Upon the trial the defendant insurance company had a witness .ppon the stand with one of the applications for insurance in his hand, -amid was proceeding to- prove that the answers to the several questions therein were made by said Sarah Howie,- and that said answers were false, when counsel for plaintiff below objected on 'the ground that said defendant had failed to prove in open court .that it had returned with said policy a complete copy of said application as required by Section 3623, Revised Statutes. The court sustained the objection., and excluded both of said applications, to which the defendant excepted. Said Section 3623 is 'as follows:
. “Every company doing business in this- state shall return with and as part of any policy issued to it, to any person taking such poli.c}', a full and complete copy of each application or other document held by it which is intended in any manner to affect the *567force or validity of snob policy, and any company which neglects so to do shall, so long 'as it is in default for such copy, be estopped from denying the truth of any such application or other document; and in case such company neglect, for thirty days after demand made therefor, to furnish such copies, it shall be forever barred from setting up, as a defense to any suit on such policy, any incorrectness or want of truth of such application or other document.”
Under the provisions of this section, a failure to return a full and complete copy of the application -with the policy, works an es-toppel, so long as the company shall be in default, and in case of neglect to furnish such copy for thirty days after 'demand made therefor, such neglect shall be a bar to any and all defenses growing out of such applications and the ‘answers to questions therein contained. The bar here provided for is a permanent estoppel. To make am estoppel or such bar available the facts constituting the same must be pleaded in all cases'where the same is practicable.
In this case the plaintiff below should have pleaded the estoppel in his reply, but instead of so doing he contented himself with a general denial, and thereby denied the existence of such applications. As the applications in this case in fact existed, he should have admitted that fact in his reply, and avoided their effect oy pleading the failure to return copies, and thereby made the estoppel available. The defendant company was not required in its answer to say whether a full and complete copy of the application had been returned with each policy or not. The denial of the existence of the applications might be taken 'as an argumentative denial of their return with the policies, but pleadings should be direct and not' argumentative. As the pleadings stood the court erred in excluding the evidence.
In the court’s charge as to expert testimony the word plaintiffs was used when the word deceased's was evidently intended. The intention was so clear that it would seem that the jury could not have been misled thereby. The real meaning of the court in other regards as to expert testimony was not so clear as the above mistake, and is not approved, and. should not be followed.
The defendant company introduced Dr. Steiner as a witness in its behalf, amid asked him the following question :
"Now, Doctor, what, if anything, did Mrs. Sarah Iiowle say to you during the times that she came to you- for examination and treatment as to the length of time of her disease?”
*568Objection being made the witness was not allowed to answer. Under Section 5241, Revised Statutes, this ruling was correct. That section provides as follows:
“The following persons shall mot testify in certain respects: A physician concerning a communication made to him by his patient in that relation, or his advice to his patient.”
This question cleaady sought to have the physician disclose a communication made by his patient to him in the relation as patient, and was therefore incompetent.
Bach policy had this condition:
“Provided, however, that no obligation is assumed by this company prior to the date hereof, nor unless on said date the insured is alive and in soumid health.”
In view of this condition the defendant company introduced Dr. Crooks as a witness, and the record discloses the following:
"Q. From your treatment of Mrs. Sarah Howie, and the facts you have testified to, what' do you say was her state of health on November 12, 1894?
"A. She was not in sound, health on that day.
“Q. You may state what was her condition on that day.
“(Objected to; objection sustained).
“Q. What, if anything, did you prescribe for her, if you remember, in November, 1894?
“(Objected to; objection sustained.)”
In each instance the defendant company by its counsel excepted, and stated what the answer would be, and the same was in each instance pertinent and competent.
The evidence so offered was not a communication -by the patient to the physician, but was 'as to the independent knowledge of the physician, and was clearly competent, and the court' erred in excluding the same.
The plaintiff offered evidence to the effect that his wife, during the dates in question, walked around the house and to market, and walked as naturally as anybody. To contradict' this the defendant company introduced a Mrs. Kendall, a neighbor, and asked her the following question:
*569“Did tbe woman walk a great deal or very little? Wbat do yon know of yonr own knowledge as to ber going out much or little in those days., if yon know?”
Objection being made she was not allowed to answer. She would have answered, if permitted, th'at in those days Mrs. Howie walked ont bnt little. The insurance company was clearly entitled to this evidence, because it had a direct 'bearing as to whether or not she' was in sound health. As an element to show sound health the plaintiff attempted to prove that she did much walking, and the defendant had a clear right to show that the statements as to the walking were not true.
The insurance company, by its counsel, requested the court to give the following charges to the jury:
“2. If you find from the evidence that Mrs. Sarah Howie was not in sound health on the 12th day of November, 1894, amid on the 25th day of September, 1893, the respective dates of the two policies upon which this suit is brought, you must' find in favor of the defendant company.
“3. If you find from the evidence that Mrs. Sarah How-le was not in sound health on the 12th day of November, 1894, the date of one of the policies, you must find for the defendant upon that particular policy.
“4. If you'find from the evidence that Mrs. Sarah Howie was not in sound health on the 12th day of November, 1894, and on the 2oth day of September, 1893, or on either of- said days, you must find for the defendant, and it malees no- difference whether she knew or did mot know that she was. not in sound health.”
The couid refused to 'give either of said requests, and said to the jury:
“I have been asked by the defendant to make certain charges. Except as I have given -the matter in a qualified way in the general charge I decline to give these requests.”- • ' -
The charge as 'given on the subject, and which the court conceded to the jury to he in a “qualified way” was as follows:
“I say to you, gentlemen, that if y-ou find Mrs. Howie was mot in sound -health, within the meaning -of the definition I have given you, if she was not thus in sound health on -September 25, 1893, and November 12, 1894, under such circumstances, it would be your duty to render a verdict for the defendant. If yon find that the plaintiff has complied with the terms of the policy in question, *570add if Sarah Iiowle was in sound health at the time of'the issuance of these policies in question, under such circumstances the .plaintiff would be entitled to recover.” .
■ The charges as requested are direct' and to the point, and should have been givens, while the charge as- given referred to the circumstances, and'was well calculated, if not intended, to furnish a suggestion to the jury by which they might ease their consciences and bring in a verdict against the insurance company. A court in charging a jury should so evenly balance the scales of justice as not-to-indicate by a wink, look, shake of the -head, or peculiar emphasis, -as-to his -notions as to which way the verdict should go. When a case is to be submitted to a jury at all, it should be impartially submitted, and if the court feels that the -Case is so clear as -to require an indication from him, he should direct a verdict, and then Ms. action can be easily reviewed in -a higher court; but if he gives a charge which looks fair on paper, but which is in fact distorted by his looks, attitudes, emphasis; winks, and rolling of the eyes, an unjust result is often attained which can not be corrected in a higher court.
There is not much difference between the charge as requested and as given, yet there is enough to. disclose to any good trial lawyer that a jury would understand that the court felt that the plaintiff o-ught to recover, and therefore the insurance company did not have a fair trial.
The judgments of the lower courts will be reversed and the cause remanded for a -new trial.
Judgments reversed and cause remanded.