The Canada Life Assurance Company, a Corporation v. Charlotte S. Houston

241 F.2d 523, 63 A.L.R. 2d 1130, 1957 U.S. App. LEXIS 3488
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 12, 1957
Docket15102_1
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 241 F.2d 523 (The Canada Life Assurance Company, a Corporation v. Charlotte S. Houston) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Canada Life Assurance Company, a Corporation v. Charlotte S. Houston, 241 F.2d 523, 63 A.L.R. 2d 1130, 1957 U.S. App. LEXIS 3488 (9th Cir. 1957).

Opinion

LEMMON, Circuit Judge.

1. Statement of the Case

This action to collect the proceeds of a life insurance policy was commenced by the appellee against the appellant in the Superior Court of Alameda County, California, on January 4, 1955. On petition of the appellant, the suit was removed to the Court below. The case was tried without a jury before Chief Judge Roche, whose Memorandum Opinion is reported in 137 F.Supp. 583.

The Court below awarded the ap-pellee a judgment for $28,552, with interest at 7% from May 4, 1954, the date on which the proof of loss and claim were filed with the appellant.

From that judgment, which was signed on February 8, 1956, an appeal was taken on March 6, 1956.

2. Statement of Facts

On September 24, 1953, William Mark Houston, United States manager for three insurance companies, of which the New Zealand Insurance Company was the “prime employer”, made written application for a $10,000 life insurance policy, subject to a “family income” provision. The policy was issued on November 3, 1953, at which time Houston was a resident of Berkeley, California.

Houston’s application stated that he used “alcoholic stimulants” “socially only occasionally”, and to the question, “Have you ever used them to excess?” his written answer was “No”. The appellant asserts that these two answers were “material misrepresentations”.

The policy contained the following paragraph:

“Suicide. During the first two years from the date of issue of this policy, suicide (whether the assured be sane or insane) is a risk not assumed under this policy; should death occur in such manner that the assurance is not effective because of the operation of this provision, the Company will pay an amount equal to the premiums paid under this policy, which amount will be paid in one sum to the person or persons who would have been entitled to the net proceeds of this policy or the first payment therefrom had this policy matured by reason of the assured’s death.”

Houston and the appellee had been married for twenty-five and a half years. His widow, who remarried on July 9, 1955, testified that “It was a very happy marriage”. There were two daughters, Charlotte, 26, and Ann, 22.

On Monday, February 22, 1954, Houston died as a result oí: a gunshot wound suffered by him in the basement of his Berkeley home.

On the Friday before Houston met his death, he worked in his office in San Francisco, leaving there at about six o’clock. His manner that day was not different from “any other day”, according to his secretary.

*526 The following day he attended a party at his daughters’ sorority house, and appeared to enjoy himself. The next day, Sunday, he went to church, and after-wards went to Lafayette to make plans for his ranches in Oregon with his two partners. At that conference “He was still very cheerful”.

Sunday night Mr. and Mrs. Houston and their daughter Ann “went to dinner with the Hanscoms, * * * friends of long standing”, to whose son Ronald Ann was engaged. On that occasion “he was his usual jovial self”, exchanging neckties with his host. The Hous-tons left the Hanscoms at about 11 o’clock, and returned directly to their own home. At the Hanscom gathering, Houston had “two drinks before dinner * * * None after.”

We now come to the day of Houston’s death. Since Monday was Washington’s birthday, in accordance with the holiday custom in the Houston household the family slept late. Mrs. Houston and Ann had gotten up at about 9:30 in the morning, but it was between 1 and 1:30 in the afternoon before Mrs. Houston went upstairs and awoke her husband. At that time, he still seemed “congenial and happy”. Mrs. Houston put a glass of tomato juice for him “on the top of the stairway, the floor of the upstairs hall”.

Mrs. Houston went back into the kitchen, to finish cooking breakfast for Houston and brunch for herself and Ann.

Ann was nailing a shelf in the hall outside of the kitchen. As she was putting the hammer and nails away, “Daddy came downstairs into the kitchen, and I was singing, ‘Oh, What a Beautiful Morning!’” Her father, with his minutes numbered, went up to her, gave her “a good morning peck on the forehead, and said it certainly was a beautiful morning”.

Ann told her father that they were going to have steak for breakfast. *‘And he said that sounded wonderful.”

Houston was dressed in his bathrobe, pajamas, and leather slippers. He was not wearing his tri-focal glasses, although he “usually wore them all the time”.

Ann testified that her father looked “happy and smiling”. She left him to go to the living room to speak to her grandmother, while Houston went down to the basement.

The daughter's testimony continued:

“Then I heard a bam! — and I came back into the hall because I thought my shelf had fallen, and I called to Mother and I didn’t get an answer”.

In the meanwhile, Mrs. Houston, who had heard, not a “bam!” but “a heavy thud”, .went down alone into the basement, and “saw Mr. Houston lying there”. She was the. first to reach him. She called upstairs to her daughter, “Ann, as quickly as possible, call the ambulance.”

“Then I ran downstairs into the basement and saw Daddy,” Ann testified.

The shooting occurred in a narrow passageway at the rear of the basement, at a point directly beneath the living room. This section of the basement was raised about 14 inches from the main level. Houston was a tall man — 6'2y%" . — and it was therefore necessary for him to stoop in the passageway area where the shooting occurred. The passageway- area led through many stored items, such as a sofa, patio chairs, a cedar chest, sleeping bags, air mattresses, a garden trellis, some bedboards, and the like. Some of these items protruded into the hallway. The distance from the floor to the ceiling in the passageway was less than 5'11", because a police officer of that height “couldn’t stand up in the area without bending over”. The “light was off” in the basement when Mrs. Houston found her husband’s body.

The death gun was an 1894 Winchester, .30 caliber, WPCP lever action repeater. There was “only the one exploded cartridge in it, no others”.'

*527 The body was lying face down, both hands underneath. The bullet had entered in “the chest area at the front”, and had come out “in the area of the shoulder blades, to the rear, the bottom of the shoulder blade area.” In a bookcase in the basement there was a Manila paper sack containing two different kinds of cartridges, one of which would fit the death gun. The bag of shells was closed when the police found it. “I had opened it to look in,” one officer testified.

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Bluebook (online)
241 F.2d 523, 63 A.L.R. 2d 1130, 1957 U.S. App. LEXIS 3488, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-canada-life-assurance-company-a-corporation-v-charlotte-s-houston-ca9-1957.