Caldwell Opinion
Caldwell Opinion
Caldwell Opinion
[PUBLISH]
In the
United States Court of Appeals
For the Eleventh Circuit
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No. 22-10534
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____________________
USCA11 Case: 22-10534 Document: 41-1 Date Filed: 12/14/2022 Page: 2 of 10
bullets to deter him, but Justin reached the truck, “grabbed the ri-
fle, spun around, and lifted the rifle to shoot the [officers].” The
officers then shot and killed Justin.
After the beneficiaries claimed the death benefits, North
American filed an action against them for a declaratory judgment
“that the $2 million cumulative death benefits under the Policies
are not payable because Justin committed suicide.” In a motion for
a judgment on the pleadings, the beneficiaries argued that “the en-
tire lawsuit is predicated on [North American’s] erroneous position
that the contract term ‘suicide’ is synonymous with the expression
‘suicide by cop,’ which is a term of art that actually refers to justifi-
able homicide.” The district court agreed that “[t]he plain meaning
of the term ‘suicide’ encompasses the act of killing oneself—not the
killing of a person by another” and granted the motion.
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
III. DISCUSSION
(11th Cir. 2003). Under Florida law, the “terms of an insurance pol-
icy must be construed to promote a reasonable, practical and sen-
sible interpretation consistent with the intent of the parties.” U.S.
Fire Ins. Co. v. Pruess, 394 So. 2d 468, 470 (Fla. Dist. Ct. App. 1981).
We look to the “plain and unambiguous meaning” of the terms “as
understood by the man-on-the-street.” State Farm Fire & Cas. Co.
v. Castillo, 829 So. 2d 242, 244 (Fla. Dist. Ct. App. 2002) (citation
and quotation marks omitted). So the ordinary meaning of “sui-
cide” governs our inquiry. Antonin Scalia & Bryan A. Garner,
Reading Law § 6, at 69 (2012) (“The ordinary-meaning rule is the
most fundamental semantic rule of interpretation.”).
a person’s intent to die, his voluntary act on that intent, and his
resultant death. The specific method is irrelevant.
English-language and legal dictionaries confirm that the or-
dinary meaning of “suicide” covers any method used by someone
to end his own life, including the provocation of an officer into
shooting him. Suicide is an “[a]ct or an instance of taking one’s own
life voluntarily and intentionally.” Suicide, WEBSTER’S NEW INT’L
DICTIONARY (2d ed. 1959); see also Suicide, AM. HERITAGE DICTION-
ARY OF THE ENG. LANGUAGE (5th ed. 2011) (“The act or an instance
of intentionally killing oneself”); Suicide, BLACK’S LAW DICTIONARY
(11th ed. 2019) (“The act of taking one’s own life”); Suicide, OX-
FORD ENG. DICTIONARY (3d ed. 2020) (“The action or an act of tak-
ing one’s own life”); Suicide, WEBSTER’S NEW INT’L DICTIONARY
(3d ed. 1993) (“The act or an instance of taking one’s own life vol-
untarily and intentionally”). Under all these definitions, a person
must do some act to commit suicide, but no definition restricts the
meaning to only a limited set of qualifying acts that involve no third
parties, such that Justin’s actions would be excluded. See also Bryan
A. Garner, Suicide, GARNER’S DICTIONARY OF LEGAL USAGE 861 (3d
ed. 2011) (“Suicide and self-killing are broad terms that include
every instance in which a person causes his or her own death
within the legal rules of causation.”). In other words, these defini-
tions do not require that the suicidal act be the final, fatal blow.
Even more persuasively, definitions of the specific term “suicide-
by-cop” confirm that it is a type of suicide. See, e.g., Suicide-by-cop,
BLACK’S LAW DICTIONARY (11th ed. 2019) (“Slang. A form of suicide
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him has chosen the officer as his instrument in the same way that
someone else might have chosen a noose or a needle.
Even if the authorities available to us were less clear, the
broader definition of “suicide” would still be most “consistent with
the intent of the parties” to the life insurance policies. See Pruess,
394 So. 2d at 470. Life insurers do not make payouts when a person
commits suicide for the same reason that home insurers do not pay
an arsonist who burns down her own house. As the American
Council of Life Insurers explained in an amicus brief, “it is clearly
in no one’s interest to create a financial incentive for someone to
take their own life.” Liability would thwart the purpose of insur-
ance, which is to protect the insured from “unforeseen events ra-
ther than . . . events that are planned.” So the question in determin-
ing whether Justin committed suicide as understood by the parties
when they contracted for life insurance is whether Justin planned
to end his own life when he provoked the police to kill him. As
even the beneficiaries acknowledge, if we construe the facts in
North American’s favor, we must assume that he did.
As far as we can tell, the crux of the beneficiaries’ objection
to this conclusion is that Justin took his life indirectly. Under their
reasoning, that an officer fired the deadly bullet sufficiently de-
taches Justin’s death from his intent to die such that his death falls
outside the ambit of “suicide.” Indeed, the beneficiaries assert that
these events are closer to homicide than suicide. They cite to a Mar-
yland decision that, although not involving a suicide-by-cop,
opined about how it should be classified: “[W]hen one incites a
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