Carduff v. Boston Mutual Life Insurance

1 Mass. App. Div. 580
CourtMassachusetts District Court, Appellate Division
DecidedDecember 29, 1936
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Mass. App. Div. 580 (Carduff v. Boston Mutual Life Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts District Court, Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carduff v. Boston Mutual Life Insurance, 1 Mass. App. Div. 580 (Mass. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

Hibbard, P. J.

The plaintiff seeks as beneficiary therein named to recover the amount of an industrial insurance policy issued by the defendant. The answer is a general denial, a plea of payment and further that the insured was not in sound health at the time of the issuance of the policy.

It is stated in the report that the action came before the Trial Court “upon an agreed statement of facts”. This characterization however appears to be erroneous as there was testimony both by the plaintiff and a physician. The agreed statement was in effect that one of the defendant’s agents and its local assistant superintendent talked to the plaintiff about insurance on the life of her daughter, then fifteen years of age. This daughter was at the time an inmate of the Belchertown State School, an institution under the general control of the Department of Mental Diseases of this Commonwealth, of which fact the defendant’s assistant superintendent and agent w'ere aware. Inquiry as to the health of the daughter brought from the mother the statement that it was good. Thereupon the plaintiff was advised that the defendant would accept a policy. One was written and delivered by the defendant’s agent to the plaintiff. It was agreed that premiums were paid to the date of death and that proper proofs of death were furnished to the company.

The plaintiff testified in substance that at the time the policy was written, the daughter was in good health and had no illness requiring medical care; that she was sent to the Belchertown State School on January 18, 1929 by school [582]*582commitment because the plaintiff was not at that time well; that the insured daughter at the time she was sent to the school was able to be out and around and could play with other children; that she could not talk except to say “Mama”, had a good appetite and appeared to be in good health; that the plaintiff visited the daughter at the hospital at frequent intervals; that at a time six years after the admission of . the daughter to the school, the mother was notified of her illness with a cold and shortly thereafter that there was an obstruction of the stomach; that the daughter died within a few days; that upon admission of the daughter to the school she was notified by the superintendent that she appeared to be in excellent condition.

A Doctor Quinn, testifying for the defendant, said that the daughter upon admission to the school was an idiot having the mental age of one year and eight months, was partially paralyzed on the right side and that her mental condition and paralysis were due to an injury at birth; that she was undersized and undernourished although apparently coming from a good home where she had received proper attention; that the child’s heart, lungs, kidneys and reflexes were normal; that her eyes, ears, nose and throat were negative but that the teeth were not in good condition; that the child could not talk but could walk with a limp induced by the partial paralysis; that with the condition of mental age and partial paralysis existing in the child from birth she was upon admission to the school in good condition as testified to by the mother.

Upon the completion of the plaintiff’s testimony, the defendant offered in evidence the application for the policy to which the plaintiff objected because the application was not endorsed upon or attached to the policy in compliance with Oh. 175, §131 of the General Laws of Massachusetts (Ter. Ed.).

[583]*583The plaintiff admitted that the name “Catherine Car-duff” on the application, as a signature, was signed by her, the mother, if the application was admissible in evidence. The Court excluded the application.

At the close of the trial and before final arguments, the defendant requested the following rulings:

“1. No contractual duty arose on the part of the defendant towards the plaintiff upon the policy of insurance in suit unless there was a compliance with the conditions precedent in said policy. Lopardi vs. The John Hancock Mutual Life Ins. Co., 1935 Advance Sheets 587.
2. If, on the date said policy of insurance was issued, the insured was not in sound health, the said policy never issued as an obligation of the defendant. Lopardi vs. The John Hancock Mutual Life Ins. Co. supra; Kravit vs. U. S. Casualty Company, 278 Mass. 178; Fondi vs. Boston Mutual Life Ins. Co., 224 Mass. 6; Carroll vs. Metropolitan Life Ins. Co., 258 Mass 249.
3. If, on the date the policy in suit was issued, the insured, Catherine Cardiiff, was suffering from mental disease or disorder, said insured was not in sound health, and the said policy never took effect as an obligation of the defendant.
4. If, on the date the policy in suit was issued, the insured, Catherine Carduff, was an inmate of an institution for the treatment and care of mental diseases and disorders,, the said policy according to its terms was void and never took effect as an obligation of the defendant, and the plaintiff is not entitled to recover.
5. If the conditions precedent in the policy of insurance in suit were not complied with, the said policy never became an obligation of the defendant, and the provisions in said policy as to incontestability have no effect.
6. If the policy in suit never took effect as an obligation of the defendant, no provision in said policy had any binding effect upon the defendant.
7. No policy of industrial insurance may be written without medical examination on a minor except on a [584]*584written application signed by said minor’s parent or guardian. G. L. Ch. 175, §123 (Ter. Ed.)
8. If the plaintiff signed to the application for insurance, on which the policy in suit was issued, the name of the assured without indicating in said signature that she signed as parent or guardian of said insured, no binding policy of insurance ever came into being.
9. The signing of the name of the assured alone, without indicating the name of the parent or guardian who made the actual signature is not a compliance with G. L. Ch. 175 §123 (Ter. Ed.).
10. The application for a policy of industrial life insurance, to be issued on the life of a minor, is admissible in evidence to show compliance or non-compliance with G. L. Ch. 175, §123 (Ter. Ed.).
11. In the policy in suit in the ease at bar there is no reference to the application upon which the policy was issued and the provisions of G. L. Ch. 175, §131 (Ter. Ed.) are not applicable.
12. Where a policy of industrial life insurance contains no reference to the application upon which such policy is issued, the said application is admissible in evidence for any purpose.
13. Under the terms of G. L. 175, §123 (Ter. Ed.) a written application for insurance signed by the parent or guardian of the minor was required, the said application is admissible in evidence.
14. Declarations or statements by an agent or solicitor of insurance for the defendant, cannot bind the defendant in the absence of -evidence of specific authority to such agent or solicitor to make such declarations or statements.
15. G. L. (Ter. Ed.) .Ch. 175, Par.

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44 N.E. 1073 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1896)
Barker v. Metropolitan Life Insurance
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Fondi v. Boston Mutual Life Insurance
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Ansin v. Mutual Life Insurance
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Smardon v. Metropolitan Life Insurance
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Edgecomb v. Edmonston
153 N.E. 99 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1926)
Carroll v. Metropolitan Life Insurance
154 N.E. 757 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1927)
Kravit v. United States Casualty Co.
179 N.E. 399 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1932)
Lopardi v. John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance
289 Mass. 492 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1935)

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Bluebook (online)
1 Mass. App. Div. 580, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carduff-v-boston-mutual-life-insurance-massdistctapp-1936.