Waddell v. Prudential Insurance

288 N.W. 643, 227 Iowa 604
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedNovember 21, 1939
DocketNo. 44956.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 288 N.W. 643 (Waddell v. Prudential 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.

Bluebook
Waddell v. Prudential Insurance, 288 N.W. 643, 227 Iowa 604 (iowa 1939).

Opinion

Richards, J.

Plaintiff seeks to recover as the sole beneficiary named in a policy of insurance upon the life of her husband, John Berl Waddell. The insurer is the defendant. The insured suffered a gunshot wound and his death immediately ensued. He died within 2 years from the date of the policy. That fact, and a provision in the policy limiting the insurer’s liability to the amount of the paid premiums in event of death by suicide within such 2-year period, were defensively plead in the first division of defendant’s answer together with the further allegation that the insured did die by suicide. The cause was tried on the merits. Upon a verdict for plaintiff in the full amount she claimed a judgment was rendered against defendant wherefrom it has appealed.

At the close of the evidence defendant moved that a verdict in favor of plaintiff be directed for the amount of the premiums paid, i. e. $70. The motion was overruled. One of appellant’s complaints is that this ruling was erroneous because it was the duty of the court to find as a matter of law that the insured had committed suicide during the 2-year period named in the policy, and so finding to limit recovery as contemplated in the motion.

*606 Tbe answer to tbe question of fact involved in tbe motion cannot be found in tbe testimony of any witness wbo observed tbe tragedy. It occurred at about six o ’clock a. m. on April 25, 1938. On tbe previous evening tbe insured and bis wife and two children, having been invited to come, bad arrived at tbe farm borne of tbe parents of plaintiff near Des Moines, after an all-day trip by train from Lansing, Michigan. This farm borne faced toward tbe south. A plat indicates there were six ground floor rooms. They were not of large dimensions. One was 7 feet 8 inches long measured east and west and 5 feet in width measured north and south. This small room is also mentioned in tbe record as a closet and for convenience we will adopt tbe term for its designation hereinafter. It was being used for storage of various household articles and supplies. In its east wall was a window affording an outside view. The plat and photographs show a door in tbe closet’s west wall that opened into the living room. To this door we have found no reference in tbe oral testimony. In tbe north wall of tbe closet was another door providing a means of entrance from tbe dining room. This door was hinged at approximately tbe western extremity of the north wall of tbe closet. In being opened it swung inside tbe closet. Upon tbe south wall of this closet a wooden cupboard was affixed. Its depth was 12 inches, and it reached from tbe ceiling to within 34% inches from the floor. It was 5 feet 10 inches in length and extended from the westerly extremity of the south wall toward the east to a place where a wardrobe stood against the remainder of the south wall. This last mentioned wardrobe was 21 inches deep and 4 feet 8 inches in height. Against the north wall of the closet was another wardrobe that rested on the floor. Its depth was 16 inches, its height 6 feet 8 inches. Its west end was 6 inches east of the east edge of the door that opened from the dining room, thus leaving a clearance of 6 inches when that door started to swing into the closet upon being . opened. This wardrobe extended toward the east to within 4% inches of the east wall of the closet. In this space of 4% inches plaintiff’s father was keeping a shotgun he had had for 25 years. It was a discharge from this gun that caused the death of insured while he was in the closet. During the night that preceded his death the insured and plaintiff occupied a ground floor bedroom located in *607 the southeast corner of this home. When morning came insured arose and dressed, and was about to go out from the bedroom when plaintiff’s mother met him as she came in. Not long remaining the insured walked out into the living room. During the brief interval he was alive thereafter he was not seen by any of the witnesses. Within a minute or two after he departed plaintiff and her mother heard a sharp noise. They left the bedroom, hurried through the sitting room and into the dining room. The door from that room into the closet was open a little ways, enabling them to see the insured lying in the closet. Plaintiff reached in and placed hers on her husband’s hand and screamed to her mother that he was dead. Plaintiff returned to the living room and lay prostrate on a davenport. The body of insured was lying in the closet on its back excepting that the head was resting somewhat against the west wall. The feet extended toward the east and the head was toward the west. One witness says the position was somewhat northwesterly and southeasterly. The body was behind and in such close proximity to the door from the dining room that the coroner who soon arrived found it necessary to push the door open and enter sideways. The shotgun was lying across decedent’s legs, the muzzle pointing toward the door. Decedent’s left hand “was up on his chest,” the right hand “down to his side.” Neither hand had “hold of the gun.” The coroner testified there was no wound on decedent’s face below the eyes; that the forehead was intact except for the wound extending slightly below the hairline about the middle of the forehead; that the top of the head was not intact; that portions of the top of the skull- bone were missing and pieces were lying about, one in another room; that there were marks of brain matter on the walls and ceilings of the closet and of the dining room; that the hair on the head had not been carried away, but the scalp was split. The undertaker stated that the wound was approximately 1 to 1% inches in diameter and more or less oblong. He also stated, “I don’t remember exactly about whether the wound was jagged, but I would rather say it was jagged.” He stated it had the appearance of Exhibit L to which another reference will be made.

From the foregoing appellant says it appears conclusively that, when the gun discharged, it was slanting upward in a northerly direction, the dining room door was open, and the in *608 sured was leaning over and practically looking down the barrel, and had placed the muzzle against his forehead. Appellant urges that the inevitable conclusion is that insured intended to and did destroy himself. To fortify the conclusion appellant says that in the assumed position the insured, whose height was 5 feet 8 inches, “could have pulled the trigger or could have set off the trigger by pushing it with a small stick or with his toe. ’ ’

Two important elements of this theory, and on which this conclusion seems bottomed, are (1) that the muzzle was against insured’s forehead, and (2) that he pulled or set off the trigger. The record is such that neither of these elements appears with what can be deemed conclusiveness. The only expert evidence that was introduced was such as to warrant a jury finding that, had the muzzle of the gun been against the insured’s forehead, there would have been neither powder marks nor burns on the surface around the wound. Associated with that ’ evidence the jury could have found that, though none of the blackening from powder marks was observed, there were burns that were described by the undertaker as “a number of red pockmarks in the skin of the forehead.” Nor is that all the record disclosed. As has been stated, the undertaker described the wound as having the appearance of Exhibit L.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Brown v. Metropolitan Life Insurance
7 N.W.2d 21 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1942)
Allison v. Bankers Life Co.
299 N.W. 889 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1941)
Reddick v. Grand Union Tea Co.
296 N.W. 800 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1941)
Beckley v. New York Life Insurance
295 N.W. 844 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1941)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
288 N.W. 643, 227 Iowa 604, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/waddell-v-prudential-insurance-iowa-1939.