Engle v. National Council, Junior Order United American Mechanics of U. S. of North America

1 A.2d 798, 133 Pa. Super. 149, 1938 Pa. Super. LEXIS 288
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 27, 1938
DocketAppeal, 82
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 1 A.2d 798 (Engle v. National Council, Junior Order United American Mechanics of U. S. of North America) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Engle v. National Council, Junior Order United American Mechanics of U. S. of North America, 1 A.2d 798, 133 Pa. Super. 149, 1938 Pa. Super. LEXIS 288 (Pa. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

Opinion by

Cunningham, J.,

George D. Engle, husband of the plaintiff below and *151 appellee herein, made application for membership in what is known as the “Beneficiary Degree” of the appellant fraternal order, and was issued a certificate and contract of life insurance on March 30, 1935. He was then forty-eight years of age. By the terms of the contract the insurer agreed to pay him $1,000 upon his seventieth birthday, or upon proof of his death prior thereto to pay that amount to his wife, Barbara. He died suddenly May 5, 1935, from a heart condition. Payment of the claim was refused, whereupon appellee brought suit as the beneficiary under the policy.

Appellant set up three defenses: First, that appellee had failed to pursue certain remedies within the order before bringing suit; second, that the insured had warranted he was free from any heart disease, whereas in point of fact he was suffering from endocarditis at the time the policy was issued; and third, that the insured had falsely answered a question concerning the last time he had consulted a physician. The learned trial judge, being of opinion that there was no issue of fact on any of these points upon which appellant was entitled to go to the jury, directed a verdict in favor of the beneficiary for the face of the certificate, with interest. Appellant’s motions for judgment n. o. v. or a new trial were subsequently denied, and this appeal from the judgment entered upon the verdict followed.

The general and fundamental question with which we are confronted in disposing of this appeal is whether there is any competent evidence upon this record which entitled the appellant insurer to go to the jury upon any of the issues framed by the pleadings. If there is such evidence it must be found in the portions of the testimony and exhibits to which counsel for appellant point as supporting their contention that the insured fraudulently procured the certificate of insurance by knowingly making false answers to questions asked him by the insurer’s solicitor and medical examiner *152 with relation to the condition of his health when the certificate was applied for and concerning previous consultations with a physician.

We shall, therefore, defer for the present consideration of the contention that the beneficiary was required to show she had “exhausted her entire remedy within the order.”

Turning to the question of alleged false answers, in reliance upon which it is contended the policy was issued, it is to be noted that the contract of insurance is not one in which the insurer waived a written application and a medical examination and elected to protect itself by the insertion therein of a “sound health” clause, to the effect that the contract should not take effect if the insured was not in sound health when it issued, but was issued upon a written application, signed by the insured on March 22,1935, and containing the insured’s answers to some forty questions propounded to him by the insurer’s solicitor, and after a thorough medical examination on the following day by Dr. W. J. George, the insurer’s medical examiner for the local council of which the insured was a beneficial member. We agree with the court below that the solicitor and medical examiner were the agents of appellant, regardless of any statement to the contrary inserted in the certificate.

The questions and answers thereto material to this branch of the case read:

“7. Are you in good health? Yes.”......

“11. Have you ever been afflicted with any of the following complaints or diseases?......Asthma, bronchitis, pneumonia, pleurisy, consumption, spitting of blood, shortness of breath, or any disease of the throat, heart or lungs? No.”

In connection with his application the insured declared: “I am in sound mental and physical condition and that all the foregoing answers and statements, *153 whether written in my own hand or not, together with all answers and statements made or to be made to the Medical Examiner in pursuance thereof and all statements and representations of fact made by me in or in connection with this application are hereby warranted to be full, complete and true.”

The evidence upon which appellant relies as proof of the falsity in fact of the above answers is uncontradicted. Dr. B. L. Savitz, the insured’s attending physician for a year, testified and certified in the proofs of death that the cause of insured’s death was “chronic endocarditis,” or “long standing leaking heart.” Material questions and answers appearing in the certificate of Dr. Savitz constituting part of the proofs of death read:

“7. For what did you treat or advise deceased prior to his last illness? Give date, duration and result of each. Nov. 1934, Cardiac condition.
“8. Did you attend deceased during his last sickness? Sudden attack.
“12. What disease was the immediate cause of death? Embolus — Chronic endocarditis. Was there any contributing or remote cause of death? No.......
“13. Hoav long did deceased suffer from this disease? Apx. 10 years.”

The above statement by Dr. Savitz that he had treated and “advised” the insured in November, 1934, for a “cardiac condition” was nullified by his testimony when called by the appellant as one of its witnesses at the trial. We quote from his direct examination: “Q. Did Mr. Engle ever consult you at any time betAveen 1923 and March 22, 1935? A. He did. Q. When during that period of time did he consult you? A. Once on November 9, 1934. Q. What did he consult you for at that time, doctor? A. For influenza; an acute cold or influenza at that time. Q. Did you make an examination of Mr. Engle at that time? A. Yes, sir. Q. What *154 was your diagnosis of Ms condition? A. Acute sore throat and influenza, and chronic endocarditis. Q. Did you prescribe treatment for him? A. Yes, sir. Q. Did you give him any medicine at that time? A. I did at that time.”

It is significant that the witness did not testify he “advised” the insured he had a diseased heart or that he treated him for that condition. It was definitely developed by his cross-examination that he did not tell the insured of, or treat him for, his heart condition. The cross-examination reads: “Q. Doctor, what did Mr. Engle come to you to be treated for? A. For an acute cold. Q. And what did you treat him for? A. For an acute cold. Q. You did not treat him for chronic endocarditis, did you? A. I did not treat him for that condition at that time. ...... Q. Did you advise this patient at that time that he had this heart condition? A. Not at that time.” The meaning of the qualification, “at that time,” was neither explained by the witness nor developed by counsel, nor was there any evidence that the doctor saw the insured professionally at any other time, or ever told Mm he had a diseased heart.

Appellee when called as for cross-examination testified: “A. All I know he was to the doctor in 1935; we all had the grippe and cold and I sent him to the doctor to get something for us; that is all I know. Q. When was that, Mrs. Engle? A. In 1935. Q. What time in 1935? A.

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Bluebook (online)
1 A.2d 798, 133 Pa. Super. 149, 1938 Pa. Super. LEXIS 288, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/engle-v-national-council-junior-order-united-american-mechanics-of-u-s-pasuperct-1938.