St. Louis Mutual Life Insurance v. Graves

69 Ky. 268, 6 Bush 268, 1869 Ky. LEXIS 142
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedDecember 7, 1869
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 69 Ky. 268 (St. Louis Mutual Life Insurance v. Graves) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
St. Louis Mutual Life Insurance v. Graves, 69 Ky. 268, 6 Bush 268, 1869 Ky. LEXIS 142 (Ky. Ct. App. 1869).

Opinion

JUDGE ROBERTSON

delivered the following opinion, in which

JUDGE PETERS concurred:

Only a few days after the intermarriage of Leslie O. Graves and Mary E. Searles, both born and reared in Lexington, Kentucky, he procured for her benefit from the appellant, a life insurance company of St. Louis, Missouri, a policy insuring his life to the amount of five thousand dollars to her use, on several prescribed conditions, among which are the following: “If the said person whose life is insured shall clie by his oion hand, by delirium tremens, or the use of opium, or in consequence of a duel, or the laws of any nation, state, or province, that then, in such case, the policy shall be null and void.”

All these terms alike, being eyusdem generis, imply a death as the natural consequence of some voluntary act [270]*270of the assured which he had the moral power to avoid, and against which therefore the underwriters would not insure, and could not, consistently with public policy, have insured.

The inevitable act of an insane man, who in that respect is morally dead, is not, in the sense of the law or of the recited conditions, his voluntary act. An insane act is no more voluntary than any act constrained by extraneous force would be the voluntary and responsible act of the victim of accident or resistless power over his will. The object of the policy was to insure against involuntary death without the fault of the assured.

Graves was insured as a free moral agent, who, as such, might voluntarily so act as to increase the contemplated risk. It was prudent and just therefore to provide in the policy against any extraordinary perils to life resulting from the voluntary conduct of the assured, who, by necessary implication, undertook to abstain from any act jeopardizing his life beyond the ordinary accidents to which it was liable without his fault. Nor this precautionary condition there was a reasonable and consistent motive. But there was no such motive for avoiding the policy for inevitable suicide, which, whether accidental or otherwise against the free will of a rational mind, is essentially in the category of natural death froih ordinary causes, as indisputably insured against. Mental insanity is disease; and the policy insures against death by disease of any sort which ordinary prudence could not avoid. Death by insanity is death by disease, and is so considered in medical jurisprudence.

'Why except from the insurance death by insanity? Did not the parties contemplate death by any disease not avoidable by prudent and proper conduct? The underwriters took all such risk and no other; and to prevent [271]*271fraud or imposture excepted death by opium or by delirium tremens, and other causes which the assured could avoid, and ought to avoid, and therefore impliedly undertook to avoid. Death “by his own hand” is in the same class of causes for avoidance, and means the same character of avoidable death. The mind is the man, and the conditions of avoidance all alike contemplate a rational mind and presiding will. Death by opium therefore means not the accidental or involuntary but the rational and voluntary use of opium; death by delirium tremens imports death by voluntary and habitual drunkenness; and death by dueling is a voluntary act: all of which deaths might and ought to have been avoided. So, for the same reason, death “by his own hand” means suicide, not accidental or coerced, but premeditated by a sound mind and perpetrated by a free will; and a voluntary act of the will necessarily implies liberty and self-control; and consequently the act of an insane mind or subjugated will is not voluntary. It is not the act of the man, but of some power above him, and which his will can not elude or control.

The condition as to death “by his own hand” reasonably imports therefore that if the insured should commit suicide voluntarily when he had the moral power to forbear, just as he might commit it by the habitual use of opium or intoxicating liquors, the policy should be thereby avoided. The death, in each case alike, must be the voluntary act of a sane mind and a responsible will. As policies are peculiar in their style, and not easily intelligible by the common mind, this language should, in cases of doubt, be most favorably construed for the benefit of the assured. This is enough for this case.

There is some apparent conflict in the adjudged cases on the construction of just such a condition of avoidance in a life policy as that which we are considering; but there [272]*272is no very essential diversity in principle; all that is judicial, with perhaps one exception, concurring in- the principle that to avoid the policy the death must be tilvoluntary.” And no mind, itself rational, can contemplate any act as voluntary unless it be the offspring of a free volition, unconstrained by inevitable duress, physical or moral.

In the case of Dean v. American Insurance Company, 4 Allen’s Reports, the Supreme Court of Massachusetts, in lan elaborate, self-contradictory, and inconclusive opinion, (seemed inclined to construe the words “if he died by his 'own hand” as intended to mean self-destruction, however or by whomsoever effected. But, to escape the absurdity of including death by accident, the opinion concludes that the avoiding act must be voluntary.

This argument is surely a felo de se, or must concede that all suicide, however effected, is voluntary. And this is a petitio principii, and begs the question. This case therefore, though apparently the strongest against us, is, when its metaphysical labyrinth is threaded, corroborative of our conclusion that the avoiding act must be voluntary. This interpretation of the decision can be evaded only by the assumption that it uses the word “ voluntaiy ” in some recondite sense, inconsistent with its legal and metaphysical import.

In Hartman v. Keystone Insurance Company, 9. Harris, 479, the Supremo Court of Pennsylvania say that the words “die by his own hand,” standing alone, “mean any sort of suicide.” This -has no essential bearing on the question we are considering, and noscitur a soeiis, can not be disregarded. But several American cases ably and, as we think, conclusively sustain our construction.

In Breasted v. The Farmers Loan and Trust Company, 4 Hill, 74, the Supreme Court of New York, in a powerful [273]*273opinion by Nelson, now of the United States Supreme Court, adjudged that “suicide” and “died by his own hands,” as generally used in policies, were synonymous, and that “ die by his own hands ” means voluntary self-destruction by the free will of a sane man; and said “self-destruction by a fellow-being bereft of reason can with no more propriety be ascribed to the act of his own hand than to the deadly instrument that may have been used for the purpose.” “The drowning of Comport was no more his act in the sense of the law than if he had been impelled by irresistible physical force.” “Self-slaughter by an insane man or a lunatic is not an act of suicide within the meaning of the law.” (4 Black. Com. 189; 1 Hale’s P. C. 411.)

In that case therefore the court decided that the policy was not avoided, though the assured died by his own hand, but without a self-controlling will to avoid the act.

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Bluebook (online)
69 Ky. 268, 6 Bush 268, 1869 Ky. LEXIS 142, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/st-louis-mutual-life-insurance-v-graves-kyctapp-1869.