National Life & Accident Insurance v. Braswell

272 S.W. 413, 209 Ky. 165, 1925 Ky. LEXIS 452
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMay 19, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 272 S.W. 413 (National Life & Accident Insurance v. Braswell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
National Life & Accident Insurance v. Braswell, 272 S.W. 413, 209 Ky. 165, 1925 Ky. LEXIS 452 (Ky. 1925).

Opinion

*166 Opinion op the Court by.

Judge Sampson

Affirming.

In consideration of the payment to it of certain specified premiums, the National Life & Accident Insurance Company, a Tennessee corporation, with headquarters at Nashville, issued and delivered to Tilford A. Braswell, of Eddyville, Lyon county, an accident and sick benefit policy of insurance, effective from and after the hour of noon September 9, 19.18, to continue in force so long as the premiums were paid in accordance with the terms of the policy. His wife, the appellee, Lillian W. Braswell, was named beneficiary in the contract. For death through accident in the ways specified in the policy, she was to receive $1,000.00, and after the policy had been carried for a certain specified time, the principal sum was increased yearly. In case of sickness the insured was to receive $25.00 per week. The insured, Tilford A. Braswell, died intestate on March 20, 1923, and his wife, appellee, Lillian M. Braswell, was duly appointed administratrix of his estate by the Lyon county court, and she thereafter instituted an action in the Lyon circuit court upon the policy to recover $1,000.00, the principal sum, and $500.00 increase therein, resulting from the carrying of the policy through four and one-half years, and $117.80, the amount of premiums paid by insured under certain terms of the contract, a total of $1,617.80. Ln the petition it was averred that the premiums stipulated in the policy had been duly and regularly paid by the insured to the company and that the policy was in full force and effect at the time of the accident to insured from which the insured died on the date above stated. The policy insured Braswell against “Loss of life, limb, sight or speech and hearing, resulting directly and independently of all other causes from bodily injury which is effected accidentally and through external and violent means, excluding suicide, sane or insane, herein called such injury, in the initial principal sum of one thousand dollars.”

By answer the company traversed and put in issue all of the material averments of the petition including the accidental death of Braswell and the payment of premiums by him. By a second paragraph the company pleaded that the fall and injury, described in the petition, were not the cause of the insured’s death but that he. received other injuries on the 11th day of February, 1923, *167 which were intentionally inflicted upon him either by himself or by others on that date, and that Braswell at the same time drank a great quantity of whiskey which contained fusel oil and other poisonous substances, drinking to such an extent that he became greatly intoxicated and very sick and nauseated from the effects thereof; that the insured died from the effects of the alcoholic stimulants consumed by him and that his death was not accidental. Or, if not so produced, then his death was' the result of injuries inflicted by himself or others, and that under the terms of the policy the company was not liable therefor; that the company was not liable in any event for the death of the insured caused or brought about through injuries intentionally inflicted upon him by himself or by others.

Both the petition and the answer were amended with leave of court. A reply was filed by the appellee to the amended answer of the company in which all the affirmative averments were put in issue. This reply, however, was not filed at the term at which the amended answer was filed, and indeed not until the next term and only two or three days before the calling of the case for trial, and this is one of the grounds of complaint which the insurance company now makes upon this appeal.

The facts surrounding the death of Braswell were proven by the administratrix to be as follows: The insured left his home at Eddyville, on Saturday or Sunday and went by the train to Paducah. He met some friends en route and they all went to the Riverview Hotel, where they had some intoxicating liquors; while he and two other persons were in one of the rooms of the hotel he sat upon the side of a bed with the liquor on the floor, not far from his feet; that he was intoxicated and when reaching for the bottle on the floor he lost his balance and pitched forward, his head striking the floor and a bottle or broken glass on the floor, cutting his head and face and inflicting such serious injuries that he immediately became unconscious, bled profusely, lingered, and in about two weeks died.

There was no evidence showing that the insured came to his death in any other way than as claimed by appellee, except that the appellant company introduced one or two witnesses who stated in substance that they saw the insured on the day he returned from Paducah to his home in Eddyville, and talked to him, or heard him talk, and that he stated in answer to questions as to how *168 he received his injuries, that he had been in an automobile accident. There was absolutely no evidence tending to show that the insured had brought about his own death, or that the wounds found upon his head and face were intentionally inflicted by others. Equally lacking was evidence in support of the averments of the answer of appellant company that he had died from the consumption of poisonous liquors.

Several grounds are relied upon by appellant for a reversal of the judgment, the first one being, “Error in refusing continuance on account of absence of the witness, Austin Bell.”

When the case was called for trial the appellee, Mrs. Braswell, administratrix, announced ready, but the insurance company announced not ready and filed an affidavit in support of motion for continuance on account of the absence of Austin Bell. The affidavit stated that the affiant is advised that the witness, Bell, would state he had viewed the body of the insured after his death and found on him abrasions and marks indicating that he had been struck with the heel of a shoe. It does not state that this evidence when given by the witness would be true. The affidavit was, therefore, insufficient. On the facts made known to the trial court, an order was entered overruling the motion for continuance on the ground that the mover had not shown diligence. Certainly the affidavit was not sufficient to manifest diligence on the part of the company, and the court did not err in overruling the motion for continuance.

Appellant insists that its motion for a peremptory instruction should have been sustained. In this it is mistaken. The facts proven by the administratrix were entirely sufficient to warrant the court in submitting the case to the jury.

Appellant company complains that the court overruled its motion to require appellee to' elect whether she would prosecute the suit in her individual capacity or as administratrix of the estate of her deceased husband.Again it is in error. As Mrs. Braswell was the beneficiary named in the policy she was entitled to recover upon it as an individual, if at all; and as the weekly sick benefits belonged to the estate' of Braswell and not to her individually she was entitled to maintain an action against the insurance company in her official capacity as administratrix.

*169 ■' It is next complained that the trial court overruled motion to strike the reply to the amended answer filed 'on.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
272 S.W. 413, 209 Ky. 165, 1925 Ky. LEXIS 452, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/national-life-accident-insurance-v-braswell-kyctapphigh-1925.