.

The defendant in error asserts that this evidence was admissible and competent because of the fact that the second and third defenses in effect charge that the insured had committed a crime, that thereby his character was questioned and placed in issue, wherefor the rule applicable, in criminal cases applied, to-wit, that *323 reputation evidence is admissible for the reason that a man with a good reputation is not as likely to commit a criminal act as one with a bad reputation. But the fact is overlooked that this is a civil action based upon a contract, wherein the insured’s general character was not involved.

It is the generally accepted rule that in civil actions, even where fraud is imputed or dishonesty is charged, evidence of a party’s good or bad character is incompetent in evidence unless it be made an issue by the pleadings or the proof, as in actions for libel and slander, malicious prosecution, or cases of seduction. In these exceptions to the rule, character is generally involved and the amount of the damages recoverable may be affected thereby.

Jones in his Commentaries on the Law of Evidence (2nd Ed.), Volume 2, pages 1190 to 1193, inclusive, Sections 639 and 640, adopts the reasoning of Heileg v. Dumas, 65 N. C., 214, and Quinalty v. Temple, 176 F., 67, 99 C. C. A., 375, 27 L. R. A. (N. S.), 1114, in discussing the general rule:

‘If such evidence is proper, then a person may screen himself from the punishment due to fraudulent conduct till his character becomes bad. * * * Every man must be answerable for every improper act, and the character of every transaction must be ascertained by its own circumstances, and not by the character of the parties.’ ”

‘At best, such evidence is a mere matter of opinion, and, in matters of opinion, witnesses are apt to be influenced by prejudice or partisanship, of which they may be unconscious, or by the opinions of those who first approach them on the subject. The introduction of such evidence, in civil cases, to bolster the character of parties and witnesses who have not been impeached, would make trials intolerably tedious and greatly increase the expense and delay of litigation.’ ”

*324 The author further points out that in the ordinary-case character evidence has but a remote bearing as proof as to whether or not the act in question has or has not been committed, for, as said in Thompson v. Church,

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Bluebook (online)
197 N.E. 235, 49 Ohio App. 319, 3 Ohio Op. 226, 19 Ohio Law. Abs. 422, 1934 Ohio App. LEXIS 365, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mutual-life-insurance-v-kelly-ohioctapp-1934.