Travelers Insurance Co. v. Miller

122 S.E.2d 268, 104 Ga. App. 554, 1961 Ga. App. LEXIS 736
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedSeptember 7, 1961
Docket38845
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 122 S.E.2d 268 (Travelers Insurance Co. v. Miller) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Travelers Insurance Co. v. Miller, 122 S.E.2d 268, 104 Ga. App. 554, 1961 Ga. App. LEXIS 736 (Ga. Ct. App. 1961).

Opinions

Hall, Judge.

The question of first importance, upon which depends the necessity to review all the others, is whether or not there is any evidence sufficient in law to- support the jury’s verdict that plaintiff’s husband, Ercell B. Miller, died before midnight December 19, 1959. The record contains no positive evidence supporting this conclusion. There is supporting circumstantial evidence, in the testimony of witnesses set out below. (We exclude from consideration for the moment the evidence opposing the conclusion).

The evidence showed that between 9 p.m., December 19, and 10 a.m., December 20, the temperature ranged from 34° to 43° F. C. C. Tays, the owner of the land where Miller’s body was found, testified that he discovered Miller’s body on the morning of December 20’, 1959, as he was coming back home after taking his wife to Sunday School, where she had to be before 10, and after “fooling around” on his property at least 30 minutes. “. . . And I just walked up on the bank of the little old creek and looked down there, and there lay that guy just flat on his back there with his hands up about like this, right in the creek right behind this car. . . The body that I first saw—its head and part of its shoulders and its hands was out of the water. He was laying just about like that and—both hands kind of extended. And his face, head and shoulders, nose and mouth then, were above the water and part of his shoulders or maybe all. I was standing right there when they pulled them out . . . I let them help him pull them out, and he was stiff. He was stiff all over—just about like handling a plank. I’m speaking of the first body. The other body was stiff, too. . . It—he was laying—the deepest part of the water was where his feet was, you see, and part of his shoulders and his head and neck and his hands was above the water.”

Bill Mendenhall, a highway patrolman: “I found this Mr. Miller behind the automobile laying partially in the water and partially out of the water. . . It was 10:35 a.m. when I received this call. . . The stream of water Was about five or [557]*557six feet wide. The depth varied in places, but there where the car was, it was about a foot. Miller was partly in and partly out of the water. His arms was out and—one of his arms was out of the water and part of his head was out of the water and the upper part of his chest was out of the water. The water wasn’t deep enough for his whole body to lay down in this water. I don’t remember just how his face was in that water. I cannot remember whether his nose and mouth were under the water or not. . . The entire bodies seemed to- be' stiff enough to indicate that they Were dead bodies to me. They looked like they were stiff, that is, legs, arms, feet and the bodies all over seemed to be stiff. I helped put Miller in the ambulance. I do not recall in lifting him whether he was limber or stiff. I saw them at Hillcrest Hospital when the bodies were disrobed and after they were disrobed. They undressed Miller while I was there, but Moore was undressed when I arrived. That’s the only occasion I’ve had to see a stiff person. Now, how stiff he was, I don’t know. . .”

Ray Bachus, a county investigator: “. . . As to his coloring or complexion, at that time he was—he was gassed up. In other words, he was blue at that time, at the time that we arrived there. . . He didn’t present all of the same appearance he presented in life, as I guess no dead body does; but after a while, he was gassed up and blue. By gassed up, I mean there was some swelling. Rigor mortis had set up, in other words. . . His stomach had more of a swelling than his chest or aims. He was of a darkish bluish color. Not all over, his feet and arms, they’re just more or less—not the—-they’ll just be spots over the body. Rigor mortis set up through stiffness of the joints. There were spots on him. His stomach was swollen and I could tell from the appearance that he Was stiffened. It was between nine and ten when I arrived at the hospital. I would say that it would take—something like 20 to 30 minutes to get him there. That would then have fixed it so that the call must have been by 9:30 or before. . . Well, if rigor mortis isn’t set up in a body, why; you can tell. But it had set up in him. In other words, it would have made it difficult, unusually, for me as a layman to determine. I depended on [558]*558the intern. I had confidence in the intern. . . I just accepted whatever they gave me at that time and took his word for it. . . I got there a little before ten and saw him blue and swollen, with rigor mortis set in, so I knew good and well that he died a good little while before ten. . . When I saw him swollen and blue, I knew he had been dead for some length of time before that.”

Clarence Foster, an embalmer: . . Rigor mortis is the muscular juices leaving the joints of a person’s body which causes stiffness and can set in anywhere from one minute to twenty-four hours after death. It remains for a spell. Like I said, it will set in and it will take it anywhere from one minute to twenty-four hours to set in and pass off. It passes off and the person is not stiff anymore. Warm weather would cause it to set in and pass off more quickly it has been my experience to observe than in cool weather. Well, as a general rule it starts in the joints first and finally permeates the entire body. If 1 assume a situation where the weather is somewhere between 40 degrees and freezing but maybe 35 degrees, cold enough for frost but not cold enough for ice, would that or not cause rigor mortis to set in more slowly than on a warm day like 65 or 70 degrees, in my opinion? It would set in more slowly in cool weather than it would in warm weather. If a person say thirty years old who was about five feet and nine inches tall weighed about 130 pounds, was found in water nearly up to his shoulders in water his head and part of his aims and shoulders out, the lower part of his body in water but not freezing water maybe 40 degrees, 36-7 or 8 or 35 degrees and if that person were found in that condition, deceased and if he were stiff as a plank or stiff as a board, each and every part of his body was stiff, his head his arms and hands and fingers, toes, rigor mortis had set in completely in that kind of weather, in my opinion. I would say that it would take several hours for rigor mortis to1 actually set in and start to work. If it is finally completed though; if it was rigor mortis all over the body, in every part of it, I would say that would have been as much as 12 hours. If I assume, in addition, that there was an extended protuberance of the abdomen, swollen, and there were blue splotches or dark splotches about [559]*559over the body, that would indicate, in my opinion, that the body had been deceased for a great length of time due to this fact that what would cause the swelling and the splotches would be that after death the body fluids have a tendency to seek their lowest level and after it does that, then what we call tissue gas sets up which causes a swelling and enlargement of the abdominal area. . . It would be impossible to determine with any degree of accuracy when the man died, but from all indications it was quite a while. From the indications you were speaking of a small man weighing around 130 or 135 pounds, temperature around 33 and 35 and 40, and part of him being in water, too, would have a tendency to slow the tissue gases from working as fast as it normally would if it was in weather such as we are having here today. It could possibly have slowed them so that it took over twenty-four hours.”

Carl Mock, an embalmer and coroner: “. . .

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Travelers Insurance Co. v. Miller
122 S.E.2d 268 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 1961)

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Bluebook (online)
122 S.E.2d 268, 104 Ga. App. 554, 1961 Ga. App. LEXIS 736, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/travelers-insurance-co-v-miller-gactapp-1961.