Tisdale v. Connecticut Mutual Life Insurance
This text of 26 Iowa 170 (Tisdale v. Connecticut Mutual Life Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
An honored and upright citizen, who, through a long life, has enjoyed the fullest confidence of all who knew him, — prosperous in business and successful in the accumulation of wealth; rich in the affection of wife and children, and attached to their society; contented in the enjoyment of his possessions, fond of the associations of his friends, and having that love of country which all good men possess, — with no habits or affections contrary [177]*177to these traits of character — journeys from his home to a distant city and is never afterward heard of. Must seven years pass, or must it be shown that he was last seen or heard of in peril, before his death can be presumed? No greater wrong could be done to the character of the man than to account for his absence, even after the lapse of a few short months, upon the ground of a wanton abandonment of his family and friends. He could have lived a good and useful life to but little purpose, if those who knew him could even entertain such a suspicion. The reasons that the evidence above mentioned raises a presumption of death are obvious; absence from any other cause, being without motive and inconsistent with the very nature of the person, is improbable. It is suggested in argument that such absence may be on account of insanity. That may be possible, but as death under such circumstances is more probable than insanity in the absence of evidence thereof, the law raises the presumption of death. Evidence which would point toward insanity as the cause of such absence, would of course be proper for the consideration of the jury, from which its probability might be determined. The competency of evidence of the character above indicated, from which the fact of the death of an absent person may be found within the period of seven years, is well sustained by authority. 2 Greenl. Evid. § 278; Angell on Fire and Life Ins. § 351; Doe v. Flanagan, 1 Kelly, 513; White v. Mann, 26 Maine, 376; Smith v. Knowlton, 11 N. H. 197.
The granting of letters of administration cannot, therefore, be considered an adjudication upon the fact of death which is conclusive upon that question. Evidence, therefore, which, under the rules of law, would establish the existence in life of the supposed decedent at the time of the granting of administration upon his estate, would overcome the presumption raised thereby.
The instruction is erroneous, in that it determines the weight of evidence which is the peculiar province of the jury. A prima facie case having been made, the jury must determine, under proper directions of the court, what quantity of evidence will outweigh the presumption thus raised.
The jury having been incorrectly instructed, the judgment of the District Court is
Beversed.
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