Temmey v. Pheonix Mutual Life Insurance

34 N.W.2d 833, 72 S.D. 387, 1948 S.D. LEXIS 46
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 2, 1948
DocketFile No. 8982.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 34 N.W.2d 833 (Temmey v. Pheonix Mutual Life Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Temmey v. Pheonix Mutual Life Insurance, 34 N.W.2d 833, 72 S.D. 387, 1948 S.D. LEXIS 46 (S.D. 1948).

Opinion

*388 SICKEL, J.

This action, was brought on a life insurance policy. On January 22, 1941, the Phoenix Mutual Life Insurance Company of Hartford, defendant, insured the life of Leo A. Temmey, Jr., for the sum of $2,500, and named Rose Temmey and Leo A. Temmey, parents of the insured and plaintiffs in this action as the beneficiaries. The death of insured occurred on May 18, 1945, while the policy was in force. Defendant denied liability on the policy and plaintiffs brought this action. The action was tried in the circuit court on a stipulation of facts, and judgment was entered for defendant. Plaintiffs have appealed.

The policy of insurance involved in this action was dated January 22, 1941, and the insured was at that time seventeen years, ten months and five days of age. He was not then in the armed forces of the United States but was later inducted into the Navy. His death-occurred on May 18, 1945, while he was a member of the armed forces engaged in a military mission in the Pacific Ocean. Attached to the insurance policy is a rider designated “Special Aeronautics Provision,” the material parts of which read as follows: “It is hereby provided that death of the insured resulting directly or indirectly from participating in aeronautics, as passenger or otherwise, or from exposure to any hazard incident thereto, is a risk not assumed by the Company under any of the terms of the policy; but in the event of such death the Company will pay to the beneficiary the amount of the reserve under the policy.” The insurance policy does not exclude hazards which are incidental to war, nor fare-paying passengers.

Respondent’s contention is that the death of the insured resulted “directly or indirectly from participating in aeronautics, as passenger or otherwise, or from exposure to any hazard incident thereto.” It contends that the language of this aeronautics provision excludes the insured while riding in aircraft whether he took part or aided in the operation of the aircraft or not. Appellants dispute this contention. They also claim that even though the insured was “participating in aeronautics” at the time of his death, such death did not result directly or indirectly from such participation.

*389 According to the language of the policy, liability of the insurer is excluded only when the cause of death is incident to the ordinary risk of aeronautics. Neel v. Mutual Life Ins. Co. of New York, 2 Cir., 1942, 131 F.2d 159.

In the case of Bull v. Sun Life Assur. Co., 7 Cir., 1944, 141 F.2d 456, 459, 155 A. L. R. 1014, certiorari denied 323 U. S. 723, 65 S. Ct. 55, 89 L. Ed. 581, the policy of insurance was issued in 1939. On February 5, 1942, the insured, then a lieutenant is the United States Naval Reserve, was commanding officer and alternate pilot on a seaplane on patrol duty in the Pacific Ocean. The plane was damaged by Japanese anti-aircraft fire and made an emergency landing in the sea near an island. The insured was standing on the fuselage trying to launch a rubber boat in an attempt to escape. While in that position a Japanese seaplane dived low and strafed the plane with machine gun fire, and the insured was never seen again. In the opinion the court says: “We think the true intent of the parties was to exclude the risks of aviation and to include the risks of war. * * * The provision of the policy relied upon as a defense by the defendant becomes operative only where the insured meets ‘death as a result, directly or indirectly, of service, travel, or flight in any species of aircraft.’ (Emphasis ours.) Death in ■ this instance resulted directly from the strafing by the Jap plane. The evidence clearly supports that view. The policy does not say that it shall not apply if the death is contributed to directly or indirectly by'the service, travel, or flight in the aircraft. The policy deals with results and not causes or contributing causes. Aviation may have been a contributing cause, but that did not make the death an indirect result of aviation. No risk of aviation resulted in death. A risk of war resulted in death. That was a risk not excluded by the policy.”

The case of Green v. Mutual Benefit Life Ins. Co., 1 Cir., 1944, 144 F.2d 55, 57, was one in which the policy excluded death occuring by reason of any aerial flight. The insured was the pilot of a Navy scout bomber. While engaged in carrier landing a heavy driving snowstorm reduced visibility to zero. The insured made a forced landing *390 in the water, and died from drowning and exposure. In that case the court said: “The natural and obvious meaning of the aviation clause in the case at bar is that the insurer declines to assume those extra risks of death ordinarily associated with aerial flight. Where death admittedly results from the operation of one of those familiar and popularly understood risks there cannot be any issue of proximate causation for a jury to determine.” In reviewing the Bull case the court said: “We are not inclined to disagree with this case. It may reasonably be said that death by the deliberate act of a third person is not of the risks ordinarily associated with aerial flight.”

In the case of Boye v. United Service Life Ins. Co., App. D. C. 1948, 168 F.2d 570, the policy excluded liability if death was “due to operating or riding in any kind of aircraft.” The policy did not exclude hazards incident to war. The insured was a lieutenant acting as pilot of a B-17 bomber engaged in a mission over Germany. The plane was reported missing on August 25, 1944, and it was believed to have been lost as a result of enemy anti-aircraft fire. There was no other information regarding its disappearance. The opinion of the court states: “If Lieutenant Boye’s death resulted directly or indirectly from gunfire, as the District Court thought and we think it probably did, we think it resulted from a risk of war that the policy did not exclude and not from a risk of aviation that the policy did exclude. We think the case is much the same as if the policy had excluded death ‘due to operating or riding in an automobile’ and the insured had been killed by gunfire while driving an army car.”

The respondent in this case seeks to avoid liability on the policy on the ground that the death of insured was due to an excluded risk, and the burden is therefore upon respondent to prove the facts constituting such defense. 46 C. J. S., Insurance, § 1319(4a); Honrath v. New York Life Ins. Co., 65 S. D. 480, 275 N. W. 258, 112 A. L. R. 1272. The facts in this case consist largely of War Department documents admitted in evidence on stipulation of the parties. From these documents it appears that at the time of death *391 the insured was a crew member of a Navy plane flying in the Pacific Area; that he was then acting as aviation, radioman and machine gunner on the plane. The plane crashed on a reef near Ormed Island. The first report of Ross T.

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Bluebook (online)
34 N.W.2d 833, 72 S.D. 387, 1948 S.D. LEXIS 46, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/temmey-v-pheonix-mutual-life-insurance-sd-1948.