Atlas Life Insurance v. Zellner

1935 OK 551, 47 P.2d 151, 173 Okla. 254, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 593
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMay 21, 1935
DocketNo. 24116.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 1935 OK 551 (Atlas Life Insurance v. Zellner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Atlas Life Insurance v. Zellner, 1935 OK 551, 47 P.2d 151, 173 Okla. 254, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 593 (Okla. 1935).

Opinion

*255 WELCH, J.

The action was begun on September 3, 1931, by Tbomas Booth Zell-ner to recover of the Atlas Life Insurance •Company, a corporation, certain sums of money alleged to be due under the terms and provisions of a supplemental agreement attached to and made a part of the life insurance policy issued to Zellner, Zellner contended the insurance company was liable to him for permanent disability resulting from tuberculosis. Zellner obtained judgment as prayed in his petition, and the insurance company has appealed. The parties will be referred to as plaintiff and defendant, as they appeared in the trial court.

Upon trial of the cause it developed that there was no controversy concerning the facts in the case, and the court discharged the jury and rendered judgment for plaintiff.

The facts are that on February 5, 1931, a soliciting agent of the defendant procured plaintiff’s application for a policy of life insurance in which there was to be included .total disability benefits for injury or disease occurring after the issuance of the policy. At the time of making the application the plaintiff informed the defendant’s agent that he was not feeling well, and was then sick with a cold or the flu or some other ailment. This information was incorporated in the application for insurance, At the time the application was taken, the plaintiff paid to defendant’s agent one year’s premium on the policy. Three days following, and on February 8, 1931, plaintiff consulted physicians regarding his illness, and was informed by them that he had fluid on his lung, and either had an abscessed lung or tuberculosis. He was advised by them to enter a hospital for further examination. On the same . date, in pursuance of this advice, he entered a hospital, and was immediately confined to his bed on account of his illness, and for the purpose of the examination. Four days thereafter, and on February 12, 1931, he was informed by the hospital physicians that he had pulmonary tuberculosis. There is no dispute that he was suffering from this same disease at all times herein mentioned. On the same date that the hospital physicians informed plaintiff that he had tuberculosis, the policy herein sued upon was approved, issued, and delivered by the proper authorities of the insurance company. It appears that the policy was delivered a few hours before the physician fully informed plaintiff of the cause of his condition.

The provision of the policy upon which plaintiff bases his right to recover, and upon which this controversy turns, is quoted as follows:

“Upon receipt * * * of due proof * * * that the insured has * * * become totally disabled as the result of bodily injury hereinafter described or disease occurring after the issuance of said policy * * * the company during the continuance of such disability will pay to the insured $10 per month. * * *”

The judgment of the court provided that plaintiff recover for total disability at the rate of $10 per month from June 1, 1931. It is an uncontroverted fact that the plaintiff was totally disabled as a result of tuberculosis from February 8, 1931, to thei date of trial.

The sole contention of the defendant is that it is not liable under the terms of its policy for the disability herein shown. It contends that it is only liable for disability suffered by the plaintiff by reason of disease occurring after the issuance of the policy. It does not contend here that the policy was procured by fraud, or that it is invalid. In fact it specifically admits the validity of the contract of insurance for the purposes contained in its provisions. The gist of its contention is that the disability for which plaintiff makes claim is excepted from risks assumed by the policy, since it occurred prior to issuance of the policy.

Plaintiff • contends that he did not know prior to the issuance of the policy that he had tuberculosis, either latent or active, and was not informed of the cause of his condition until February 12, 1931, after the issuance and delivery of the policy. This contention is not disputed by the evidence. Plaintiff’s detailed contentions are best shown by the following quotation from his brief:

“* * * If plaintiff had the latent condition for tuberculosis or the beginning of tuberculosis on February 5, 1931, when he applied for the policy involved herein, the undisputed evidence discloses that all he knew was the condition described to plaintiff when he applied for the policy of insurance; he did not know what the condition meant, what the diagnosis of a physician or clinic -might prove to be; defendant’s medical staff certainly was put on inquiry, but saw fit to take plaintiff’s money for the first year’s premium and to approve the application for *256 and issued the policy without giving plaintiff any medical examination. Therefore, plaintiff contends that the policy having been issued to him prior to a time that hel had knowledge of what his physical condition described to plaintiff at time of application for policy meant, and said condition having continued during a period of four months after issuance of policy, an'd still continuing- at time of , trial, that defendant should be held to have waived any disease which plaintiff might have had in facl; either latent or active at time of application for policy where such disease arose out of the condition described to plaintiff or its agent at time of application. We think that the plaintiff is estopped from the consequences of its action in insuring him when it was fully aware o-f plaintiff’s condition; where the condition producing total disability is one of which defendant was advised, and not some new disease arising between the date- of application of policy and date of issuance. * * *”

The question to be determined, therefore, is whether or no-t the disability here shown was covered by the terms of the policy, or if such coverage was not specifically included therein, has the defendant waived the limitation evidently intended by the quoted provisions of the policy, or is it es-topped from denying liability?

This court in the case of Clardy v. Grand Lodge of Oklahoma, A. O. U. W., 132 Okla. 165, 269 P. 1065, had under consideration' a case which we consider similar in principle in some respects to the instant case. Therein the court in construing the policy provisions says:

■ “The provisions of the policy, in our opinion, are not ambiguous or susceptiblei of two constructions, but clearly provide that after the member makes all required payments thereon for one year, if he shall become totally and permanently disabled before reaching 65 years of age, and upon making satisfactory proof thereof, the defendant will pay the" indemnity therein, which is the face of the policy. In other words, the insured must first pay his obligations to the order for one year under the policy before the clause under consideration comes into effect. Such payments are required to .vitalize it. If, after he has done that, he shall become totally and permanently disabled before he attains the age of 65 years, he is entitled to make his proof and receive his indemnity.”

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1953 OK 345 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1953)
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Bluebook (online)
1935 OK 551, 47 P.2d 151, 173 Okla. 254, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 593, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/atlas-life-insurance-v-zellner-okla-1935.