Rich v. Travelers Protective Ass'n of America

8 Tenn. App. 218, 1928 Tenn. App. LEXIS 131
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMay 15, 1928
StatusPublished

This text of 8 Tenn. App. 218 (Rich v. Travelers Protective Ass'n of America) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rich v. Travelers Protective Ass'n of America, 8 Tenn. App. 218, 1928 Tenn. App. LEXIS 131 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

OWEN, J.

The Travelers Protective Association of America, hereinafter called defendant, has appealed from a judgment rendered in the chancery court of Davidson county, in favor of the complainants. The suit was based upon a $10,000 death benefit certificate, provided the death of the insured was caused by an accident. The defendant issued a certificate to Bernard Rich, who was a brother of the complainants. The complainants are nine in number. The defendant duly excepted to the decree, prayed and was granted an appeal to this court and has assigned five errors.

These errors raise the following propositions:

(1) The Chancellor erred in not dismissing complainant’s bill.

(2) The Chancellor erred in holding that the insured’s death resulted from injuries effected directly and independently of all other causes, through external, violent and accidental means.

(3) The Chancellor erred in holding that the death of the insured was accidental.

(4) The Chancellor erred in not holding that the insured undertook a hazardous adventure, under the circumstances surrounding his death.

The case was tried before Chancellor John R. Aust, who rendered a written finding of fact in his opinion, which is made a part of this record.

Learned counsel for the complainants state in their brief that the opinion of the Chancellor is so clear, logical and convincing, that for the convenience of each member of the court, it is printed in full as an appendix to their brief.

■The opinion of the learned Chancellor is an able one and has cited the facts in a clear and logical manner and he has also cited numerous authorities in support of his opinion, which we have examined and find the principles announced in the various cases cited are applicable to the issues in this case.

The defense made was that the insured’s death was not by accident. He lost his life in the Cumberland River, probably twenty miles from Nashville, on July 4, 1925. At the- time of his death he was a strong healthy man, about fifty years of age, had not been afflicted with any disease or infirmity which would result in death because of his receiving a thrill or shock.

The record indicates that the deceased was a fairly good swimmer. Just prior to the accident the deceased, in company with some friends, visited a lock and dam on the Cumberland River. The water was flowing somewhat swiftly over the dam and various persons were going over this dam on a surf board. The deceased undertook to go *220 over. He bad seen other parties go over, and come out unharmed. In fact, it appears that this surf board liad been used for a number of years and no accident had ever happened prior to July 4, 1925. The deceased got on a board and was pushed off and went over the dam. Shortly after going over and out into the eddy below formed in the river from the water coming over the dam, the deceased was noticed to be sinking, and his body did sink and was not recovered until the next day.

It was the insistence of the Insurance Company that because no water was found in the deceased’s lungs that he was not drowned, but his death was caused from heart failure, but if he was drowned, then the deceased assumed such a hazardous risk in g’oing over the falls that the defendant should be relieved from paying the policy.

Without further elaboration we set forth the Chancellor’s opinion, which is full, and which makes a full statement of the facts:

“The defendant is a fraternal accident insurance order, and the complainants are the brothers and sisters of Bernard Rich, deceased, and the beneficiaries of an accident policy issued by the defendant to said Rich. Pursuant to its constitution and by-laws the policy obligated the defendant upon the death of said Rich caused by accidental means, as hereinafter more particularly shown, to pay the beneficiaries the sum of $10,000.
“On July 4, 1925, Bernard Rich met his death and complainants’ claim is that death was solely and exclusively caused by violent, external and accidental means. Proof of death was made, and a formal demand for payment having been refused by the company, on grounds hereafter to be stated, this suit brought to recover the face of the policy, with interest and statutory penalty.
“There is practically no conflict in the testimony, though, there is a sharp controversy over what inferences are to be drawn therefrom as well as the applicable rules of law.
“On July 4, 1925, M£ Bernard Rich, accompanied by Messrs. Morris Loveman and Merrill Moore and by Misses Jessamine Stein and Stella Rich, repaired to Woodale Grove, a bathing- beach on the Cumberland River near Nashville, for the purpose of bathing and swimming. There they met and became associated with Mr. Robert Alexander and wife. Some of the party, including Mr. Rich, entered the water and engaged in the game of ‘water hand ball.’ During the progress of the game Mr. Rich and the other participants were in the water over their heads and Mr. Rich demonstrated he was a fair swimmer.
“Finding the beach at Woodale filled with a holiday crowd, Mr. Rich and party, now including Alexander and wife, decided to go up the river a short distance to a lock and dam erected and maintained by the United States Government. At this point the water was flowing over the dam at a depth of from eight to ten inches. It first *221 flowed over the crest of the dam and then down an incline about twenty feet long onto an apron about ten feet wide and some two and one-half feet below the lower edge of the incline. From the apronj which was level, the water flowed into the open river level, about two feet below the edge of the apron. According to the undisputed evidence, this was a favorite place and there were summer pleasure camps in the vicinity near the dam. Messrs. Alexander and Criddle, witnesses for defendant, say, and I so find, that when Rich and party arrived ‘A good many of the swimmers were going over the dam, on a kind of board they had there . . . and there were a great number of them going over.’
“The boards mentioned are called ‘surf boards’ by the witnesses. They were about three feet wide by three and a half feet long, and had a strip or cleat fastened at each end on the top side. The party desiring to ride a board down the incline and into the river would mount it at the top of the dam while others held it, plant his feet against the front cleat and his hands against the rear one, his back toward the board, but so braced by feet and hands that the body would be protected from any jar which might occur when the board left the incline and passed to the apron. This was being done near the shore and just below where the board struck the river there was an eddy through which it was not difficult to swim to the shore.' It seems this was a favorite sport at this place for the younger people and had been engaged in for several summers prior to 1925, and has been followed each season since then. Except' on the one occasion when Mr. Rich met his death, it does not appear that any person suffered any injury while engaging in this pasttime. The thrill or pleasurable sensation is in riding rather rapidly down the incline, the impact on the water on the apron and from that down to the river level.

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Bluebook (online)
8 Tenn. App. 218, 1928 Tenn. App. LEXIS 131, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rich-v-travelers-protective-assn-of-america-tennctapp-1928.