Adams v. Modern Woodmen of America

130 S.W. 113, 145 Mo. App. 207, 1910 Mo. App. LEXIS 443
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 6, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 130 S.W. 113 (Adams v. Modern Woodmen of America) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Adams v. Modern Woodmen of America, 130 S.W. 113, 145 Mo. App. 207, 1910 Mo. App. LEXIS 443 (Mo. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinion

JOHNSON, J.

The above entitled suits were begun in the circuit court as separate actions, but all are founded on a benefit certificate issued by defendant, a Fraternal Beneficiary Society and before trial were consolidated, by agreement of parties and, afterwards, tried as one case.

January 5, 1906, Willie Thomas Crews made application to become a member of defendant’s lodge at Moberly and for a death benefit certificate of $2000. He was duly admitted and on January 29, 1906, the certificate in suit was issued to him. He was twenty-one years old at the time and was .unmarried. The beneficiaries named in the certificate were Stella Adams, a sister, and Cary D. Crews and David Arthur Crews, brothers. The application, which was in writing and signed by the applicant, contained a number of questions and answers, among them the following:

“11. Have you ever been rejected by any life insurance company or companies, mutual benefit association or associations, or fraternal beneficiary society or societies?” To which the applicant answered, “No.”
“14. Have you within the last seven years been treated by or consulted any physician or physicians in regard to a personal ailment?” Answered. “No.”
“15. Are you now of sound body, mind and health and free from disease or injury,” etc. Answered, “Yes.”
[210]*210“16. Have you ever sought change of climate or occupation for benefit of health?” Answered, “No.”,
“18a. Do you abstain entirely from the use of intoxicating liquors?’’ Answered, “Yes.” . . .“f. If you use intoxicants at all, state kind and quantity consumed.” Answered, “Use only for medicine.”
“33. Have you ever had . . . any of the following named diseases '. . . consumption?” Answered, “No.” “Spitting blood or other hemorrhage?” Answered, “No.”

Since plaintiffs concede in their brief “that the answers contained in the application for insurance are warranties and that the insured is bound by the bylaws of the insurance society in this case,” and further admit that defendant is a fraternal beneficiary society authorized to do business in this State, the scope of our inquiry under the contention of defendant that its demurrer to the evidence should have been sustained, is restricted to the question of whether or not we should hold, as a matter of law, that the applicant falsely answered the questions we have quoted. The trial court treated that question as an issue of fact and submitted it to the jury in instructions appropriate to that theory. Counsel for defendant insist that the evidence, considered from any viewpoint, indisputably establishes the falsity of the answers, while counsel for plaintiffs argue that the evidence will support a reasonable inference that the answers were true. In solving this issue, which is simple and closely drawn by the admissions and arguments of counsel, we begin with the presumption of right acting on the part of the applicant and cast* the burden on defendant to plead and prove the falsity of the answers which, being warranties, became an integral part of the1 contract of insurance.

The evidence which defendant says conclusively establishes its defense thus may be stated: The young man died of consumption at Clark, Missouri, November 11, 1907, a year and ten months after he received the [211]*211benefit certificate. He was not of sound body at the time he made the application for membership and insurance, but was afflicted with tuberculosis which had attacked one of his lungs. A physician, Dr. Taylor Mangas, testified that in 1903 and 1904, he was practicing his profession at Clark, Mo.; that young Crews who was living there was examined by him and found to be tubercular; that he treated the patient for that disease and finally, on his advice, the patient went to Colorado to seek benefit from a change of climate.. After a time, Crews returned and was examined by witness who discovered that the disease had made progress. All of this occurred before Crews applied to defendant for the benefit certificate. Witnesses living in? Colorado testified by deposition that Crews came to that State with his brother in the summer of 1905 and lived there; that he stated he was afflicted with consumption and had come in the hope of restoration to health; that he was too weak and run down to work and that he had a hemorrhage there.

This evidence very strongly tended to prove the falsity of the answers to the 14th, 15th, 16th and 33rd questions. Plaintiffs introduced as a witness the mother of young Crews who testified that her son was living at home when he applied to defendant for insurance and that she had “never heard any complaint as to his health.” She was cross-examined as follows: “Q. Didn’t Dr. Mangas live there at Clark at that time? A. He did live there, but I could not say that he lived there then. Q. He lived there at one time? A. Yes, sir.

“Q. At the time that he lived there, did he examine your son? A. Never examined him that I know of..

“Q. Isn’t it a fact that prior to January, 1909,. Dr. Taylor. Mangas told you that your son was afflicted with consumption? A. I don’t remember.”

Other witnesses who knew the applicant at Clark testified that he was in good health until a few months-[212]*212before his death and that he went to Colorado in 1905, not on account of his health, but to find employment. A druggist at Clark by whom Crews had been employed as clerk was a positive witness for plaintiffs on these points. The physician who as medical examiner employed by defendant examined the applicant testified: “I found him in good physical condition, the condition that I passed him in; he got a certificate and a policy and he could not have got it if I turned him down. I found him all right. I could not tell anything about his condition noAV. I had known Willie Crews ever since I was at Clark. .

“Q. I will get you to state from what you knew of the family history and the examination you made whether or not you considered him a good insurance risk at the date of your examination. . . A. I always base my examination on the family history to a great extent; his family history was good; they never called me in as a physician; they would come up and buy something once in awhile and the history of the family was good and I base my examination upon the family history; and this young man, when I examined him, I found him in good condition, my record will show that my death loss is less than five on the thousand. . . . I did not discover any evidence of tuberculosis.”

Though we regard the evidence of defendant in its relation to these questions of fact as stronger than that of plaintiffs, we would invade the province of the jury should we declare as a matter of law that the applicant knew at the time that, he was not sound in body but was a consumptive and that he had consulted a physician for that ailment. Finding the evidence substantial on each side of controverted issues of fact, our duty is to let the verdict stand, unless we find that errors of law have been committed in the trial of the case. We have no right to weigh the conflicting substantial evidence nor to render verdicts. The fact that no witness [213]*213directly contradicted the testimony of the physician who said he examined the applicant in 1903 and 1904 and found him in the grip of consumption does not compel us to accept the testimony of that witness as conclusive.

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Related

Maratta v. Chas. H. Heer Dry Goods Co.
177 S.W. 718 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1915)
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160 S.W. 44 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1913)
Adams v. American Patriots
141 S.W. 21 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1911)

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Bluebook (online)
130 S.W. 113, 145 Mo. App. 207, 1910 Mo. App. LEXIS 443, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adams-v-modern-woodmen-of-america-moctapp-1910.