Tillotson v. Travelers Insurance Co.

263 S.W. 819, 304 Mo. 487, 1924 Mo. LEXIS 533
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 3, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 263 S.W. 819 (Tillotson v. Travelers Insurance Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tillotson v. Travelers Insurance Co., 263 S.W. 819, 304 Mo. 487, 1924 Mo. LEXIS 533 (Mo. 1924).

Opinions

I. Suit on an accident policy for the death of plaintiff's husband for the sum of $10,000, the *Page 492 amount of the policy. There was judgment for the amount sued for, from which defendant appeals. The policy was issued April 21, 1919. The plaintiff was the wife of William L. Tillotson, the assured, and the beneficiary in the policy. The policy provided that the amount thereof should be paid to the beneficiary upon the death of the assured during the life of the policy, which was for one year from its date, in the event the assured should die "from bodily injuries affected directly and independently of all other causes through external violence and accidental means." The petition further alleged that, "on the 30th day of August, 1919, while said policy was in full force and effect, said William L. Tillotson, deceased, lost his life and died at St. Joseph, Missouri, from bodily injuries, affected directly and independently of all other causes through external violence and accidental means, to-wit, by drowning in the Missouri River."

The plaintiff had property and money amounting to about $18,000 at the time of the marriage, which she had when Tillotson disappeared. He never used or lost any of it. Tillotson, when he married, had some property, a ranch of about 600 acres in Wyoming, and a considerable estate which he had inherited from his mother. But he lost most of his property or lived it up before the policy sued on was taken out. His last business or employment before his disappearance was managing the real estate department of a bank or trust company in Denver. When he disappeared, and for some time before, he had a third interest in a fund of $70,000, the income of which he held in trust for his aunt, who was eighty-five or eighty-six years old, and at her death the principal became the absolute property of himself and his two sisters in equal shares. In May, 1919, Tillotson had to his credit in a bank at Denver between $2300 and $2400 of his own. He afterwards gave $700 of this to his wife. He was forty-two years of age. There is no evidence he ever threatened suicide. His health was *Page 493 good and his family relations were pleasant. In that month, May, 1919, he and his wife, and her daughter by her first husband, took a trip, he paying the expenses, she returning a substantial part of the $700 he had given her near the end of the trip. They went South, visiting some of Mrs. Tillotson's relatives, and from thence East, to visit relatives of the assured. They remained about three months, when they started West and stopped at St. Joseph, Missouri, on August 26th, where they visited at "the old Col. Gates's home." Mrs. Tillotson was a granddaughter of Colonel Elijah Gates. On August 30, 1919, the wife and her daughter, Helen, went to Kansas City on the 11:30 A.M. interurban train. Tillotson accompanied his wife to the station, with Burr McCarty, his wife's nephew. Tillotson and McCarty, after the train left, went to a near-by drug store and bought some cigars and cigarettes, where Tillotson used the telephone (but to whom he was talking or intended to talk does not appear), and then returned to the Gates home for the mid-day meal. Tillotson left after dinner about 1:30 P.M., and was never seen thereafter. He and his wife had planned to return to Denver the next Sunday or Monday night after her return from Kansas City. After his disappearance, his account as trustee of the $70,000 was intact. He had $855 in bank to his credit, as such trustee, subject to his check. He owed about $650. At the time of his disappearance he had a $20,000 life insurance policy, which had been taken out seven or eight years before, which had a loan value of $1600 or $1700. He had a paid-up policy of life insurance for $5000, more than twenty-two years old, which had a loan value of $2500, and on which he had obtained a small loan from the company. He also had a $5000 policy, taken out three years prior to 1919. He had about $600 or $700 with him, when he disappeared, besides a gold watch and personal jewelry. On cross-examination of one of plaintiff's witnesses, it was shown that these three life policies had been paid to Mrs. Tillotson, the beneficiary of them, she having *Page 494 given satisfactory bond with security, conditioned that she would re-pay the money, if Tillotson "turned up" in seven years.

Shortly after 2:15 P.M. on the same afternoon Tillotson disappeared, Hape, a Uuion Terminal trackwalker, patrolling the railroad track along the bank of the Missouri River in the railroad yards at the foot of Locust Street in St. Joseph, found a hat, coat and trousers and a pocketbook containing no money, which was afterwards identified as belonging to Tillotson, and which he had on his person when he left the Gates home about half or three quarters of an hour before. These articles were found between the railroad track and the water's edge, and some on the rocks which riprapped the river bank. The coat and trousers were considerably torn in places, and the necktie had been ripped apart. The trackwalker Hape's testimony was substantially as follows:

On the afternoon of August 30, 1919, he found a pocketbook, hat and coat, also a tie and a cigar, on the river bank, half way between the railroad track and the rock dike. He did not notice the time when he stopped there, but did when he left, and it was 2:15 P.M. He looked at his watch as he went away. He had stopped there probably ten minutes. The tie was on the rock dike, the hat four to six feet north of the coat, and the coat six to eight feet from the rocks. The tie was on the rocks west of the coat, about in the middle of the dump. It had been torn to pieces, as though it had been jerked off the neck. The piece around the neck was broken, but it was all there, and remained tied. The witness opened the pocketbook to examine its contents. He found some receipts and business and lodge cards of different kinds. Tillotson's name was on the cards. The cards and papers found were not all in the pocketbook, some were scattered about on the ground. One of the cards was a certificate of registration in the draft for the World War; one was a receipt for dues paid to a Masonic order. The place *Page 495 where he found these articles was about the foot of Locust Street. These articles were all introduced in evidence, after being identified by the witness as those he found on the river bank. The coat and trousers were badly ripped, and the necktie also, when he found them, and in the same condition as when shown to witness at the trial. A cigar was near the necktie on the rocks. Two men followed him down to where he discovered these articles. He did not know them. They looked around at him, and said they would not have anything to do with it, and went on south. He didn't see them any more.

Cross-examination: These two men looked like they were laboring men. They said they were going across the river to get a job. He saw the coat and hat about ten or twelve feet west of the railroad tracks. The bank of the river was about thirty feet from the tracks at that place. There were bushes growing on the bank, pretty thick at that time. Nothing was hanging on the weeds or bushes. He examined the bank and the weeds to see whether anybody had been in there or not — to see if he could see anything of anybody going over this rock business, over the bank. He saw no sign of anybody going through the weeds, except where he saw the articles. They were in a small bare place, where there were not many weeds between the tracks and the rocks. The pocketbook was between the coat and the hat — between the coat and the track. He looked for blood stains and indications of that kind, and could not find any. He just walked down and glanced around.

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Bluebook (online)
263 S.W. 819, 304 Mo. 487, 1924 Mo. LEXIS 533, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tillotson-v-travelers-insurance-co-mo-1924.