Taylor v. Aetna Life Insurance

22 P.2d 775, 132 Cal. App. 434
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 5, 1933
DocketDocket Nos. 7502, 7503.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 22 P.2d 775 (Taylor v. Aetna Life Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Taylor v. Aetna Life Insurance, 22 P.2d 775, 132 Cal. App. 434 (Cal. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

YORK, J.

These two actions were consolidated for trial" by stipulation of the parties, and likewise have been consolidated for hearing upon appeal, and are now before this court upon a bill of exceptions.

These actions were brought by plaintiff as beneficiary under accident policies of insurance issued to her husband by the two defendant insurance companies. Plaintiff’s husband lost his life as the result of gunshot wounds inflicted during an altercation which occurred after a collision between decedent’s car and that of one Martinez. The policy issued by defendant Great Western Insurance Company insured plaintiff and her husband “against the effect of Personal Bodily Injury which is caused solely by accidental means”. The policy issued by defendant Aetna Life Insurance Company provided for double indemnity if the death of the assured resulted “directly and independently of all other causes from bodily injuries effected solely through external, violent, and accidental means”. The complaints against the defendant insurance companies alleged an accidental death. The Aetna Life Insurance Company interposed a defense that the death of plaintiff’s husband was not the result directly and independently of all other causes from bodily injuries effected solely through violent or accidental means. However, it was stipulated that this defendant had, prior to the time of trial, and subsequent to the filing of its answer paid to the plaintiff the sum of $2,500, the face value of the insurance policy, and that if said defendant was liable at all, its liability would be only for the double indemnity provided for in said policy. The Great Western Insurance Company interposed the same defense, i. e., that the death was not the result of accidental means, and in addition thereto the defense that, if plaintiff should establish a right to recover, the amount of recovery should be limited to the proportionate amount of the named indemnity ($3,000) which that indemnity bore *436 to the total amount of like indemnity of that and other policies covering the same loss suffered by the beneficiary.

On the issues thus formed, trial was had before a jury resulting in judgments against the Great Western Insurance Company for the sum of $3,000 and against the Aetna Life Insurance Company for the sum of $2,500. The defendants appeal from these judgments.

The appellants maintain that the court made many errors in the course of the trial affecting the plaintiff’s right of recovery, in giving certain instructions and in refusing to give requested instructions, and also in its rulings on the admission and rejection of evidence. Appellants also maintain that the court erred in receiving certain exhibits in evidence, and in refusing to declare a mistrial because of remarks of counsel for the plaintiff, and that counsel for plaintiff was guilty of misconduct which prevented the defendants from having a fair and impartial trial. In connection with the last-named point, appellants contend that plaintiff’s counsel was guilty of flagrant misconduct in his opening statement, during the trial of the cause and in his closing argument to the jury,' and to each statement so made appellants have taken an exception:

“Exception No. I. Mr. Cohn: I am going to prove it. You are setting up the defense that this man was justified in shooting and killing this fellow.
“Mr. Sterry: He was acquitted by the superior court.
“Mr. Cohn: He was acquitted by the machinery of several million dollars that wanted to avoid paying an insurance policy. I will show it, too.
“Exception No. II. (Mr. Cohn, continuing): We will show you this man was charged with murder and was found ‘not guilty’ telling this sort of a story—
“Mr. Sterry: Just a minute. I object to what he told.
“Mr. Cohn: It is set up in their pleadings, it is part of their defense, and the jury have a right to know, because we are going to anticipate it in our case in chief, the preposterous tale that he was being beat over the head with a wrench of a car or an automobile crank.
“Mr. Sterry: I assign those remarks as misconduct and ask the court to instruct the jury to disregard them.
“Exception No. III. Mr. Cohn, continuing: We will show you, ladies and gentlemen, as the case progresses, that *437 it was as cold and deliberate and horrible premeditated murder as you ever heard of. We will show you that although one jury was fooled by a bunch of lies that we are now in position to completely refute.
“Exception No. XII. Mr. Cohn: I might say—will you stipulate that this reporter’s transcript, that is—I think Mr. Sterry will agree with me, that his whole transcript of the coroner’s inquest is a conglomerate mass or mess. Practically two-thirds of it is incomprehensible, and, while I stipulated that the reporter if present would testify this is made from his notes, I am quite confident, if your Honor will read over this transcript, that is supposed to be a shorthand report of that inquest, you would come to the conclusion—couldn’t help but come to the conclusion—that it must have been an inexperienced or an incompetent shorthand reporter taking it down or transcribing it, because half of the stuff don’t make sense, not only with this witness, but with any of them. Mr. Sterry: I object to counsel’s remarks. Mr. Cohn: You have found it to be true, haven’t you? Mr. Sterry: No, I haven’t, absolutely not. Mr. Cohn: Then I ask leave, since counsel won’t be fair with me, to read it to the jury, the whole blame thing and see whether any human being could talk the way this stenographer says they talk. Mr. Sterry: I assign counsel’s remarks as misconduct, and ask the jury to be instructed to disregard them. Mr. Cohn: You have been very fair with me up to this point; in fact, you have been very courteous. The Court: The jury will be instructed that all statements made by Mr. Cohn with reference to the condition of the transcript will be disregarded and the other statement of Mr. Cohn about opposing counsel will also be disregarded by the jury. Mr. Cohn: In that connection, I would like leave, then, for fear the jury may think I am unfair, to read the coroner’s inquest. Will you permit me to read it and see if any human being could have given the testimony the way that stenographer said they did?
“Exception No. XIII. Q. (By Mr. Sterry): Referring again to your testimony at the coroner’s inquest, page 7, will you read your answer starting on line 2, page 7, down to line 10? Mr. Cohn: Now, if that is to be read, your Honor, I insist that the witness be given the right to read *438 on page 12, lines 19 to 22, where he absolutely states to me that this is an error and was not the time he meant. Mr. Sterry: Just a minute. Mr. Cohn: All right, I will show it to the court. There is no use in misleading the jury. The jury is supposed to hear the truth here, not any trick.
“Exception No. XV. Q. Did he (Mr. Taylor) have a quick temper? Mr. Cohn: Objected to as argumentative. Mr. Sterry: I am trying to find out what the phrase ‘quick tempered’ means. Mr. Cohn: It means in this case if he loses his head if a Mexican crowded him off of the road.

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Bluebook (online)
22 P.2d 775, 132 Cal. App. 434, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/taylor-v-aetna-life-insurance-calctapp-1933.