Baldi v. Metropolitan Insurance

18 Pa. Super. 599, 1902 Pa. Super. LEXIS 7
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 21, 1902
DocketAppeal, No. 2
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 18 Pa. Super. 599 (Baldi v. Metropolitan Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baldi v. Metropolitan Insurance, 18 Pa. Super. 599, 1902 Pa. Super. LEXIS 7 (Pa. Ct. App. 1902).

Opinion

Opinion by

Rice, P. J.,

This was an action upon a policy of life insurance in which the answers and statements contained in the written application therefor were made warranties and a part of the contract.

[605]*6051. The question raised by the first three assignments of error is whether the “ application as signed by the applicant ” was copied in the policy within the provisions of the act of assembly of May 11, 1881, P. L. 20, so as to render the warranties in the application available to the insurer.

The paper in question is a single sheet. On the upper half of the first page is what is designated at its head as “ A. Application to The Metropolitan Life Insurance Company.” On the upper half of the reverse page is what is designated at its head as “B. Statements Made To The Medical Examiner.” On the lower half of the latter page is what is designated as “ C. Medical Examination and Report.” Immediately opposite to the last mentioned caption are the words in parenthesis, “No part of the declaration of the applicant.” The court below held that the part of the paper designated C was in effect part of the application, and ought to have been copied in or attached to the policy in order to make it available to the insurer.

Considerable stress is laid upon the fact that the clause of the policy relative to the answers and statements contained in the printed and written application is not expressly limited to the answers and statements contained in A and B. This is true, but it does not answer the question for decision, namely, what is the application ? This question is to be determined by an inspection of the paper itself. Examining it more critically we find, that part A was signed on January 19,1895, by the applicant and contains this clause : “ It is hereby declared and warranted by the undersigned that the answers and statements contained in the foregoing application and those made to the medical examiner as recorded in parts A and B of this sheet, together with this declaration shall be the basis and become part of the contract of insurance with the Metropolitan Life Insurance Company; that they are full and true and are correctly recorded and that no information or statement not contained in this application” (evidently referring to part A). “and in the statements made to the medical examiner” (evidently referring to part B) “ received or acquired at any time by any person shall be binding upon the company, or shall modify or alter the declarations and warranties made therein.” Referring now to part .B, we find that it is headed, “ Statements made to the medical examiner by Francis Rizzo, M. D., in con[606]*606nection with application on reverse of this sheet.” It is thus made a part of the application. Construing these two parts as a connected whole we find conclusive evidence as to what answers and statements were intended to be made warranties and part of the contract. They are the answers and statements recorded in parts A and B. These were signed by the applicant. Part C was not. The latter bears date two days after A and B were signed and for aught that appears in this case may never have been seen by the applicant. The medical examiner was not his agent but was selected by the company. His declarations although indorsed on the paper itself could not be offered in evidence against the plaintiff in the absence of extrinsic evidence that they were authorized or assented to by him. To remove all doubt upon this point it was expressly noted at the head of part C that it was “ no part of the declaration of the applicant.” This operated to the benefit of the insurer as well as the insured. By no process of reasoning can it be held that the latter warranted the truth of the answers and statements of the medical examiner contained in part C. It seems to us equally clear that the former in its effort to comply with the provisions of the act of 1881, was justified in treating part C as not part of the application. The facts above referred to plainly distinguish the case from Morris v. State Mutual Life Assurance Co., 183 Pa. 563, and Fisher v. Fidelity Mutual Life Association, 188 Pa. 1. In the first mentioned case the medical examiner’s report, which was held to be part of the application was in fact answers given by the applicant to questions aslced by the medical examiner and entered in the latter’s handwriting; it was signed by the applicant; and in a preceding part of the paper he had agreed “ that the foregoing answers and statements, also those made to the company’s medical examiner, are true and full, and are offered as a consideration of the policy contract.” Thus the answers were brought into and made part of the application by express reference. The paper corresponded in all essential particulars to part B of the paper under consideration. In the Fisher case the point decided is correctly stated in the syllabus as follows: The omission to attach to a policy of insurance a portion of the application is a failure to comply with the requirements of the Act of May 11, 1881, P. L. 20, and if it appears that -there is a [607]*607supplemental application which was not attached to or indorsed on the policy the original or principal application is not admissible in evidence. The supplementary application there referred to was entitled, “ Statement made to the medical examiner as supplementary to and part of the application made by the undersigned,” etc., and was signed by the applicant. It likewise corresponded to part B of the paper under consideration. Speaking of the act of 1881, Chief Justice Sterjrett said: “ That act requires that a copy of the entire application, not merely a part thereof, shall be attached. The omission of a part, which of course includes a supplementary part, operates to exclude the whole.” The differences between these cases and the present are important. Here the application was complete without part C. Part C was not signed by the applicant; it does not purport to contain answers and statements of the applicant to the company or to the medical examiner, as in the cases cited, but statements of the medical examiner to his principal; it was not made part of the application by reference; on the contrary, by express declaration on its face, was excluded. We are clearly of opinion that it was not part of the “ application as signed by the applicant.”

2. The application having been excluded, the defendant was compelled to rest its defense on that condition of the policy which provided that no obligation was assumed by the company unless at the date of the policy the insured was in sound health. The policy was dated January 25, 1895, the insured died September 11, 1897. In the proofs of death submitted to the company by the claimant appear, (1) the claimant’s statement; (2) the attending physician’s statement. By the latter, as well as the former, it appears that the cause of death was “ syncope from angina pectoris,” and that the duration of his last illness was eleven days. In the former appear the following questions and answers: “ What sickness previous to the last one did deceased have, and when ? Four years ago (about) a mild attack of angina pectoris which was cured at that time. Give names and addresses of physician who attended deceased or prescribed for any sickness or ailment previous to the last sickness. Dr. L. V. Leone, Dr. Deakyne, 9th & Pine, in 1892, essential fever.” For the purpose of showing that a man who had an attack of angina pectoris in latter part of 1893, or early part of 1894, and [608]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
18 Pa. Super. 599, 1902 Pa. Super. LEXIS 7, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baldi-v-metropolitan-insurance-pasuperct-1902.