An application for a policy of life insurance contained these
questions and answers:
"Q. Are you, or have you ever been, in the habit of using
alcoholic beverages or other stimulants?"
"A. Yes, occasionally."
"Q. Have you read and assented to the following agreement?"
"A. Yes."
The agreement referred to contained the following:
"It is hereby declared that the above are the applicant's own
fair and true answers to the foregoing questions, and that the
applicant is not, and will not become, habitually intemperate or
addicted to the use of opium."
The policy declared that if the assured should become
intemperate so as to impair his health or induce
delirium
tremens, or if any statement in the application on the faith
of which the policy was made should be found to be in any material
respect untrue, the policy should be void. The assured having died,
his creditor for whose benefit the insurance was made sued the
insurer to recover on the policy. The defendant set up (1) that at
the time of making the policy, the insured was and had been
habitually intemperate, and that his statements on which the policy
had been issued were fraudulent and untrue; (2) that after the
policy was issued, he became so intemperate as to impair his health
and to induce
delirium tremens. On both these issues the
insurer assumed the affirmative, taking the opening and close at
the trial.
Held:
(1) That the opinion of a witness as to the effect upon the
assured at the time of the issue of the policy of a habit of
drunkenness five years before that date (the witness knowing
nothing of them during the intervening period) was properly
excluded.
Page 122 U. S. 502
(2) That under the 1st issue, the defendant was bound to prove
that the assured was habitually intemperate when the policy issued,
and under the 2d that he was so after it issued.
(3) That while in a very clear case, a court may assume on the
one hand that certain facts disclose a case of habitual
intemperance, or on the other that they warrant the opposite
conclusion, in the main, these are questions of fact to be
submitted to the jury.
(4) That the charge of the court contained all that it was
necessary for him to say by way of assisting the jury to arrive at
a just verdict, and that he was not required to give them the same
instructions over again in language selected by the defendants'
counsel.
(5) That other requests made by defendants' counsel took from
the jury the decision of the question which should be left to
them.
If, in regard to any particular subject or point pertinent to
the case, the court has laid down the law correctly and so fully as
to cover all that is proper to be said on the subject, it is not
bound to repeat this instruction in terms varied to suit the wishes
of either party.
This was an action at law upon a policy of insurance. Judgment
for the plaintiff. The defendant sued out this writ of error. The
case is stated in the opinion of the Court.
MR. JUSTICE MILLER delivered the opinion of the Court.
The Muskegon National Bank recovered a judgment in the Circuit
Court of the United States for the Southern District of New York,
against the Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Company upon a
policy of insurance on the life of Erwin G. Comstock for
$23,717.04, and to this judgment the present writ of error is
directed. The bank had an insurance upon the life of Comstock, its
debtor, for the sum of $20,000. On the trial before the jury,
although some other issues were made in the pleadings, the contest
turned, so far as the assignments of error are presented here, on
the condition of Comstock in regard to the habit of drinking
alcoholic liquors. The policy and the application for it, the
answers to which were signed both by Comstock
Page 122 U. S. 503
and the bank through its president, present the foundation of
the controversy. The sixteenth interrogatory is as follows: "Are
you, or have you ever been, in the habit of using alcoholic
beverages or other stimulants?" The answer to this was, "Yes;
occasionally." The twenty-second interrogatory, "Have you read and
assented to the following agreement?" was answered "Yes." This
agreement, so far as it touches the present issue, reads as
follows:
"It is hereby declared that the above are the applicant's own
fair and true answers to the foregoing questions, and the applicant
is not, and will not become, habitually intemperate or addicted to
the use of opium."
The body of the policy declared that if Comstock shall become
intemperate, so as to impair his health or induce
delirium
tremens, or if any statement in the application on the faith
of which the policy is made shall be found to be in any material
respect untrue, the policy is void.
Upon this language in the application and the policy the
defendant founded two separate pleas or defenses:
First. That
"at the time of making and presenting said application as
aforesaid and of the issuing of said policy, the said Erwin G.
Comstock was, and prior thereto had been, habitually intemperate,
and that the said statement in said application contained that said
Erwin G. Comstock was not then habitually intemperate was untrue
and fraudulently made, and a suppression of facts material to the
risk assumed by said policy of insurance."
Second. That
"said policy was issued by this defendant, and accepted by said
plaintiff, upon the express condition, among others contained
therein, that if said Erwin G. Comstock should become either
habitually intemperate or so far intemperate as to impair health or
induce
delirium tremens, the said policy should be null
and void; that in fact, as this defendant is informed and believes,
the said Erwin G. Comstock did, after the issuing of said policy,
become habitually intemperate and so far intemperate as to impair
his health and induce
delirium tremens, and that thereby
the said policy became and is null and void."
The issues were tried upon the two allegations of habitual
Page 122 U. S. 504
intemperance before and after the issue of the policy. The
company, discarding other issues, assumed the affirmative on these
two pleas, and on a plea of suicide, which seems to have been
abandoned, and thereby obtained the opening and the conclusion to
the jury. The assignments of error raise objections to the action
of the court in excluding answers to questions propounded to
witnesses for the defendant company on the trial, as well as its
refusal to give certain instructions prayed for by the defendant to
the jury.
A witness for the defendant named Torrent testified that he knew
Comstock at Muskegon from 1868 to 1875. The policy of insurance was
taken out in New York in 1879. The witness further states that he
was well acquainted with Comstock in Muskegon, and knew that he was
addicted to the use of intoxicating liquors during the period of
their acquaintance; had seen him drunk; knew of his being on
prolonged sprees, and gave other testimony to the effect that he
did use intoxicating liquors to excess. He was then asked this
question:
"Up to the time your acquaintance with him ceased, what would
you say as to whether his drinking had affected his health or
impaired his vital powers in any respect?"
To this he answered:
"I think it had affected him materially. I think it had affected
his nerves and impaired his health generally -- general debility.
The symptoms of that were his general looks, and that the time he
went away, or just before, he was taken very sick, and they didn't
know whether he was going to be alive or die; that was the general
impression."
The court excluded this answer, and the defendant excepted.
Witness also testified that he saw him during that sickness, and
that he was then sick for about three weeks, adding: "I think he
had the
delirium tremens." This expression of opinion was
also excluded.
It is to be observed that the witness had testified to all the
facts which he knew, without objection, that tended to establish a
habit of intemperance in Comstock prior to 1875. What he was next
asked, and what he then testified to, was his opinion in regard to
the effect of this intemperance upon the health of the assured. It
will be noted that all this occurred
Page 122 U. S. 505
between four and five years before the execution of the policy.
We are of opinion that while the facts recited by this witness and
received in evidence might have some remote tendency to show
Comstock's habits in regard to temperance at the time to which they
related, his opinion of their effect upon his health at the date of
the policy, four years later, was inadmissible as to that or his
habits, as he knew nothing of these during that period.
The exception to the testimony of Barney, who undertook to
detail conversations with a doctor attending Comstock prior to
1875, as to whether Comstock was threatened with
delirium
tremens or not, and the statement of the witness that he was
afraid Comstock was going to have
delirium tremens, which
was excluded by the court, depend upon the same principle, and are
otherwise incompetent. We see no error in those rulings.
The remaining assignments of error have regard to prayers for
instructions by the court to the jury which were refused. No
assignment of error is founded on any exception taken to the charge
of the judge who tried the case, which seems to have been eminently
fair and very full, and in our opinion embraced all that was
necessary to be said to the jury on the subject. The questions
which the jury had to respond to were whether Comstock was of
intemperate habits at the time the policy was taken out and whether
he became habitually intemperate after that period. The whole case
turned, so far as the jury was concerned, upon the true definitions
of the words "habitually intemperate," taken in connection with the
testimony on the subject at these two different periods. The
plaintiff was not bound to prove that the assured was temperate, or
that he was a temperate man; but the defendant was bound to prove
not only that Comstock was intemperate at those periods, but that
he was habitually so. This it was bound to do by such a
preponderance of testimony as should satisfy the jury that, at one
of these periods or the other, he was habitually intemperate. We do
not know of any established legal definition of those words. As
they relate to the customs and habits of men generally in regard to
the use of
Page 122 U. S. 506
intoxicating drinks, and as the observation and experience of
one man on that subject is as good as another of equal capacity and
opportunities, their true meaning and signification would seem to
be a question addressed rather to the jury than to the court. While
there may be on the one hand such a clear case of intemperate
habits as to justify the court in saying that such and such facts
constitute a condition of habitual intemperance, or on the other
such an entire absence of any proof, beyond an occasional
indulgence in the use of ardent spirits, as to warrant the opposite
conclusion, yet the main field of inquiry, and the determination of
the question within it, must be submitted to the jury, and the
question on this submission must be decided by them.
The testimony in this case is all embodied in the record, and is
contradictory. It must be divided into its relations to the two
periods -- before and after the execution of the policy. It is seen
from the testimony that Comstock left Muskegon, where many of these
witnesses resided who testify as to his excessive use of
intoxicating drinks, prior to 1875, and that they know nothing of
his habits after that. The policy was taken out in 1879. It is also
quite clear that, under a pledge made to one of his partners in
business, he had refrained from the use of intoxicating drinks from
the first of June, 1878, up to the time of taking out this policy,
and continued so to refrain up to March, 1880. There are several
witnesses who testify that after his removal to New York in 1875,
he was drunk, had sprees once in a while, and perhaps several of
them up to the time when he made this pledge to his partner. There
are others who testify that after March, 1880, he was again seen
intoxicated, and had spells of confinement on account of those
sprees. On the other hand, there were four or five witnesses
examined, some of whom were in the same building in which Comstock
was employed in New York, who saw him daily, and transacted
business with him for the two or three years prior to his death,
which was in 1881, who testify that they never saw him drunk or
under the influence of liquor, and did not suppose that he was
addicted to drinking, but that he was a prompt, efficient business
man, and that they had no suspicion
Page 122 U. S. 507
that he was intemperate or indulged in the excessive use of
stimulants. Among these, Mr. Samuel Borrow, vice-president of the
Equitable Life Assurance Society, in whose building Comstock was a
tenant, says that he saw him almost daily for two or three years
prior to his death; that he struck him as a very energetic, active
man, and that he never saw him under such circumstances as to
suggest that he had been drinking.
Under these circumstances, and in view of this conflicting
testimony, the following language of the judge in his charge to the
jury in this case seems to contain all that was necessary for him
to say by way of assisting them to arrive at a just verdict:
"I think that there is no rule of law which says that in order
to make a man a drunkard, he must drink every day or every week to
excess. Neither, on the other hand, does a single or an occasional
excess make a man an habitual drunkard; but if you find that the
habit and rule of a man's life is to indulge periodically and with
frequency, and with increasing frequency and violence, in excessive
fits of intemperance, such a use of liquor may properly cause the
finding of habitual drunkenness. It is the fact of the certainty of
these periodical sprees, accompanied with their frequency, which
marks the habit. If a man should indulge in such a debauch once in
a year only, it could not, in my opinion, properly be said that he
was an habitual drunkard; he would be an occasional drunkard. But
if such debauches increased in frequency, and the certainty of
their increasing frequency becomes established, then the time
finally arrives when the line between an occasional excess and
habit is crossed. It is for you to say whether Comstock was at the
time of the application, or became afterwards, the victim of such a
habit. If you find that after the making of the policy, Comstock
became so far intemperate as to impair his health, the policy is
avoided, and the verdict will be for the defendant."
At the request of the defendant, he also gave to the jury the
following instructions:
"If the jury find from the evidence that Erwin G. Comstock
Page 122 U. S. 508
was habitually intemperate when the application for the policy
of insurance was made, then they must find for the defendant."
"If the jury find from the evidence that Erwin G. Comstock
became habitually intemperate after the issuing of the policy, then
they must find for the defendant."
"If the jury find from the evidence that, after the making of
the policy, Erwin G. Comstock became so far intemperate as to
impair his health, then they must find for the defendant."
Exceptions were taken and errors assigned in regard to the
following instructions, which were asked and refused by the
court:
First.
"To be habitually intemperate, it is not necessary that a person
should be addicted to the excessive use of intoxicating liquors
continually, or without interruption, but a person who, during a
period of time sufficient to form a habit in that respect, is
addicted to periodical 'sprees' of longer or shorter duration, when
for days in succession he drinks intoxicating liquors to great
excess, producing a state of continued drunkenness until
prostration and sickness compel a cessation and terminate the
'spree,' comes within the definition of being habitually
intemperate, although such person may remain sober for a month,
three or six months, or even a year at a time."
Second.
"If the jury find from the evidence that for seven or eight
years immediately prior to the 17th day of April, 1879, Erwin G.
Comstock was addicted to periodical 'sprees,' when for several days
and sometimes for a week or more in succession he would drink
intoxicating liquors to great excess, producing a state of
continued drunkenness until prostration and sickness intervened,
then they must find for the defendant, although they may find that
he would remain sober for a month, three or six months, or even a
year at a time."
Third.
"It was the duty of the plaintiff and of Erwin G. Comstock, in
their application for this policy of insurance, to communicate to
the defendant the fact that for six or seven years immediately
prior to the first day of June, 1878, Comstock
Page 122 U. S. 509
had been addicted to periodical sprees, lasting for a longer or
shorter period, when for days in succession he would drink
intoxicating liquors to great excess, producing continued
drunkenness, although he might remain sober for a month, three or
six months, or longer even at a time, and their failure to disclose
such facts to the defendant avoids the policy, and the jury must
find for the defendant."
Fourth. This includes two charges which amount to very much the
same thing. They are in the following words:
"If the jury should find from the evidence that for six or seven
years immediately prior to the first day of June, 1878, Erwin G.
Comstock had been addicted to periodical sprees, lasting for a
longer or shorter period, when for days in succession he would
drink intoxicating liquors to great excess, producing continued
drunkenness, until sickness and prostration would intervene and
terminate the spree; that such sprees would occur once in every
three or six months, or thereabouts; that on the first day of June,
1878, after the termination of one of such sprees, under threat of
dissolution of partnership from his then partner, Mr. Hoagland, he
gave a written pledge not to drink any more so long as he and
Hoagland were associated in business; that his partnership with
Hoagland ceased on the first day of May, 1879; that afterwards,
during the years 1880 and 1881, he again became addicted to such
periodical sprees; that during the year 1880, he had at least three
such sprees; that during the year 1881, up to the latter part of
April of that year, he had a number of such sprees of great
intensity; that in one of those sprees, in or about the month of
April, 1881, he subjected himself to the restraint of a nurse for
several weeks in order to prevent himself from obtaining liquor --
then the jury must find for the defendant. If the jury find from
the evidence that after the making of the policy of insurance,
during the years 1880 and 1881, Erwin G. Comstock became addicted
to periodical sprees, lasting for a number of days, or even a week
or more each time when he would use intoxicating liquors to such
excess as to produce continued drunkenness and prostrate him and
make him sick for several days; that such sprees occurred in or
about the month of March, 1880, in or about the month of July,
1880, again in or about the month of August, 1880, again on or
about the first of January, 1881, again in or
Page 122 U. S. 510
about the month of February, 1881, and again in or about the
month of April, 1881; that his last sprees in February and April,
1881, were of such intensity that toward the close of the drinking
period, when sick and prostrated, he subjected himself to nurses
for a week and more each time in order that they might assist him
to become sober -- then they must find for the defendant."
The first, second, and third of these prayers for instruction do
not differ much from the substance of the charge of the court at
its own instance. The language of that charge embodies the real
principles upon which these three prayers are based, and in terms
much more apt and just to both parties than that used by counsel.
The court said, among other things:
"Neither does a single or an occasional excess make a man an
habitual drunkard; but if you find that the habit and rule of a
man's life is to indulge periodically and with frequency and with
increasing frequency and violence in excessive fits of
intemperance, such a use of liquor may properly cause the finding
of habitual drunkenness."
This is the substance, and in very strong language, of the three
prayers above referred to for instruction which were refused by the
court.
It has been often said by this Court, and we repeat it now with
emphasis, that if in regard to any particular subject or point
pertinent to the case the court has laid down the law correctly,
and so fully as to cover all that is proper to be said on the
subject, it is not bound to repeat this instruction in terms varied
to suit the wishes of either party.
Kelly v.
Jackson, 6 Pet. 622;
Laber v.
Cooper, 7 Wall. 565;
Indianapolis & St.
Louis Railroad v. Horst, 93 U. S. 291;
Railway Co. v. McCarthy, 96 U. S. 258. If
the charge of the judge, made at his own suggestion, covers the
point in question, it is much more likely to be impartial and
correctly stated than it will be by counsel.
These requests, however, are inadmissible, as we think, for
Page 122 U. S. 511
other reasons. They all, as near as they dare, attempt to define
approximately for the jury the number of times a man must get drunk
or have a spree, or how closely such excesses must succeed each
other to constitute "habitual intemperance." They also attempt to
say how long a time a man must have abstained from drunkenness or
sprees in order to relieve him from that charge. And especially are
the requests obnoxious in saying that under such circumstances a
person comes within the definition of being habitually intemperate,
although he might remain sober for a month, three or six months, or
longer at a time; one of them says, "or even a year at a time."
What effect should be given to an entire abstinence from the use of
liquors for a whole year, in connection with occasional drunken
sprees before or after, is not for the court to determine. But if
it were, it does not seem to us, in view of this testimony, that
sufficient force was given to it in the rejected prayers. This
reference to periods of abstinence from drink is still more
objectionable when it is seen from the testimony that during a
continuous period just before and after the taking out of this
policy, Comstock was admitted to have been entirely sober, if not
entirely abstinent from the use of ardent spirits, for a period of
nearly two years. It would be rather harsh for a court to instruct
a jury as a matter of law that a man who was sober nearly two years
was at a period near the middle of that time "habitually
intemperate." It was certainly a question to be left to the jury,
on all the testimony, to draw their own conclusions in regard to
the subject.
The two other requests are still more liable to these objections
inasmuch as they constitute an attempt to recite the various
occasions on which the jury might infer that Comstock had been
drunk, together with some vague description of the intervals
between certain sprees, with an account of his struggles against
his thirst for liquor; in fact, they are a history of his life for
six or seven years prior to the making of the contract for
insurance down to the time of his death, from all of which there is
sought to be deduced a positive instruction to the jury that they
must find for the defendant. We do not think
Page 122 U. S. 512
there was anything in the case which would have justified the
court in thus taking the determination of it from the jury. The
court had no right in this summing up to ignore the testimony of
four or five respectable and intelligent gentlemen who knew
Comstock well during the most important part of this period, during
several years of it, who saw him almost daily, and who testify that
they never had any reason to suppose that he used ardent spirits at
all, much less to excess. It was for the jury to weigh all these
circumstances and to determine in view of them all whether he was
habitually intemperate.
There are very few decisions by courts of high character
relating to this question. The principal one which has been brought
to our attention is
Insurance Co. v. Foley, 105 U.
S. 350. In that case, the insured, in answer to the
question "Is the party of temperate habits; has he always been so?"
answered "Yes," whereas the defendant company alleged that in fact
he was a man of intemperate habits. The Court, through MR. JUSTICE
FIELD, said:
"The question was as to the habits of the insured. His
occasional use of intoxicating liquors did not render him a man of
intemperate habits, nor would an occasional case of excess justify
the application of this character to him. An attack of
delirium
tremens may sometimes follow a single excessive indulgence. .
. . When we speak of the habits of a person, we refer to his
customary conduct, to pursue which he has acquired a tendency from
frequent repetition of the same acts. It would be incorrect to say
that a man has a habit of anything from a single act. . . . The
court did not therefore err in instructing the jury that if the
habits of the insured 'in the usual, ordinary, and everyday routine
of his life were temperate,' the representations made are not
untrue within the meaning of the policy although he may have an
attack of
delirium tremens from an exceptional
overindulgence. It could not have been contemplated from the
language used in the policy that it should become void for an
occasional excess by the insured, but only when such excess had by
frequent repetitions become a habit. And the testimony
Page 122 U. S. 513
of witnesses who had been intimate with him for years and knew
his general habits may well have satisfied the jury that whatever
excesses he may at times have committed, he was not habitually
intemperate."
We think this language eminently applicable to the case before
us.
The questions presented by these requests do not rise to the
dignity even of mixed law and fact, but are questions the answers
to which are governed by no settled principle or rule of law
established either by statute or by a recognized course of judicial
decision. They are emphatically questions of fact which it is the
province of a jury to decide and in regard to which they are or
ought to be as capable of making a decision as the court or anybody
else.
The judgment of the circuit court is therefore
affirmed.