Scott v. Homesteaders

129 N.W. 310, 149 Iowa 541
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedDecember 15, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 129 N.W. 310 (Scott v. Homesteaders) 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
Scott v. Homesteaders, 129 N.W. 310, 149 Iowa 541 (iowa 1910).

Opinions

Evans, J.

The plaintiff is the widow of B. W. Scott, and is the beneficiary named in a certificate of membership and insurance held by the said Scott in his lifetime in the defendant as a fraternal beneficiary association. One of the provisions of such certificate is that it shall be void if the holder thereof die by his own hand, except by accident. The certificate was issued on January 9, 1906. On January 20, 1907, Scott died from a gunshot wound. The immediate circumstances of his death are involved in much uncertainty. Circumstantial evidence alone is relied on by both parties; the burden of proof being upon the defendant to prove its defense of an alleged suicide.

This is a companion case to Mary E. Scott v. Sovereign Camp of the Woodmen of the World, 149 Iowa, 562. The [544]*544two cases are based upon similar policies upon the life of said H W. Scott, and in favor of the plaintiff as the beneficiary in each. The cases were tried' separately, but upon substantially the same evidence, and substantially the same questions are presented in both cases here. In our opinion already filed in the first case, we have passed upon all the questions presented on this appeal except two which we are about to note. Without repeating the discussion already had in the former case, we will confine our attention to the two alleged errors which differentiate the record in this case from that in the other.

I. In the rebuttal testimony on behalf of plaintiff, the following record is presented to us by appellant’s abstract :

i. Expert evidence: experiments: admissibility. Q. There has been some theorizing by eminent physicians about the effect of holding a pistol in contact with the skin and discharging it, and some gentlemen, chiefly Mr. Ileindel, have advanced the theory that if held in contact, it would leave no burning or mark, and will aslc- you if, at my request, you have made an experiment with a piece of hog meat placed upon a cabbage head? A. Yes, I have made some tests. This head of cabbage was placed against the wall, and the pistol, a 22-caliber, was pressed hard in on the head of the cabbage; pressed against the skin on the piece of bacon. By Mr. Ileindel: We object to this testimony as incompetent and immaterial, and because it appears from what has been said by witness the pistol is a different caliber, and the witness acknowledges this test as made in a different way in which Mr. Scott’s was fired. Overruled. Excepted. A. Well, this pistol, as I said, was fired with the muzzle pressed tight against the piece of bacon; here is the powder marks in burning the powder; there was a good deal more of it than there is now; some of it has been rubbed off. Now the hole went through this head of cabbage, pressed right up against the bacon, and the bacon is black where the bullet entered, and a little black’on the cabbage, showing that combustion came out on this side, and not on this.

[545]*545It is now argued that the objection above noted should have been sustained, and that evidence of the alleged experiment should not have been permitted because (a) it was made with a 22-caliber pistol, whereas the pistol found near the dead body of Scott was of a larger caliber; and because (b) a bacon skin supported by a cabbage head did not present sufficient similarity of condition to render evidence of the experiment admissible. The rule contended for by appellant is, that evidence of experiments is admissible only when the experiment is shown to have been made under essentially the same conditions. This rule may be conceded for the purpose of this discussion, although it falls somewhat short of reaching the real question presented to us by this record. But this is an abstract rule only, and its application varies with the particular circumstances of each case. It has been held by this court, that the important question to have in view in passing upon the admissibility of such testimony is: Will it aid rather than confuse the jury in reaching its conclusion? In this case, the defendant itself took the initiative on this question and offered expert opinion, based upon alleged observation and experiment with pistols generally, regardless of caliber, and opened a wide door to plaintiff. The evidence complained of was directly responsive to such testimony offered on behalf of the defendant. An important circumstance in the case was the fact that no cauterization or powder marks appeared about the wound. This circumstance on its face tended to negative the theory of suicide. It is generally conceded that a self-inflicted gunshot wound is usually characterized by powder-marks about the opening of the wound. This condition results because of the close proximity at which the muzzle of the weapon is necessarily held from the point of injury. As the distance increases, the chances for such a condition become less. As against this, however, the defendant advanced the theory that where the muzzle of a pistol or [546]*546revolver is held close enough against the point of injury to prevent communication with the outside atmosphere, no powder marks will appear on the outside of the wound, and it introduced expert evidence to that effect. This expert opinion was based upon alleged observation and experiment. In the expert testimony offered by the defendant to this effect, no differentiation was claimed as to the caliber of pistols or revolvers.

An excerpt from the testimony of Dr. Bannister, as it appears in the appellant’s abstract, will show the record in this respect:

Q. Have you, doctor, in the course of your practice, made some experiments with firing a pistol at an object at various distances? A. Yes, sir. • Q. I will ask you, from Avhat you have observed in a case known to be suicide and from your experience of bullet wounds and from your experience, what would be the condition as to the presence of or absence of powder marks, burns, and smoke upon the skin surface at the point of entrance of the bullet, when the pistol is held in contact with the object at which it is shot ? A. My own experience and observation from these experiences, from what I have seen and also from what I liaA^e read, if a pistol is held in close contact, there are no powder marks around, but it often goes straight through the hole; no scattering around about it. Q. I would like to have you include in your answer whether or not, any case where the muzzle of the gun is held in close contact, there are burns or smoke marks, as distinguished from powder marks. A. The edge of the wound would be burned and powder marks that are blown into the bone that is to be distinguished from burning the edge of the wound, and powder marks would not be present. Q. When you say burned — the edges Avould be burned? I Avill ask yon if you mean there that whether it simply will extend out over the surface, or whether it is simply the edge of the skin? A. The edge of the skin. Q. Does it extend over the area of the wound? A. No, sir. Q. Would it be indistinguishable to the ordinary observer ? A. No, sir. Q. What has been your observation and ex-[547]*547perienee as to the presence or absence of powder burn or smoke mark surrounding the wound by the bullet in the case where the gun or pistol has been held in the vicinity of two or three feet? A. If it would be at any distance further than three feet, powder marks are very liable to be absent. . . . Cross examination: Q. Doctor, your theory is that if the muzzle' of the revolver is pressed right against the surface, in that case, then, there will be no indication of powder marks around the wound. None whatever? A.

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Bluebook (online)
129 N.W. 310, 149 Iowa 541, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scott-v-homesteaders-iowa-1910.