Rousseau v. Metropolitan Life Insurance

2 Mass. App. Div. 241
CourtMassachusetts District Court, Appellate Division
DecidedApril 27, 1937
StatusPublished

This text of 2 Mass. App. Div. 241 (Rousseau v. Metropolitan Life Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts District Court, Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rousseau v. Metropolitan Life Insurance, 2 Mass. App. Div. 241 (Mass. Ct. App. 1937).

Opinion

Hibbard, P. J.

An action of contract brought by the plaintiff to recover double indemnity, death benefits under two policies of industrial life insurance, issued by the defendant upon the life of Raymond A. Rousseau. Each of the policies contained a clause providing for double indemnity where the insured “sustained .... bodily injuries solely through external, violent and accidental means resulting directly and independently of all other causes, in the death of the Insured within ninety days from date of such bodily injuries. ’ ’ The face of each policy was paid hut the double indemnity was not. The said Raymond A. Rousseau met his death under the circumstances narrated in the decision by the trial court which was as follows:

“I find as follows:
“That Raymond Rousseau, a young man of about twenty years of age, met two other young men at Gardner on the early evening of August 7, 1936; that they [242]*242had considerable to drink and that during the evening at one place Eousseau had seven drinks of muscatel wine, and at another place had two gin fizzes; that these young men hung around together and were in several liquor places between 7:45 o’clock P. M. and 11:30 P. M.; that they came out on to the street at about 11:30 o’clock P. M: and that Eousseau was ‘staggering,’ ‘his eyes were funny’; he was ‘feeling good’ and ‘pretty well shot’; that the three young men decided to steal an automobile; that they finally found a car which was not locked and one of the men, not Eousseau, attempted to start the car but was unable to do so; that Eousseau then got into the driver’s seat, started the car and drove it about half a mile to his home where he went into the house to get some money; that when he came out of the house and returned to the car another one of the young men named Dupre was sitting in the driver’s seat and he operated the car from then on, Eousseau getting into the back seat.
‘ ‘ The car was driven by Dupre in a westerly direction from Gardner at a high rate of speed and the car was swaying from side to side at about seventy miles per hour, the limit of the capacity of the car. Between Athol and Orange a hitch-hiker was picked up and given a ride to a point farther west at which time Eousseau made no sound. The car proceeded along about seventy miles per hour and the third young man told the driver to cut down his speed but the speed was not cut down.
“At the French King Bridge, about thirty-five miles west of Gardner and five miles east of Greenfield, some Greenfield police officers attempted to stop the car but the car was not stopped. At that time the driver said, ‘We’re all outlaws. We got to stick together,’ and Eousseau mumbled something. The Greenville police officers pursued the car but were left behind. At Greenfield one of the police officers got into another and faster car belonging to the Greenfield Police Department and proceeded westerly to a point about a mile and a half west of Greenfield where they found the car in which the insured was riding wrecked side of the road and the insured lying in the road and had suffered injuries from which he .died almost immediately, the injuries and death resulting from the wrecking of the automobile, the wreck being due to the fact that the car [243]*243had left the road due to the high rate of speed at which it was being operated.
“At the French King Bridge when Rousseau mumbled something, I find that he was in a drunken stupor and had no intelligent knowledge of what was actually going on at the time.
“I find that the police officers were still pursuing the stolen car although outdistanced and although the stolen car had for a long time been out of their sight at the time it was wrecked, but in view of the fact that the car was operated at its maximum speed prior to being signalled by the police officers, I find that the pursuit of the police officers did not cause the driver to accelerate his speed as that was impossible.”

The plaintiff seasonably filed certain requests for rulings of which two and five only are material. They are as follows :

“2. That there are no implied exceptions applicable to either policy of insurance.”
“5. That the insured’s death was caused by bodily injury that was accidental.”

Both were granted.

The defendant likewise seasonably filed certain requests for rulings, all of which with one exception were denied. Those denied were as follows:

“1. That on all the evidence the plaintiff cannot recover and as grounds therefor the defendant sets forth the following:
a. That the insured’s death did not result from accidental means.
b. That the insured’s death occurred while he was engaged in a criminal act which contributed to his death. ’ ’
“3. That the insured was presumed to know the risk he was taking in riding in a stolen automobile and that death might be the result of such conduct.”
“4. That, if the insured at the time of his injury and death was engaged in the violation of the Statutes of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts and there was a direct causal connection between such violation and [244]*244the injury and death of the insured, the death of the insured did not result from bodily injury sustained solely through external, violent and accidental means within the terms of the policy.”
. “5. That, if the insured was riding in a car known by him to have been stolen and if this car was being operated at an excessive speed because of the fact that it was being pursued by police officers and as a result of such excessive speed the car overturned and the insured was killed, the plaintiff cannot recover.”
‘ ‘ 6. That, if the insured did not have control of the operation of the car, he was nevertheless a party to a violation of the Statutes of the Commonwealth at the time of his death and the plaintiff cannot recover. ’ ’
“7. That to allow recovery would be against public policy.”

The question presented upon the report is whether there was error in granting the plaintiff’s requests numbered two and five and in the denial of the defendant’s requests.

The contention of the defendant may be briefly stated as follows: The beneficiary cannot recover under the double indemnity clause first because the death was not accidental within the.proper interpretation of that word, and secondly, because to allow recovery under the circumstances of the case would be against public policy.

The facts found by the trial judge and set forth in his decision have been adopted by the parties as an agreed statement of facts.

■ It is not contended by the defendant that the bodily injury and death of the insured were not incurred through external and violent means. It does contend that they were not “accidental” as that word is used in the policies.

The clause found in the policies and above quoted in like or similar phraseology has been before the courts in many jurisdictions. In Piotrowski vs. Prudential Insurance Company, 252 N. Y. S. 313, the Court said “Any occurrence which naturally and probably results from the sitúa[245]

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Related

Burt v. Union Central Life Insurance
187 U.S. 362 (Supreme Court, 1902)

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Bluebook (online)
2 Mass. App. Div. 241, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rousseau-v-metropolitan-life-insurance-massdistctapp-1937.