Fales v. New York Life Insurance

17 P.2d 174, 128 Cal. App. 201, 1932 Cal. App. LEXIS 226
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 15, 1932
DocketDocket No. 4434.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 17 P.2d 174 (Fales v. New York Life Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fales v. New York Life Insurance, 17 P.2d 174, 128 Cal. App. 201, 1932 Cal. App. LEXIS 226 (Cal. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

PULLEN, P. J.

Defendant appeals from a judgment of $3,000 on a life insurance contract payable to respondent herein as beneficiary. The defendant claims that Byron E. Pales, the insured, had made false representations in his application for the policy. The application wherein the alleged false representation was contained was dated March 14, 1929, and the policy issued March 21, 1929. The insured died January 19, 1930, the cause of death being pulmonary tuberculosis. In the application for the policy and upon which the policy was issued appeared a question:

“7.E. Have you ever raised or spat blood?” To which the applicant answered “N'o.”

Appellant contends the finding of the trial court “that said Byron E. Pales before the said date of March 14, 1929, had never raised and/or spat blood ...” was not supported by the evidence and on that issue relies for reversal. Most of the testimony at the trial centered upon the condition of health of the insured within the year preceding March 14, 1929, the date of the application and the ten months intervening between that date and his death. At the time of the application for the policy Byron Pales was about twenty-four years of age and from the medical examiner’s report attached to the application, which was *203 received in evidence, the pulse rate was found to be 74, height 5 feet 1Ó inches, exact weight 150 pounds, girth of chest at fourth rib 36 inches, and in response to the question “Is applicant’s general appearance healthy?” the answer by the medical examiner was “Yes.” He was unmarried and lived on his parents’ ranch near the town of Dos Rios in Mendocino County practically all of the time up to his death except for intervals of a few weeks from time to time when he was away on short trips.

There is a decided conflict in the testimony of the witnesses for the insured on the one hand and for the company on the other, and it becomes the duty of this court to say where the truth lies between the two.

The defendant called four witnesses who testified directly and positively as to the spitting of blood.

Mrs. Clara Vinton, a witness called by the defendant, testified she was well- acquainted with the insured and his family for many years. During the Christmas season of 1928 he visited the Vintons, remaining about five days. The witness testified that during that time he, together with three other young men, Brian and John Vinton, her sons, and a young man named Reel, slept in a cabin near the family home. Upon the occasion of that visit Mrs. Vinton testified that the deceased was sick all of the first day he was there, December 26, 1928; she told how he sat around the fire, and starting to cough, went out of the kitchen and to the back of the house and there sat upon a box and coughed blood and pus from his lungs. She helped him back into the house and to the fire, where he had a chill and was very sick. She testified also that on the day following he was very sick and was brought from the cabin up to the house by the boys, where he had another spell of coughing, but not quite so bad and that she again observed him spitting blood. She described his cough as a “hacking cough”. The witness stated that at that time she observed that he had tuberculosis, although that was three months before he was passed on his medical examination by Dr. Hogshead, the examining physician for appellant, and approximately six months before he was examined by Dr. Bennett, who in his examination used a stethoscope and took his temperature and sounded his chest and *204 Dr. Bennett stated he thought he was only then beginning tuberculosis.

Brian Vinton, a son of Mrs. Vinton, testified that at the time of Byron Pales’ visit to their place during Christmas, 1928, he had a bad cough “sounded like away down in his lungs, coughed hard and his voice seemed to change, he had a coarser voice”. He also testified that during the visit in December, 1928, he and Byron slept in the same bed. He did not notice that deceased had any trouble holding food in his stomach although his mother testified that he “had a good appetite . . . but couldn’t beep it on his stomach; when he ate in a few minutes it would come up; I don’t think he retained anything more than a half hour while at my place”.

Lube Vinton, another son of Mr. and Mrs. Vinton, testified that he had spent a portion of the time at the home of his parents during the Christmas holidays of 1928 and had observed the physical condition of Byron Pales, although he was not asked about any spitting of blood. He testified the health of Byron was very bad, that “he saw him coughing like he always did and he was taking some kind of medicine”, and also-. “Q. Now, did he have spasms of coughing this Christmas? A. Yes. Q. "What were those like? A. They were so hard—we had an old wagon in the yard and he would rest himself on this wagon and cough. Q. Did you see that? A. I did. Q. Would he throw up anything? A. He would spit. Q. What would he bring up? A. I never did investigate that.”

John Vinton and a young man named Reel who also occupied the cabin with Byron Pales during Christmas, 1928, were not called as witnesses.

John M. Vinton, the husband of Mrs. Clara Vinton, testified he was home during the Christmas season of 1928 while deceased was visiting them. He did not testify that he saw deceased vomit his food or have any hemorrhages, although he said his wife told him she had disposed of evidence of a hemorrhage. Neither did he testify that deceased went to bed during the day on account of his illness. He testified that “Byron and my boys slept in the other house and the family in another house; so they spent most of the time in the other house,” and further: “Did you notice any spells of coughing that he had at Christ *205 mas time? A. I don’t know I noticed any more than he was coughing and seemed to have some disease. Q. You didn’t see the hemorrhages at Christmas time, did you? A. No, I never did.”

L. C. Barnes was one of the witnesses called by defendant, who testified that he had seen Byron Pales spit blood.

It appeared from the record that a hog had strayed or been stolen and the witness, together with Martin Hanke, Eugene Provost and the deceased, had been delegated to search for the missing animal throughout the surrounding country. Mr. Barnes was riding a horse; Provost, Hanke and deceased were walking. As they were climbing up an incline out of a creek-bed the witness testified that deceased became weak and had to stop upon two occasions on account of his coughing. "When asked to describe the cough the witness answered: “Well, at that time his cough was in the nature of a hemorrhage . . . lasted say half a minute.” He observed the witness at that time raised “a kind of bluish substance and I noticed a slight trace of blood in it”. This instance occurred between January 27 and February 4, 1929.'

On cross-examination it appeared that the witness Barnes was a defendant in an action by William Pales, the husband of respondent herein, to evict him as a squatter from certain farm lands claimed by Pales, which action was still pending at the time of the trial of this action. It also appeared that Barnes had written the insurance company after the death of Byron Pales, but the contents of the letter were not disclosed.

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Bluebook (online)
17 P.2d 174, 128 Cal. App. 201, 1932 Cal. App. LEXIS 226, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fales-v-new-york-life-insurance-calctapp-1932.