Robinson v. Hawkeye Commercial Men's Ass'n

186 Iowa 759
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMarch 20, 1919
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 186 Iowa 759 (Robinson v. Hawkeye Commercial Men's Ass'n) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Robinson v. Hawkeye Commercial Men's Ass'n, 186 Iowa 759 (iowa 1919).

Opinion

Salinger, J.

1. Appeal and error’: decisions reviewable : order overruling motion to dismiss bill in equity : failure to renew. I. At the close of plaintiff’s testimony, the defendant moved the court to dismiss the bill of plaintiff on four grounds, which amount to an assertion that, upon the evidence of the plaintiff, there is such lack of proof as that the court is not warranted in entering any decree other than a dismissal; and the last ground of the motion asserts there is no evidence that any proof of loss was furnished the defendant. The motion was not renewed at the close of all the evidence. The overruling of it constitutes the first complaint presented here.

[762]*762H this motion to dismiss had been a motion to direct verdict,. we could not consider an assignment complaining of its denial, if the motion was not renewed at the close of all the testimony. The underlying reason for this rule of appellate practice is that, when a party asserts that it is entitled to the judgment upon the proof made by his opponent, and, after said motion is overruled, he introduces evidence, he has waived the motion if he fails to renew it at the close of all the evidence, because it is presumed, from the failure to renew the motion, that the evidence introduced by the movent after the motion was overruled, has so changed the record as that the motion to direct, though it may have been well taken at the close of the testimony for one side, is no longer well taken, by reason of the evidence introduced after the ruling. This reasoning applies to a motion to dismiss a bill in equity, made at the close of the testimony of one party, as much as it does to a motion to direct verdict, made at that stage of the trial. This, of course, does not mean that one who moves to dismiss the bill for want of evidence may not contend in this court that all the evidence is insufficient to sustain the decree, even though he does not renew his motion to dismiss. This is but in analogy to the rule prevailing on the law side, that, though a party has waived the right to complain in this court that his motion for an instructed verdict was denied, he may urge in some manner, say by motion for new trial, that the evidence as a whole does not sustain the judgment. That the decree is not warranted by the evidence is properly. raised in this record.

II. The petition alleges, generally, that assured was a member of defendant association, and during his lifetime kept and performed all his obligations to the defendant by virtue of said membership; and that, at a time stated, a piece of brick was thrown by one Weyman, which acci[763]*763dentally struck assured on the head, and accidentally fractured In's skull, and directly caused liis ‘accidental death.

. The essential controversy arises upon affirmative defenses interposed.

2. Insurance : accident insurance : “injury intentionally inflicted” defined. The policy provides that there shall be no liability for an injury, whether resulting in death or not, if such injury is “intentionally inflicted on a member by another person in or by reason of any altercation, brawl, or fight provoked by the member;” and it is averred that assured came to his death “from an injury intentionally inflicted upon the member by one Weyman, in or by reason of an altercation, brawl, or fight,provoked by said decedent.” Tt follows that, though the injury was received in such altercation, etc., still there is liability, if the injury was not intentionally inflicted. Tt follows that failure to prove that the injury was intentionally inflicted ends further inquiry as to this defense; wherefore we address ourselves first- to whether the injury was intentionally inflicted by We3rman. On that question, the authorities all seem to hold that, when found in a polic3r, words such as “intentionally inflicted injury” are construed to mean an injury specifically intended to cause the injury done. That is to say, though Weyman threw a brick at deceased with intent to injure him, but with no intent to kill him, then the killing was not an injury “intentionally inflicted,” within the meaning of this exception;. and while, against Wejunan, there is the presumption that he intended the natural consequences of his act, as against the beneficiary of Robinson, no less will suffice than that Weyman intended to kill with the brick he threw. See Utter v. Travelers’ Ins. Co., 60 Mich. 545; Travelers Ins. Co. v. Wyness, 107 Ga. 584 (34 S. E. 113); Railway O. & E. Acc. Assn. v. Drummond, 56 Neb. 235 (76 N. W. 562); Stevens v. Continental [764]*764Cas. Co., 12 N. D. 463 (97 N. W. 862); Union Acc. Co. v. Willis, 44 Okla. 578 (145 Pac. 812).

3. Insurance : accident insurance : presumption : death J'rom external, visible, injury. We said, in Allen v. Travelers Prot. Assn., 163 Iowa 217, at 223, that we have heretofore held, and again hold, that, where death is shown to have resulted from an external, visible injury, a presumption will obtain that it was accidental, and not intentionally inflicted, either by the insured or by another person. To the same effect is Caldwell v. Iowa St. Trav. Men's Assn., 156 Iowa 327, and Stevens v. Continental Cas. Co., 2 N. D. 463 (97 N. W. 862). The presumption is that death was due to accident. Jones v. United States Mut. Acc. Assn., 92 Iowa 652; Stephenson v. Bankers Life Assn., 108 Iowa 637.

The rule is stated thus in 1 Corpus Juris 442:

“The existence of an intent on the part of the person inflicting the injury is necessary, and this intent must be to inflict the injury actually inflicted; and * * * where death ensues from the injury, it is necessary that the person inflicting the injury should have had the intent to kill.”

The intent to injure or kill, on the part of the person inflicting the injury, becomes an essential part of the proof, and the infliction of the injury does not raise a presumption that it was done intentionally. Stevens v. Continental Cas. Co., 12 N. D. 463 ( 97 N. W. 862). The ease of Union Acc. Co. v. Willis, 44 Okla. 578 (145 Pac. 812), lends much support to the claim of the appellee. In that case, the death was due to a fracture of the skull from a fall on a hard pavement, and the falling was the result of a blow in the face. It is held the insurer was not released if the blow, and not the fatal result, was intentionally inflicted. In Utter v. Travelers’ Ins. Co., 65 Mich. 545, deceased was a [765]*765deserter, and killed in a bawdy house by a sheriff, and it was held that the design of the sheriff was not to kill,' but to arrest, and therefore it could not be held that the death was caused by design, and the court said:

■ “The design intended by the terms of this policy must be the design that intended the actual result accomplished, and not the design of the act itself which resulted in the killing of one, contrary to the design of the act.”

In Richards v. Travelers Ins. Co., 89 Cal. 170, assured came to his death by a blow inflicted by a third person, while attempting to blackmail him.

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Bluebook (online)
186 Iowa 759, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robinson-v-hawkeye-commercial-mens-assn-iowa-1919.