Hartford Life & Annuity Insurance v. Gray

91 Ill. 159
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1878
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 91 Ill. 159 (Hartford Life & Annuity Insurance v. Gray) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hartford Life & Annuity Insurance v. Gray, 91 Ill. 159 (Ill. 1878).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Scholfield

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This appeal is prosecuted for the purpose of obtaining a reversal of a judgment of the circuit court of Cook county against appellant and in favor of appellees, on a certain policy of life insurance.

The policy is dated June 15, 1869, and purports, “in consideration of the representations made in the application for this policy and of the quarterly premium * * * to be paid,” to assure the life of Charles A. Morey for the benefit of his heirs, in the sum of $4000, for the term of his natural life. It contains the provision that it “ is issued and accepted by the assured upon the following expressed conditions and agreements:

“If the declaration made in the application for this policy, or if any statement respecting the person or family of the one whose life is hereby assured, submitted by the assured to this company, and upon the faith of which application and statements .this policy is issued, shall be found in any respect untrue, then and in every such case, all right or claim to the amount assured by this policy shall terminate and be forfeited, and the company shall not be liable for any payment under the terms hereof, excepting the cash value of the policy, and any additions thereto, such cash value to be paid at the death of the assured and to be computed at the time of such forfeiture, and upon an assumption of mortality at the rates in the actuary’s table, and at a rate of interest at four per cent per annum.”

The evidence shows that the issuing of the policy was preceded by a written application on behalf of and signed by the assured, which has been since destroyed by fire. This is not seriously controverted by appellees, but there is controversy as to its precise terms. Appellant produced and gave in evidence, on the trial, what it claims was an exact copy of this application. It contains the following questions and answers:

“ 10. Have you ever had spitting of blood, inflammation of lungs, consumption, or diseases of any vital part? A. None whatever.”
“13. Do you now possess a sound constitution and good health ? A. Yes.”
“15. Are your parents living or dead? A. Both dead.”
“ The causes of their death and their ages at time of death ? A. Father died of fever, aged fifty-eight; mother of fever, fifty-four.”
“How many brothers and sisters have you had? A. One brother and three sisters; two sisters are living, with good health; brother’s health is excellent; my grand parents are dead; don’t know the cause of their death; I most resemble my father.”
“ 17. Have either of your parents, brother or sisters ever had pulmonary, scrofulous or any mental or constitutional or hereditary disease ? A. No.”

On the same page, at the conclusion of the questions and answers, is the following:

“ Declaration.—It is hereby declared and warranted, that the above answers and statements are true; and it is agreed that this declaration and warranty shall be the basis of the contract between the undersigned and said Hartford Life and Annuity Insurance Company, and that the undersigned will accept a policy for the amount stated above, subject to the conditions, stipulations and provisions prescribed therein.
Dated at Belvidere, Ill., this 4th day of June, 1869.
Charles A. Morey.
Signed in the presence of Capt. B. Wheeler, witness.”

It was stipulated by the parties, on the trial, among other things, as follows:

“ In ease defendant shall, during the trial, reach a point where it'becomes material to prove whether the question in any application that shall be proved to have been made by said Morey to said company for said policy, relating to consumption or pulmonary diseases, in said Morey or his parents, or questions relating to the causes of death of such parents, called for information material to the risk on the life of the insured under said policy, then plaintiffs admit that the same are material, but do not admit the existence or authenticity of such application.”

The assured died September 24, 1870, but before his death appellant had declined to receive the premiums on the policy, on the ground that the policy had been obtained by fraud and misrepresentation.

The evidence is uncontradicted and ample that the brother of the assured was dead, when he made the application for the policy—that the parents of the assured did not die of fever —the father at the age of fifty-eight and the mother at the age of fifty-four, but that, on the contrary, both parents died of pulmonary consumption more than twenty years before the application, the mother dying some two or three years later than the father, and the father being, at the time of his death, only forty-six years of age. The materiality of these representations, if made, being conceded and their falsity clearly proved, it only leaves us to inquire whether they were, in fact, made.

As before observed, that some kind of a written application for the policy was made, is clearly proved, and not seriously controverted. One witness swears that the copy produced is an exact copy of the application of the assured. The only evidence that we regard as of any importance tending to contradict this, is that of Dr. Angelí, who says that, by request of appellant’s agent, he, as a physician, examined the assured for the policy in litigation and indorsed his certificate on the application of the assured. He thinks he was present when the assured signed the application. He says the questions in this copy are nearly the same as in the original application, but that the answers differ in this, that in the original the answer to the question, “ have you ever had any of the following diseases,” the answer instead of being, as in the copy, “ none whatever,” was, “ none whatever—except bronchitis— a slight bronchitis.” He says his certificate, indorsed on the original application, differs in these respects from that on the copy, that in the question, “has he ever had any severe, injurious illness,” I asked him that question and he said, “ no; ” I told him at the time that I wanted him to tell me, as I had not treated his case. The words, “except a slight bronchitis,” are omitted from this. The answer I wrote was, “ except a slight bronchitis.” To the question, “ have his parents, brothers or sisters ever been afflicted with pulmonary or other diseases, hereditary in their nature,” and it says, “has not,” I put two dots. I answered another question above, “has he any predisposition, hereditary or acquired,” “ has not to my knowledge,” and when I came to this question, I dotted it instead of writing again. I don’t remember any other respect in which this copy differs from my certificate,”

He further says, that his impression is, that in the original application of the assured he stated that one of his parents died from fever, and that the other he did not know.

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Bluebook (online)
91 Ill. 159, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hartford-life-annuity-insurance-v-gray-ill-1878.