Wild v. Sovereign Camp, W. O. W.

149 So. 906
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 5, 1933
DocketNo. 1222.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 149 So. 906 (Wild v. Sovereign Camp, W. O. W.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wild v. Sovereign Camp, W. O. W., 149 So. 906 (La. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

LE BLANC, Judge.

Plaintiff brought this suit to recover as beneficiary, under a certificate issued to- John David Wild, Jr., by the defendant fraternal beneficiary association.

The certificate provided for a payment of $1,000 in the event of the death 9f the insured, and it contained a rider, attached, providing for double indemnity in the event death resulted from bodily injury effected solely through external, violent, and accidental means and within sixty days after sustaining such injury.

Claiming that the insured was accidentally killed on November 28, 1931, while the policy of insurance was in full force and effect, plaintiff seeks to recover the double indemnity provided for under the rider referred to.

It appears that the insured died of a gunshot wound, the discharge from a .22 caliber rifle which he had been seen: handling just a few minutes before.

Reading the certificate under which the claim is made, we find that the articles of incorporation, the constitution, laws and bylaws of the association in force at the time and all amendments to each, together with the application for membership, the medical examination and the certificate itself, shall constitute the agreement between the assured and the association. - The certificate was issued June 23, 1930. Referring to the constitution, laws, and by-laws of the Sovereign Camp of the Woodmen of the World, in force at the time this certificate was issued, under paragraph 10 of section 57, we note a provision to the effect that the association shall not be liable for the' payment of double indemnity under any beneficiary certificate providing for such indemnity in case of death by accidental means including that by the discharge of, firearms, unless the-fact of such *907 death by any such means was accidental shall be established by the testimony of at least one person other than the member, who was an eyewitness to the. discharge of the firearm or shooting.

Contending that plaintiff’s petition failed to allege that there was an eyewitness to the shooting in this case, the defendant filed an exception of no cause of action to that part of the demand for double indemnity. Upon the exception being overruled in the lower court, answer was filed under reservation. The defense to the demand as a whole is that the insured committed suicide, and that, under the provisions and specific terms of the certificate, the defendant is thereby relieved from all payment, and, secondly, that as to the claim for double indemnity same cannot be allowed, as there was no eyewitness to the actual shooting which caused his death. From a judgment rejecting both of these defenses and decreeing payments of the claim in full as prayed for, the defendant has appealed.

In this court, the exception of no cause of action is again stressed, and we are asked to review the ruling of the lower court thereon. It seems to us, however, to be strictly a matter of defense and of proof that is presented under it, and we therefore hold that it was properly overruled.

A defense of suicide in an action on an insurance policy being a special defense, the burden of proof rests on the insurer to sustain it with sufficient legal certainty. “When circumstantial evidence, only, is relied on, the defense fails, unless the circumstances exclude, with reasonable certainty, any hypothesis of death by accident, or by the act of another.” Leman v. Manhattan Life Ins., Co., 46 La. Ann. 1189, 15 So. 388, 24 L. R. A. 589, 49 Am. St. Rep. 348. Also Valesi v. Mutual Life Insurance Co., 151 La. 405, 91 So. 818. The record in this case is void of any direct testimony that the insured died from a self-inflicted gun shot wound. The only circumstantial evidence lies in the fact that he died as a result of such a wound from a .22 caliber rifle, and that he had been seen with that kind* of rifle in his hands a few minutes before the shot was fired. Counsel for defendant have worked a theory of suicide around a remark the deceased is said to have made before the shot was heard. The testimony shows that the deceased was working on a dredge boat below Raceland in the parish of Lafourche. His duties kept him around and near a drum on which was wound and rewound the cable which operated the b.offm. On the evening he was shot, he had in his hands this rifle which caused his death. It is not absolutely clear, but we understand from the testimony of a witness named Warren Breaux that he had been cleaning the rifle while seated on a bench near the drum. The remark used by counsel to support their theory was made to Breaux, who quotes the deceased as having said: “You all will hear about me in a few days.” He had just prior to that time showed the rifle after cleaning it and how it worked. Breaux does not know what he meant by that remark. If it be considered in the light of .counsel’s theory as indicating a design of self-destruction, there is, on the other hand, testimony by the same witness to the effect that the deceased also spoke at the same time about a dance he was going to attend the following week, which in the nature of things tended to show anything but an intention to commit suicide at that moment. Moreover, Breaux speaks of him as being at the time in his ordinary good humor, laughing and joking.

The deceased was a young man nineteen years old, earning good wages at the time, and contributing to the support of his. father and mother. There is nothing to indicate that he was morose or of a melancholy disposition. On the contrary, he is said to have been happy, had lots to live for, and on the very day that he was killed had gone to Race-land and made purchases of clothes and other objects which he seemed pleased to show to the people on the dredge boat.

No motive for suicide has been suggested, and the legal presumption in cases of this character is against self-destruction.. Outside of the strained circumstances arising out of the remark the deceased is reported to have made to the witness Breaux, there is nothing whatever in the record to rebut that presumption. We find that the lower court properly rejected the defense of sui-, eide.

The provision in the constitution and by-laws of the defendant corporation requiring the testimony of an eyewitness in cases of accidental killing is attacked by the plaintiff on the ground that it is in contravention of prohibitory law. It is urged that, if the Legislature is prohibited from enacting any law changing the rules of evidence in any judicial proceeding or injury before the court,, under our state Constitution, certainly no individual or private corporation can do so. We find that similar provisions regulating the manner of proof in cases like this have frequently been questioned in -other jurisdictions, on the ground that they are against public policy, and as a rule they are held to be valid. If we adopt the construction that, is generally placed on the term “eyewitness” as contemplated under such a provision,' however, it will be unnecessary for us to pass on the question of its validity in this case, as to all intents and purposes the witness Warren Breaux was an eyewitness to the shooting as he was held to be by the district judge. In an annotation in Ruling Case Law, *908 yol. 5, Permanent Supplement, p. 3799, par. 441, we find that: “The provisions as to proof by an eye-witness does not require that the witness must have seen the actual discharge of the firearm.

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

Related

Villemarette v. Sovereign Camp, W. O. W.
178 So. 648 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1938)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
149 So. 906, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wild-v-sovereign-camp-w-o-w-lactapp-1933.