This suit is on a death benefit certificate issued to John B. Claver, November 30, 1907, by defendant, a foreign fraternal beneficiary society duly authorized to transact business in this state. The assured died in St. Joseph, July 5, 1908, and defendant denied liability on two grounds, viz.: First, a breach of warranty in the answer of the assured to a question in the application and, second, the suicide of the assured in violation of the terms of the certificate. A trial to a jury resulted in a, verdict and judgment for plaintiffs and the cause is before us on writ of error sued out by defendant.
The certificate stated that it was “issued in consideration of the representations, agreements and warranties made by the person named herein in his application to become a member” and the application signed by Claver contained the following warranties and agreements: “I hereby certify and agree and warrant that all the statements, representations and answers in this application . . . are full, complete and true. ... I agree that in the event of my death by my own hand or act, whether I am at the time sane or insane, then my beneficiary certificate in said order shall he null and void and of no effect and all my rights *160•and benefits which may have accrued on account thereof shall be absolutely forfeited.” Among the questions and answers in the application are these: “Have •any of your parents or grandparents, uncles or aunts been subject to consumption, cancer, gout, scrofula, insanity or any other hereditary disease, or committed suicide?” Answered, “No.”
The fact is undisputed that in May, 1907, six months before the application for the certificate in question, the mother of the applicant was pronounced insane and sent to the state hospital at St. Joseph, where she died August 2, 1908. She was seventy-one years old and had been in good health until some ten Weeks before her admission to the hospital. In that period she had suffered from typhoid fever, from a stroke of appoplexy and from a most severe stroke of paralysis. Evidently her dementia was caused by the ravages of these diseases on a body and mind afflicted by senile decay. There is no suggestion in the evidence that it was due in any degree to hereditary taint.
Eacts in evidence pertinent to the issue of suicide thus may be stated: Claver drove a mail wagon for a morning newspaper published in St. Joseph and on the night of his death reported for duty at eleven o ’clock p. m., the usual hour. He had been complaining of sickness at the stomach for two or three weeks •and had been taking medicine. He looked like a sick man to the clerk in charge of the mailing room and at four o’clock he said he felt too ill to go out on the mail wagon and the mailing clerk went out in his place. The clerk testified:
“I left there to make the trip about twenty minutes past four o’clock. Returned shortly after six .a. m. When I got back he was in the office which is in the basement. He was lying on a bench. He said, “I am sorry that you had to make that South St. Joseph trip for me. I don’t want to go down there, it is all over now.’ I finished up' my reports. We *161started for home. I met him out in front of the office again. I went on; as we walked down the street he says: ‘Mitchell, I was not drunk this morning.’ I says, ‘I know it — what is the matter with yon anyway?’ ‘My stomach is bothering me.’ ‘Why do yon not get a doctor?’ ‘I don’t know that it would do anybody any good.’ ... I left Claver on Edmond street.”
On cross-examination the witness said:' “There was nothing unusual about Claver being in the basement. It was where the men worked that were employed by the Gazette. It was lighted. I walked down with him to Berger’s about a block from the Gazette office, about 6:30 or 7:00 a. in. . . . He acted like a sick man. He kind of moped around instead of being lively. He acted as if he were suffering pain. Like I would act if I were suffering intensely from some sickness. There was nothing in his demeanor that he was going to commit suicide.”
After separating from the mailing clerk, Claver evidently returned to the mailing room for, at seven o’clock, his groans attracted other employees to the place and he was found lying on the floor in a dying condition. The coroner testified: “I held a post mortem examination on him and found the stomach containing carbolic acid I thought in sufficient quantity to produce death. There was no burning on his lips, on the outside of his mouth. His lips were not burned —but very little, but down his tongue — further on his tongue he had been burned some and as far as I could see down his throat, but outside on his lips— I mean just inside, was not burned very much, if any. I could not tell whether it had been taken intentionally or accidentally. When I opened the stomach there was odor of carbolic acid. The food pipes was burned some — the oesophagus. There is no way to tell how long the carbolic acid was in his stomach before he died. If a maxi*162mum dose should he taken it might produce death in ten of fifteen minutes; if less it is possible to be sufficient to produce- death and the party live twelve hours. I have known of them living twelve hours after taking it. I could not state how much was taken by the effect of it, as it mixes with the jucies and food of the stomach. I could -not tell whether the dose was a maximum or a minimum dose except in the probable duration of life afterwards, that is the only way I could tell. In my opinion, carbolic acid poisoning was the cause of John B. Claver’s death.”
On cross-examination he said: “Creosote is similar to carbolic acid. If they were in two bottles, I might not tell the difference. A man might take carbolic acid, thinking he was taking creosote. Creosote is a poison also. The dose is small. Physicians prescribe it as a medicine for colds and lung troubles. The dose is from three to ten drops. Ten drops would not produce death. It is generally taken in capsules, or in a mixture. It is not pleasant to take. ’ ’
A physician who was present at the autopsy testified: “I noticed the condition of Mr. Claver’s mouth, and the mucous membrane. It had the typical signs of carbolic acid irritation; the whitening.or blanching of the membranes; also of the entire lining of the stomach; a decided odor of carbolic acid; the typical sign of poisoning. I think there was a slight burn about the lips; not extensive, however, on the outside of the mouth.” On cross-examination he said: “I do not know whether he took the carbolic acid on purpose or by accident. It might have been accidental. Such things happen. Creosote smells very similar to carbolic acid. It takes an experienced hand to tell the difference.”
The physician of Claver introduced as a witness by plaintiff testified: “I knew John B. Claver, the husband of Mrs. Claver, here, the plaintiff in this.case. He was one time a patient of mine; probably for a *163couple of years at different times. Just prior to his death, I don’t know exactly how long before, I was treating him for a cold, and dyspepsia; he had some stomach trouble; I prescribed for him some cough syrup or some medicine for the cough which he had and probably something for indigestion. I frequently prescribe creosote. I am satisfied that I did for him, because I so frequently do that. It smells like carbolic acid. The odor is very similar to carbolic acid, and the effect upon the muco.us membrane is the same.”
To show a motive prompting him to commit suicide, defendant introduced evidence tending to show that Claver’s married life had been most unhappy and that he had discovered that day that his wife from whom he was separated a second time was receiving attentions from another man. In justice to Mrs. Claver we say that the fact on which defendant attacks the propriety of her conduct, in our opinion, does not afford any ground for accusing her of impropriety, though it might support a reasonable belief that Claver had been greatly perturbed at seeing her accompanied by another man.
At the request of plaintiffs the court instructed the jury: “That your verdict should be for plaintiffs unless you believe from the evidence that John B. Claver did die by his own hands; that is, he died as the result of having taken a drug with the intent to end his own life; and you are instructed that the burden .of proving that the said John B. Claver did die by his own hands is upon the defendant, and in determining this fact you should not speculate or guess as to whether or not he did die by his own hands, but unless the defendant has proved to your satisfaction by a preponderance of the evidence in this case that the said John B. Claver did die by his own hands your verdict should be for the plaintiffs.”
*164The first question raised by the demurrer to the evidence is whether or not the certificate should be declared void on the ground that Claver intentionally gave a false answer to one of the family history questions. Since defendant is a fraternal society authorized to do business in this state the general insurance laws have no application to the contract before us. The answer of Claver to the questions propounded to him were made warranties by the express terms of the application and certificate and the rule is well settled that “where a warranty is part of a contract it must be strictly complied with. ‘It is in the nature of a condition precedent, and no inquiry is allowed into the materiality or immateriality of the fact warranted.’ ” [Aloe v. Insurance Co., 147 Mo. l. c. 575.] “In the absence of such statutory regulations as prevail in cases of ordinary insurance, false declarations, if made contrary to the agreement of the parties, will vitiate and avoid a policy of life insurance, although such declarations be not material to the risk.” [Whitmore v. Sup. Lodge, 100 Mo. 36; Hanford v. Ben. Assn., 122 Mo. 50; McDermott v. Modern Woodmen, 97 Mo. App. 636.]
It is well said in the case last cited: “Warranties must be strictly true according to the intention of the parties; but what was intended and understood to be warranted is ascertained by the same rules of interpretation applied to other contracts, and all reasonable doubts about the compass of a warranty will be resolved in favor of the insured.” Tested by this rule we do not. find any evidence of a false statement uttered either intentionally or innocently.
The question propounded clearly was intended to relate to none but hereditary diseases. If it was not intended to qualify each of the diseases named with the adjective “hereditary” what, function in the sentence was performed by the adverb “other?” The import of the question is the same as it would be were *165the word “hereditary” placed before each of the mentioned diseases. Defendant says this cannot be so because some of the diseases named, e. g., gout are not hereditary. Gout may not be hereditary in the sense that the seeds of the disease are transmitted from parent to child but there is abundant scientific authority for the theory that it is hereditary in the sense that a predisposition to contract it does run in certain families! The same may be said of consumption, cancer or insanity. There is much plausibility in the theory that none of these diseases is inheritable but only the tendency to contract them. It is but fair to Claver to infer that he understood the question to relate only to diseases that were a taint in the family blood — to insanity that recurred habitually or occasionally in the line but not to a mere sporadic instance where it appeared from some special cause peculiar to the individual. It is reasonable to suppose that the insurer might not care to be informed of a case where insanity was of traumatic origin, was caused by disease, or was merely a form of senile.dementia brought on by old age and feebleness. We do not think the meaning of the question is ambiguous but if it were we would adopt the meaning most favorable to the insured. A truthful answer was given. Indisputably the insanity of the applicant’s mother was caused by disease and sénility and was not due to any hereditary taint.
Passing to the question of suicide, we hold that question is presented by the evidence as an issue of fact which was properly submitted in the instruction quoted.
There is room for the belief that the unhappy man did take his own life, but the facts and circumstances in evidence will support the opposite-conclusion. We start out with the presumption, and it is a very strong one, that no one will commit the crime of self-murder no matter how great the provocation may be. The burden was on defendant to overcome that presump*166tion and this has not been done in a way that would justify us in declaring, as a matter of law, that the deceased intentionally took his own life.
“The presumption of law is against suicide. It is said that when a man is charged with crime, the law presumes that he is innocent, unless proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. Oan the presumption in such instances be greater than it should be that a man has been guilty of self-murder? We think not. The natural instinct is to recoil from death. Self-preservation is the first and most compelling instinct of man. And to overcome the natural presumption against suicide there should be a great preponderance.” [Almond v. Modern Woodmen, 133 Mo. App. l. c. 388.]
The presence in the stomach of what the coroner assumed was carbolic acid is accounted for by the testimony of Claver’s physician who gave him creosote in a prescription. All of the doctors agree that creosote is similar to carbolic acid in odor and effect and it is reasonable to infer that Claver, to alleviate the great pain he was suffering from his illness, took too large a dose of medicine and died from the effects of creosote. The court properly overruled the demurrer to the evidence and, since we find no error in the instructions, we perceive no reason for disturbing the verdict.
There is no merit in the contention that a new trial should have been granted on the ground of newly discovered evidence.
The judgment is affirmed.
All concur.