Wallin v. Insurance Co. of North America

596 S.W.2d 716, 268 Ark. 847
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedApril 9, 1980
DocketCA 79-214
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 596 S.W.2d 716 (Wallin v. Insurance Co. of North America) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wallin v. Insurance Co. of North America, 596 S.W.2d 716, 268 Ark. 847 (Ark. Ct. App. 1980).

Opinion

Ernie E. Wright, Chief Judge.

This is an appeal from a verdict and judgment in favor of each of the appellees, Insurance Company of North America and Federated Guaranty Life Insurance Company, in suits against them by appellants who were the beneficiaries under a separate insurance policy issued by each of the appellants insuring the life of Keith W. Wallin.

The suit against Federated sought recovery of $25,-000.00, the face amount of a life insurance policy, and the suit against INA sought recovery of $50,000.00, the face amount of an accidental death policy.

Separate suits were filed against each appellee and were later consolidated for trial.

The insured was found dead in his motel room in Fort Lauderdale, Florida on the morning of November 15, 1974, by a motel housekeeper. His body was lying across the bed, he was fully clothed and there was a gunshot wound in his left chest. The bullet had passed through the left chest and exited from his back. A revolver containing four live rounds of ammunition and one spent shell was lying in the floor about six or seven feet from the body. The room was in order and showed no evidence of violence other than the results of the single gunshot. The motel door was locked with the lock in the door knob that locks automatically when the door is closed, and the housekeeper gained entrance by use of a key after there was no response to her knock on the door.

. The motel manager, Sheriffs Office and the County Medical Examiner were notified. The motel manager went to the room and viewed the body before the officers arrived.

Both policies contained a suicide exclusion clause and both defendants asserted suicide as a defense. Suicide is the intentional taking of one’s own life. There is a presumption against suicide and this presumption arises even where it is shown by proof that the death was self-inflicted. The death is presumed to have been accidental until the contrary is made to appear. The burden is upon the one interposing the defense of suicide to establish the fact of suicide by a preponderance of the evidence.

Since the INA policy was an accidental death policy the burden was on the appellants to establish that the death was accidental.

The evidence leaves no room for doubt that the insured died as a result of a gunshot wound in his left chest. The crucial decision for the jury was whether the insured died as a result of suicide or whether the death was the result of accident or possibly homicide at the hands of an unknown person. Determination of the ultimate issue was for the jury, and of necessity, the determination had to be made upon circumstantial evidence and competent opinion evidence.

Dr. Geoffrey Mann, a pathologist and Chief Medical Examiner for the 17th Judicial District of Florida, which includes Fort Lauderdale, investigated the death in the discharge of his official duties. A test was performed for blood alcohol content and it showed an alcohol content of 0.17 per cent. In Dr. Mann’s opinion the deceased was intoxicated at the time of his death. He testified the deceased was lying diagonally across the bed, there was a gunshot wound in the left chest, the bullet had passed through the body and exited in the back, the bullet had gone through the wall after passing through deceased’s body and was found in the bathtub where it had dropped after passing through the wall, that it was obvious the deceased had been sitting on the bed when he fired the shot and the gun had been held tightly against his chest. There were extensive powder burns and the chest wound was jagged and burned, it was obviously a contact shot. There was no sign of any disturbance in the room. It was his conclusion the subject died as a result of a self-inflicted gunshot wound in the left chest, and that the bullet had gone through the heart.

There was testimony by Dr. John Bimmerle, a psychiatrist on the staff of Coral Ridge Psychiatric Hospital who treated the deceased while he was hospitalized there from November 2, 1974, to November 14, 1974. He testified the deceased showed a depressive and anxiety state. The patient was treated with medications to relieve depression and anxiety. He improved and was discharged November 14, 1974, to continue as an out patient with Henderson Clinic. He was given a pass some three days prior to discharge and resumed his work. His history showed a denial of sucidal ideation or any attempts at suicide. He was satisfied Mr. Wallin wanted to live when he discharged him from the hospital. He did not have a psychotic depressive reaction. He was not in a severe depressive state when he came into the hospital and he was improved at the time of discharge.

Wendell Wallin, father of the deceased, and one of the appellants, testified the deceased never talked about suicide, and that he “loved living about as well as anybody I knew.”

Mary Wallin, mother of the deceased, and a plaintiff in the suit against each of appellees, testified Keith was age 26 at the time of his death, that he had gone to Florida in July, 1974, that she and her husband talked to him by telephone every two or three days. Her husband was fixing up a Cadillac for him that he was to pick up when he came home for Christmas. At the time of this death he had $94.00 in a bank in Fort Lauderdale, several hundred dollars in the Cross County Bank, and $2000.00 or $3000.00 in the Wynne Federal Savings & Loan Association. He had two pay checks for over $100.00 each at his place of work he had not picked up. He “loved life more than anybody I had ever known.”

Giles Charette, a deputy sheriff who investigated the death, testified. Incident to his testimony his written report of the investigation was read in evidence. The following portions of the report were received in evidence over the objections of appellants that the statements were incompetent as hearsay:

. . . Mr. Brawner stated that his nephew had been treated for mental disorder for the past three or four years and had been admitted in several hospitals in regard to that situation, and also had an extremely long past of DWI type accidents and. reckless driving.
. . . The driver of the vehicle, above victim, was charged and cited by Trooper Peterson for driving while intoxicated and careless driving. The victim was then booked at the Broward County Sheriffs Jail by Trooper Peterson on the above charges.
. . . This writer talked to the maid who stated that approximately 10:30 a.m. on the date in question, 15th of November, 1974, she was contacted by the desk clerk Orrin Silverstein who told her that he was in contact with the victim’s supervisor Richard Ricones and Ricones advised him that he tried to make contact with the victim by phoning the victim’s room and was unable to reach him, so he asked the desk clerk if he would send one of the maids or someone to the room to see if he could make physical contact with the subject because the victim had been very depressed in the past and everything else, and he was afraid that something could have happened to him.
. . .

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Bluebook (online)
596 S.W.2d 716, 268 Ark. 847, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wallin-v-insurance-co-of-north-america-arkctapp-1980.