| |
|
|
 |
| Gross & Romanick, PC |
 |
|
 |
Publications / Seminars
Related Articles: Litigation
Act of God: Are You Saved?
Flood, fire, and famine may be the traditional hallmarks of
divine intervention, but the law has a very specific definition
of what count as actions by the Almighty. Legally, "Acts of
God" are "misfortunes and accidents arising from inevitable
necessity which human prudence could not foresee or prevent"
- in other words "bad luck." The earliest recorded use of
the term "Act of God" was by Sir Edward Coke in 1581; he used
the term to refer to death, and later extended it to include
a sudden tempest that broke down sea walls. In 1899 the Virginia
Supreme Court had the opportunity to address the Act of God
question when it excused a reluctant groom from his promise
to marry because the unfortunate fellow had contracted a urinary
disease that was aggravated by sexual intercourse. As the
blushing Court states: "I desire to speak with all reserve:
but to possess the lawful means of gratifying a powerful passion,
with the alternative of abstaining or periling life, is, indeed,
to incur a risk of intense misery, instead of mutual comfort."
Similarly, in 1931 the Virginia Supreme Court came to a widow's
aid, when it made her deceased husband's life insurance company
pay. The insurance company tried to avoid the insurance contract
by a provision that required prompt notice of incapacity even
from a person who was too incapacitated to give any notice.
The court quotes: "The primary purpose of all insurance is
to insure or to provide for indemnity, and it should be remembered
that, if the letter killeth, the spirit giveth life."
Most Act of God defenses involve extraordinarily violent storms,
sudden tempests, severe frosts, great droughts, lightening,
earthquakes, sudden death and illness. Or, a remarkable "freshet"?
A railroad company successfully argued that the sweeping away
of a privy with one of their employees inside was excused
because a freshet with this volume of water pouring through
the creek could not have been anticipated.
To successfully employ the Act of God defense, one must have
been victim of a natural cause without human intervention
that could not have been prevented by exercise of reasonable
care and foresight. So, ironically, a devout worshiper who
testified that he was trotting through his church under the
Spirit of the Lord when he injured a fellow congregant was
not permitted to use "Act of God" as a defense.
Should an atheist be allowed to make the Act of God argument?
Maybe an agnostic judge should decide the issue.
|
|
|
|
| |
|