Szymanska v. Equitable Life Insurance

183 A. 309, 37 Del. 272, 7 W.W. Harr. 272, 1936 Del. LEXIS 16
CourtSuperior Court of Delaware
DecidedFebruary 25, 1936
DocketNo. 97
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 183 A. 309 (Szymanska v. Equitable Life Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Szymanska v. Equitable Life Insurance, 183 A. 309, 37 Del. 272, 7 W.W. Harr. 272, 1936 Del. LEXIS 16 (Del. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

Layton, C. J.,

delivering the opinion of the Court:

The demurrers to the pleas raise the questions whether the death of the insured resulted from injuries received through (1) accidental means; (2) violation of law directly; or (3) indirectly therefrom.

The answer to the first two questions depends upon a consideration and proper application of the doctrine of proximate cause, seldom absent from insurance cases. This must be determined from the factual basis presented upon mixed considerations of logic, common sense, justice, policy and precedent. See Island Express v. Frederick, 5 W. W. Harr. (35 Del.) 569, 171 A. 181.

As said by Chief Justice Shaw, in Marble v. City of Worcester, 4 Gray (Mass.) 395:

“The whole doctrine of causation, considered in itself metaphysically, is of profound difficulty, even if it may not be said of mystery. * * * The law, however looks to a practical rule, adapted to the rights and duties of all persons in society, in the common and ordinary concerns of actual and real life.”

In the field of negligence, the intervening negligent act of a third party does not relieve a defendant from liability for his own negligence, if the former was reasonably to be anticipated. Stucker v. American Stores Co., 5 W. W. Harr. (35 Del.) 594, 171 A. 230.

And, in the field of insurance, where indemnity is sought from an insuring company' for injury or death resulting from accidental means, the same test is applied to determine the quality of the means. Koester v. Mutual [278]*278Life Ins. Co. (Del. Sup.), 6 W. W. Harr. (36 Del.) 537, 179 A. 327.

There, the death of the insured resulted from an unintentional discharge of a revolver which he was striving to take from his wife. The Supreme Court held that the discharge of the weapon during the struggle was not an unforseeable or unusual result, but the natural and probable consequence of the effort made to obtain possession of the weapon, a result which might well have been expected and probably apt to occur. Therefore, while the death was accidental in the sense that it was unforseen and unexpected, thé means which caused the death were not accidental.

Where liability is sought to be established under such provision, the plaintiff may not recover upon a mere showing that injury or death was unforseen, unexpected, an unlocked for mishap, and therefore, in common understanding, an accident; for, the insurance is not against an accidental result. The precisely selected words defining liability distinguished between the result and the external means by which it is produced. Landress v. Phœnix Mutual Life Ins. Co., 291 U. S. 491, 54 S. Ct. 461, 78 L. Ed. 934, 90 A. L. R. 1382.

The instant case is within this reasoning and rule. Disregarding philosophical subtlety, we think that one, who in the pursuit of- his lust, makes improper advances to the wife, or reputed wife, of another, in her own home, creates voluntarily a situation fraught with danger to himself in that discovery by and violence at the hands of the outraged husband are reasonably forseeable, and such as naturally and probably will result.

The conduct of the insured, therefore, was so tied with [279]*279the result, that it became a means, an efficient co-agent in producing it, without which it would not have happened, and hence, contributed proximately to the result. The death of the insured was unexpected, unforseen, and, in that sense, accidental. The means were not accidental.

The plaintiff, addressing the argument indifferently to all of the questions raised, contends that the conduct of the insured furnished an occasion, not a cause, of the injury and death, and relies largely upon the authority of Supreme Lodge K. P. v. Crenshaw, 129 Ga. 195, 58 S. E. 628, 13 L. R. A. (N. S.) 258, 121 Am. St. Rep. 216, 12 Ann. Cas. 307.

There, a provision of the policy relieved the insurer from liability if death was caused or superinduced in violation of any criminal law. A plea alleged that the insured, immediately after committing adultery with a married woman, was killed by the injured husband. The court was of opinion that the death was not caused by violation of the statute denouncing adultery. The reasoning was, while one who commits adultery with a married woman well knows that his life is imperiled if caught in the act by the husband, yet, the killing is not, as a matter of law, the natural and legitimate consequence of the illicit act any more than is the death of a felon at the hands of an arresting officer the reasonable and legitimate consequence of the felony committed. For, it was said, there must be something in the act itself, independent of other circumstances, which makes the death the reasonable consequence, as, for example, fighting, which, in its nature, is calculated to bring on injury and death; not so with adultery which, in some circumstances, may be the occasion of, but not the natural and legitimate cause of death.

Railway Mail Ass’n v. Mosley (C. C. A.), 211 F. 1, [280]*280cites this authority with apparent approval. Landry v. Independent Nat. Life Ins. Co., 17 La. App. 10, 135 So. 110, refuses approval.

Ability to foresee the injury in the precise form in which it, in fact, resulted, or to anticipate the particular consequence which actually follow from the wrongful act, is not required. It is sufficient that the injury is the natural though not the necessary, result of the act. 22 R. C. L. 125.

The same learned judge who wrote the opinion in the Crenshaw Case, discussed at length the doctrine of proximate cause in Southern Ry. Co. v. Webb, 116 Ga. 152, 42 S. E. 395, 396, 59 L. R. A. 109. There, he quoted with approval the language of a standard text writer that, “the inquiry as to natural and proximate cause and consequence is to be answered in accordance with common sense and common understanding.”

Unless we wander into the field of metaphysics, which has been said to be a fertile field of delusion propagated by language, we are unable reasonably to distinguish the difference in proximation of consequence flowing from fighting where hot blood is aroused and injury, therefore, is reasonably to be anticipated, and injury at the hands of an incensed husband who, in his own home, finds one in adultery with his wife. In either case, the injury or death is not the necessary or inevitable consequence. In either case, injury or death is reasonably foreseeable. In the one situation there is activity on the part of the insured; in the other, passivity. The element of causation is present in both. Cause, as a rule, is complex, consisting of a number of conditions each of which is only a part of the cause; and we are unable to say that the conduct of the insured, furnished a mere occasion of injury, not a cause, unless we indulge in an unpractical refinement of logic.

[281]*281The same reasoning applies to the questions raised by the demurrers to the third and fourth pleas, that is, whether the pleas aver facts sufficient to establish the death of the insured as resulting, directly or indirectly, from a violation of law.

By Chapter 264, Vol. 29,

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Bluebook (online)
183 A. 309, 37 Del. 272, 7 W.W. Harr. 272, 1936 Del. LEXIS 16, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/szymanska-v-equitable-life-insurance-delsuperct-1936.