Schofield's Admx. v. Metropolitan Life Insurance

MiLes, J.

Three questions are raised in this case, viz.: first, did the court below err in refusing to direct a verdict for the defendant; second, was it error for the court to deny the *165request of counsel for the defendant, for “leave to argue to the jury that California and Colorado were places where consumptives go,” and third, was the charge of the court respecting what constituted illness, error ?

A motion to set aside the verdict was made by the defendant, and a large number of requests to charge were attached to the bill of exceptions, but they did not show that there was any exception taken to a refusal to comply with them, and the defendant makes no point as to either; hence they are disregarded by us in the consideration of this case.

The action is assumpsit upon a life insurance policy issued upon the application of the plaintiff’s intestate. The policy bears date Nov. 30, 1901, and the considerations expressed are the answers and statements contained in the printed and written application for the policy and the annual premium of forty-four dollars and sixty-nine cents; which answers and statements in the application are, by the terms of the policy, made warranties and a part of the policy. The terms of the policy are also made subject to the conditions set forth on its reverse side, and provide that those conditions are made and accepted by the insured as a part -of the contract of insurance. The only condition alluded to in the policy having a bearing upon any question in this case, is the third. That provides, that, if any answer or statement in the application is not true, the policy shall be void and all premiums paid shall be forfeited. The application, among other things, contained a statement, that it was agreed and warranted by the undersigned, the insured, that any false, incorrect or untrue answer should render the policy null and void and should forfeit all payments made thereon, and that the answers and statements contained in the application and those made to the medical examiner should be the basis and become a part of that contract of insurance.

*166At the close of all the evidence the defendant moved for a verdict on the ground, as it claimed, that the undisputed evidence in the case showed that the insured falsely answered the following questions contained in his statement to the medical examiner, viz.: “Have you ever had consumption ?” and “Have you consulted any other physician, if so- when and for what?” Both questions were answered, “No.”

The authorities do not all agree respecting the effect of an incorrect answer to a question contained in a statement made by the insured to a medical examiner, where the question calls for an opinion and the answer is honestly made in the belief that it is true. Those favoring the rule, that it does not amount to a warranty and so does not render the policy void, base their reasoning upon the presumption that the insurer only expects that the insured will give his honest opinion, as that was all he could give; that, when a correct answer could only be given from an examination by a physician, the insurer, by taking the answer of the insured through its own physician, impliedly gives the insured to understand that an honest and full answer, so far as he knew, is all that is required.

Such are the cases referred to in May on Insurance, 2nd; ed. §296. In that section the author states as a conclusion arrived at from the weight of authorities upon that subject, as follows: “An honest belief in the truth of his answer is all that is required of the applicant. He may have had repeated attacks of disease, but if he does not know, or have reason to believe that they are within the range of the inquiry, his failure to answer is immaterial, even though in point of fact, they had a tendency to1 shorten life and to increase the hazard of the risk.” Later along in the same section the author says: “In such case the rule seems to be, that if the inquiry calls for an answer which involves a matter of opinion, *167the applicant is answerable only for the honesty of his opinion, although the answer be untrue in fact.”

Cases holding that such'incorrect answers render the policy void, whether honestly made or not are referred to by the same author in section 297 in the following language: “Though some of the cases make use of language strong enough to require that he must answer truthfully at his peril, without regard to the applicant’s knowledge of, or reason to believe, the truth of the facts as stated or omitted, yet as we have before seen, the facts in those cases did not require so strong and so extreme a ruling; and it may be doubted, if, in view of the current of opinion, in a case presenting the exact point, the courts using this language will not be found in accord with the other authorities.”

Our own State seems to have followed that class of cases which hold that an incorrect answer in the application or statement made to the medical examiner is a false warranty and renders the policy void, whether the applicant believed the answer to be true or false. Powers v. N. E. Mut. L. Association, 50 Vt. 630. That being the holding of our own Court, it becomes unnecessary to inquire as to where the balance of authority lies. Following, therefore, our own decided case, which is similar to- the case at bar, we hold, that the answers to the questions, “Have you ever had consumption?” and “Have you ever consulted any other physician, and if so, when and for what?” were warranties, and, if false, rendered the policy void.

The question, then, arises, does the undisputed evidence show, that they or either of them were false?

It is elementary, that, if there is any substantial evidence supporting the plaintiff’s claim, the court will not direct a *168verdict for the defendant, but must submit the question to the jury.

The defendant’s evidence tended to prove that at the time the policy was obtained by the insured, he had consumption. This evidence was based upon opinion formed from the discovery of tubercular bacilli in the sputum- of the insured and upon personal examination. Medical authority produced by the plaintiff testified that it was not conclusive evidence that the insured had consumption because tubercular bacilli were found in his sputum, and, that his sputum having been examined on a later date, and two tests having been made and no tubercular bacilli then being found, the conclusion naturally followed that the tubercular bacilli found on the former occasion was not the product of consumption, but was a result often obtained from the examination of the sputum of a healthy person. Dr. Jackson, the defendant’s examining physician, who made the examination of the insured and who took the statements and answers, claimed by the defendant to be false, testified, that in his judgment, the insured did not have consumption at the time of making his application for, and taking out this insurance. His testimony, as well as that of several other witnesses, tended to prove that the insured did not die of consumption. There was other evidence in the case tending to prove that the insured did not have consumption at the time he answered “no” to the question, “Have you ever had consumption?” There was also evidence in the case tending to prove that the insured never had consumption previous to taking out the policy of insurance in question. Enough has already been shown, without alluding further to the evidence, to justify the court below in refusing to direct a verdict for the defendant upon this point.

*169To show that the insured answered falsely the question, ■“Have you consulted any other physician?” when he answered “no,” the defendant produced Doctor Bidwell, who testified in substance, that he first saw the insured June 5, 1901; that at that time he was an examining physician for the defendant; that the insured came to him to be examined, and that on that occasion he did examine him superficially; that the insured said to him that he came to him for that examination because he had been told that he had trouble with his lungs and he wanted another examination. No charge was made for the examination, nor did the doctor advise him to do anything, until shortly before his death, long after the insurance was taken out. The doctor distinctly states that he was not consulted by the insured before the claimed answer, and that he did nothing but examine him. Merely calling into the office of a doctor for some medicine to relieve a temporary indisposition, or simply for an examination to ascertain if there is any ailment or complaint about the person, and for nothing more, is not a consultation by a physician. Billings v. Metropolitan Ins. Co., 70 Vt. 477. The answer of the insured, that he had not consulted any other physician, is not shown by this witness to be false.

Dr. Grout was the only other witness who testified upon this point. He testified that the insured consulted him for four or more years, one or more times in each year, about his physical condition, before making application for insurance; that some time he gave him some general advice, but what it was he could not state, and could not say that he had ever prescribed for him or charged him anything for advice or treatment ; nor had he .been paid anything by the insured until his last sickness, several months after the insurance had been taken out. Dr. Grout’s evidence, as a whole, showed that he had only an indistinct recollection of what occurred on the occa*170sions when the insured visited him and had the consultations to which the doctor testified. He could not remember what the consultations were about, whether more than one took place-in each year, and whether they continued through ten or not more than four years. On cross-examination, the doctor testified with reference to those consultations as follows: “How did I know what he had in mind, or whether he came in there with the idea of getting- my professional opinion, how could I know? Nothing said or done to indicate what he was there for so you would know.”

The testimony of Dr. Grout was exceedingly slight upon this point, even if it had any tendency to- prove a consultation -r but assuming, though not deciding, that it did have such tendency, there was evidence in the case tending to prove that the insured did not consult Dr. Grout previous to talcing out the policy in question.

The evidence of the plaintiff tended to- show, that, during the years in which the doctor testified that those consultations-took place, the insured was strong, robust and in good health, and that he was not in need of and, in fact, did not receive any medical treatment.

The plaintiff’s evidence further tended to contradict Dr. Grout’s testimony by showing that his statements made out of court were inconsistent with and contradicted his testimony given in this case. The plaintiff’s evidence also tended to prove that Dr. Grout was a witness interested in behalf of the defendant and had taken an active part in its defence.

The defendant’s claim being, that the answers of the insured, in the respect complained of, were false warranties and that the insured had committed a fraud, cast upon the defendant the burden of proving that fact. As a matter of law, the court could not presume it in the absence of all proof. An*171thony v. Mer. Accident Ins. Co., 44 Am. St. Rep. 369. Indeed, the defendant does not claim that it could, but claims that the testimony of Drs. Bidwell and Grout proves it and that neither is contradicted. We have seen that the testimony of Dr. Bidwell had no tendency to prove it, and, if the testimony of Dr. Grout had a tendency to prove it, there being evidence on the part of the plaintiff contradicting his testimony, the court below was justified in refusing to direct a verdict for the defendant upon that testimony alone, and in submitting to the jury to find whether Dr. Grout’s testimony established the fact that the insured consulted him within the meaning of the law as explained in the charge to- which no exception was taken. This disposes of the first question upon the ground that Dr. Bidwell’s testimony does not. tend to show that the insured ever consulted him; and that, if the testimony of Dr. Grout has a tendency to show that the insured, at some time previous to the application for the insurance in question, consulted him1, there was evidence in the case tending to disprove it, or, at least, to contradict Dr. Grout’s testimony upon this point which Would, in effect, be evidence tending toi disprove it; for such contradiction might in the minds of the jury wholly discredit the doctor. It is, therefore, unnecessary to decide whether the testimony of Dr. Grout tends to prove that he was consulted by the insured previous to his answers to the medical examiner.

The second exception is to the refusal of the court to allow defendant’s counsel to argue to the jury, that California and Colorado were resorts for consumptives and that the insured went to those places in the winter of i90'i-i9O2. The case shows that the only evidence upon this point was, that the brother of the insured received a letter from him mailed from Colorado.

*172A large portion of the defendant’s brief is devoted to a discussion of the question of whether this Court will take judicial notice of the fact that Colorado is a place to which consumptives resort, and that subject was exhaustively treated by the defendant; but we think it unnecessary to decide that question, as it is wholly immaterial.

The only purpose for which the defendant could argue that the insured was in Colorado in the winter of 1901-1902 'and that Colorado is a resort for consumptives, would be to show that the insured had consumption at that time. Without saying more respecting the soundness of such an argument, based solely upon the single fact, that the brother of the insured, during that winter, received a letter from the insured mailed in Colorado, we hold, that that fact has no tendency to prove that the insured had consumption, or that he resided in Colorado. That evidence was as consistent with the theory that it was mailed while passing through Colorado as it was with the theory that the insured was residing there at the time it was mailed, besides, we should hesitate to' hold, if the evidence did in fact have a tendency to prove that the insured had gone to Colorado to reside temporarily, or permanently, that it was evidence that he then had consumption.

We find no error in the court’s ruling upon this point.

The third exception is to the court’s definition of the term “illness.” We find no error in this respect. The language used was substantially that used by this Court in Billings v. Metropolitan Ins. Co., 70 Vt. 477.

Judgment affirmed.