Enge v. John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance

236 N.W. 207, 183 Minn. 117, 1931 Minn. LEXIS 888
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedMarch 27, 1931
DocketNo. 28,028.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 236 N.W. 207 (Enge v. John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Enge v. John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance, 236 N.W. 207, 183 Minn. 117, 1931 Minn. LEXIS 888 (Mich. 1931).

Opinions

Hilton, J.

Defendant appeals from a judgment against it for $825.46.

Defendant is a foreign life insurance company licensed to do business in Minnesota, where it has a resident general agent authorized to employ and pay soliciting agents to take applications for life insurance.

One of such agents solicited and secured an application from Edwin Enge for a $408, weekly-premium insurance policy. Another such agent about a year later solicited and secured an appli *118 cation for a like policy for $297. Each application was in turn sent to the main offices of the company and approved. The policies applied for were issued respectively on November 25, 1925, and December 22, 1926, and delivered to Enge. A copy of the application was not attached to either policy, nor did either policy make any reference thereto. Medical examinations were not required or had. Similar policies were also taken out on the wife and a baby (since deceased).

The weekly premium on the first policy was 20 cents and on the second policy 15 cents. These premiums were all collected by agents of the company until Enge’s death from tuberculosis on July 29,1927. Plaintiff (insured’s wife) was the beneficiary named in each policy. Proper notices and proofs of death were made as required in the policies.

Defendant refused payment on the grounds that insured was not in good health at the time of the issuance of the policies; that he had been attended by a physician for a serious disease and complaint within two years prior to the dates of the delivery of the policies; that at all times subsequent to March 10, 1922, he had been a victim of pulmonary tuberculosis. The application did not contain a question relative to attendance by a physician within two years.

The policies made numerous references to the health of insured. Among others it contained the provision: “This policy shall not take effect unless upon its date the Insured shall be alive and in sound health.” There were also statements therein that the agents were not authorized to waive any of. its terms or conditions or to bind the company by making any promises not contained in the policy, and that the conditions and provisions of the policy constitute the entire contract.

A provision in the policy made it void if the insured “has been attended by any physician, within two years before the date hereof, for any serious disease, complaint or operation; or has had before said date any pulmonary disease, * * These provisions could only be waived “by an' endorsement in the space for endorsements * * ':f signed by the secretary.” The policies also had *119 noted thereon in large type: “Read Your Policy Carefully.” In the application the agent wrote negative answers to' all questions that referred to sickness or tuberculosis.

The case was tried to the court without a jury and findings of fact made. One of the litigated questions was as to the truthfulness of answers made by the insured to questions in the application. The court found that the insured truthfully answered all questions at the time the application was taken and that he told the soliciting agent who asked the questions and filled in the answers that he (Enge) had a “bum right lung”; that the soliciting agent assured him that that made no difference; that the soliciting agent filled out the application in his own handwriting and after-wards requested’ the insured to sign it without reading it to him or requesting or allowing him to do so.

With reference to the application for the second policy, the court found practically to the same effect; that there ivas no changed physical condition in insured from the time of the soliciting, issuance, and delivery of the first policy up to the time of the soliciting, issuance, and delivery of the second policy. It was also found that the second application was taken in the same manner as was the first, the acts and conduct of the agents being the same in each instance, except that the second agent referred to the first policy and urged the taking out of additional insurance for the protection of Enge’s family and assured him it would be all right. These findings had sufficient support in the evidence and must stand. 1 Dunnell, Minn. Dig. (2 ed.) § 410.

Pertinent statutory provisions are G. S. 1923 (1 Mason, 1927) §§ 3334, 3370, 3396, 3398, 3399 and 3412.

This court in McAlpine v. Fidelity & Casualty Co. 134 Minn. 192, 158 N. W. 967, had occasion to comment on the kind of policy here involved, and what was there said is applicable here.

The soliciting agents who secured the applications of Enge were agents of the company and not agents of the insured. In Kausal v. Minnesota F. M. F. Ins. Assn. 31 Minn. 17, 20, 16 N. W. 430, 47 Am. R. 776, it is stated:

*120 “On principle, as well as for considerations of public policy, agents' of insurance companies, authorized to procure applications for insurance, and to forward them to the companies for acceptance, must be deemed the agents of the insurers and not of the insured in all that they do in preparing the application, or in any representations they may make to the insured as to the character or effect of the statements therein contained. This rule is rendered necessary by the manner in which business is now usually done by the insurers. They supply these agents with printed blanks, stimulate them by the promise of liberal commissions, and then send them abroad to the community to solicit insurance. The companies employ them for that purpose, and the public regard them as the agents of the companies in the matter of preparing and filling up the applications,—a fact which the companies perfectly understand. The parties who are induced by these agents to make applications for insurance rarely know anything about the general officers of the company, or its constitution and by-laws, but look to the agent as its full and complete representative in all that is said or done in regard to the application. And in view of the apparent authority with which the companies clothe these solicitors, they have a perfect right to consider them such. Hence, where an agent to procure and forward applications for insurance, either by his direction or direct act, makes out an application incorrectly, notwithstanding all the facts are correctly stated to him by the applicant, the error is chargeable to the insurer and not to the insured. [Cases cited.]
“After the courts had generally established this doctrine, many of the insurance companies, in order to obviate it, adopted the ingenious device of inserting a x>rovision in the policy that the application, by whomsoever made, whether by the agent of the company or any other person, shall be deemed the act of the insured and not of the insurer. But, as has been well remarked by another court,, ‘there is' no magic in mere words to change the real into the unreal. A device of words cannot be imposed upon a court in place of an actuality of facts.’ If corporations are astute in contriving such provisions, courts will take care that they shall not be used as in *121 struments of fraud or injustice.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
236 N.W. 207, 183 Minn. 117, 1931 Minn. LEXIS 888, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/enge-v-john-hancock-mutual-life-insurance-minn-1931.