Snyder v. Mutual Life Ins.

22 F. Cas. 740, 3 Ins. L.J. 579, 1874 U.S. App. LEXIS 1900
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 6, 1874
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 22 F. Cas. 740 (Snyder v. Mutual Life Ins.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Snyder v. Mutual Life Ins., 22 F. Cas. 740, 3 Ins. L.J. 579, 1874 U.S. App. LEXIS 1900 (circtedpa 1874).

Opinion

OADWALADER, District Judge.

Gentlemen of the jury: On the morning of Saturday, the 22nd of February, 1873, at about seven o’clock, two men, driving a wagon across the Monocaey bridge, just at the entrance from the railroad depot, toward Old Bethlehem, saw in the water of the Monocaey creek, as they crossed the bridge, something which they looked at, and discovered to be a dead body; and one of them had seen at just the same place, a few weeks before, the dead body of another man, Louis Conner, who was murdered, as was reported, and, it seems to have been assumed, in that neighborhood. It is conceded to be impossible that the body could have been where it was found through any simple accident^ without some effort of will of a human creature. There is a difficulty, which we will consider more particularly hereafter, in comprehending how the body could have been where it was found without some other agency than that of the dead person in his lifetime. The stream had not force enough to move it, even if the fall had been in the water, but the weight of probability is that the fall was in a dry place, and not in this shallow stream. The body was from 20 to 25 feet — I think you will safely say, from the evidence, at least 22 feet— from the nearest point which it could have reached from the bridge. Now, it lay thereun-til, as I said, some time, which, according ti> the best evidence, I think, must have been between ten and eleven o’clock, when a person, with the assistance of the coroner, got it out upon the bank of the creek, — the Mon-ocacy, — and there it was ascertained to be the body of Monroe Snyder, a citizen of good standing in Bethlehem, a man of whom the most undisputed account is that at a quarter past nine, in the evening before, when he was in apparently*good health and spirits; during this period of some thirteen hours, more or less, we have accounts which, according to one side or the other of the contention of the parties, may refer to him, until a short time after two o’clock, supposing him identified sufficiently by the witnesses whose testimony we will have to consider hereafter; but from the time before three o’clock until the body was seen, at seven o’clock, I suppose, at least four hours, we have not even the obscurest evidence,' or ground for conjecture from any distinct fact. Now, then, when the body was examined, there were four wounds, one a mortal wound, on the head, from which it seems to be fairly agreed that he died from suffusion of blood upon the brain, eaused by a severe blow. That mortal wound and the three wounds from an instrument which the surgeons think was not sharp-pointed, but of the knife kind, these three wounds were not mortal; that is to say, though they might have caused inflammation from which death would have ensued, that could not have occurred probably for days; but the earliest time is said to be eighteen hours, and that is much under the time that the other surgeons indicate; probably for two or three days, If not much longer, these wounds were not necessarily mortal; even then may not have caused death. The exact character of the wounds, — these three wounds, — much as it has been discussed by the counsel, and extended as the testimony is from surgeons, we know very little of. They were on the belly, in the neighborhood of the navel, one a little above, and the other below, and one moving upward and inward, and the other downward and inward, and the third not so [741]*741distinctly described, and apparently more trifling. These three wounds appear to have been about the same width at the bottom as at the place where the instrument inflicting them entered the body, and I do not think there is any reason to doubt, from the testimony, that one of them at least had penetrated the peritoneum, but they were very shallow cuts, and the measure of the little finger seems to be the greatest length attributed to them. They were very shallow cuts, and so shallow that the one which penetrated the peritoneum must have barely penetrated it. They took it for granted that it was murder at that time, and perhaps it may not be wholly unimportant, in that stage of the cause, that they did, but I am not now discussing that. They all took it for granted that it had been a murder. No idea of suicide then entered anybody’s mind, and this remarkable fact is undisputed: That, when they stripped the body to examine these wounds, they put the inner red shirt, the outer white shirt, and the drawers under the head, which lay upon them so as to saturate them with blood. That occurred almost immediately after the examination, and after that, of course, no inspection of the clothing would help us. Now, gentlemen, it is very unsafe here even to argue about probabilities; the most improbable things are sometimes true, and the most probable things sometimes don’t happen; but if you go for mere probabilities, if the murderer stabbed this body after death, it is very strange he did not cut deeper; if, on the contrary, the wounds were inflicted during life, either by the murderer or by a suicide, there is no difficulty in finding just such little wounds as these. If a man stabs himself, he will very likely shrink from cutting deep, and if a man stabs another he must do as he best can, and though the counsel put themselves in a fencing rather than in a forensic attitude, in discussing the question, it would be arbitrary to adopt any conclusion of probability, except in the event of death; but, if death had occurred before these wounds, you will say whether it will be very probable that the murderer would not have strack more deeply into his victim.

Now, these are the external aspects of the case, as it was exhibited at the coroner’s inquest on post mortem examination. Whatever may have been thought then, and we don’t know, and I don’t see as we need care, there was further investigation, supposed or actual further developments, and there arose a very natural difference of opinion whether this death had occurred through murder or suicide; the theory of accident not seeming to be adopted by anybody, and I don't think being reasonable. How the body got where it was seems to have been a matter of immediate attention; and of continued thought and observation; and what motives were attributable to the deceased man in case of imputed suicide was also a matter of considerable thought. It is not surprising that two parties — that conflicting opinions — arose in the community, even if it had been a larger one; and there seems to have been a difference very soon arising. I say that because some of the witnesses appear to have had a theory on one side or the other of the question. A difference of opinion naturally arose, I say, whether this was murder or suicide.

Now, this deceased person, Monroe Snyder, had effected certain insurances, on three of which, for the sum of thirty thousand dollars, this action is brought. It is admitted that the insurance was made. It is admitted that the premiums were paid, or what is equivalent, accepted. It is admitted that the man died on the day in question. It is admitted that due proof of death was made, and the admission is such as to dispense with the exhibition of the proof, and all these admissions are made in what are technically called the pleadings; that is to say, the written declarations of the parties and the defendant. The insurance company alleges that the insured died by his own act.

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Bluebook (online)
22 F. Cas. 740, 3 Ins. L.J. 579, 1874 U.S. App. LEXIS 1900, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/snyder-v-mutual-life-ins-circtedpa-1874.