Ball v. New York Life Insurance

3 Tenn. App. 102, 1926 Tenn. App. LEXIS 75
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJanuary 9, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 3 Tenn. App. 102 (Ball v. New York Life Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ball v. New York Life Insurance, 3 Tenn. App. 102, 1926 Tenn. App. LEXIS 75 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

SNODGRASS, J.

This controversy is over the question of a liability of the defendant for the amount of a disability benefit which accrued to complainant in his lifetime, and for which he sued, and also as to the liability of the defendant to the widow and two minor children of the complainant as beneficiaries, which accrued to them upon the death of the complainant, which took place during the pendency of-the suit.

The policy was applied for on September 14, 1922, was issued on September 19, 1922, and took effect from the date of the application. Under the terms of the policy, upon the death of the insured his wife, Mrs. Nina L. Ball and his two children, Burrell Edward Ball and Jean Elizabeth Ball, as the named beneficiaries, were to receive the sum of $5000. The policy contained a clause against total disability, in the event of which and after due proof thereof, the assured, Charles S. Ball, Jr., was to be paid at the rate of $50 *104 per month during such disability, and which was also to excuse the payment of further premiums.

Some two months after the policy was taken out, as claimed by the complainant, it was discovered that he' had tuberculosis, and a total disability was claimed thereafter and demand made for its payment. This was refused, and on September 6, 1923, he was notified that the policy was cancelled on account of false statements and alleged fraudulent "misrepresentations contained in the application for the policy, which application was a part of the contract. Thereupon the assured, Chas. S. Ball, Jr., brought suit.

Pending his suit he died, and his case was revived in the name of Burrell W. Ball, his executor, and an amended and supplemental bill was filed by the executor, joining the widow in her own right and himself as next friend of the minors, to collect the $5000 accruing to them on fhe death of the deceased. The proceeding sought also the collection of a penalty alleged due as a result of the unreasonable delay in settlement.

To these bills, which also averred estoppel, answers were filed as cross-bills, and as incident's thereto a number of motions were filed and .acted upon, with the interposition of certain pleas, and the cause finally coming at issue was heard by Special Chancellor S. E. Miller, on the whole record, including briefs of counsel. From all of which the court was of opinion that the complainants were entitled to recover for the disability sued for from the 1st day of March, 1923, until and including May 23, 1924, together with interest on each monthly payment from its due date, the principal thereof being the sum of $750 and $84.45 interest; and that complainants were entitled to recover of the defendant the face of the policy, together with interest thereon from the 19th day of September, 1924, on which date the defendant refused to pay and sought to rescind the face of the policy, amounting to $5000, together with interest amounting to $283.35, making in all the sum of $6158.84, for which the court gave a decree in favor of the complainants and against the defendants, and also for all costs of the cause. The court was further of opinion that the complainant was not liable for premiums after he had given proof of his disability to the defendant, and that complainants are not entitled to a return of the premium tendered into court on the;-day of August, 1925. The court was further of opinion that complainants are not entitled to the penalty sued for.

The defendant and cross-complainant excepted to so much of the decree as finds and adjudges and decrees that the complainant shall recover of the defendant the sum of $750 with interest thereon of $84.75 on account of disability from March 1, 1922, until and including May 23, 1924; also the giving of a decree or judgment for *105 tbe face of the policy sued on, to-wit, the sum of $5000, with interest on the same from September 19, 1924, amounting to $283.35; and also to so much of said decree as adjudges that complainants are not liable for the premium, being $125 due from the year beginning •September 19, 1923, and ending September 19, 1924, and prayed, obtained and perfected an appeal to this court.

Complainants also excepted to the decree or refusal of the chancellor to allow any penalty, but did not appeal.

The assignments of error made by the defendant Insurance Company are as follows:

1. “The special chancellor erred in not finding, holding and decreeing that the complainant and cross-defendant, Charles S. Ball, Jr., was, at the time of making application for the policy of insurance, and has been for some years, suffering from a disease of the lungs known as tuberculosis; that, at the time he made said application, the disease had assumed an aggravated, incurable and malignant form, and was so far advanced as to render him totally disabled within about two months aftér making said application, and to put an end to his life within two years, notwithstanding all of the governmental means and agencies used to keep him alive. ’ ’
2. “The óhancellor erred in not finding and decreeing that the complainant and cross-defendant, Charles S. Ball, Jr., knew of his tubercular condition at the time of making said application, that his answers to questions regarding his health, to the effect that he had never suffered from disease of the lungs, nor of the heart, and had not consulted a physician about them, were made with actual intent to deceive and to defraud the defendant, and that the matters misrepresented increased the risk of loss, and that the defendant would not have accepted said risk, if the facts had been truly stated.”
3. “The chancellor erred in not finding and decreeing that the said Ball, when he made his application aforesaid, had good and strong reasons to know and believe that he had the disease of the lungs called tuberculosis, and an ailment of the heart, even if not fully developed, and he was bound to make known to the company those facts, instead of denying it, as he did.”
4. “The chancellor erred in not finding and decreeing that the condition of the said Ball, at the time of making said application and for some time theretofore, was such as would and should have put a reasonably prudent man, exercising ordinary sense and care for his health, on notice of the fact that he was afflicted with a malignant disease; and that, if he had used ordinary care and intelligence and have made inquiry *106 of a reputable and qualified physician, he could and would have been informed of his ailment.”
5. “The chancellor erred in not finding and decreeing that the condition of said Ball was such, at and before the making of said application, and that his consultations with physicians had been such, that he was bound to know that he was afflicted with tuberculosis or some malignant disease, and he was bound to make this fact known to defendant.”
6.

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Bluebook (online)
3 Tenn. App. 102, 1926 Tenn. App. LEXIS 75, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ball-v-new-york-life-insurance-tennctapp-1926.