Eminent Household of Columbian Woodmen v. Prater

23 L.R.A.N.S. 917, 1909 OK 163, 103 P. 558, 24 Okla. 214, 1909 Okla. LEXIS 29
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJuly 13, 1909
Docket193
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 23 L.R.A.N.S. 917 (Eminent Household of Columbian Woodmen v. Prater) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Eminent Household of Columbian Woodmen v. Prater, 23 L.R.A.N.S. 917, 1909 OK 163, 103 P. 558, 24 Okla. 214, 1909 Okla. LEXIS 29 (Okla. 1909).

Opinion

Hayes, J.

This is an action on a policy of life insurance, in which defendant in error, plaintiff below, is the beneficiary. From, a judgment in favor of plaintiff for the amount of the policy, plaintiff in error, defendant below, brings this proceeding in error. The policy was taken out by Elizabeth Prater, plaintiff’s mother, on the 19th day of December, 1905, who died on the 17th day of February, 1906. The insurance order by its answer admits-the execution and delivery of the policy and the death of the insured, but denies liability under the policy upon several grounds. Hnder the state of the record in this case it will only be necessary to mention and consider two of the questions raised in defendant’s answer as defenses. It alleges, first, that Mrs. Prater, in her application for the policy, had stated that she had never had hemorrhage or inflammation of the lungs, spitting of blood, and had never been seriously sick, nor attended by any physician during any such serious sickness, that such statements were by her application and the contract of insurance made her warranties upon which the policy was issued, and that such statements were untrue. Second. That she had made the misrepresentations aforesaid knowing them to be untrue; that they were material, and were relied upon by defendant when it issued the policy. The trial was to the court without a jury, who made a general finding *216 for -plaintiff. Under our view of this case it will be necessary for us to investigate the facts and the law to determine only whether there was a breach of warranty by the insured.

Some of the alleged misrepresentations complained of by defendant are in the application of the insured; others are in her answers to questions in the worthy physician’s report on the reverse side of the application. There is no contention by plaintiff that the statements made in the application are not, by the provisions of the application and the policy, made warranties of the applicant, and we shall first ascertain whether there was any breach of warranty by reason of false statements made in the application. The following questions and answers occur in the application:

“Q. Give date of last serious illness, month and year. A. Was never seriously ill. Q. What was it? A. Nothing. Q. Name and address of attending physician. A None.”

In the month of August, 1904. deceased became ill one afternoon, and suffered from hemorrhage. She spit up much blood. A physician was called, and the physician who attended her testified at the trial that deceased was at that time very sick; that she bled profusely from the lungs; that her pulse'ceased beating, and that she became cold and clammy; that life was almost gone; and that she coughed up blood at almost every breath. Other witnesses corroborate the attending physician’s statement that decedent had a profuse hemorrhage at that time, and that her condition was alarming, and there is evidence that she continued in a state of impaired health from that date up till the time of her death, and that subsequent to this illness, she was under the treatment of a Christian Scientist, but the evidence as to the severity of this illness is conflicting. Plaintiff testified that his mother recovered immediately and entirely after this illness. There is also evidence from other witnesses who lived at that time as neighbors of the deceased, who did not see her when she had the hemorrhage, but who saw her within a day or two thereafter, to the effect that she appeared to be in good health, and that in her ap-pearancé she bore no evidence of having suffered from a serious *217 illness. There is further evidence to the effect 'that her health after this illness was better than usual until she was attacked by her last illness. On the other hand, there is evidence that at the time of the hemorrhage deceased was afflicted with consumption; that she continued to be so afflicted until her death; that her death was due to this disease, but this evidence is controverted.

On the conflicting state of the evidence as to whether the illness of the deceased during August, 1904, was a serious illness it was for the jury or court to whom the case was submitted to decide. The question propounded to applicant did hot require her to give information as to the last illness she had suffered, but the last serious illness. Not every illness is serious. An illness may be alarming at the time, or thought to he serious by the one afflicted, and yet not be serious in the sense of that term as used in insurance contracts. An illness that is temporary in its duration, and entirely passes away, and is not attended, nor likely to be attended, by a permanent or material impairment of the health or constitution, is not a serious illness. It is not sufficient that the illness was thought serious at the time it occurred, or that it might have resulted in permanently impairing the health. Insurance Co. v. Wilkinson, 13 Wall. 222, 20 L. Ed. 617. A cold may be, and sometimes is, followed by pneumonia, pleurisy, abscess of the lungs, and consumption, but to hold that because a cold may be attended or followed by such consequences it is a serious illness, and that a failure to mention such in response to an inquiry in an application for insurancé as to the nature and character of any serious illness the applicant has suffered, would result in invalidating almost all contracts of insurance, the covenants of which are based upon the statements in the application as warranties; for, if a careful investigation should be made in the lives of persons insured, in almost every life there would be found some incident of illness of such ordinary occurrence and insignificance in its effect, yet of possible seriousness, which the applicant, without careful scrutiny and accurate recollections of his past life, has overlooked to mention. “A serious illness is a grave, important, *218 weighty trouble.” Brown v. Insurance Co., 65 Mich. 306 32 N. W. 610, 8 Am. St. Rep. 894. In the Century Dictionary it is defined. to be "an illness attended by. danger, giving rise to apprehension.” In Caruthers v. Kansas Mut. Life Ins. Co. (C. C.) 108 Fed. 487, a negative answer of the applicant to the question as to whether he had ever had "any serious illness, constitutional disease, or surgical operation” was held not a false representation which would avoid the policy as a breach of warranty because applicant once broke his leg,' which was set and attended by a physician. “A sickness may be very bad and very sad, and yet not serious. Any permanent or material impairment of health” is a serious illness. Drakeford v. Supreme Conclave, etc., 61 S. C. 338, 39 S. E. 523; Masons Benev. Soc. v. Winthrop, 85 Ill. 537. Upon the conflicting evidence as to deceased’s condition within a day or two after the hemorrhage, and as to the condition of her health thereafter until her last illness, and the entire absence of any evidence that such loss of blood as occurred to her on that day was likely to result in permanent or material impairment of her health, the general finding of the trial court in favor of the ■plaintiff is conclusive against defendant as to the nature , of that illness. Insurance Co. v. Wilkinson, supra; Hockaday v. Jones, 8 Okla. 156, 56 Pac. 1054.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
23 L.R.A.N.S. 917, 1909 OK 163, 103 P. 558, 24 Okla. 214, 1909 Okla. LEXIS 29, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eminent-household-of-columbian-woodmen-v-prater-okla-1909.