Whitehouse v. Travelers' Ins. Co.

29 F. Cas. 1038, 7 Ins. L.J. 23
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of New Hampshire
DecidedOctober 15, 1877
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 29 F. Cas. 1038 (Whitehouse v. Travelers' Ins. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Whitehouse v. Travelers' Ins. Co., 29 F. Cas. 1038, 7 Ins. L.J. 23 (circtdnh 1877).

Opinion

CLARK, District Judge

(charging jury). The plaintiff in this case is Ephraim H. White-house, administrator of the estate of Horace Gowan. He -is the nominal party upon the record of the court, entitled to bring the action; but the person for whose benefit the sum sued for is to be recovered, if recovered at all, is Mrs. Gowan, the widow of Horace Gowan. He seeks to recover upon a policy of insurance against death resulting from accident, by which the sum of three thousand dollars was insured, in case of his death by accident, to be paid to his wife; the allega - [1039]*1039tion being that death happened to him by accident, and that the company has not paid the same to his widow, or wife, as agreed. The suit is for the violation of that contract, for the benefit of the wife. The suit was originally brought in the state court, as was suggested to you, and has been removed by due process of law from the state court into this court. Comments were made, on the one side and the other, upon the transfer of the cause from the state court to this court, as if it might be a matter of prejudice to the defendant, that he had transferred the cause into this court But it cannot be so, gentlemen. The right which the law gives him, or gives the defendants, to transfer the cause here, would be of little, or very much less, value, if upon the trial, it was to tell against them. But for certain reasons, in certain causes, the law of the United States provides that causes may be transferred from the state courts into the United States courts, and there tried. Complying with that law, this cause has been transferred here, and the consideration of that transfer may be laid entirely out of the case by you, and receive no consideration whatever. It is not a matter with which you have to do in finding your verdict, in any way. It was a right which the defendant had. It is to be presumed, or it is to be taken for granted, that he exercised that right properly rightfully. The state court would not have transferred the cause here, and this court would not have received and would not try the cause, unless it had been properly brought there. Justice, gentlemen, is said to be blind; and this is true, and should be true in one regard: that she is blind to the parties, as they stand before her. She cannot be blind as to the cause and witnesses and testimony, because, if she were, she never would decide the cause rightly, unless by accident; but, as to the parties, she holds her scales even, or should, and she is blind. You are the organs, gentlemen, of justice. If she be blind as to the parties, you must, if you would do justice, also be blind as to the parties. You must not know this defendant as a corporation. Holding the scales evenly between the two, you must say what is the fact, upon the evidence. It is a high duty, gentlemen; it is a difficult duty. There is a reason to believe that jurors do not always act with these high motives, but the court has no doubt in this cause, that, disregarding all considerations and suggestions of that kind, you will turn your attention to the evidence on the points of the case, and decide by the evidence. The cause is not very wide in its scope. The facts are few. The evidence is somewhat voluminous, and the witnesses, numerous; but the evidence and witnesses are to be received and weighed by you as bearing «mainly upon two or three important facts. There may be other facts which tend to decide these two or three important facts, which you will consider; but what I mean is, that the evidence all hinges on, or is chiefly applicable to, two or three important questions.

But, before I come to these questions, I want to make a suggestion or two to you, which are called out by the counsel on the one side and the other, and principally by some remarks of the counsel for the plaintiff, in regard to fraud in this case. It is a well-established maxim of law, gentlemen, that fraud never is to be presumed. That is, you are never to take it for granted that people have acted fraudulently; you are rather to take it that they have acted honestly, until the evidence shows you that they have acted otherwise. Now it is contended by the plaintiff’s counsel that this company have been fraudulent in this transaction, in the issuing of this policy; and he adduced as proof the fact that certain portions of the policy are printed in smaller letters than other portions, contending that the intention was to deceive; because, if there were no intention to deceive, there would not be any fraud. It is alleged that fraud consists in the use of smaller type in certain parts of the policy. But if you will examine this policy, you will find that the conditions relied upon are referred to in the large type, and the attention is called to them in such a way as entirely to negative the idea that the company meant to conceal them. I say this much to you on this point because it seemed to me, I frankly say, that the evidence did not seem to warrant the remarks of counsel. I have not the least doubt, gentlemen, that the counsel was well-intentioned in the mátter. He put forward the best side of his case, but I felt it due to you, due to justice, that I should make the above statement.

I shall have occasion to say one thing, if I do not forget it, in regard to the autopsy. Perhaps I might as well say it here, lest I should forget it, as at any other time. Complaint was made by counsel for the plaintiff that this defendant exercised the privilege, if you call it so, or that he undertook to make an autopsy when this man was lying dead, before he was buried. Now if you will examine this policy, gentlemen, you will find here a provision made for that very purpose,—a provision in this policy that in case of death, or any other time, when accident occurs, the company shall have the right to examine, and you will see the necessity of it, gentlemen. I comment now upon this, as it was adduced as evidence of fraud. You will see the necessity of such a condition or right as this in insurance policies, where a man might die and be buried, and it be alleged afterward that the death was caused by accident, whereas, if an autopsy had been made, it might have been shown otherwise; or, where death did not occur, it might be shown what the disability was, or the extent of the accident was. to know how much should be paid. So, having secured that right, gen[1040]*1040tlemen, to make that examination, it was only exercising a right which they had by their contract.

But the plaintiff says further to you, gentlemen, that they called the agent of the company, and did not call the attending physician, to make such autopsy: but. gentlemen, it was no more the part of the defendant company to call the attending physician, than it was of Mrs. Gowan. If she wanted him there, it was very easy for her to call him in; and you will weigh, gentlemen—you will weigh the considerations as showing to you whether this defendant practiced any fraud in this regard, and give such weight as it deserves. If there was fraud, or improper acts, on the part of the defendant, of course you will give the plaintiff the benefit thereof, and it will be the duty of the court to instruct you so to do; while, on the other hand, the court feels bound to say that the plaintiff cannot set up fraud on the part of the defendant, unless he produces evidence of it. The contract provides, gentlemen,—I will read it, gentlemen,—“The said sum insured to be paid to Sarah P.

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

Related

Hubbard v. Mutual Acc. Ass'n
98 F. 930 (U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Pennsylvania, 1897)
Barry v. United States Mutual Accident Ass'n
23 F. 712 (U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Wisconsin, 1885)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
29 F. Cas. 1038, 7 Ins. L.J. 23, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/whitehouse-v-travelers-ins-co-circtdnh-1877.