This was an action on six policies of insurance, all alike
(except as to the amount of insurance) and in the following
form:
"In consideration of the application for this policy, which is
hereby made a part of this contract, the Mutual Life Insurance
Company of New York promises to pay at its home office in the City
of New York, unto William M. Runk, of Philadelphia, in the County
of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, his executors, administrators or
assigns, twenty thousand dollars, upon acceptance of satisfactory
proofs at its home office of the death of the said William M. Runk
during the continuance of this policy, upon the following
condition, and subject to the provisions, requirements and benefits
stated on the back of this policy, which are hereby referred to and
made part hereof. The annual premium of seven hundred and
eighty-two dollars shall be paid in advance on the delivery of this
policy, and thereafter to the company at its home office in the
City of New York, on the tenth day of November in every year during
the continuance of this contract. In witness whereof,"
etc. The principal defense was that the assured, when in sound
mind, deliberately and intentionally took his own life, whereby the
event insured against -- his death -- was precipitated. One of the
issues was the sanity or insanity of the assured when he committed
self-destruction.
Held:
(1) If the assured understood what he was doing, and the
consequences of his act or acts, to himself as well as to others --
in other words, if he understood, as a man of sound mind would, the
consequences to follow from his contemplated suicide, to himself,
his character, his family and others, and was able to comprehend
the wrongfulness of what he was about to do, as a sane man would,
then he is to be regarded as sane.
(2) In the case of fire insurance, it is well settled that,
although a policy, in the usual form, indemnifying against loss by
fire, may cover a loss attributable merely to the negligence or
carelessness of the insured, unaffected by fraud or design, it will
not cover a destruction of the property by the willful act of the
assured himself in setting fire to it, not for the purpose of
avoiding a peril of a worse kind but with the intention of simply
effecting its destruction.
(3) Much more should it be held that it is not contemplated by a
policy taken out by the person whose life is insured and
stipulating for
Page 169 U. S. 140
the payment of a named sum to himself, his executors,
administrators, or assigns that the company should be liable if his
death was intentionally caused by himself when in sound mind. When
the policy is silent as to suicide, it is to be taken that the
subject of the insurance -- that is, the life of the assured --
shall not be intentionally and directly, with whatever motive,
destroyed by him when in sound mind. To hold otherwise is to say
that the occurrence of the event upon the happening of which the
company undertook to pay was intended to be left to his option.
That view is against the very essence of the contract.
(4) A contract the tendency of which is to endanger the public
interests or injuriously affect the public good or which is
subversive of sound morality ought never to receive the sanction of
a court of justice or be made the foundation of its judgment.
(b) If, therefore, a policy -- taken out by the person whose
life is insured and in which the sum named is made payable to
himself, his executors, administrators or assigns -- expressly
provided for the payment of the sum stipulated when or if the
assured, in sound mind, took his own life, the contract, even if
not prohibited by statute, would be held to be against public
policy in that it tempted or encouraged the assured to commit
suicide in order to make provision for those dependent upon him or
to whom he was indebted. The case is not different in principle if
the policy be silent as to suicide and the event insured, the death
of the assured, is brought about by his willful, deliberate act
when in sound mind.
The case is stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN delivered the opinion of the Court.
This action was brought against the Mutual Life Insurance
Company of New York on six policies of life insurance, each bearing
date November 10, 1891 -- one for $20,000, one for $15,000, and
four for $10,000 each. There was a verdict in its favor, upon which
judgment was entered, and that judgment was affirmed in the circuit
court of appeals. 70 F. 954.
Page 169 U. S. 141
The policies were all alike except as to the amount of
insurance, and were in the following form:
"In consideration of the application for this policy, which is
hereby made a part of this contract, the Mutual Life Insurance
Company of New York promises to pay at its home office, in the City
of New York, unto William M. Runk, of Philadelphia, in the County
of Philadelphia, State of Pennsylvania, his executors,
administrators, or assigns, twenty thousand dollars, upon
acceptance of satisfactory proofs at its home office of the death
of the said William M. Runk during the continuance of this policy,
upon the following condition, and subject to the provisions,
requirements, and benefits stated on the back of this policy, which
are hereby referred to and made part hereof: the annual premium of
seven hundred and eighty-two dollars shall be paid in advance on
the delivery of this policy, and thereafter to the company at its
home office, in the City of New York, on the tenth day of November
in every year during the continuance of this contract. In witness
whereof,"
etc. The "provisions, requirements, and benefits" thus made part
of the policy will be referred to hereafter.
The assured died October 5, 1892, all premiums falling due
previous to his death having been paid. It is not disputed that he
took his own life.
In the affidavit of defense filed by the insurance company, it
is stated that at or about the time of the execution of the
policies in suit, Runk held policies upon his life, to the extent
of $315,000, issued to him by other companies; that, during the
year 1892, he effected additional insurance to a considerable
amount, the total amount at or about the time of his death being
$500,000; that, prior to taking the additional insurance of
$200,000, he was indebted in a very large amount by reason of the
improper use of moneys entrusted to him in a fiduciary and in a
quasi-fiduciary capacity; that he was without resources of
his own sufficient to meet the amount of that indebtedness; that he
was confronted with the fear of being convicted of breach of trust,
and was desirous to protect pecuniarily those whom he had injured;
that he deliberately determined to commit suicide for the purpose
of escaping the
Page 169 U. S. 142
necessity of meeting those whose confidence had been betrayed,
and with the intention, through moneys expected to be paid on his
policies of insurance, to liquidate, wholly or in part, the debts
owing by him; that he deliberately and intentionally took his life,
being at the time in sound mind and in the full possession of his
mental faculties, and that his suicide was not the result of, nor
occasioned by, mental unsoundness, but was the act of a man
mentally and morally able to understand all the consequences
thereof.
The affidavit of defense also contained the following
statements:
"The policies of insurance sued upon contain a reference to the
application therefor, which is made a part of the contract of
insurance. A copy of this application is hereto attached, which it
is prayed may be taken as a part of this affidavit. Under the
advice of counsel, the defendant avers that this application is a
part of said contract, and that the contract of insurance was a
contract made in the State of New York, and to be interpreted by
and in accordance with, the laws of that state."
"The policies of insurance sued upon were delivered to the said
Runk upon the faith of an independent contract entered into by him,
embodied in the said application, to the effect that if such
policies should be granted, he, the said Runk, did 'warrant and
agree . . . that I will not die by my own act, whether sane or
insane, during the said period of two years,' said period of two
years dating from the 6th day of November, 1891."
"The said Runk did, within the period of two years, commit a
breach of said contract by killing himself, as has been before
stated, in the way and manner above recited. By reason of the
breach of said contract, and only by reason of such breach, the
policy of insurance matured, and damages occasioned by such breach
are equivalent in amount to that demanded under the policies."
Each of the applications for policies signed by the assured and
attached to the affidavit of defense contained the following:
Page 169 U. S. 143
"I hereby warrant and agree . . . not to engage in any specially
hazardous occupation or employment during the next two years
following the date of issue of the policy for which application is
hereby made, and also not to engage in any military or naval
service, in time of war, during the continuance of the policy,
without first obtaining permission from this company. I also
warrant and agree that I will not die by my own act, whether sane
or insane, during the said period of two years."
At the trial below, the defendant offered in evidence Runk's
application for insurance. This was objected to on the ground that
the application was not attached to the policy, and under an act of
the General Assembly of Pennsylvania approved May 11, 1881, could
not, for that reason, be considered as part of the contract or be
admitted in evidence. The defendant, by counsel, stated at the time
that the paper was not offered for the purpose of making it, as an
"application," part of the contract, but to prove that an
independent, collateral, contemporaneous agreement was entered into
by which Runk stipulated that he would not die by his own act,
whether sane or insane, during the period of two years. The
objection to this evidence was sustained; Judge Butler, who
presided at the trial in the circuit court, observing:
"The representation or statement or agreement (call it by
whatever name you choose) is, in my estimation, a part of the
application for insurance, and it constitutes a condition on which
the policy was applied for and obtained -- as much so as any
representation contained in the paper itself; and, it is therefore,
by the statute, excluded, by reason of the fact that a copy was not
attached to the policy. . . . The statute intended that the policy
shall exhibit on its face, or the policy, in connection with
whatever it refers to, shall exhibit to the insured, the conditions
on which he holds the policy. The object of this would be to limit
the policy of insurance, to qualify it, to make it available only
in case the party lived up to this contract."
The statute of Pennsylvania to which reference was made is in
these words:
"That all life and fire insurance policies upon the lives or
property of persons within this commonwealth,
Page 169 U. S. 144
whether issued by companies organized under the laws of this
state, or by foreign companies doing business therein, which
contain any reference to the application of the insured, or the
constitution, bylaws or other rules of the company either as
forming part of the policy or contract between the parties thereto,
or having any bearing on said contract, shall contain, or have
attached to said policies, correct copies of the application, as
signed by the applicant, and the bylaws referred to; and, unless so
attached and accompanying the policy, no such application,
constitution or bylaws shall be received in evidence, in any
controversy between the parties to, or interested in, the said
policy, nor shall such application or bylaws be considered a part
of the policy or contract between such parties."
Laws of Pennsylvania 1881, p. 20.
Whether the circuit court erred in excluding the application,
which, by the terms of the contract, constituted the consideration
of the company's promise to pay, is a question that need not be
considered. If error was committed in this particular, it was one
for the benefit of the plaintiff in the action; for, if the
application had been admitted in evidence as part of the contract
of insurance, the agreement and warranty of the assured not to die
by his own act, whether sane or insane, within two years from the
date of the policy, would have precluded any judgment against the
insurance company.
Travelers' Ins. Co. v. McConkey,
127 U. S. 661,
127 U. S. 666.
Upon this writ of error, therefore, we must assume that the
contract of insurance contained no such agreement or warranty by
the assured, nor any express condition avoiding the policy in case
of suicide. Besides, the defendant does not insist that this Court
should determine the rights of the parties upon the basis that the
application of Runk constituted part of the contract of insurance.
It may be added that we do not wish to be understood as expressing
any opinion upon the question whether the circuit court erred
either in its construction of the Pennsylvania statute of 1881, or
in applying that statute to the policies here in suit.
At the trial in the circuit court the plaintiff submitted the
following points:
Page 169 U. S. 145
1. The evidence was not sufficient to warrant the jury in
finding that the deceased entered into the contracts of insurance
evidenced by the policies sued upon with the intention of
defrauding the company.
2. The evidence was not sufficient to warrant the jury in
finding that the deceased entered into the contracts of insurance
with the intention of committing suicide.
3. The evidence upon the part of the defendant did not warrant
any inference of fact constituting a defense in law to the
plaintiff's right to recover the amount due upon the policies.
4. The mere fact that the insured committed suicide did not,
standing alone, avoid the policies; there being no condition in
them to that effect.
5. If one whose life is insured intentionally kills himself when
his reasoning faculties are so far impaired by insanity that he is
unable to understand the moral character of his act, even if he
does understand its physical nature, consequence, and effect, such
self-destruction will not of itself prevent recovery upon the
policies.
The company submitted the following points as the basis of
instructions to the jury:
1. There can be no recovery by the estate of a dead man of the
amount of policies of insurance upon his life, if he takes his own
life designedly, while of sound mind.
2. If the jury found that Runk committed suicide when he was of
sound mind, being morally and mentally conscious of the act the was
about to commit, of its consequences, and of its nature, with the
deliberate intent to secure to his estate and to his creditors the
amount of the policies sued upon, there could be no recovery.
3. If the jury found that Runk obtained he policies of insurance
sued upon at a time when he was insolvent and an embezzler, with
the intent thereby to secure, in case of his death, from the
defendant, a fund with which to pay those to whom he was indebted,
and whose property he had embezzled, and subsequently committed
suicide, while of sound mind, with the deliberate intent to carry
out this scheme, there could be no recovery.
Page 169 U. S. 146
4. The defendant was entitled to set off the loss occasioned by
the failure of Runk to keep his agreement not to die by his own
hand within two years of the date thereof, and the amount of this
loss cannot be less than that of the policies sued upon.
The court disaffirmed the plaintiff's first, second, and third
points without comment. It disaffirmed the plaintiff's fourth point
relating to the effect upon the rights of the assured of suicide,
standing alone, and affirmed the defendant's first point relating
to the same matter.
The plaintiff's fifth point was affirmed, the court, however,
accompanying its affirmance of that point with some observations to
be presently referred to.
It will be observed that the plaintiff's first and second points
assumed that the evidence was not sufficient to warrant a finding
that the assured entered into the contracts of insurance with the
intention either to defraud the company or to commit suicide. The
court rightly refused to so instruct the jury. When the last
policies were taken out by Runk, he was carrying insurance on his
life for an amount large enough to require annual premiums of about
$12,000. His income, so far as the record shows, was inadequate to
meet such a burden. And yet in 1891 he largely increased the
insurance on his life, and added about $8,000 to the sum to be paid
annually for premiums. Besides these facts, it appeared that, on
the day before his death, he avowed that his debts must be paid,
and that they could only be paid with his life. That avowal was in
a letter written to his partner, in which he said that he had
deceived the latter, and could only pay his debts with his life.
That letter concluded:
"This is a sad ending of a promising life, but I deserve all the
punishment I may get. Only I feel my debts must be paid. This
sacrifice will do it, and only this. I was faithful until two years
ago. Forgive me. Don't publish this."
On the same day, he wrote to his aunt, to whom he was indebted
in a large sum, saying, among other things: "Forgive me for the
disgrace I bring upon you, but it is the only way I can pay my
indebtedness to you." In addition, he left for the guidance of his
executor a memorandum
Page 169 U. S. 147
of his business affairs, prepared just before his death, and
which tended to show that he was at that time entirely himself.
In view of these and other facts established by the evidence,
the court did not err in disaffirming the first and second of
plaintiff's points. We may add that under the charge to the jury,
it became unnecessary for them to inquire whether the policies were
taken out with the intention of defrauding the insurance company,
or of committing suicide. The court said to the jury:
"What constitutes insanity, in the sense in which we are using
the term, has been described to you, and need not be repeated. If
this man understood the consequences and effects of what he was
doing or contemplating, to himself and to others; if he understood
the wrongfulness of it, as a sane man would, then he was sane so
far as we have occasion to consider the subject; otherwise he was
not. Here, the insured committed suicide, and, as the evidence
shows, did it for the purpose, as expressed in his communication to
the executor of his will, as well as in letters written to his aunt
and his partner, of enabling the executor to recover on the
policies, and use the money to pay his obligations. I therefore
charge you that if he was in a sane condition of mind at the time,
as I have described, able to understand the moral character and
consequences of his act, his suicide is a defense to this suit. The
only question therefore for consideration is this question of
sanity. There is nothing else in the case. That he committed
suicide, and committed it with a view to the collection of this
money from the insurance companies and having it applied to the
payment of his obligations is not controverted and not
controvertible. It is shown by his own declaration -- possibly not
verbal, but written. The only question, therefore, is whether or
not he was in a sane condition of mind, or whether his mind was so
impaired that he could not, as I have described, properly
comprehend and understand the character and consequences of the act
he was about to commit. In the absence of evidence on the subject,
he must be presumed to have been sane. The presumption of sanity is
not overthrown by the act of committing suicide. Suicide
Page 169 U. S. 148
may be used as evidence of insanity, but, standing alone, it is
not sufficient to establish it. . . . If you find him to have been
insane, as I have described, your verdict will be for the
plaintiff. Otherwise it will be for the defendant."
It thus appears that the case was placed before the jury upon
the single issue as to the alleged insanity of the assured at the
time he committed suicide, and with a direction to find for the
plaintiff if the assured was insane at that time, and for the
company if he was then of sound mind.
Assuming that the jury obeyed the instructions of the court,
their verdict must be taken as finding that the assured was not
insane at the time he took his life. We must, then, inquire whether
the observations of the trial court on the subject of insanity were
liable to objection.
We have seen that the plaintiff asked the court to instruct the
jury that, if the assured intentionally killed himself when his
reasoning faculties were so far impaired by insanity that he was
unable to understand the moral character of his act, even if he did
understand its physical nature, consequence, and effect, such
self-destruction would not of itself prevent recovery upon the
policies.
This was the only instruction asked by the plaintiff which
undertook to define insanity, and, as before stated, it was given
by the court. But in giving it, the court said:
"We must understand what is meant and intended by the term
'moral character of his act.' It is a point which has been used by
the courts, and is correctly inserted in the term, but it is a term
which might be misunderstood. We are not to enter the domain of
metaphysics, in determining what constitutes insanity, so far as
the subject is involved in this case. If Mr. Runk understood what
he was doing, and the consequences of his act or acts, to himself
as well as to others (in other words, if he understood, as a man of
sound mind would, the consequences to follow from his contemplated
suicide, to himself, his character, his family, and others, and was
able to comprehend the wrongfulness of what he was about to do, as
a sane man would), then he is to be regarded by you as sane.
Otherwise he is not."
Substantially the same observations
Page 169 U. S. 149
were made in that part of the charge which is above given.
The plaintiff insists that the definition of insanity, as given
by the trial court, was much narrower than was required or
permitted by the decisions of this Court. It is said that the
impairment not only of the moral vision, but also of the will,
leaving the deceased in a condition of inability to resist the
impulse of self-destruction, has been accepted by this Court as
describing a phase of insanity or mental unsoundness. One of the
cases to which the plaintiff referred in support of this view is
Davis v. United States, 165 U. S. 373,
165 U. S. 378,
which was a prosecution for murder. It was there held that the
accused was not prejudiced by the following instruction given to
the jury:
"The term 'insanity,' as used in this defense, means such a
perverted and deranged condition of the mental and moral faculties
as to render a person incapable of distinguishing between right and
wrong, or unconscious at the time of the nature of the act he is
committing, or where, though conscious of it, and able to
distinguish between right and wrong, and know that the act is
wrong, yet his will (by which I mean the governing power of his
mind) has been, otherwise than voluntarily, so completely destroyed
that his actions are not subject to it, but are beyond his
control."
This was substantially what had been held by this Court in
previous cases.
Life Ins. Co. v.
Terry, 15 Wall. 580;
Bigelow v. Berkshire Life
Ins. Co., 93 U. S. 284;
Insurance Co. v. Rodel, 95 U. S. 232;
Manhattan Insurance Co. v. Broughton, 109 U.
S. 121;
Connecticut Life Ins. Co. v. Lathrop,
111 U. S. 612;
Accident Ins. Co. v. Crandal, 120 U.
S. 527.
In
Terry's case, above cited (which was an action upon
a life policy declaring the policy void if the assured died by his
own hand), it became necessary to instruct the jury on the subject
of insanity. The Court said:
"We hold the rule on the question before us to be this: if the
assured, being in the possession of his ordinary reasoning
faculties, from anger, pride, jealousy, or a desire to escape from
the ills of life, intentionally takes his own life, the proviso
attaches, and there can be no recovery. If the death is caused by
the voluntary
Page 169 U. S. 150
act of the assured, he knowing and intending that his death
shall be the result of his act, but when his reasoning faculties
are so far impaired that he is not able to understand the moral
character, the general nature, consequences, and effect of the act
he is about to commit, or when he is impelled thereto by an insane
impulse which he has not the power to resist, such death is not
within the contemplation of the parties to the contract, and the
insurer is liable."
Recurring to the ruling of the Court in the present case, it is
not perceived that the plaintiff had any ground to complain that
its definition of insanity was too strict or too narrow. His fifth
point, in general terms, defined insanity as being a condition in
which the reasoning faculties are so far impaired that the person
alleged to be insane when committing self-destruction was unable to
understand the moral nature of his act, even if he understood its
physical nature. This definition was not rejected. On the contrary,
it was accepted, the court at the time making some observations
deemed necessary show what, in law, was meant by the words "moral
nature of his act." By those observations, the jury were informed
that if the assured understood what he was doing, and the
consequences of his act or acts to himself and to others (that is,
if he understood, as a man of sound mind would, the consequences to
follow from his contemplated suicide, to himself, his character,
his family, and others, and was able to comprehend the wrongfulness
of what he was about to do, as a sane man would), then he was to be
regarded as sane; otherwise, not.
It is suggested that the attention of the jury should have been
brought specifically, or more directly, to the fact that
unsoundness of mind exists when there is an impulse to take life
which weakened mental and moral powers cannot withstand -- a
condition in which there is no continued existence of a governing
will strong enough to resist the tendency to self-destruction. But
the words of the charge, although of a general character,
substantially embodied these views. The court stated the principal
elements of a condition of sanity as contrasted with insanity. What
it said was certainly as specific as the instruction asked by the
plaintiff. If the plaintiff
Page 169 U. S. 151
desired a more extended definition of insanity than was given,
his wishes in that respect should have been made known. The court
having affirmed his view of what was evidence of insanity, and such
affirmance having been accompanied by observations that brought out
with more distinctness and fullness what was meant by the words
"moral character of his act," the plaintiff has no ground to
complain, for nothing said by the court upon the question of
insanity was erroneous in law or inconsistent with that which the
plaintiff asked to be embodied in the charge.
No error of law having been committed in respect of the issue as
to the insanity of the assured, it is to be taken as the result of
the verdict that he was of sound mind when he took his life.
This brings us to the question whether the insurance company was
liable, assuming that it was not a part of the contract,
enforceable in Pennsylvania, that the assured should "not die by
his own act, whether sane or insane," within two years from the
date of the policy.
It is contended that the court erred in saying to the jury, as
in effect it did, that intentional self-destruction, the assured
being of sound mind, is, in itself, a defense to an action upon a
life policy even if such policy does not in express words declare
that it shall be void in the event of self-destruction when the
assured is in sound mind. But is it not an implied condition of
such a policy that the assured will not purposely, when in sound
mind, take his own life, but will leave the event of his death to
depend upon some cause other than willful, deliberate
self-destruction? Looking at the nature and object of life
insurance, can it be supposed to be within the contemplation of
either party to the contract that the company shall be liable upon
its promise to pay where the assured, in sound mind, by destroying
his own life, intentionally precipitates the event upon the
happening of which such liability was to arise?
Life insurance imports a mutual agreement whereby the insurer,
in consideration of the payment by the assured of a named sum
annually or at certain times, stipulates to pay a
Page 169 U. S. 152
larger sum at the death of the assured. The company takes into
consideration, among other things, the age and health of the
parents and relatives of the applicant for insurance, together with
his own age, course of life, habits, and present physical
condition, and the premium exacted from the assured is determined
by the probable duration of his life, calculated upon the basis of
past experience in the business of insurance. The results of that
experience are disclosed by standard life and annuity tables,
showing at any age the probable duration of life. These tables are
deemed of such value that they may be admitted in evidence for the
purpose of assisting the jury in an action for personal injury, in
which it is necessary to ascertain the compensation the plaintiff
is entitled to recover for the loss of what he might have earned in
his trade or profession but for such injury.
Vicksburg &
Meridian Railroad v. Putnam, 118 U. S. 545,
118 U. S. 554.
If a person should apply for a policy expressly providing that the
company should pay the sum named if or in the event the assured at
any time during the continuance of the contract, committed
self-destruction, being at the time of sound mind, it is reasonably
certain that the application would be instantly rejected. It is
impossible to suppose that an application of that character would
be granted. If experience justifies this view, it would follow that
a policy stipulating generally for the payment of the sum named in
it upon the death of the assured should not be interpreted as
intended to cover the event of death caused directly and
intentionally by self-destruction while the assured was in sound
mind, but only death occurring in the ordinary course of his
life.
That the parties to the contract did not contemplate insurance
against death caused by deliberate, intentional self-destruction
when the assured was in sound mind is apparent from the
"provisions, requirements, and benefits" referred to in, and made
part of, the policy. They show that the policy was issued on the
twenty-year distribution plan, and was to be credited with its
distributive share of surplus apportioned at the expiration of
twenty years from the date of issue; that, after three full annual
premiums were paid, the company
Page 169 U. S. 153
would, upon the legal surrender of the policy, before default in
the payment of any premium, or within six months thereafter, issue
a nonparticipating policy for a paid-up insurance, payable as
provided, for the amount required by the provisions of the New York
statute of May 21, 1879, Laws of New York, c. 347; that the assured
was entitled to surrender the policy at the end of the first period
of twenty years,
"and the full reserve computed by the American table of
mortality, and four percent interest, and the surplus, as defined
above, will be paid therefor in cash;"
that, if the assured surrendered the policy, the total cash
value at the option of the policy holder should be applied "to the
purchase of an annuity for life, according to the published rates
of the company at the time of surrender;" that, after two years
from the date of the policy the only conditions that should be
binding on the holder of the policy were that
"he shall pay the premiums at the time and place and in the
manner stipulated in the policy, and that the requirements of the
company as to age, and military or naval service in time of war,
shall be observed;"
that in all other respects, if the policy matured after the
expiration of two years, the payment of the sum insured should not
be disputed, and that the party whose life was insured should
always wear a suitable truss. These provisions of the contract tend
to show that the death referred to in the policy was a death
occurring in the ordinary course of the life of the assured, and
not by his own violent act, designed to bring about that event.
In the case of fire insurance, it is well settled that although
a policy, in the usual form, indemnifying against loss by fire, may
cover a loss attributable merely to the negligence or carelessness
of the insured, unaffected by fraud or design, it will not cover a
destruction of the property by the willful act of the assured
himself in setting fire to it, not for the purpose of avoiding a
peril of a worse kind, but with the intention of simply effecting
its destruction. Much more should it be held that it is not
contemplated by a policy taken out by the person whose life is
insured, and stipulating for the payment of a named sum to himself,
his executors, administrators, or assigns,
Page 169 U. S. 154
that the company should be liable if his death was intentionally
caused by himself when in sound mind. When the policy is silent as
to suicide, it is to be taken that the subject of the insurance
(that is, the life of the assured) shall not be intentionally and
directly, with whatever motive, destroyed by him when in sound
mind. To hold otherwise is to say that the occurrence of the event
upon the happening of which the company undertook to pay was
intended to be left to his option. That view is against the very
essence of the contract.
There is another consideration supporting the contention that
death intentionally caused by the act of the assured when in sound
mind -- the policy being silent as to suicide -- is not to be
deemed to have been within the contemplation of the parties -- that
is, that a different view would attribute to them a purpose to make
a contract that could not be enforced without injury to the public.
A contract the tendency of which is to endanger the public
interests or injuriously affect the public good, or which is
subversive of sound morality, ought never to receive the sanction
of court of justice, or be made the foundation of its judgment. If
therefore a policy -- taken out by the person whose life is
insured, and in which the sum named is made payable to himself, his
executors, administrators, or assigns -- expressly provided for the
payment of the sum stipulated when or if the assured, in sound
mind, took his own life, the contract, even if not prohibited by
statute, would be held to be against public policy in that it
tempted or encouraged the assured to commit suicide in order to
make provision for those dependent upon him, or to whom he was
indebted.
Is the case any different in principle if such a policy is
silent as to suicide, and the event insured against -- the death of
the assured -- is brought about by his willful, deliberate act,
when in sound mind? Light will be thrown on this question by some
of the adjudged cases having more or less bearing upon the precise
point now before this Court for determination.
The plaintiff insists that the question just stated is answered
in the affirmative by the opinion in
Life Ins.
Co. v. Terry,
Page 169 U. S. 155
15 Wall. 580. As before stated, that was an action upon a life
policy containing the condition that it should be void if the
assured should "die by his own hand," and the controlling question
was whether the condition embraced the case of an assured who
committed self-destruction at a time when his reasoning faculties
were so far impaired that he was unable to comprehend the moral
character, the general nature, consequences, and effect, of the act
he was about to commit, or when he was impelled thereto by an
insane impulse which he had not the power to resist. There was no
question in that case as to the effect upon the rights of the
parties of intentional self-destruction, where the policy contained
no provision as to suicide. In the course of the review of the
adjudged cases, reference was made in the opinion of this Court to
Borradaile v. Hunter, 5 Mann. & Gr. 639, and also to
Hartman v. Keystone Ins. Co., 21 Pa.St. 466, 479. In the
former case, it appeared that the assured threw himself into to the
Thames, and was drowned, and the jury found that he voluntarily
threw himself into the water, knowing at the time that he should
thereby destroy his life and intending thereby to do so, but at the
time of committing the act he was not capable of judging between
right and wrong. The question was as to the liability of the
insurance company on a policy issued to the assured, containing a
clause or proviso that the policy should be void if "the assured
should die by his own hands, or by the hands of justice, or in
consequence of a duel." Maule, Erskine, and Coltman, JJ., held that
the company was not liable, while Tindall, C.J., was of the opinion
that the proviso embraced cases of felonious suicide only, and not
cases of self-destruction while the assured was under the influence
of frenzy, delusion, or insanity. In the latter case, it appeared
that the assured committed self-destruction by taking arsenic. The
Supreme Court of Pennsylvania held that there could be no recovery,
Chief Justice Black saying:
"The conditions of the policy are that it shall be null and void
'if the assured shall die by his own hand, in or in consequence of
a duel, or by the hands of justice,' etc. The plaintiff argues that
the first clause here quoted
Page 169 U. S. 156
does not embrace a suicide committed by swallowing arsenic.
Where parties have put their contracts in writing, their rights are
fixed by it. But the contract is what they meant it to be, and,
when we can ascertain their meaning from the words they have used,
we must give it effect. One rule of interpretation is that we must
never attribute an absurd intent if a sensible one can be extracted
from the writing. No absurdity could be greater than a stipulation
against suicide in a duel. The words 'die by his own hand' must
therefore be disconnected from those which follow. Standing alone,
they mean any sort of suicide. Besides this, the court was very
plainly right in charging that if no such condition had been
inserted in the policy, a man who commits suicide is guilty of such
a fraud upon the insurers of his life that his representatives
cannot recover, for that reason alone."
Mr. Justice Hunt, delivering the opinion in
Terry's
case, made an observation in relation to the two cases just cited
which is supposed to be favorable to the plaintiff's contention. He
said,
"In
Hartman v. Keystone Ins. Co., the doctrine of
Borradaile v. Hunter was adopted, with the confessedly
unsound addition that suicide would avoid a policy although there
was no condition to that effect in the policy."
This observation of the learned justice was irrelevant to the
case before the court, and cannot be regarded as determining the
point in judgment. If it was meant that there could be a recovery
by the personal representative of an assured who took out the
policy, and who, in sound mind, took his own life -- the policy
being silent in reference to suicide -- we cannot concur in that
view.
In
N.Y. Mut. Life Ins. Co. v. Armstrong, 117 U.
S. 591,
117 U. S. 600,
which was an action by the assignee of a life policy (the defense,
in part, being that the assignee murdered the assured in order to
get the benefit of the policy), Mr. Justice Field, speaking for
this Court, said:
"Independently of any proof of the motives of Hunter [the
assignee] in obtaining the policy, and even assuming that they were
just and proper, he forfeited all rights under it when, to secure
its immediate payment, he murdered the assured. It would be a
reproach to
Page 169 U. S. 157
the jurisprudence of the country if one could recover insurance
money payable on the death of a party whose life he had feloniously
taken. As well might he recover insurance money upon a building
that he had willfully fired."
In
Hatch v. Mutual Life Ins. Co., 120 Mass. 550, it
appears that a policy of insurance on the life of a married woman
provided that "if the said person whose life is hereby insured
shall die by her own act or hand, whether sane or insane, the
policy should be null and void." It was in proof that the assured
died by reason of a miscarriage produced by an illegal operation
performed upon, and voluntarily submitted to by, her with intent to
cause an abortion, and without any justifiable medical reason for
such an operation. The court, observing that this voluntary act on
the part of the assured was condemned alike by the laws of nature
and by the laws of all civilized states, and was known by the
assured to be dangerous to life, said:
"We are of opinion that no recovery can be had in this case,
because the act on the part of the assured causing death was of
such a character that public policy would preclude the defendant
from insuring her against its consequences, for we can have no
question that a contract to insure a woman against the risk of her
dying under or in consequence of an illegal operation for abortion
would be contrary to public policy, and could not be enforced in
the courts of this commonwealth."
The report of the case shows that it was decided without
reference to the questions raised by the special clauses of the
policy.
The subject was considered by the Supreme Court of Alabama in
Supreme Commandery v. Ainsworth, 71 Ala. 436, 446. Chief
Justice Brickell, delivering the unanimous judgment of that court,
said:
"In all contracts of insurance. there is a implied understanding
or agreement that the risks insured against are such as the thing
insured, whether it is property or health or life, is usually
subject to, and the assured cannot voluntarily and intentionally
vary them. Upon principles of public policy and morals, the fraud
or the criminal misconduct of the assured is, in contracts of
marine or of fire insurance, an
Page 169 U. S. 158
implied exception to the liability of the insurer.
Waters
v. Merchants' Louisville Ins. Co., 11 Pet. 213;
Citizens' Ins. Co. v. March, 41 Penn.St. 386;
Chandler
v. Worcester Mut. Fire Ins. Co., 3 Cush. 328. Death, the risk
of life insurance, the event upon which insurance money is payable,
is certain of occurrence. The uncertainty of the time of its
occurrence is the material element and consideration of the
contract. It cannot be in the contemplation of the parties that the
assured, by his own criminal act, shall deprive the contract of its
material element; shall vary and enlarge the risk, and hasten the
day of payment of the insurance money. The doctrine asserted in
Fauntleroy's case, that death by the hands of public
justice, the punishment for the commission of a crime, avoids a
contract of life insurance, though it is not so expressed in the
contract, has not, so far as we have examined, been questioned,
though the case itself may have led to the very general
introduction of the exception into policies. The same
considerations and reasoning which support the doctrine seem to
lead, of necessity, to the conclusion that voluntary, criminal
self-destruction, suicide, as defined at common law, should be
implied as an exception to the liability of the insurer, or,
rather, as not within the risks contemplated by the parties,
reluctant as the courts may be to introduce by construction or
implication exceptions into such contracts, which usually contain
special exceptions."
Again:
"The fair and just interpretation of a contract of life
insurance made with assured is that the risk is of death proceeding
from other causes than the voluntary act of the assured, producing
or intending to produce it,"
and that
"the extinction of life by disease or by accident, not suicide,
voluntary and intentional, by the assured, while in his senses, is
the risk intended, and it is not intended that, without the hazard
of loss, the assured may safely commit suicide."
In support of the general proposition that the law will not
enforce contracts and agreements that are against the public good,
and therefore are forbidden by public policy, reference is often
made to the case of
Amicable Society &c. v. Bolland, 4
Bligh N.S. 194, 211, known as "
Fauntleroy's Case."
Page 169 U. S. 159
That was an action by assignees in bankruptcy to secure the
amount due on a policy of insurance stipulating for the payment of
a certain sum upon the death of Fauntleroy to his executors,
administrators, or assigns. The assured was convicted of forgery,
and for that offense was executed. The Lord Chancellor, after
observing that the question was whether the parties representing
and claiming under one who effects insurance upon his life, and
afterwards commits a capital felony, for which he was tried and
executed, could recover the amount named in the policy, said:
"It appears to me that this resolves itself into a very plain
and simple consideration. Suppose that in the policy itself this
risk had been insured against -- that is, that the party insuring
had agreed to pay a sum of money, year by year, upon condition that
in the event of his committing a capital felony, and being tried,
convicted, and executed for that felony, his assignees shall
receive a certain sum of money. Is it possible that such a contract
could be sustained? Is it not void upon the plainest principles of
public policy? Would not such a contract, if available, take away
one of those restraints operating on the minds of men against the
commission of crime, namely, the interest we have in the welfare
and prosperity of our connections? Now if a policy of that
description, with such a form of condition inserted in it in
express terms, cannot, on grounds of public policy, be sustained,
how is it to be contended that in a policy expressed in such terms
as the present, and after the events which have happened, we can
sustain such a claim? Can we, in considering this policy, give to
it the effect of that insertion which, if expressed in terms, would
have rendered the policy, as far as that condition went at least,
altogether void?"
Referring to that case, Bunyon, in his work on Life Insurance,
says:
"It would render those natural affections which make every man
desirous of providing for his family an inducement to crime, for
the case may well be supposed of a person insuring his life for
that purpose, with the intention of committing suicide. For a
policy, moreover, to remain in force when death arose from any such
cause would be a fraud
Page 169 U. S. 160
upon the insurers, for a man's estate would thereby benefit by
his own felonious act. Hence, the rule of law when there is no
condition whatever; but in that case, if the suicide or
self-destruction takes place when the assured is insane and not
accountable for his acts, the rule arising from public policy does
not apply, and his representatives are entitled to the policy
money."
3d ed., p. 96, 2d ed., p. 72.
In
Moore v. Woolsey, 4 Ell. & Bl. 243, 254, in
which the question was as to the rights of an assignee under a
policy providing that, if the assured should die by dueling, or by
his own hand or the hand of justice, it should be void as to the
personal representative of the assured, Lord Campbell, C.J., said
that
"if a man insures his life for a year, and commits suicide
within the year, his executors cannot recover on the policy, as the
owner of a ship who insures her for a year cannot recover upon the
policy if within the year he causes her to be sunk. A stipulation
that in either case upon such an event the policy should give a
right of action would be void."
For the reasons we have stated, it must be held that the death
of the assured, William M. Runk, if directly and intentionally
caused by himself, when in sound mind, was not a risk intended to
be covered, or which could legally have been covered, by the
policies in suit.
The case presents other questions, but they are of minor
importance, and do not affect the substantial rights of the
parties.
We perceive no error of law in the record, and the judgment
is
Affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE PECKHAM did not participate in the consideration or
decision of this case.