Bordelon v. National Life Accident Ins. Co.

187 So. 112, 1939 La. App. LEXIS 97
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 13, 1939
DocketNo. 17052.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 187 So. 112 (Bordelon v. National Life Accident Ins. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bordelon v. National Life Accident Ins. Co., 187 So. 112, 1939 La. App. LEXIS 97 (La. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinions

WESTERFIELD, Judge.

The plaintiff, Kirby Bordelon, brings this suit against the defendant, National Life & Accident Insurance Company, Inc., of Nashville, Tennessee, claiming $500 as the beneficiary of a policy of industrial life insurance issued to Lucille M. Bor-delon on June 28th, 1937. He alleges that the insured died on the 25th day of November, 1937, while the policy was in full force and effect, and that on November 29th, 1937, due proof of death was furnished by him to the defendant, but that payment was refused upon the ground that the written application for the insurance contained misstatements of fact concerning the insured’s health.

The defendant company answered admitting the issuance of the policy, but denied liability upon the ground that the deceased died of acute pulmonary tuberculosis, with which disease she had been afflicted since December 18, 1931, and that she had knowledge of the fact and withheld such information from the defendant by giving false answers to pertinent questions in the application for insurance and “that the answers made by her to the questions propounded in the aforesaid application constituted a wilful misrepresentation on the part of said Lucille Marie Borde-lon, and that she concealed from your respondent facts as to her ill health existing at the time that she made said application, and prior thereto, all of which constituted an attempt to perpetrate a fraud on your respondent.”

The judgment below was in , favor of the plaintiff as prayed for, the learned judge, a quo, giving the following brief written reasons: “Considering the provisions of Act 144 of 1936, Act No. 195 of 1932; Act No. 97 of 1908; Act No. 134- and Act No. 160 of 1934, and the suit of Sharper v. Security Mutual Benevolent Association, 177 So. 461, this Court has no other alternative but to find for plaintiff.”

From this judgment defendant has appealed.

It is .admitted that the insured, Mrs. Bordelon, died as a result of acute pulmonary tuberculosis and that she was afflicted with that disease at the time that the application for the policy was executed. It is also admitted that there was no. medical examination and that the answers, in the application were false. The position of the plaintiff is that the defendant’s agent who sold the policy to the deceased and who admittedly wrote all the answers-to questions in the application, knew of Mrs. Bordelon’s condition and that he, the agent, and not the insured, falsified the answers, though the insured signed the *114 application, and that the knowledge of the. defendant’s agent must be imputed to his principal.

Defendant denies that its agent had obtained, or could, with reasonable diligence, obtain any knowledge of the insured’s condition of health. The insurance was written for the defendant by its agent, D. S. Coco. Coco denied any knowledge of Mrs. Bordelon’s infirmity. His testimony, however, is unsatisfactory in that he first stated that he obtained Mrs. Bor-delon’s name as a prospect through a Mrs. Savoy, who was living in the house with her, and afterwards admitted that he had known the Bordelons for a number of years and prior to their coming to New Orleans when both he and the Bordelons resided in Mansura, Louisiana.

Kirby Bordelon, the plaintiff, Otis Bordelon, plaintiff’s brother, and Mrs. H. J. Bolotte each testified to having discussed Mrs. Bordelon’s illness with Coco before the application for the policy was executed by Mrs. Bordelon. • The trial judge was convinced that Coco knew of Mrs. Bordelon’s condition and so are we.

Coco, for some reason or other, perhaps because of the commission he could earn, wrote a policy on Mrs. Bordelon’s life notwithstanding the information he had to the effect that she was suffering from tuberculosis. If his knowledge can be imputed to his employer, the plaintiff should recover because having issued the policy with knowledge of deceased’s condition, it will be deemed to have waived the provisions of its policy with respect to false answers in the application with respect to the applicant’s health.

The general law on the subject of the imputation of knowledge of insurance agents to their principals is thus stated by Corpus Juris, Volume 37, Sec. 262(b), pp. S29, 530: “Knowledge of Officers or Agents. — Under the general rule that the knowledge of an officer or agent of insurer which’ is acquired within the scope of his duties as to facts material to the insurance is imputed to insurer, a policy of life insurance cannot, in the absence of a stipulation in the policy to the contrary, be avoided for misrepresentations or breach of warranty or condition as to health, habits, occupation, or other matters material to the risk, knowledge of which was acquired by authorized officers or agents of insurer in the performance of their duties relative to the acceptance of the risk and issuance of the policy, unless insured conspired with the agent to defraud insurer, or, as held by some authorities, obtained a policy by material representations known by him to be false.”

The policy sued on contains no stipulation common to many policies to the effect that a waiver could only be effective when in writing .and when attached to the policy. But if it did, it would appear that, under the jurisprudence of this state, such provision would have no effect. Gitz Sash Factory v. Union Insurance Society, 160 La. 381, 107 So. 232.

Act No. 97 of 1908 provides that, when a policy of insurance is written without a medical examination, knowledge of the agent, concerning the health, habits, or occupation of the insured shall be imputed to the insurer. Act No. 160 of 1934 declares' that: “No policy of industrial life insurance shall be void, nor shall the rights of the assured thereunder be impaired, by any misrepresentation in the application of the assured unless such misrepresentation is wilful on the part of the assured and conceals facts as to the ill-health of the assured existing at the time of any such application, and provided further, that fraud shall always be a defense against any suit by the assured, if the insurer shall have obtained an application from the assured as hereinabove provided.” Section 3.

Act No. 144 of 1936 ordains that: “ * * * whenever industrial life, health or accident .insurance corporations, issue policies or contracts of insurance to the assured without a written application or a medical examination of the assured by a physician, it shall be presumed (whenever it appears that the agent of the corporation has had an opportunity to ascertain the true condition of the health, habits or occupation of the assured, and has certified to the corporation the desirability of the risk), that the knowledge acquired, or which might have been acquired with' reasonable diligence by the agent of the corporation in securing the application, as to the health, habits or occupation of the insured, has been disclosed to his principal; and it shall also be presumed that the corporation has waived its rights to claim a forfeiture of the policy, based upon the ground that the assured did not make true and full answers in the application as to health, habits or occupation, whenever it shall appear that *115

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Bluebook (online)
187 So. 112, 1939 La. App. LEXIS 97, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bordelon-v-national-life-accident-ins-co-lactapp-1939.