Butcher v. Nationwide Life Ins. Co.
Decision Date | 20 April 1982 |
Docket Number | No. 8117SC652,8117SC652 |
Citation | 290 S.E.2d 373,56 N.C.App. 776 |
Court | North Carolina Court of Appeals |
Parties | Alesia Dee Inman BUTCHER v. NATIONWIDE LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY. |
Faw, Folger, Sharpe & White by W. Thomas White and T. Richard Pardue, Jr., and Folger & Folger by Fred Folger, Jr. and H. Lee Merritt, Jr., Mount Airy, for plaintiff-appellee.
Petree, Stockton, Robinson, Vaughn, Glaze & Maready by Grover Gray Wilson and Michael L. Robinson, Winston-Salem, for defendant-appellant.
The Accidental Death Benefit Rider issued on the life of Donald Butcher provided $10,000 insurance against "the death of the Insured ... [resulting] directly and independently of all other causes from bodily injury caused solely by external, violent and accidental means." In applying the law to the uncontroverted facts of this case, we conclude that the death of the insured was not caused by accidental means and that it was not, therefore, covered by the Accidental Death Benefit Rider. Defendant's motion for a directed verdict should have been allowed.
The term "accidental means" refers to the occurrence or event which produces death and not to the death itself. Chesson v. Insurance Co., 268 N.C. 98, 150 S.E.2d 40 (1966). The word "accidental" describes the means of death. Id. Fletcher v. Trust Co., 220 N.C. 148, 150, 16 S.E.2d 687, 688 (1941).
In Scarborough v. Insurance Co., 244 N.C. 502, 94 S.E.2d 558 (1956), the insured (Midgette) was killed as the result of an altercation with another man (Baldwin). The uncontradicted facts were that, while in Norfolk, Virginia, Midgette argued with a stranger, Baldwin, who was sitting on the porch of his home. Midgette, after cursing Baldwin and while in a state of anger, rushed up the steps toward Baldwin; Baldwin jumped to his feet and shoved Midgette back onto a dirt sidewalk. Midgette's head, however, struck the metal water meter which caused injuries resulting in Midgette's death ten days later. There was no question but that the insured was the aggressor. The Court stated with approval the following principle from 45 C.J.S., Insurance, § 753, p. 779:
Where the policy insures against loss of life through accidental means, the principle seems generally upheld that if the death of the insured, although in a sense unforeseen and unexpected, results directly from the insured's voluntary act and aggressive misconduct, or where the insured culpably provokes the act which causes the injury and death, it is not death by accidental means, even though the result may be such as to constitute an accidental injury.
Id. at 505, 94 S.E.2d at 561. The court concluded that "the character and the extent of the insured's aggression under the circumstances ... are such as to exclude the concept of death by accidental means within the meaning of the policy." Id. at 506, 94 S.E.2d at 561.
Likewise, in another case involving the insured's aggressive conduct, Clay v. Insurance Co., 174 N.C. 642, 94 S.E. 289 (1917), the Supreme Court interpreted a similar "accidental means" clause in a life insurance policy to invoke the test of "whether the insured, being in the wrong, was the aggressor, under circumstances that would render homicide likely as the result of his own misconduct." Id. at 693, 94 S.E. at 290. The court adopted the proposition that where a person voluntarily invites another to a " 'deadly encounter ..., his death, if h...
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Butcher v. Nationwide Life Ins. Co.
...Stockton, Robinson, Vaughn, Glaze & Maready, Winston-Salem, for defendant. Plaintiff's petition for discretionary review, 56 N.C.App. 776, 290 S.E.2d 373, under G.S. § 7A-31 ...