Wiggins v. New York Life Ins. Co.

2 F. Supp. 365, 1932 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1635
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Kentucky
DecidedFebruary 26, 1932
Docket5:07-misc-00003
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 2 F. Supp. 365 (Wiggins v. New York Life Ins. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wiggins v. New York Life Ins. Co., 2 F. Supp. 365, 1932 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1635 (E.D. Ky. 1932).

Opinion

ANDREW M. J. COCHRAN, District Judge.

This is an action on a life insurance policy, and is before me for trial and judgment, a jury having been waived by written stipulation. The policy was for $5,000, and was issued August 13, 1920.- The plaintiff was appointed administrator of the insured by the circuit court of Fayette in this district in 1929, and this action was brought July 19, 1930, in the circuit court of that county, and removed from thence on the petition of the defendant to this court. The sole question in the case is as to whether the insured was dead at the time of such appointment and the bringing of this action. There is no proof of his actual death prior to that time. Reliance is had solely on a presumption that he was then dead.

The insured was the son of the plaintiff, and was bom in Robertson county in this district February 16, 1900. Some time before the year 1918, possibly a number of years, his parents removed to Lexington, where they have ever since lived, leaving an older son in Robertson county, who still lives there. They brought the insured with them to Lexington, and he continued to live with them. un- . til the year 1918. During that year, after he had become 18 years of age, he went to Cleveland, Ohio, to work for Armour Packing Company, and continued to work for it there and in the vicinity until some time shortly before January 25, 1922. In the early part of August, 1920, he made a short visit to his parents in Lexington. Whilst there, to wit, on August 7, 1920, he-made application for the policy of insurance. His application stated his residence to be in Cleveland, Ohio. Whilst he was living and working at Cleveland, he corresponded regularly with his parents, mainly with his mother, and at times sent home to his father a portion of his earnings. During this period of time, just when not appearing, he .was secretly married. Whom he married and where his wife was from was unknown to his parents and family. Shortly after his marriage they were divorced at his suit. On January 25, 1922, his mother received a letter from him, mailed at Memphis, Tenn., in these words:

“January 25, 1922.

“Dear Mother:

“Don’t worry. Am entering college this fall — won’t say where. No mail will reach me here. Would never have amounted to anything at the rate I was going. Intend to square up some of these days. Don’t spend nothing looking for me.”

From the receipt of this letter until the-date of this trial, June 16,1931, neither parents nor his brother or sister have heard anything from or about him. The parents *367 had some letters from a man named Jolly, an associate of the insured. Seemingly those letters were written after his disappearance,' though this is uncertain. They wrote him and requested him to notify them if he ever heard anything as to him, but received no answer. This was about two months after insured’s disappearance. About two years afterwards, the plaintiff went to Cleveland to find out about him amongst the people with whom he worked and his landlady, but was unable to get any elew as to his whereabouts. He tried to find Jolly, but could not. Several years after this, just when not appearing, whilst passing through Memphis, he made an investigation to get some elew as to his son. He examined the police records and the daily newspapers for a week before or about the time that this letter was written, but was unable to find any trace qf him.

The presumption of death on which plaintiff relies originated in the common law. Wigmore on Evidence, vol. 4, § 253, states that, as the presumption there stood, it arose “from the fact of the person’s continuous absence from home, for seven years, unheard of by the persons who would naturally havo received news from the absentee.” He refers to it as “a genuine presumption, of long standing and universal acceptance.” The defendant urges that this is not a ease for the application of this presumption. The only ground put forward for this position is that plaintiff has not alleged in his petition that he has made a diligent search to find the insured and the evidence establishes that ho has not. Before taking up directly this contention of defendant, I desire to consider and determine what is the law of this state as to such presumption and the necessity of a diligent search.

Fro-m an early date such presumption lias been a matter of statutory provision in this state. By the Act of January 22, 1798, entitled “An Act declaring when the Death of Persons absenting themselves shall be presumed” (2 Littell’s Laws, p. 28; 1 Statute Law of Kentucky 544), it was provided: “That any person absenting himself beyond sea, or elsewhere, for seven years successively, shall be presumed to be dead, in any case wherein his death shall come in question, unless proof be made that he was alive within that time.”

Provision was then made for restitution of an estate recovered in any such case if in a “subsequent action or suit the person presumed to be dead shall be proved to be alive.”

The statute was silent as to the place from which such person had absented himself. OE course the meaning was — there seems to be no possibility of any other — from his home. That is how Wigmore puts it as to the common-law presumption which the statute must have had in mind. The presumption was a logical presumption. Absence for seven years from .one’s home where he would naturally be yields an inference, nothing else appearing, that he must be dead, and it is only absence therefrom that yields such inference. And such absence yields such inference no matter where the home may bo.

The case of Spurr v. Trimble, 1 A. K. Marsh. (Ky.) 278, involved the question as to whether the death of Gilbert Jrnlay, “a spectator” of much that happened in the early history of this state, but not a resident, had been established. The absence relied on was from the state. It was held that this was not sufficient. The court then said, after referring to the statute: “Yet as Imlay has not been proven to have so absented himself from the country of his residence, his death ought not, in the present contest, to be presumed.”

The absence referred to was not from Ms residence, but from “the country of his residence.” But, as the contention was that absence from this state established presumptively his death, there was no occasion for the court to be more specific as to the place, absence from which was necessary to give rise to the presumption. It was recognized that absence for seven years from any country constituting the residence of the person whose death was in question came within the statute.

It is to be noted that, according to Wig-more, seven years’ absence was not sufficient in and of itself to give rise to the presumption, as it was essential also that during that time the absentee was “unheard of by the persons who would naturally havo received news from him,” but, according to the statute, seven years’ absence without more was sufficient. It was deemed that such an absence was such an unnatural occurrence as in and of itself to give rise to the presumption. But it was provided that such presumption would be overcome by proof from the opponent that the absentee “was alive within that time.” This could be done by evidence to the effect that he had been heard from or that he had been seen and possibly in other ways. It was no part of the statutory provision that any search, diligent or otherwise, had been *368

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2 F. Supp. 365, 1932 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1635, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wiggins-v-new-york-life-ins-co-kyed-1932.