Co-operative Life Ass'n v. Leflore

53 Miss. 1
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1876
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 53 Miss. 1 (Co-operative Life Ass'n v. Leflore) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Co-operative Life Ass'n v. Leflore, 53 Miss. 1 (Mich. 1876).

Opinion

Chalmers, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

John D. Leflore, suing for himself and children, recovered judgment in the Circuit Court of Montgomery County against the Co-operative Life Association of Mississippi, upon a policy of insurance which had been by said corporation issued upon the life of his deceased wife. The rightfulness of the recovery depends principally upon the correctness or incorrectness of the action of the court below in giving and refusing instructions.

It having been shown that Mrs. Leflore did not answer truly certain questions propounded to and answered by her, in her application for insurance, the court below instructed the jury that the beneficiaries under the policy were, nevertheless, entitled to recover, unless they believed that the misrepresentations by the insured were fraudulently made. Thus, by the first instruction granted for the plaintiffs below, the jury were informed that “ nothing short of fraud committed by Mrs. Leflore against the defendants in hex application will avoid the payment of the money on the policy ; ” and, by subsequent instructions, fraud was defined to consist in “ designedly or intentionally misstating any fact or facts within her knowledge.”

In none of the instructions is it declared that a different rule will prevail, if the untrue statements were made as to matters material to the risk, and which the parties may be supposed to have had specially in view in making the contract ; but the broad doctrine is laid down, that nothing short of actual moral fraud upon the part of the applicant will avoid the policy, even though there have been false representations, not fraudulent, as to the most vital and important matters. It is at once evident that these charges cannot be sustained, unless there is something exceptional in the character of the policy sued on.

Nothing is better settled, both in regard to insurance contracts and contracts of all sorts, than that an untrue statement by either party, as to a matter vital to the agreement, will avoid it, though there be no intentional fraud in the misrepresentation. Bliss on Insurance, § 52; May on Insurance, §§ 181, 182.

The particular feature which it is insisted takes the case [13]*13out of the operation of this rule, is to be found in the second special proviso annexed to, or rather printed in, the body of the policy, which is in these words : “ If, however, any fraud should be committed against said association in the statements made in the application by the'insured, and upon the faith of which this policy is issued, then and in such case this policy shall be null and void, and all payments made thereon shall become forfeited to the association.”

Under this clause, it is argued that nothing less than actual fraud in the application will avoid the policy ; and, in consonance with this view, the charges asked for by the plaintiff's, noted above, were given, and all those offered by the defendants, announcing a different doctrine, were refused.

In testing the correctness of this ruling, it will be necessary to look carefully at the other parts of the policy, as well as at the written application for insurance, “ upon the faith of which,” as set forth in this proviso, the contract was entered into ; and to consider also the nature of the untrue statements shown to have been made by the applicant. The application was made out in the town of Carrolton, by the agent of the company, the applicant, and a local physician, acting as medical examiner for the association. It was by the agent forwarded to the head-quarters of the association at Winona, from -which place, four days afterwards, the policy was returned.

The application contained twenty-five printed questions, to all of which the applicant made response in writing.

Int. 10. “ Has the party had, or been afflicted since childhood with, any of the following complaints: . . . paralysis, disease of the liver or kidneys, or any serious disease ? ”

Int. 11. “ Has the party ever met with any accidental or serious personal injury? ”

Int. 12. “ Has the party ever been seriously ill ? If so, when, of what complaint, and who was the medical attendant? State his name and residence.”

To each of these interrogatories the applicant answered “No.”

It was satisfactorily proven that each of these answers was untrue in fact, however honest the witness might have been [14]*14in supposing that the accidents and diseases from which she had theretofore suffered were at the time immaterial.

A few years before the date of this application she had suffered from an attack of paralysis, by which her features had been, for a short time, slightly distorted. About the same time she had been afflicted with an internal tumor, which, located in the lower part of the abdomen, was plainly perceptible to the external touch, and by which she had at one time been seriously alarmed. Two years before the date of the policy she had been dangerously ill in New Orleans, and had lain for two months under the medical treatment of Dr. Chop-pin, an eminent physician of that city. She was pregnant at the time; and her condition was rendered dangerous by the presence, also, of the disease known as albuminuria, which seems to be akin to diabetes, or, perhaps, to Bright’s disease of the kidneys; and, in order to save her life, the physician was compelled to produce an abortion. About eight months before the taking out of the policy, she had been in a railroad accident, in consequence of the injuries received in which she had been confined to her bed for five or six days, and to recover damages for which she brought suit against the railroad company a few months after the issuance of the policy of insurance.

She died very suddenly, of apoplexy, about twelve months after the insurance was effected, in the city of New Orleans, where she had gone again to consult Dr. Choppin.

If we concede that, at the time of making her application, her health was so good that she was momentarily oblivious of all these things, or thought them of no present or future importance, it is quite evident that the insurance company did not so regard them. For reasons satisfactory to itself, it required specific information upon these matters, and thereby indicated to the applicant, that, however lightly she might regard them, it considered them as vital to the matter in hand.

An immense amount of labor and learning is displayed in the books in the consideration of what are, and what are not, material matters in contracts of insurance, a false statement in relation to which will avoid the policy; and it is impossible to [15]*15resist the conclusion, in perusing the cases, that the courts, in order to avoid supposed, hardships in this class of suits, have been disposed to adopt other rules than those applicable to ordinary contracts. For this difference we can recognize no sound principle. Contracts of insurance are neither mala prohibita nor mala in se, and, where entered into by persons sui juris, are to be regulated and determined by the same rules that govern ordinary agreements, with neither more nor less favor than is shown in other cases. As to the question of the materiality of the statements and conditions annexed to them, we prefer the simple rule laid down by the Supreme Court of the United States, in the late cases of Jeffries v. Life Ins. Co., 22 Wall. 37, and Ætna Life Ins. Co. v. France,

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Bluebook (online)
53 Miss. 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/co-operative-life-assn-v-leflore-miss-1876.