Brubaker v. Beneficial Standard Life Insurance

278 P.2d 966, 130 Cal. App. 2d 340, 1955 Cal. App. LEXIS 1901
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 24, 1955
DocketCiv. 20473
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 278 P.2d 966 (Brubaker v. Beneficial Standard Life Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brubaker v. Beneficial Standard Life Insurance, 278 P.2d 966, 130 Cal. App. 2d 340, 1955 Cal. App. LEXIS 1901 (Cal. Ct. App. 1955).

Opinion

*342 DRAPEAU, J.

The material facts in this ease are not disputed. Its decision turns upon the answer to the following legal question: Is an insurance policy void when the insured at the time of its delivery was mortally afflicted with cancer, although when application for the insurance was made, when the insured was examined by the insurance company’s doctor, and when the policy was issued and delivered neither the insured nor the insurer knew of the serious character of the illness?

Plaintiff Gladys Huette Brubaker is the widow of Walter B. Brubaker. She brings this action against the defendant insurance company to collect $7,000 on two policies of insurance upon the life of her deceased husband.

The insurance company would not pay, and contended that it is not liable because the insured was not in good health at the time the policies were delivered. As stated, this is the determinative question in the ease, neither fraud nor misrepresentation being an issue.

The facts, stated chronologically, are as follows:

March 8, 1952, Mr. Brubaker went to see Dr. Robert E. Williams, of Camarillo, California. Mr. Brubaker complained that he had been having abdominal pain for a little over a week. The doctor found upon examination that his patient had tenderness in his abdomen, more especially in the lower right portion, where there was an old scar apparently from an appendectomy. There were some small, tender, firm nodules in the right portion of the abdomen.

The doctor diagnosed Mr. Brubaker’s illness as acute gastroenteritis. X-ray pictures taken of Mr. Brubaker’s abdomen showed no abnormalities.

March 14, 1952, Mr. Brubaker signed what the insurance company designated part one of an application for the insurance here in question. The gist of Mr. Brubaker’s answers to the questions in the application was that he was in good health and knew of no condition which would make him a poor life insurance risk. All of his statements were made in good faith, and were true so far as he then knew.

March 25, 1952, Mr. Brubaker executed part two of the application, the gist of which was substantially the same as part one. In this part of the application Mr. Brubaker disclosed that he had consulted Dr. Williams for the disorder diagnosed by the doctor as gastroenteritis.

On this same date, March 25, 1952, Dr. Williams again made a physical examination of Mr. Brubaker. This time *343 the doctor was acting as medical examiner for the insurance company. At that time the doctor could find no change in Mr. Brubaker’s condition. So he reported to the insurance company, with a notation that Mr. Brubaker was “quite healthy. ’ ’

March 28, 1952, the insurance company issued the two policies here in question, and delivered them to Mr. Brubaker April 11, 1952. Mr. Brubaker’s wife was beneficiary in both policies.

April 9,1952, Mr. Brubaker again went to see Dr. Williams. He complained that he was again having abdominal pains. This time the doctor sent his patient to a hospital for X-ray pictures, with the use. of barium in the bowel. As a result of these tests an exploratory operation of the abdominal cavity was recommended.

April 24, 1952, the exploratory operation was performed. It was then discovered for the first time that Mr. Brubaker had a cancer of the first portion of the large bowel, and that the disease had spread to lymph nodes throughout the abdomen.

It was not until after the surgery that Dr. Williams told Mr. Brubaker what was really the matter with him, although the doctor testified on the trial that “in retrospect” he believed that all of Mr. Brubaker’s symptoms were due to cancer.

November 4, 1952, Mr. Brubaker died.

January 26, 1953, the insurance company tendered to Mrs. Brubaker all premiums received, amounting to $475.83.

The superior court found that at the time of the application, the medical examination, and the delivery of the policies, decedent was acting in good faith, without any knowledge of any cancerous condition or of any other serious disease or disorder of his body, that at the time of Mr. Brubaker’s death all premiums had been paid, and that all other things required in the policies of him or of his widow had been done.

As a conclusion of law the court found that the insurance company was bound by the policies, and that the widow was entitled to judgment for $7,000.

Defendant appeals from the judgment that followed.

The insurance company contends:

(1) That no disclosure of his cancerous condition was made in decedent’s application for insurance; and (2) That delivery of the policy during good health was a condition precedent, which is not present in this case.

*344 In support of the first contention, it is asserted that the failure of the insured to mention in the application that he “had small, tender, firm nodules in the right lower portion of his abdomen” voids the policy.

This contention is without merit. It would be a strange medicolegal rule to say that nodules under the skin are certain evidence of cancer of the bowel, and that the presence of such nodules must be noted in every application for insurance, at the peril of the beneficiaries. Borland’s American Medical Dictionary defines the word “nodule” as coming from the Latin nodulus, a little knot, meaning a small boss or node. ' To state the contention is to refute it.

The second contention does have merit. For the final ruling in this ease will set the pattern in California in an important and interesting phase of insurance law. This contention has been given careful study and consideration.

The insurance company argues that the clause in the application for the policy reading as follows is a condition precedent :

“I hereby declare and agree . . . that this application (Part I and Part II) shall form a part of any policy of insurance issued, . . . that any policy issued shall not take effect unless and until the full first premium has been paid and the policy delivered to me during my good health, . . . and during my lifetime ...”

In an able and comprehensive memorandum of opinion, the trial judge points out that there are divergent lines of decision and reasoning in the United States with respect to the situation here, and that this is apparently a case of first impression in California.

What may be termed the Massachusetts rule supports the contention of defendant that unless the insured is in actual good health at the time of delivery of a policy of life insurance, the insurer is not liable on the policy, at least until under our law, or by a provision in the policy, it is incontestable. (See Ins. Code, § 10953.3.)

In other states a rule to the contrary has been established and applied.

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Bluebook (online)
278 P.2d 966, 130 Cal. App. 2d 340, 1955 Cal. App. LEXIS 1901, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brubaker-v-beneficial-standard-life-insurance-calctapp-1955.