Schwarzbach v. Ohio Valley Protective Union

25 W. Va. 622, 1885 W. Va. LEXIS 26
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedApril 4, 1885
StatusPublished
Cited by77 cases

This text of 25 W. Va. 622 (Schwarzbach v. Ohio Valley Protective Union) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schwarzbach v. Ohio Valley Protective Union, 25 W. Va. 622, 1885 W. Va. LEXIS 26 (W. Va. 1885).

Opinion

GReen, Judge:

The first question presented by the record is: Did the municipal court of Wheeling err in overruling the motion of the defendant to exclude all the plaintiff’s evidence from the jury ? The court ought not to have excluded the plaintiff’s [642]*642evidence from the jury on this motion of the defendant, unless regarding the- defendant, as though he was a demurrant to the plaintiff’s evidence, and the plaintiff as a demurree and considering the plaintiff’s evidence with all the favor and giving to it all the force and drawing from it all the inferences, it would be entitled to, if there had been a formal demurrer filed thereto, the court would-feel itself bound to find for the demurrant and render a judgment for the defendant. But if on such a demurrer to the plaintiff’s evidence the court would have felt itself bound to render a judgment in favor of the demurree, the plaintiff, then it did not err in refusing to exclude all the plaintiff’s evidence from the jury. (Point 1, of syllabus in Dresser v. Transportation Company, 8 W. Va. 553.) Now where the plaintiff’s evidence is considered, as it must be on this motion in order to exclude it from the jury, with all the favor with which the evidence of the demurree is construed on a demurrer to the plaintiff’s evidence, such motion would be properly overruled in such case as this. As a demurrer to evidence or, as we have seen, a motion to exclude from the jury the plaintiff’s evidence withdraws from the jury, the proper triers of facts, the consideration of the evidence, by which they are to be ascertained and the party, whose evidence is thus withdrawn from its proper forum, is entitled to have it most benignly interpreted by the substituted court, the plaintiffs below in this case, ought to have all the benefit, that might have resulted from a decision of the case by the proper persons, the jury. (Miller, &c. v. Insurance Company, 8 W. Va., point 2 of syllabus.)

The evidence being thus weighed, we must regard the plaintiffs’ evidence, which was moved to be excluded, as having proven their case. It proved that the defendant had issued the life-policy sued upon to George W. Scwarzbach for the benefit of the assured, his wife and children, the plaintiffs in this suit; that he died June 22, 1881; that the proofs of his death required by the policy were received by the defendant September 15, 1881; that about two months afterwards, on November 25, 1881, the defendant refused, when called upon by the agent of the plaintiffs, to pay the amount of this policy and made no objection to the proofs of [643]*643the death of the party insured. It is not disputed, that, if the plaintiffs’ evidence thus benignly construed establishes these facts, the court below did not err in refusing to exclude it from the jury; for this proof was sufficient to make out plaintiffs’ case. (See Insurance Company v. Francisco, 17 Wal. 672.) But that these facts could all of them be deduced from the evidence, even when thus benignly construed, is controverted. It is denied, that the evidence justified the conclusion, that the defendant received the proofs of the death of the assured on September 15, 1881. It seems to me clear beyond controversy, that this fact was well established by the evidence, even if it was not thus benignly construed in favor of the plaintiffs. The defendant at the instance of the plaintiffs produced what was admitted to be the proofs of the death of the insured ; and on the back of these proofs produced by the defendant was endorsed “received September 15, 1881.” The word received being printed and a blank left after it for the date, which was filled up “September 15, 1881.” This paper had also endorsed on it., “Proofs of the death of George Schwarzbach, who died at Wheeling on June 22, 1881,” and also “The above blanks are to be filed only at the office of the Ohio Protective TJnion,” the defendant below. Yet itis contended in this Court, that this does not prove that these proofs of the insured’s death were received by the defendant September 15, 1881, because, it is said, the meaning of “ Eeceived September 15, 1881,” is doubtful, and because it was not proven to have been made by the defendant, and it might have been put there by some one else. Such a conclusion from this evidence would have been most unjustifiable and certainly could not possibly be reached, if this evidence were to be benignly construed in favor of the plaintiffs below.

But it is said that these endorsements ought not to have been permitted to go to the jury, unless the plaintiffs also submitted to the j ury the proofs of the death of the insured contained on the-face of the paper so endorsed by the defendant, because a party offering in evidence a written paper must offer the whole, and when a plaintiff offers a paper, his opponent is entitled to insist, as he did in this case, that the whole be introduced as a part of the plaintiffs’ case. No one dis[644]*644putes this proposition. But it seems to me obvious, that the proofs of the death contained on the face of this paper, which had been made out some time before and signed by one of the plaintiffs and by others, was an entirely different paper from those endorsements madeby the defendant on September 15, 3881. What was contained in these endorsements might just as well be made 6u the books of the defendant, as probably they were, or on some other and different piece of paper; and surely then no one could pretend, that these proofs of the death of the insured and these entries made on a different piece of paper subsequently by the defendant or on its books were part and parcel of the proofs of death. And it seems to me clear that the fact, that the defendant thought proper to put the matters contained in these endorsements on the back of the proofs of death of the insured for its convenience, in noway alters the case. They still constitute no part of the proofs of the death of the insured. They constitute still in law a separate and distinct paper and were not at all necessary to make out the plaintiffs’ case. (Insurance Company v. Francisco, 17 Wall. 672; Thurston v. Murray, 3 Binney 326.) In fact the contents of this proof of the death of the insured could not have been used as evidence for the plaintiffs, they being nothing but ex parte affidavits. (Lycoming Insurance Company v. Robin, 77 Ill. 402-8; Lycoming Insurance Company v. Schriffler, 42 Pa. St.; Commonwealth Insurance Company v. Sennet, 41 Pa. St. 161.) All that the plaintiffs could have produced them for would have been to show, that they were the proofs of the death of the insured required by the policy to be delivered to the defendant below. And that this was their character was admitted by the defendant below, when it produced them as such on the demand of the plaintiffs, and also by the express statement in the endorsement, that they were the proofs of the death of the insured.

As this suit was instituted on January 3,1882, it obviously was not brought too soon, for by the policy the insurance was payable ninety days after the delivery to the defendant of these proofs of the death of the insured. Probably it might have been instituted on the November 25, 3881, when the defendant refused to pay the policy and made no objection to the proofs of the death of the insured, which it had [645]*645received on September 15, 1881.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
25 W. Va. 622, 1885 W. Va. LEXIS 26, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schwarzbach-v-ohio-valley-protective-union-wva-1885.