Inter-Ocean Insurance v. Harkrader

67 S.E.2d 894, 193 Va. 96, 1951 Va. LEXIS 243
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedDecember 3, 1951
DocketRecord 3833
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 67 S.E.2d 894 (Inter-Ocean Insurance v. Harkrader) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Inter-Ocean Insurance v. Harkrader, 67 S.E.2d 894, 193 Va. 96, 1951 Va. LEXIS 243 (Va. 1951).

Opinion

Spratley, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an action instituted by notice of motion for judgment by Hal H. Harkrader against the Inter-Ocean Insurance Company to recover on an insurance policy issued by that company to the plaintiff.

The contract of insurance is what is commonly called a preferred accident and health policy, insuring the holder from loss resulting from accidental bodily injuries and loss of time resulting from sickness. No medical examination was required as a condition of the issuance of the policy; but it was based on a written application made and signed by the insured, Harkrader, the applicant, on March 15,1949, and made a part of the policy.

The application contains among other provisions the following questions and answers:

Question No. 11 :
“Has any application for life, accident or sickness insurance been declined, postponed, or withdrawn or policy cancelled or renewal refused? (State particulars).”
To the question the applicant answered: “No.”
Question No. 15:
“Have you now or have you ever had Tuberculosis, Paralysis, Rheumatism, Neuritis, Appendicitis, Hemorrhoids, Hernia, Varicose Veins, Epilepsy Fits, Syphilis, Heart Disease, Kidney or Bladder Trouble, Peritonitis, Asthma, Hay Fever, Tonsilitis, Goiter, Cancer, or any mental disorder, impairment of sight or hearing, or any other bodily defect or infirmity? (If so, state particulars).”
To the question appellee answered:
“Had some bad teeth which made heart irregular (skip beats) a short ‘time after extraction no more trouble this happened several mos. ago.”
Asked further in question No. 20, if he agreed that the issuance of the policy should be based upon his representation of facts, the plaintiff replied, “ Yes. ”

The policy was issued on May 13, 1949. On May 18, 1949, plaintiff was injured in getting into an automobile. Thereafter, he was physically incapacitated for a considerable time with the results hereafter recited. He filed claim against the insurance *98 company for indemnity in the sum of $4,102, covering loss from his alleged injuries and hospital service in connection therewith.

Upon receipt of plaintiff’s claim, the company promptly denied liability on the policy beyond the sum of $90, the amount of the premium paid thereon, and tendered that sum to the plaintiff. The tender was refused and the present action was begun.

The company defended on the ground that the policy was void, in that it had been procured upon the basis of statements made by the plaintiff in his application which were untrue and material to the risk assumed. The court overruled its motion to strike plaintiff’s evidence.

The trial resulted in a verdict and judgment in favor of the plaintiff for the sum claimed. To review that judgment, this writ was awarded the company, which makes before us the same contentions advanced and determined adversely to it in the court below. It further assigns error to the granting and refusing of certain instructions.

The record shows that the plaintiff, in getting into an automobile, struck his right knee on the door handle of the car. The blow was painful but the pain lasted only a few moments. No consideration was given to the incident by the plaintiff until May 21, 1949, three days later, when the injured knee began to swell. Dr. Guy Eichardson was called to the home of the plaintiff, and removed 52 ec of bloody fluid from the knee joint. Plaintiff said that the condition of his knee from then on was all right but that around the big toe “it stayed cold at one little area.” Ten days later, Dr. C. J. Harkrader, a nephew of the plaintiff, examined the plaintiff, and gave the following account of his examination:

“At the time I saw him first, on May 27, 1949, he had very obvious impairment of his circulation in both legs, much worse in the right. The right leg and foot were quite discolored and when you raise the foot until it blanched, why then you could lower it and it took a long time for the color to return, meaning that the blood was slow getting in there, and then'when the color would return, it got quite dark. There was much lesser change on the left side.
“Q. Did you reach a conclusion as to what his trouble was?
“A. My conclusion was that he had peripheral arterial disease there.
*99 “My conclusion was that he had Buerger’s disease, an acute exacerbation on the process of the right side following his injury.
“ Q. I will ask you again just in what way does that resemble or in what way is it kin to arteriosclerosis?
“A. Buerger’s disease is very similar to arteriosclerosis. There is an inflammatory process involved in Buerger’s disease, which there is not in arteriosclerosis, and Buerger’s disease occurs in a much younger age group. The end result of both is pretty much the same. That is, it is easy to see, if you look at it like a hot water pipe, where you have hard water, your hot water pipe will get a coating on the inside of it, which will gradually narrow the diameter of the opening in that pipe, carrying capacity of the pipe. And the same thing occurs, a similar thing occurs in the arteries from either arteriosclerosis or Buerger’s disease.”

On June 6, 1949, Dr. W. Gf. Crutchfield, Professor of Neurological Surgery, examined the plaintiff at the University of Virginia Hospital. Harkrader then told him “* * * that for about a year he had noticed that after walking two or three blocks, his right leg, mainly the calf, would be quite tired and would ache. This pain had gotten worse in recent months. ’ ’

Dr. Crutchfield diagnosed his condition as peripheral vascular disease of both legs, though more serious in the right, and said that he was suffering from that disease on May 13, 1949, at the time he applied for the policy.

On July 23, 1949, plaintiff was admitted to a hospital at Bristol, Virginia, and his right leg was amputated on July 25, 1949. A medical record of this hospital showed that the chief complaint of plaintiff was an “intermittent claudication for about a year.” “Claudication’,’ was defined as being caused by lack of circulation which causes pain in the legs after walking a certain length of time.

It was shown that plaintiff was operated on for appendicitis in the year 1933.

In 1933, the plaintiff took out a non-eancellable accident and health policy -with the Massachusetts Protective Association which lapsed in 1944 for failure to pay the premiums. On November 13,1936, while that policy was in force, he applied again to that Association for an additional accident and health policy. His application disclosed that he had been theretofore “declined additional insurance in 1934.” The application was rejected be *100 cause of the

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Bluebook (online)
67 S.E.2d 894, 193 Va. 96, 1951 Va. LEXIS 243, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/inter-ocean-insurance-v-harkrader-va-1951.