Hale v. Sovereign Camp Woodmen of World

143 Tenn. 555
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 143 Tenn. 555 (Hale v. Sovereign Camp Woodmen of World) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hale v. Sovereign Camp Woodmen of World, 143 Tenn. 555 (Tenn. 1920).

Opinion

Mu. Justice GtREEN

delivered tbe opinion of tbe Court.

This suit was brought to recover on a benefit certificate, and there was a decree for tbe .complainant below from which the defendant has appealed to this court. The benefit certificate was issued F'ebruary 13, 1917, on the life of Clyde C. Hale by defendant society and was payable to the complainant, the brother of the assured. The suit is defended on the ground that the application upon which the certificate was issued contained false and fraudulent statements, and under the contract between the parties these statements were made warranties and the certificate was based thereon.

The case presents some peculiar features.

The deceased, Clyde C. Hale, was a farmer and stock dealer residing near Morristown, Tenn., and was. forty-four years of age at the time of his death in October, 1918. H'e was a well-known man in this community and conspicuous by reason of his unusually large size. He was more than six feet tall and weighed about three hundred and forty pounds. All the proof shows that he was a man of the highest character. We have seldom had a record before us containing higher testimonials to the honor and integrity of anyone.

The defendant is a well-known fraternal benefit society, its organization embracing an insurance department for [558]*558the protection of the dependents and relatives of its members.

The deceased was elected to membership January 27, 1917, and made application for insurance. He was supplied with a printed form of application. This application consists of four pages, being like a sheet of note paper or foolscap paper folded crosswise. On the first page is an application containing some statements intended to be signed by the applicant, by those recommending him for membership, and by the clerk of the local lodge or camp as it is called. The second page consists of questions, to be ansAvered by the applicant to be recorded by the medical examiner referring to the family history of the applicant and the previous health of such applicant. The first page and the second page are both intended to be signed by the applicant.

The third page contains blanks to be filled out by the medical examiner referring to the physical condition of the applicant. This page is intended to be signed by the physician alone.

The fourth page, which is the outside of the document Avhen folded, contains nothing of particular importance in this inquiry.

The application upon which the sovereign camp of defendant society issued the benefit certificate in suit is filed with the record. There is no controversy about the first page thereof and that it was signed by Clyde C. Hale, the deceased. The statements thereof all appear to be true and uncontroverted. On the second page of the applica[559]*559tion filed herein, the applicant appears to have answered that he had not consulted or been attended by a physician for any disease or injury during the past five years. He also appears to have answered that he had never failed to obtain life insurance for which application had been made. It is conceded that both of these statements are untrue.

In the physician’s report on the third page, the applicant’s weight is stated to be two hundred and forty pounds. As heretofore noted, his weight was in reality 340 pounds. Likewise on this page false statements are made with reference to the circumference of the applicant’s chest and abdomen.

It is undisputed on this record that the signature of Clyde C. Hale on the second page of the application is a forgery, and that the signatures of C. T. Carroll, Jr., the medical examiner, on the third page, as well as on the second page, are forgeries. Both these pages are expected to be filled out by the medical examiner, and Dir. Carroll testifies that he did not fill out either page of the application filed herewith. It seems from the deposition of F. E. I). Clark, the clerk of the local camp, that the deceased was solicited to become a member of the defendant society by one E. C. Riggs, who belonged to the local camp and was active in procuring new members for such camp as well as for another fraternal society with a lodge at Morristown. Clark says that after deceased was elected .to membership and the first page of the application herein was filled out and signed by deceased, that he (Clark) turned the application over to Riggs with instructions, to the [560]*560latter to take it to Dr. Carroll and to have deceased examined. Clark says that a few days thereafter Riggs returned the applicátion to him, and that he put it in an envelope without giving it any particular examination and mailed it to the sovereign camp of the order at Omaha, Neb. Riggs denies that he took the application to Dr. Carroll, and denies that he brought it back to Dr. Carroll to Clark. Dr. Carroll first testified that Clark brought him the application, and that he returned it to Clark; but upon cross-examintion he is not clear as to how the application came into his hands and as to whom he returned it.

Dr. Carroll, however, is clear in his testimony as to the examination of the deceased conducted by him. Re says that deceased answered that previous applications of his for life insurance had been rejected and that his answer was truthfully recorded on the application before him. Dr. Carroll likewise states that he duly measured and weighed the deceased when examining him, and that the true weights and measurements were recorded on the application before him. The weighing of deceased was fixed on Dr. Carroll’s memory by the fact that the doctor’s office scales were too small, and he had to take the deceased out of his office, where the examination was made, to a hardware store and weigh him on heavier scales.

The testimony of Dr. Carroll shows that the second and third pages of the application before him were truthfully filled out in the particulars noted above, and signed by the doctor and by the deceased in the doctor’s presence. [561]*561Dr. Carroll paid no particular attention to the first page of the application that was turned over to him, merely glancing at it to see whether it had been filled out, and this apparently had been properly done.

It would seem from the foregoing that the application which was furnished Dr. Carroll was a bogus application with the first page forged, and that he and the deceased filled out and signed the second and third pages of this bogus application. The application of which the first page was genuine, and in reality filled out and signed by deceased and others, seems not to have been taken to Dr. Carroll, but held out by some one, the second and third pages thereof filled out by some one other than Dr. Carroll, the signatures of Dr. Carroll and deceased forged thereto, and this application forwarded to the sovereign camp.

Both parties accredit Dr. Carroll to the' court and disclaim any intimation that he was guilty of fraud in this matter.

The general officers at the sovereign camp, including the sovereign medical examiner, acted on the assumption that the application sent to them was in all respects genuine and the benefit certificate issued on the faith thereof. Under these circumstances, what are the rights of the parties?

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Bluebook (online)
143 Tenn. 555, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hale-v-sovereign-camp-woodmen-of-world-tenn-1920.