Taylor v. Mutual Benefit Life Insurance

Dykman, J.:

Tbis is an action upon a policy of life insurance, and is defended on tbe ground of misstatements and concealments made in tbe application for tbe insurance. Tbe insurance seems to bave been effected in tbe following manner: Tbe assured resided at Middle-town, Orange county, at wbicb place tbe defendant bad a local agent and a medical examiner, and on tbe 20th day of December, 1871, there was a general traveling agent of tbe defendant there also. Tbe former on that day made application to tbe agent of tbe company for insurance, and tbe agent applied to tbe medical examiner for information respecting tbe applicant and was told by him that be was tbe physician of tbe applicant, and knew of all tbe sickness be ever bad, and knew tbe man well, and knew bis family record, and that it was unnecessary to wait to fill out a written application, and that be would make tbe medical examination. A few hours previous tbe medical examiner told tbe assured in a conversation with him on tbe subject that be bad no disease wbicb would stand in tbe way of bis application. On tbe evening of tbe same day tbe assured, with other applicants, met tbe medical examiner and tbe agent to be examined, with three others. Tbe agent *54was in great haste to leave, and the examiner told him that the assured and the other three'were all sound men. After this the written application was made out which was signed by the assured, and. which contains the statements relied upon to defeat a recovery in this action, which statements are, in substance, that the assured had no ailments or diseases within the last ten years, and that he had no medical attendant.

From this statement it will be seen that this written application did not induce the acceptance of the risk, but that the medical examination was had, full investigation made by the agent and the risk accepted, before this written application was made. The risk was really accepted upon the information derived from the medical examiner, who knew ■ all about the applicant and who gave full information to the agent. Instead of inducing the agent to accept the risk the applicant was really induced to take the policy. He placed himself completely in the hands of the medical examiner, before he made the application or submitted to the medical examination, and was told that there was no obstacle in the way of his taking a policy. The agent was told the same thing in substance, and then the applicant submitted to the examination and received his policy and paid the necessary premium.

Now, if under these circumstances this company can escape liability on this policy, then life insurance will be reduced to a delusion and a snare. The companies send their agents into all places to preach the gospel of life insurance to all men, and to induce them to become insured. They meet with men of all classes, many of them having little or no education, and understanding but very little of the force or effect of language or words. They draw all the papers themselves, fill up blank applications and policies, with which they are familiar and the applicant is not, and the applicant appends his name, in most instances, in blind reliance upon the assurance of the company’s agent that all is right, and all will be well. This is substantially a true picture of this case. Now, it is claimed that a false statement has been made which vitiates the whole contract; that, whereas, the application contains a statement that the applicant had had no ailments or diseases within the last ten years, yet in truth and in fact within that time he had had an attack of one of the most common forms of infiam*55mation of the stomach, which lasted about two weeks, and which might have been forgotten at the time of making this application. Of course this attack had no possible connection with the disease which eventually caused the death of the insured person. There can be no pretense that any fraud or misrepresentation was intended by the applicant, and, as he was free from fraud, we intend to sustain this judgment on the ground that the making out of the application must be regarded as the act of the company, and it can derive no benefit or immunity from any misstatement it contains. In the case of Rowley v. The Empire Insurance Company the Court of Appeals held that an agent of an, insurance company, in filling up a blank application for insurance, acts as the agent of the company rather than of the applicant, and a misstatement made therein by him, which is not induced by the instruction of the appellant, does not avoid the policy. (4 Ct. App. Dec., 131; 36 N. Y., 550.) The same doctrine had been before that held in the case of Plumb v. The Cattaraugus County Mutual Insurance Company (reported in 18 N. Y., 392), and when Judge Grover questioned the correctness of this decision in his opinion in the case of Owens v. Holland Purchase Insurance Company (56 N. Y., 565), all the other judges took pains to say they did not concur in that portion of the opinion. The case of Flynn v. The Equitable Life Insurance Society is much like this case, and the court sustained the recovery on the ground that, although the answers and statements were untrue, yet, as the medical examiner, under whose advice they were made, was the agent of the company, they were bound by his acts, and could not set up the untruthfulness of the answers and statements as a defense. (7 Him, 387.)

This doctrine accords with good sense, fair dealing and sound morals, and ought to prevail.

Judgment affirmed, with costs.

Present — Barnard, P. J., Gilbert and Dykman, JJ.

Judgment and order denying new trial affirmed, with costs.