Beard v. Royal Neighbors of America

99 P. 83, 53 Or. 102, 1909 Ore. LEXIS 96
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 19, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 99 P. 83 (Beard v. Royal Neighbors of America) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Beard v. Royal Neighbors of America, 99 P. 83, 53 Or. 102, 1909 Ore. LEXIS 96 (Or. 1909).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Commissioner Slater.

1. The motion for a directed verdict is based upon the averment that the answer given by Mrs. Beard to the eighteenth interrogatory, contained in her application, was not true, and that the evidence conclusively shows that she had consulted a physician regarding a personal ailment within seven years prior to making such answer. The proof on the part of the defendant consisted, first, of an offer of the application, which showed a negative answer to that inquiry, the genuineness of the signature of Mrs. Beard thereto being admitted by plaintiff when called upon by defendant to testify in regard to that matter; and, second, of an offer of the proofs of death, which it is claimed contain an admission against plaintiff’s interest to the effect that the answer given by Mrs. Beard to the eighteenth interrogatory was not in fact true. The proof consisted in part of an affidavit, made on June 26, 1905, by Dr. K. L. Miller, who, it appears therefrom, attended Mrs. Beard in her last illness, in which he stated that she died of tuberculosis, the predisposing cause of which he did not know. But he stated that following an attack of la grippe she had a hacking cough; that he had been [106]*106the medical attendant or adviser of the deceased for three years, and had treated her two or three years prior thereto, for four or five days, for the disease called “la grippe.” Further, to explain his attendance upon deceased as her physician, Dr. Miller testified in person, at the instance of defendant, that he was by profession a physician and surgeon, and had practiced his profession at Roseburg since 1882, and was acquainted with the deceased during her lifetime. In answer to the question whether or not he was ever consulted by Nancy C. Beard in her lifetime as a physician and surgeon he stated that he was called to see Mrs. Beard early in the fall of 1902; that from the symptoms he discovered at the time he considered it a mild case of la grippe; that he gave her 'one prescription, and never saw her any more during that sickness. On cross-examination he stated that at that time (1902) he was requested to attend upon deceased by her' husband, the plaintiff, and in response to the following cross-interrogatory: “She never-consulted you at all; you were sent there by her husband?” he replied, “Of course she consulted me after I got there, so far as she had anything to do with it.” In response to further interrogation, he stated that he informed the patient that her trouble was “just the la grippe in a mild form”; the symptoms being a cold in the head, accompanied with pain in the limbs and head.

An attempt was made by counsel to have the witness declare that the ailment of Mrs. Beard, for which she was then treated, was “what ordinarily would be called a bad cold,” but the witness replied:

“Well, of late years we term it ‘la grippe.’ We used to call it ‘influenza.’ ”

On being urged to fix more definitely the date of his attendance upon the deceased, the witness stated that he could not fix the exact date, but that it was in August or September, 1902, and that he fixed this date from [107]*107the written prescription on file with the druggist. In rebuttal plaintiff testified in part, in his own behalf, as follows:

“I went home one day at noon, and Mrs. Beard was laying down, feeling bad. She seemed to have quite a cold in her head and headache and kind of fever, and I came back uptown and met Dr. Miller on the street, and I told him that Mrs. Beard was feeling bad, and I wished he would go down and see what was the matter. So he went down, and when he came back he gave me a prescription, and I asked him, I think, at the time, what was the matter with her. He says, ‘Oh, a severe .cold, or la grippe, or something of that kind/ and he says, ‘She will be all right in a short time/ or something to that effect, and I says, ‘If there is anything serious in any way, go ahead and straighten her out.’ And I guess he never considered it that way, for he never went back any more — never asked me any more about it.”

That the doctor “gave one little prescription, and that was the end of it.” He gave further testimony to the effect that his wife never had any symptoms of consumption prior to the time she made application for insurance in the order, but that the first he ever knew that she was afflicted with such disease was on the 10th day of December, 1904, which followed a severe cold contracted by her about that’ time; that when she made application she was strong and healthy. Other testimony was offered by plaintiff through Dr. Hoover, who was the examining physician of the defendant association at'the time of Mrs. Beard’s application, tending to show that his examination of the applicant was thorough, and that, relying upon his report made in this case, he testified that there were no symptoms or evidence of any trouble of the lungs at that time.

2. No evidence, however, was offered by plaintiff tending in any degree to controvert the truth of the statements made by Dr. Miller in the death proofs, or in his evidence in person to the effect that the deceased early in the fall of 1902, had consulted him as a physician [108]*108regarding a personal ailment, and that at that time he had treated her for the disease called la grippe. Under such state of the record there is no conflict in the evidence or dispute as to the essential facts above stated; and, as we view the law, it was the duty of the court to direct a verdict in favor of the defendant when so requested by it. Coffin v. Hutchinson, 22 Or. 554 (30 Pac. 424); Crawford v. Hutchinson, 38 Or. 578 (65 Pac. 84). By an express agreement of the parties the statements contained in the application of Nancy C. Beard for a benefit certificate were made material to the consideration thereof, and warranties on her part, and the literal truth of each of them is a necessary prerequisite to a recovery. Bacon, Benefit Soc., § 197; Buford v. N. Y. Life Ins. Co., 5 Or. 334; Christman v. State Ins. Co., 16 Or. 283 (18 Pac. 466). Objection was made by plaintiffs to the reception in evidence of the proofs of death, when offered by the defendant, as being irrelevant and immaterial; but it has been generally held that, being an admission by the beneficiary, they are admissible, and that the effect thereof is to make a prima facie case of the truth of the facts stated therein, as against the beneficiary and in favor of the society. 3 Elliott, Ev., § 2387; Bliss, Life Ins., § 265; Ins. Co. v. Newton, 22 Wall. 32 (22 L. Ed. 793); Home Benefit Ass’n v. Sargent, 142 U. S. 691 (12 Sup. Ct. 332: 35 L. Ed. 1160); Grand Lodge v. Wieting, 168 Ill. 408 (48 N. E. 59: 61 Am. St. Rep. 123). And by some authorities it is even held that, in the. absence of evidence to contradict the statements in the proofs of loss, the prima facie case thus made becomes conclusive. 3 Elliott, Ev., § 2387.

3. The interrogatory “Have you, within the last seven years, consulted any person, physician, or' physicians in regard to personal ailment?” was answered by the applicant in the negative, while the next inquiry “If so, give dates, ailment, length of illness, and person, physician or physicians’ name and address” remained [109]*109unanswered.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
99 P. 83, 53 Or. 102, 1909 Ore. LEXIS 96, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beard-v-royal-neighbors-of-america-or-1909.