Bankers' Reserve Life Company v. Crowley

284 S.W. 4, 171 Ark. 135, 1926 Ark. LEXIS 411
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedMay 17, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 284 S.W. 4 (Bankers' Reserve Life Company v. Crowley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bankers' Reserve Life Company v. Crowley, 284 S.W. 4, 171 Ark. 135, 1926 Ark. LEXIS 411 (Ark. 1926).

Opinion

Hart, J.

This is a suit in equity by the Bankers’ Reserve Life Company against J. L. Crowley, adminis trator of the estate of Elizabeth Crowley, deceased, to cancel a policy of insurance in the sum of $5,000 issued by plaintiff on the 30th day of July, 1923, on the life of Elizabeth Crowley, in which her executor or administrator is named as the beneficiary. The ground on which the policy is sought to be canceled is that the insured gave false answers in her application for insurance to the following questions:

“13. Name below all causes for which you have consulted a physician in the last ten years: Illness, flu. Number of attacks, 1. Date, Dec. 1922. .Severity and duration, five days. Any remaining effects? No. Attending physician name and address. W. J. Blackwood, Walcott, Ark. 14. Are you in good health as far as you know and believe ? Yes. 15. Has any medical examiner or physician formally or informally expressed an unfavorable opinion as to your insurability or health? No. 16. Have you had, or been advised to have, any surgical operation? No. 17. Have you ever been under observation, care, or treatment in any hospital, sanatorium, asylum, or similar institution? No. 21. Have you now, or have you ever had, any other disease or any injury? Give details, dates, and names and addresses of doctors consulted. No.”

J. L. 'Crowley, the husband of Elizabeth Crowley, was appointed administrator of her estate, and filed an answer and cross-complaint against the insurance company, in which he denied the allegations of the complaint, and asked for judgment against the insurance company in the sum of $5,000 with.interest from the 13th day of November, 1923, at six per cent.; for 12 per cent, penalty, and for reasonable attorney’s fees, costs, and all other general relief.

The record contains a stipulation between counsel for the plaintiff and defendant as follows:

“It is undisputed that questions numbered 13 to 17 inclusive and question number 21 were propounded to the assured in the form set out in the complaint and that she gave the answers thereto in the form set out in, the complaint, and the only question at issue in this lawsuit is as to whether the answers to these questions, or any of them, were false at the time and were known by the assured then and there to be false, and whether they were made with the false and fraudulent purpose and intent to deceive the plaintiff company, and did in fact deceive plaintiff company and cause it to issue the policy in question.
“It is undisputed that the policy mentioned and described in the complaint was delivered to the deceased on or about .September 1,19;23, and that she departed this life intestate while a resident of Greene County, Arkansas, on or about November 13,1923, and that J. L. Crowley is the duly appointed, qualified and acting administrator of said estate.
“The above and foregoing facts are undisputed, and it will not be necessary to formally introduce the application for insurance, medical examination made by Dr. W. J. Blackwood, the policy itself, nor the appointment of J. L. 'Crowley as administrator, it being agreed and understood that each of these instruments may be considered by the court as though formally introduced and identified.”

After hearing the testimony in the case, the chancellor found the issue on the question of false representations in favor of the defendant. It was therefore decreed that the complaint of the paintiff should be dismissed for want of equity and that the defendant recover from the plaintiff the sum of $5,000, with accrued interest. The defendant, however, was denied a recovery on his claim under the statute for penalty and attorney’s fees.

The plaintiff has duly prosecuted an appeal from that part of the decree allowing a recovery against it. The defendant has taken a cross-appeal from that part of the decree refusing to allow twelve per cent, damages and attorney’s fees allowed under § 6155 of Crawford & Moses’ Digest.

It is expressly agreed that the answers of the applicant copied above are representations and not warranties. In this connection it may be stated that a noncompliance with a warranty operates as an express breach of the contract of insurance, while false representations render the policy void on the ground of fraud. The questions propounded in the application as set out above call for answers founded on the knowledge or belief of the applicant, and a misrepresentation or omission will not'avoid the policy unless willfully or knowingly made with an intent to deceive. Metropolitan Life Ins. Co. v. Johnson, 105 Ark. 101.

In Mutual Aid Union v. Blacknall, 129 Ark. 450, it was held that knowledge affecting the rights of the insured, which comes to the agent of the insurance company while he is performing the duties of his agency in receiving applications for insurance and delivering policies, becomes the knowledge of the company; and the insurance company is bound thereby, where the agent who solicited the business was charged -with the duty of asking the applicant questions concerning his physical condition.

It was further held that a life insurance company will be bound under a policy of life insurance where the applicant and insured made false statements concerning his physical condition, where the agent soliciting the insurance was also charged with the duty of writing the data concerning the applicant’s physical condition, and where the agent, in the course of the examination, learned the applicant’s true condition.

It was also held that if an agent, in collusion with the applicant, even though acting within the apparent scope of his authority, perpetrates a fraud upon the insurance company by making false and fraudulent representations upon which the insurance is obtained, such fraud -will vitiate the policy.

The rule established in these cases was expressly reaffirmed in Home Mutual Benefit Association v. Mayfield, 142 Ark. 240, and Missouri State Life Insurance Co. v. Witt, 161 Ark. 148.

In the present case Dr. W. J. Blackwood acted for the company in taking the application for insurance and in writing down the answers of the applicant copied above, and also in the medical examination of her. He was likewise the physician of the applicant before she applied for the insurance. Hence, under the principles of law above announced, in order to cancel tbe policy and defeat an action on it, it was necessary for the company to prove that the statements and answers as written in the application were false, and that they were intentionally so made by the assured, and that the insurance company relied and acted upon such statements, or that the insured and Dr. Blackwood, as agent of the company, acted collusively in the matter for the purpose of securing the insurance.

In this conection it may be also stated that, under these authorities, the burden of proof of establishing the fraud was upon the insurance company, and, under our rules of practice, findings of fact by a chancery court are allowed to stand upon appeal unless they are clearly against t'he preponderance of the evidence.

The record shows that Dr. W. J.

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Bluebook (online)
284 S.W. 4, 171 Ark. 135, 1926 Ark. LEXIS 411, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bankers-reserve-life-company-v-crowley-ark-1926.