In one division of its answer defendant alleged that the certificate was issued in consideration of the statments contained in the application and medical examinaton of the deceased, Francis M. Wood, in which he stated and represented that he had never had any dizziness, unconsciousness, etc., nor any shortness of breath, disease or functional disorders of the heart, and that said statements and representations were untrue, and known to the said Francis M. Wood tobe untrue, at the time they were made; that in issuing the said certificate the defendant relied upon such representations, and believed the same to be true, and, so believing and relying, issued the said certificate; that said Francis M. Wood died of heart disease, from which he was suffering at the time of making his application, and for a long time prior thereto; that said disease was indicated by dizziness, unconscious spells, and shortness of breath; that prior to making said application he had been repeatedly attacked by dizziness and shortness of breath, as he well knew, notwithstanding which, and with the design and purpose of cheating and defrauding the defendant association, he knowingly and willfully stated in said application that he had at no time suffered from either dizziness, unconsciousness, or shortness of breath, or any disease or functional disorders of the heart; and that' by reason of the premises the said certificate was obtained by fraud and misrepresentation, without any knowledge on the part of the defendant asso*46ciation, or any of its officers or agents, of the falsity of such statements. It is further alleged that all applications for membership in the defendant association are passed upon by its medical director, who examined the application of Francis M. Wood, and because of the false and fraudulent statements therein contained approved of such application, and that if said questions had been truthfully answered the application would have been rejected by said medical director, and that the report of the medical director approving said application was obtained by the false and fraudulent statements aforesaid. Defendant offered evidence tending to show the truth of these allegations, but the court excluded such evidence, and, by directing a verdict for the plaintiff, ruled in effect that the facts alleged did not constitute a defense.
x examiners ¿stoppeíraud: pleading. It appears that the medical examination of the applicant was made by one Dr. Gorman, acting as medical examiner for the defendant; that the report of his examina-^ou application was considered by the medical director of the defendant, and that ¿jreotor’s recommendation to the defendant to issue the certificate was based in part on such report; but that, had the answers of the applicant shown the facts which the offered testimony tended to show tobe true, as known to the applicant when the statements in his application were made, the application would not have been approved. It is to be noticed that it is nowhere alleged, nor is there any evidence tending to show, that Dr. Gor-man, the medical examiner, was deceived or misled by the alleged false statements of the applicant, or that any fraud was committed by the- applicant in securing the report of such medical examiner. So far as appears from the pleadings or the evidence, Dr. Gorman may have been fully and truthfully advised as to all the facts, and may have made his report in good faith, believing that the applicant was a proper subject for insurance.
*47We have then the simple question whether the provision of Code, section 1812, that “-where the medical examiner or physcician acting as such” issues a certificate of health, or declares the applicant a fit subject for insurance, the compoany or association “shall be thereby estopped from setting up in defense of the action on such policy or certificate that the assured was not in the condition of health required by the policy at the time of the issuance or delivery thereof, unless the same Avas procured by or through the fraud or deceit of the assured,” applies to the certificate or declaration of the medical examiner, or to the approval of the application and examiner’s report by the medical director. It has already been settled that it is the procuring of the certificate of the medical examiner by fraud, and not the procuring of the policy or certificate of insurance by fraud, which, under the statute, may be shown to defeat the policy. While some language was used by this court in the case of Welch v. Union Central L. Ins. Co., 108 Iowa, 224, apparently inconsistent with this view, the true construction of the statutory language has since been settled by repeated adjudications. Weimer v. Economic L. Ass'n, 108 Iowa, 451; Stewart v. Equitable Mutual L. Ass’n, 110 Iowa, 528; Nelson v. Nederland L. Ins. Co., 110 Iowa, 600; Peterson v. Des Moines L. Ass’n, 115 Iowa, 668; Brown v. Modern Woodmen, 115 Iowa, 450. Any other construction of the language of the statute would leave it Avithout effect, for it would still be open to the company, as it was before the statute, to contend that the policy was fraudulently procured by reason of false statements in the application, and the truth of the statements would thereby practically be made matter of warranty, notwithstanding the medical examination in which the examiner had ascertained all the facts, and on which he had recommended the applicant as a fit subject for insurance. As said in Weimer v. Economic L. Ass'n, supra, “The very evident purpose of *48the statute is to prevent the defeat of recovery on any policy where the company has by its skilled agent-examined and passed upon the fitness of the applicant for insurance.” To hold that the medical director who passes upon the report of the medical examiner is himself a medical examiner, within the language of the statute, would be to nullify its plain intent. Such construction would leave it open to the insurance company to say that-although the medical examiner was fully advised as to the-facts, and reported the applicant as a fit subject for insurance, nevertheless, if the medical director was misled by the application and examiner’s report into approving an application which would have been rejected had the facts been correctly stated to him by the applicant and the-medical examiner, the application would have been refused. The distinction between the report of the-medical examiner as to the condition of health of the applicant and as to whether he is a suitable risk, and the action of the medical director in recommending the issuance of a policy on such application and examiner’s report, is pointed out in, Peterson v. Des Moines L. Ass'n., 115 Iowa, 668, and we are constrained to adhere to the view expressed in that case.
2. constuction assessments: liability of rights of beneficiary. In the certificate or contract of insurance it is provided that, in the event of the death of the assured “during membership, his beneficiary shall receive the sum of $2,000” and that “the amount due under this contract [is} to be provided for by assessments on the x J membership pro- rata, according to age, as provided in the articles of incorporation, unless otherwise supplied,” and the articles of incorporation and by-laws are made a part of the contract by reference. In the articles, two or three sources are indicated from which payment of death losses may be ‘made, and it is nowhere indicated that an assessment must necessarily be made for each loss. But in one article it is stipulated *49that the beneficiary- “shall be entitled to a sum of money equal to what would be realized from an assessment upon all members, as shown by the books of the association at the time of the death of the member whose certificates; have not since’lapsed. But in no case shall the said sum exceed the amount so stated in the certificate of membership of the deceased member.” In view of this provision of the articles it is argued that the lower court erred in directing a verdict for the full amount called for by the certificate in view of the fact that there was no evidence tending to show what sum would have been realized from an assessment and that plaintiff was entitled at most to a verdict for nominal damages. The record does not show what the provisions of the articles are as to the amount or frequency of the assessments, and to accept appellant’s contention as a true interpretation of the contract would lead to the absurdity of saying1 that defendant had received considerable sums of money from the assured for a contract under which, so far as it appears, his beneficiary was entitled to no recovery whatever. We should hesitate to put any such construction on the language of the contract. But there is a perfectly satisfactory answer to appellant’s argument. The articles do not provide that the beneficiary shall receive only the proceeds of an assessment, which could only be enforced by a supplemental action in equity to compel the defendant to make the assessment and pay over to the plaintiff the amount realized. The contract is not similar to that construed in Newman v. Covenant Mut. Ben. Ass’n., 72 Iowa, 242. In the case before us an assessment is referred to only as a basis for determining the amount of recovery, and the provision is not that the defendant shall pay over the proceeds of an assessment, but that it shall pay to the beneficiary a sum equal to what would be realized from an assessment. The assessment is not made a condition pre-. *50cedent to the fixing of defendant’s liability, but is referred to only as furnishing a measure by which the amount of liability may be determined. Giving the language its broadest interpretation, it would be open for a jury, in an action at law, to fix the amount due the beneficiary upon evidence as to the number of members shown by the books of the association at the time of the death, and what the assessment on that basis would amount to. As these facts were exclusively within the knowledge of defendant, and could only be established by evidence which it alone could produce, the burden was upon it to show such-facts if it desired to escape liability on that account for the full amount of $2,000, which, by the face of its contract of insurance, it agreed to pay to the beneficiary on the death of the assured. Hart v. National Masonic Acc. Ass'n, 105 Iowa, 717. The court did not err, therefore, in directing the return of a verdict for the full amount of the insurance named in the contract.
3 denial of abssíc^of02’ wltness-Error is assigned in the overruling of a motion for a continuance, based on the inability of the defendant to secure the attendance of a witness who would testify that Prior f'Ne issuance of the certificate he, as a physician, was consulted by the assured, who stated to him that he had repeated attacks of dizziness, and in such attacks had become unconscious, and that he at times suffered from shortness of breath and pains in the region of the heart. As evidence of witnesses tending to show the same state of facts was properly excluded by the trial court, as above indicated, there was no error in overruling the motion.
4. perm ature of d°ati£ad-f ditional proof. It is contended that the action which was commenced November 9, 1901, was prematurely brought, for the reason that proof of the death of the assured was not made until September 1, 1901, and the by-laws provide that no suit shall be brought upon any , . ... ,. claim against the association or any certificate *51of membership before ninety days after receipt by said association of such satisfactory proof of death. Prior to the 1st of May, 1901, proofs of death were duly received by the defendant, to which the only objection made was that the cause of death was not satisfactorily stated. The articles and by-laws do not specifically require proof of the cause of death, but refer only to the fact of death. The officers of the association could not use their own judgment as to what was a satisfactory proof, and delay indefinitely the payment of the claim by asking further proofs as to specific matters, information as to which might occur to them to be desirable. Moreover, the officers of defendant did riot definitely object to the proofs as not a sufficient compliance with the articles and bylaws, but merely advised the plaintiff that the claim would probably not be allowed by the board of directors without more definite information as to the cause of death. The board of directors could act as they thought wise about allowing the claim, but the officers could not, by asking for further information to lay before the board- of directors, postpone the time within which action might be brought.
The judgment of the lower court is aeeibmed.