v.
Illinois Commercial Men's Association
Action upon an accident insurance policy-. Plaintiff prevailed, and defendant appeals. In May, 1906, defendant issued an accident insurance policy on the life of Breffelt E. Taylor, and plaintiff is the beneficiary in said policy. On the 6th of August, 1906, the assured died as a result of injuries inflicted by a strobe of lightning.
There is but little, if any, conflict in the evidence. At the time the policy Avas issued and until he died Taylor’s home was in Schuyler, Nebraska, and he was in the employ of the Money Weight Scale Company as a traveling salesman selling computing scales on commission. In his application for the policy in suit Taylor gave his vocation as a traveling salesman, and stated that he devoted twelve months in the year to said business. About July 3, while following that vocation, he met Mr. Morey, an old acquaintance, in Crawford, Nebraska. Morey Avas foreman in charge of the construction of several buildings in said city, and desired to employ carpenters to assist him in said Avork. Taylor was a carpenter by trade, and told Morey that “the scale business did not pay, and he wanted a job to make a raise for a few days; then he Ayas going back to the road to try it again.” Thereupon Morey induced Taylor to Avork as a carpenter on said buildings. Taylor stored his sample cases in the hotel in CraAVford, and borroAved some tools and worked with them until he sent for and received his OAvn tools. It is claimed by defendant that Taylor Avorked continuously as a carpenter from July 3 until his death, August 6, but this is not accurate. Marshall, the employer, states that betAveen July 7 and July 14 Taylor worked but three days and eight hours, leaving at least three days during which T\, xor’s movements are not [*804] accounted for. August 4 Taylor was about to quit said carpenter work, whereupon Marshall raised his wages and induced him to promise that lie would remain for another week. Taylor stated that at the end of that time he would return to the road. August 6, just before a storm, Taylor sought shelter in an inclosed house, and was there killed by a stroke of lightning. Taylor had never resigned his employment with the scales company, and its manager testified that Taylor was in the company’s employ at the time of his death. The question presented is whether within the meaning of the policy Taylor had changed his business or vocation ten days or more preceding his death.
Counsel for the respective parties cite with assurance Union Mutual Accident Ass’n v. Frohard, 134 Ill. 228. Plaintiff’s counsel argue that we should accept the definition given by Judge Baker of “occupation” as “that which occupies or engages the time or attention, the principal business of one’s life,” and apply it to the instant case, whereas counsel for defendant reason that the opinion defines the word as “the vocation, profession, trade or calling in which the assured was engaged for hire or profit,” and that the determining fact in the instant case is that Taylor worked for wages. Most of the cited cases are based upon conditions providing that the assured shall not engage in any occupation more hazardous or different from the one described in his policy. In the instant case the condition is against a change of vocation. Now, a man may have more than one vocation and engage in an additional occupation without abandoning the one described in his policy, and, if he does so, he does not necessarily change his vocation, unless the one is substituted for the other: Defendant’s by-laws contemplate that its policy holders may have more than one occupation. Membership is confined to traveling salesman, “provided he (the policy holder) is not also engaged in any other business more hazardous than tin e named.” In Stone’s Adm’rs v. United States Casualty Co., 34 N. J. [*805] Law, 371, a school teacher out of employment was killed as a result of a fall from the second story of a barn which he was having built, and the court held that the words “changing his occupation” meant engaging in another employment as a usual business. In Simmons v. Western Travelers Accident Ass’n, 79 Neb. 20, the deceased had been out of employment as a traveling salesman for two years, and during that time had resided on his father’s ranches in Texas. He had performed some service for said parent, but had not received wages, and it was held for that reason, and because he had written for the purpose of securing employment as a traveling salesman, that he had not changed his occupation within the meaning of his policy. If Taylor had performed the services of a carpenter as a matter of exercise or for the accommodation of a friend, the Simmons casé would be squarely in point. It does not seem to us that the mere payment of compensation for the identical act that otherwise would not invalidate the policy can work so great a transformation in the rights of the parties as to forfeit the beneficiary’s right to recover for her husband’s death. That Taylor was working for wages was an important fact to be considered in connection with all other relevant evidence in establishing the vital and ultimate one — whether he had changed, his vocation. Defendant concedes that such change must have been permanent by pleading that “he (Taylor) had entirely and permanently abandoned the business or vocation of commercial traveler, and had engaged in the business or vocation of a carpenter.” The proof is clearly to the contrary, and the court correctly permitted the jury to find whether Taylor had resorted to carpenter work as his usual employment, or merely casually, and properly instructed them that, to change his vocation within the meaning of defendant’s by-laws, Taylor must have abandoned the vocation of traveling salesman for that of a carpenter. The instruction did not, as counsel argue, permit a recovery based upon Taylor’s secret intentions, because [*806] the evidence is undisputed from his acts and declarations that he lmd not abandoned his employment as a traveling salesman, but expected to actively engage therein within a few days of the date of the accident, and that the carpenter work ivas a mere casual incident to his actual vocation. Had the jury found for defendant, we would not have disturbed their verdict, nor, on the other hand, will we vacate their finding upon the evidence before us.
The judgment of the district court therefore is
Affirmed.