Haapa v. Metropolitan Life-Insurance

114 N.W. 380, 150 Mich. 467, 1907 Mich. LEXIS 830
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 30, 1907
DocketDocket No. 2
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 114 N.W. 380 (Haapa v. Metropolitan Life-Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Haapa v. Metropolitan Life-Insurance, 114 N.W. 380, 150 Mich. 467, 1907 Mich. LEXIS 830 (Mich. 1907).

Opinion

Ostrander, J.

For more than a year before securing the policy of insurance, the insured had an incurable disease of the heart, of which fact and that she, on account of the disease, was liable to die suddenly, her husband, the beneficiary, was informed by the physician whom he had employed to treat her. She had been treated for this trouble in March and in October, 1904. The policy was issued in April, 1905, upon an application made therefor during the same month, and the application was made a part of the policy and a copy of it attached thereto. This disease resulted in her death in July, 1905. The beneficiary states, in the proofs of death, that the cause of death was heart disease, the physician certifies to the same fact and, also, that he attended her for the trouble in March and October, 1904, and in May, 1905, and that she had another physician in April, 1905, the month in which the policy was issued. The company denied liability upon the ground that the proofs of death showed that the policy was issued upon misrepresentations. The proofs of death, being in the nature of admissions, were competent evidence (John Hancock Mut. Life Ins. Co. v. Dick, 117 Mich. 518 [44 L. R. A. 846]; Wasey v. Insurance Co., 126 Mich. 119; Krapp v. Insurance Co., 143 Mich. 369), and the facts recited are uncontradicted. The policy was not issued by the resident agent and solicitor of defendant, and was issued at the home office upon the application made by the insured, by the terms of which the deceased warranted that she had' never had disease of the heart, that she was in sound health, that she had not within two years been under the care of a physician. The application contains an express [469]*469limitation of the powers of the agent. In the policy itself is the provision:

“No obligation is assumed by the company * * * unless, upon the delivery of this policy,the insured is alive and in sound health.”

To meet the condition existing after the application and the proofs of death had been admitted in evidence, plaintiff was recalled and asked the following questions, answers to which were excluded:

Q. Now, state to the court and jury, whether you had any conversation with Mr. Warrala [the agent of defendant who solicited the insurance] relative to your wife becoming insured in this company prior to her becoming insured. * * * '
“Mr. O’Brien: This is material, if your honor please, for the purpose of showing that before this insurance was taken up Mr. Warrala was informed and well knew the physical condition of Mrs. Haapa and that at the time that this application was made he was a witness to the application and the agent of the company that presided over the making of the application for the policy and the agent who solicited the insurance, and that he wrote down whatever answers were made; that Mrs. Haapa did not talk English, and did not read or write English, and that she signed whatever he put on the paper at his solicitation. * * *
Q. State whether you have had any conversation about your wife’s physical condition with Warrala just before this application was taken. * * *
Q. Did you have any talk with Mr. Warrala in which it was stated to him by yourself that you didn’t feel that your wife’s physical condition was such that she could get insurance and that he knew it F * * *
“Q. Now, on the day that the insurance was taken or at any time before within two or three days, the day the application was made or any day within two or three days before, did you talk with Mr. Warrala about your wife becoming insured in this company ? * * *
Q. Before this application was made state whether Warrala talked with you about insuring your wife. # * *
“The Court: The ruling of the court is broad enough to exclude all conversations between the agent of the [470]*470Metropolitan Life-Insurance Company, and the witness prior to the date when the application was made, and you will have an exception, so you need not take up any more time asking particular questions. That covers the whole case.”

It is said in the brief that the object of the testimony sought to be elicited was to show—

“That the agent of the defendant who solicited the insurance knew the physical condition of the assured, in order to show that the defendant waived the right to rely on the warranties as to her physical condition, and as to the nonexistence of heart disease.”

And, again:

“The purpose of this testimony was not to vary the contract, but simply to show that with full knowledge of the physical condition of the insured, the defendant decided to issue the policy.”

The theory of counsel, as indicated by these statements and by the authorities cited, is not supported by the facts. The undisputed facts are that on April 10, 1905, the insured signed a paper, reading:

“ I intend to make application to the Metropolitan Life-Insurance Company upon the following blank form, and do hereby sign my name in the presence of the company’s agent, who will make report to the company upon the proposed risk, so that my signature to the application may be identified.
“ Emma S. Ha apa,
“ Signature of Proposed Applicant.
“ J. E. Warrala,
“Signature of Witnessing Agent.”

She, at this time, made and signed no other paper. The agent made a report which contains nothing material here. It contains the full name of the applicant, the name and relationship of the proposed beneficiary, the amount of the indemnity, of the semi-annual premiums, the sex, color, date and place of birth, age, post-office address, etc., of the applicant. The deceased was asked to make and made no representations whatever concerning [471]*471her health or physical condition. The single question relating to this subject is addressed to the agent and is: “ Does the person appear to be a good risk in every respect and do you recommend that a policy be issued ? ” This was answered, “Yes.” This report was filed in the local office, and later, on April 14th, the exarñining physician visited the applicant, and on that day the application to the defendant company was made'and signed by the insured. It was upon the “ blank form ” referred to in the paper which the insured had already signed. In it are the warranties, breaches of which are relied upon. There was but one application relied upon by the company. It was made April 14, 1905, and the solicitor, Warrala, was not present. It was the physician who filled in the application. According to his testimony, all of the questions contained in the application were put to the insured, an interpreter who spoke the language of the insured being employed for that purpose. The insured afterwards signed it. No one claims that the husband and beneficiary had ever told the examining physician that his wife had heart disease.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
114 N.W. 380, 150 Mich. 467, 1907 Mich. LEXIS 830, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/haapa-v-metropolitan-life-insurance-mich-1907.