Asselborn v. State Farm Life Insurance

116 N.E.2d 902, 1 Ill. App. 2d 104
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJanuary 13, 1954
DocketGen. 10,708
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 116 N.E.2d 902 (Asselborn v. State Farm Life Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Asselborn v. State Farm Life Insurance, 116 N.E.2d 902, 1 Ill. App. 2d 104 (Ill. Ct. App. 1954).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Dove

delivered the opinion of the court.

Mildred C. Asselborn, instituted this action against the State Farm Life Insurance Company to recover on a life insurance policy issued by the Company upon the life of her deceased husband, Joseph C. Asselborn.

The complaint alleged that the defendant issued the policy on May 8, 1952 and that the insured, Joseph C. Asselborn, died while said policy was in full force and effect and that the insured and the plaintiff had performed all of the conditions imposed upon them by said policy. The answer of the defendant admitted the execution of the policy and set forth portions of the insured’s application for the policy and averred that in the application the insured made statements as to his past physical condition and medical treatment which were false and material to the risk and which were known by said insured to be false. The plaintiff in her reply denied the allegations of this affirmative defense. The issues thus made were submitted to the court for determination, without a jury, resulting in a judgment in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendant for $42,756.07 and the defendant appeals.

The record discloses that Joseph C. Asselborn, the insured, was born on November 30, 1912, and for eight years prior to his death owned and operated an asparagus farm near Rochelle, Illinois where he and his family lived. On May 8, 1952 he made application to the agent of appellant at Rochelle for the policy which forms the basis of this suit. The next day, at the request of the agent, he went to the office of Dr. O. H. Schaller at Rochelle for his physical examination. The application which was made a part of the policy discloses that the insured was asked the following questions and made answers thereto as noted by the physician, viz.: “Has proposed insured had any special study, X ray, E.K.G. Blood sugar, blood serology or other blood chemistry?” Answer: “Yes, E.K.G. taken just for check up, always normal.” Another question: “Does proposed insured have, or has proposed insured ever had, any signs or symptoms of or suffered from any ailment or disease of heart, blood-vessels or lungs?” Answer: “No.” In response to the question for

the name and address of the physician he usually consulted, he answered “Dr. Zack, Rochelle, Illinois.” Question: “When and for what did proposed insured last consult him?” Answer: “Nothing.” Question, “Is proposed insured in sound health, free from disease and without deformity, loss or impairment of limb, sight, hearing and speech?” Answer: “Yes.” In answer to the question that required the proposed insured to state the particulars of all diseases, injuries, ailments, or surgical operations he had had or for which he had been under treatment, observation, or diagnostic study in the past ten years the answer was “none.” To the final question whether he had consulted a physician, specialist or other practitioner or been under medical care in the past ten years, for any reason not stated above, the answer was “no.”

Dr. Schaller, one of the examining physicians for appellant testified that during the course of his examination of the insured he took his pulse and blood pressure, and after doing so required him to hop around and exercise and then took his pulse and blood pressure again: that the examination of the heart showed nothing significant: that there were no murmurs or irregularities and that his blood pressure was 124/80 all the time and that his heart was normal in size and not enlarged. This witness was then asked the following question by counsel for appellant: “At the time you signed defendant’s Exhibit 4 (the medical examiner’s report) did you know at that time or did Mr. Asselborn tell you that in the month of March, 1952, Dr. Zack was called to his home at his request because of pains that Joseph 0. Asselborn was then having in the upper part of his stomach, did he tell you that?” And the physician answered: “Yes” and stated that the insured had also told him he had had some electrocardiograms which the physician noted on his medical history report. One of the questions which the examining physician was required to answer and which appears upon the doctor’s report to the company was: “Do you unreservedly recommend this proposed insured as a first-class, average or fair risk?” Doctor Sehaller recorded as his answer to this question, “First-class.”

Dr. William 0. Townsend, the other examining physician for appellant, also testified upon the trial. His report to the company, dated May 10, 1952, discloses that he had known the insured for six years; that he, Dr. Townsend, was the physician the insured usually consulted; that insured had consulted Dr. Townsend because the proposed insured was slightly overweight; that proposed insured had had a complete physical check-up in February 1952, and was put on a mild reduction diet. In answer to one of the questions, the proposed insured stated he had fractured his left elbow in 1921 and, other than as noted, he had not been under medical care in the past ten years. In his report, Dr. Townsend gave the results of his heart examination, and to the question “Do you unreservedly recommend this risk as a first-class, average or fair risk?” Dr. Townsend answered: “First-Class.”

The record further discloses that about June 10, 1952, the policy dated May 8,1952, was delivered to the insured. The harvest of asparagus was completed about July 1,1952. During the three-month season preceding that date, the insured worked regularly cultivating and fertilizing the crop, and supervising the cutting and hauling of the crop to the canning factory.

On July 2,1952, the insured, accompanied by his wife and two children aged thirteen and fourteen respectively, left their home in Rochelle by automobile for Northern Wisconsin. On July 3rd he examined some property which he was considering purchasing as a summer home. On July 4th he was at Sand Lake near Spooner, Wisconsin. In the morning and afternoon of that day he rowed a boat on the lake and fished. Before eating Ms evening meal he complained of a severe pain in the chest. A physician was promptly called, and he was removed to a hospital at Shell Lake where he died the following afternoon about one o’clock. The death certificate signed by the attending physician gave the immediate cause of Ms death as acute coronary thrombosis.

The record further discloses that the insured was the owner of eighty acres of land near Rochelle valued at $40,000 and also the home where he and his family lived in Rochelle. In the early part of 1952 he purchased an additional 160 acres of land for $45,000, paying $5,000 cash therefor and executing a note, secured by a mortgage upon the land purchased as well as his other real estate. This transaction was completed on April 24, 1952. The evidence is further that during this time he was contemplating the purchase of additional life insurance.

Dr. Russell W. Zack attended the insured at Ms home on the evening of March 6, 1952. He testified that he found the insured sitting in a chair in Ms home and that he complained of pain in his left shoulder, left arm and the substernal area; that an examination disclosed nothing remarkable; that his blood pressure was normal and his pulse regular; that he made no diagnosis but gave him a tablet of nitroglycerine to place under his tongue in order to relieve his pain. On March 7, 1952, Mr. Asselborn went to Dr.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
116 N.E.2d 902, 1 Ill. App. 2d 104, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/asselborn-v-state-farm-life-insurance-illappct-1954.