Penn Mutual Life Insurance v. Roberts

269 S.W. 736, 207 Ky. 524, 1925 Ky. LEXIS 128
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedFebruary 27, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 269 S.W. 736 (Penn Mutual Life Insurance v. Roberts) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Penn Mutual Life Insurance v. Roberts, 269 S.W. 736, 207 Ky. 524, 1925 Ky. LEXIS 128 (Ky. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Clarke

Affirming.

This is an action by the beneficiary to collect five insurance policies, aggregating $38,000.00 issued by appellant upon the life of her husband, C. W. Roberts, a little less than a year before his death, which occurred April 3d, 1921. Each policy contains the usual clause against suicide within a year, and plaintiff, in an amended petition filed before answer, admitted suicide, but alleged that the insured was so insane at the time he did not know the nature or realize the consequence of his act, which, under the uniform decisions of this court, is a good plea in avoidance. National Life Ins. Co. v. Watson, Extrx., 194 Ky. 355, 239 S. W. 35.

Issue was- joined on this plea, much evidence taken thereon by deposition, and the case set for trial on May 17,1923. On the afternoon of May 16, plaintiff was permitted, over defendant’s objection and exception, to withdraw her amended petition admitting suicide, and to file a reply denying same. In support of her motion thus late to amend her pleadings, plaintiff filed an affidavit alleging that her husband’s death occurred in Huntington, West Virginia; that she at the time was with her father in Memphis, Tennessee; that her admission of suicide was made upon the faith of such a statement in the coroner’s certificate of his death, and that in preparing her case for trial she had discovered there was no evidence of her husband’s having committed suicide.

In permitting the amended petition to be withdrawn and the reply to be filed the court traversed the latter of record, and because of the change in issues offered defendant a continuance. Defendant took time to consider the matter, and the next morning announced ready for trial, after a stipulation had been signed by the parties permitting it to introduce in evidence an unauthenticated copy, as a true copy, of the coroner’s certificate of the insured’s death, in which the cause of his death was stated to have been “suicide from cyanide of potassium,” and agreeing that the laws of West Virginia re[526]*526quired such a certificate to he made and filed, aud to state therein the time, place and cause of decedent’s death.

As the issues were finally formed, the burden was upon the defendant, and it introduced in evidence not only its own depositions but those taken by plaintiff as well, together with the oral testimony of three witnesses, the so-called suicide note, and plaintiff’s amended petition containing the admission of suicide. Thereupon plaintiff offered in evidence the entire record, which was admitted over defendant’s objection and exception.

Defendant then moved for a directed verdict, which motion was overruled, and the case was submitted to the jury upon the two issues as to whether insured had committed suicide, and if so, whether at the time he was so insane that he did not know the nature of his act.

The jury returned a verdict for plaintiff, judgment was entered thereon, and, defendant’s, motion for a new trial having been overruled, it prosecuted this appeal.

• The grounds urged for reversal are that the court erred: (1) In refusing a new trial because of newly discovered evidence, (2) in submitting to the jury any ques>tion of insured’s mental condition, (3) in permitting plaintiff to read to the jury her own pleadings, and (4) in refusing a new trial because of the failure of the court to discharge the jury after one of the jurors had made statements from his own experience upon a vital point an the case.

As the insured died in Huntington, W. Ya., and the trial was to be had in Louisville, Ky., most of the proof had to be taken by deposition, and while self-destruction was admitted by plaintiff’s pleadings. It was brought out in that evidence, however, that insured and his friend, J. M. Parker, had been living for several weeks at the Frederick Hotel in Huntington, where deceased was engaged in the jeweler’s business, and that they occupied rooms on the same floor: that they went up on the elevator together about 11 o ’clock Saturday night, April 2d; that about eleven o’clock the next morning, Parker and Mr. O’Neal, manager of the hotel, forced open the door to decedent’s room and found him dead, lying across the bed, with most of his clothing on; that there was an unsigned note, in decedent’s handwriting, on the dresser, which was referred to as a ‘ ‘ suicide note; ’ ’ and beside the bed an empty bottle and glass, in both of which there was a white sediment; that there had been no' autopsy or chemical examination of the contents of the bottle or [527]*527glass, and that the coroner, without any opinion as a physician as to the cause of decedent’s death, had concluded and stated in his certificate that it was “suicide from cyanide of potassium,” because of the above circumstances and the fact that jewelers used in their business cyanide of potassium; and that the so-called suicide note was in the possession of plaintiff.

Only one of these witnesses was asked about the date of the note, and while he remembered and stated its contents in substance, he did not remember its date, and all of these witnesses seem to have assumed that it was written upon the night of assured’® death, namely, April 3d, 1921. The note however bore date “3/3/21,” which is, of course, March ,3ld, 1921, of which fact defendant and his counsel had not been informed when they waived a continuance and announced ready for trial. This, how-, ever, was brought sharply to their attention by counsel for plaintiff in their opening statement of the case to- the jury, when that fact was commented upon -as evidence that the note was not in fact a suicide note because not written at the time of decedent’s death but 30 days prior thereto.

The note is written upon a letterhead of the Frederick Hotel, and, omitting the heading, reads as follows:

“3/3/21 (1 A. M.)

“I have lost my mind. This is being written during a period of partial sanity. I want Mr. J. M. Parker in room 212 to take charge of my body, and arrange about getting it to Memphis, where my wife is, for burrial. First communicate with her at 1961 Union Ave., Memphis-, Tenn., and see if she wants me hurried here or brought there for burrial. I want him to see that my wife gets my insurance properly paid over to her, which at this time is over $40.000.00, also a $2,000.00 policy to my father & mother at Buchanan, Ky. ’ ’

The importance of the true date of this note upon both questions at issue is obvious, since if written upon the night of insured’s death it furnished much stronger evidence of suicide than if written a month before, and is by its terms almost, if not conclusive, proof that when written insured contemplated some action which he knew would result in his death. That this was clearly realized by the parties during the trial would necessarily be pre[528]*528sumed, even if1 it were not proven, as it is, by the fact that it was argued by plaintiff that tbe note was of but little probative value upon either of the two issues involved because written a month theretofore, and by counsel for defendant that it was conclusive upon both of these questions against the plaintiff because it was written on the night of the insured’s death, despite the fact it bore an earlier date, and that this was due to a mistake by the decedent in dating the note.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
269 S.W. 736, 207 Ky. 524, 1925 Ky. LEXIS 128, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/penn-mutual-life-insurance-v-roberts-kyctapp-1925.