Blackstone v. Kansas City Life Insurance

174 S.W. 821, 107 Tex. 102, 1915 Tex. LEXIS 127
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 24, 1915
DocketNo. 2411.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 174 S.W. 821 (Blackstone v. Kansas City Life Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Blackstone v. Kansas City Life Insurance, 174 S.W. 821, 107 Tex. 102, 1915 Tex. LEXIS 127 (Tex. 1915).

Opinion

Me. Justice PHILLIPS

delivered the opinion of the court.

The suit was one by the plaintiff in error upon two policies of life insurance, issued June 23, 1909, by the defendant in error, upon the life of his son, Harvey A. Blackstone. In the trial court the case was submitted to a jury on special issues, resulting in a verdict and judgment for the plaintiff in the sum of $6300. The judgment was reversed by the honorable Court of Civil Appeals upon the ground that certain statements made by the insured in his application for the insurance, which amounted to warranties, were untrue, and judgment was rendered for the defendant in error.

Each of the .policies contained a clause declaring it to be incon *104 testible after one year from the date of issue. The Act of 1903 (arts. 4947-4951, Rev. Stats., 1911), providing that the falsity of statements made in the application for insurance shall constitute no defense to a suit to recover upon the policy, unless the misrepresentation was in relation to a matter material to the risk- or contributing to the contingency or event rendering the policy due and payable, has, therefore, no application; and the case turns upon the question whether the statements in question are to be regarded as untrue. An issue was made by the defendant in respect to a fraudulent procurement of the policies; but it was one purely of fact, and is, therefore, settled by the verdict.

The statements referred to involve the answers made by Harvey A. Blaekstone to questions contained in the application in resjoect to : (1) His place of birth and residence. (2) The number of his brothers and sisters, living and dead. And (3) whether he was then or had ever been engaged in or connected with the manufacture or sale of malt or spirituous liquors. The questions to which the answers related were a part of a printed form in the application. The question in respect to residence, in Part 1 of the application, was propounded for answer as to “street,” “city,” “county” and “State,” a blank space being left' after each of these respective headings for the insertion of the answer. Blackstone’s answer to the question was: “City, Big Bandy; county, Upshur; State," Tex.” In Part 2 of the application he was asked to give his “residence,” and his answer was, “Big Sandy, Texas.”

In respect to the place of birth the form was thus printed: “Give place of birth. Town........., County,.........State.........” The answer of Blaekstone was made so as to state that he was born in the town of Big Sandy, Upshur County, Texas. He was in fact born on the farm of his father, situated about seven miles from Big Sanely in Upshur County, and had continuously resided there to the date of his death, August 5, 1909; Big Sandy being the postoffice address of his father and himself, and their trading point.

The form in the application calling for a statement of family history as to brothers and sisters, was in part as follows:

“Give full family history as accurately as possible. . . .
“Family History.
“.Father, name...................................
“Mother, name...................................
“Brothers, number living,......; number dead......
“Sisters, number living,......; number dead,......”

Blackstone’s answer was, “brothers living, three; dead, one”; “si stew-living, two; dead, none.” He had at the time two full brothers living. He had also two full sisters, both living. His father was married three times, Harvey A. Blaekstone being a child of the second marriage. At the time of making the answer he had five half brothers living; and one half sister was dead.

The further statement made by him in the application was, that *105 “he was not then and had never heen engaged in or connected with the manufacture or sale of malt or spirituous liquors.” It appears that his father at one time maintained a still, and the testimony was that when a small boy Harvey Blackstone was, at times, about the still, and “sometimes worked there as a hand; that he did not know anything about making whisky, but helped with the peaches and apples.”

When the form of the questions and the construction of which they admitted, are considered, it seems to us that it requires a very technical construction to say that any of these statements was untrue. In Part 1 of the blank printed form, prepared, by the insurance company, and to be, therefore, most favorably construed for the beneficiary in the policy, the applicant was required to state his place of residence. The question called for a statement, not only as to the county and State, but the city and street as well. Ho provision was made for an answer stating a rural residence, except by merely giving the name of the county and State, or by the addition of qualifying words, the use of which the form does not appear to have contemplated. Anyone residing in the country, endeavoring to truly answer the question, might reasonably conclude from its form that a more definite statement of his residence was expected than merely the name of the' county and State in which lie lived; and the presence in the printed form of the heading, “City,” with the blank space following for the insertion of an answer, might reasonably suggest to him the advisability of stating the name of the city or town nearest to which he lived and constituting his address, and prompt him to do so under an honest belief that it was desired. The answer given was not technically true; but neither was the form of the question technically accurate in its application to one not having a city residence, and might easily mislead such a person in his effort to answer it. It may be said that the form in which the question was propounded invited the form in which the answer was given. It was at least open to the construction of inviting such an answer by one not having a city residence. In the light of the question, therefore, the answer is not, in our opinion, to be regarded as substantially untrue, though not literally accurate.

This form was plainly not adapted to a literally exact answer by one having only a rural residence. Its heading, arrangement, and the size of the blank spaces left for the insertion of answers indicate that its use by such an applicant was not in mind when it was framed. Boom was not afforded in the spaces left blank for a detailed statement of the exact location of a rural residence, such as would be required in order to be literally true and at the same time technically accurate. The form carries to our minds no suggestion of the necessity of such an answer. If the company desired an answer of that precision, it ought to have provided a form which indicated such a requirement, and admitted of such an answer being conveniently written. Where it is apparent, as it is here, that the form of an answer was influenced by the form of the question propounded, and, under an admissible construction of the question, was not substantially untrue, it is difficult *106 to impart to it the character of a positive misrepresentation; and we do not believe the law requires that it should be given any such eifect.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
174 S.W. 821, 107 Tex. 102, 1915 Tex. LEXIS 127, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blackstone-v-kansas-city-life-insurance-tex-1915.