Home State Life Ins. Co. v. Jennings

1937 OK 10, 64 P.2d 304, 179 Okla. 39, 1937 Okla. LEXIS 673
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJanuary 19, 1937
DocketNo. 24973.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 1937 OK 10 (Home State Life Ins. Co. v. Jennings) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Home State Life Ins. Co. v. Jennings, 1937 OK 10, 64 P.2d 304, 179 Okla. 39, 1937 Okla. LEXIS 673 (Okla. 1937).

Opinion

WELCH, J.

Plaintiff, Mrs. Grace Jennings, sued on a policy of life insurance issued to her husband, Charles H. Jennings, in his lifetime.

The policy was originally issued on November 16, 1931, and contained this provision : “No obligation is assumed by the company * * * unless on said date the insured is * * * in sound health.”

The policy thereafter lapsed for nonpayment of premium and was revived and reinstated on March 7, 1932, as shown by in-dorsement on policy. That indorsement provided, among other things, that the policy was reinstated, “provided the insured is * * * in good health on this date.”

The insured died August 8, 1932, of pulmonary tuberculosis following an illness of at least some months. The exact duration of his illness was one of the disputed facts in the trial.

The defendant company in its answer, among other defenses, alleged that on the date the policy was issued, and later on March 7, 1932, when the policy was reinstated, in truth and in fact the insured was not then in good health, but, upon the contrary, was then afflicted with the disease of which he subsequently died. This, as well as all other defenses, was denied by plaintiff’s reply.

On trial there was verdict and judgment for the plaintiff.

The defendant properly excepted to the court’s instructions and made proper request for specific instructions, and now urges, among other assignments of error, that the issue of the good health of the insured was not properly submitted to the jury.

We observe nothing improper in the above-quoted provisions of the insurance policy and the reinstatement indorsement, and the defendant has the right to rely upon such provisions. The contrary is not here contended. It is the general rule that the purpose of a contract of insurance is to insure against future contingencies, and certainly the parties by express agreement may except from the operation of the policy present existing conditions, or by policy provisions may avoid liability for results following then existing conditions. We applied these principles in Atlas Life Insurance Co. v. Zellner, 173 Okla. 254, 47 P. (2d) 151.

When the issue was joined upon the question of the good health of the insured bn the date of reinstatement of the policy on March 7, 1932, both parties were entitled to have that issue of fact presented to the jury for determination.

The trial court in instructions Nos. 5, 6, 7, and 7% advised the jury as to the right of the defendant insurance company to a verdict if the insured had willfully and intentionally made false and fraudulent representations in his application for the insurance, or in the application to revive and reinstate the policy after the same had lapsed. These instructions were proper upon one of the defenses included in the answer, which defense specifically alleged certain false representations made by the insured in those applications, but these instructions did not relate to the defense asserted upon the above-quoted provision of the insurance policy itself and of the reinstatement indorsement.

In instruction No. 8 the trial court advised the jury, in substance, that if the insured was not in sound health and good physical condition, and if he had knowledge of such facts, then and in that event the defendant should recover. That instruction was in some measure a repetition of the preceding instructions. This is true because if the insured then was afflicted with tuberculosis and had knowledge of that fact, then he would not be justified in asserting in his applications that he was in good health and not suffering from any ailment or disease. But it cannot be said that this instruction submits to the jury the issue of fact as to the actual health condition of the insured on the date the policy was issued or thereafter reinstated. That instruction relates directly to the insured’s knowledge as to his health condition, not directly to the actual fact itself of his health condition. The quoted stipulation in the policy and reinstatement requires that the insured be in good health, not that so far as he knows he is in good he'alth.

No instruction whatever was given directing the jury to determine as a fact whether *41 on the date of tlie policy or reinstatement the insured was then in good health, or in sound health, although both parties offered evidence upon that point, and the defendant in due time expressly requested an instruction submitting that question, and properly excepted to the action of the trial court in giving instruction No. 8, and in refusing the instruction requested by the defendant company.

It cannot be doubted that defendant was entitled to assert this defense, and when both parties presented evidence upon the matter, defendant was entitled to an instruction submitting the issue of fact to the jury.

It was defendant’s theory, as stated in the answer, that no liability arose on the policy by reason of the provisions of the policy and reinstatement, and a party is always entitled to an instruction submitting his theory, when that theory is supported by competent evidence.

The defendant here insists that the evidence on this point was such as to entitle defendant to an instructed verdict, but the record indicates that the case was largely tried by the plaintiff upon the same theory upon which the trial court instructed the jury, that is, that the controlling point upon this issue of fact was the insured’s knowledge of his health condition, rather than the actual facts of his health condition. From the entire record we feel that the cause should be reversed, not with directions to render judgment, for the defendant. but with directions to grant a new trial and properly submit the issue of fact to the jury for determination upon all of the evidence.

In this case it seems there was some confusion of the rules of law applicable to two separate defenses; one, the defense based upon alleged willfully false representations in the applications, and two, the defense based upon a provision in the policy and reinstatement indorsement, in substance, that liability was contingent upon the then good health of the insured. While these two defenses are often made in the same case, they are separate defenses and issues of fact upon each defense must he properly submitted to the. jury.

The plaintiff relies upon Mid-Continent Life Ins. Co. v. House, 156 Okla. 285, 10 P. (2d) 722. Plaintiff cites no other decision of this court, and urges that the House Case requires a different conclusion herq. We do not so construe that formen decision. In this case there was no medical examination, and the policy was issued in the first instance and thereafter reinstated upon the agreed condition and provision as to the then good health of the insured.

While in the House Case prominence was given to the fact that there was a medical examination by the company, that the policy was issued upon that examination, and so it was reasoned that a similar provision in the policy itself as to good health was inserted to protect the insurance company from any change in the health condition of the insured between the examination and the delivery of the policy. Some of the reasoning of the court’s opinion in the House Case is addressed to the application and to the representation therein contained as to the applicant’s health.

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Bluebook (online)
1937 OK 10, 64 P.2d 304, 179 Okla. 39, 1937 Okla. LEXIS 673, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/home-state-life-ins-co-v-jennings-okla-1937.