Kayser v. Occidental Life Insurance Co. of California

12 N.W.2d 582, 234 Iowa 310, 1944 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 529
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJanuary 11, 1944
DocketNo. 46321.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 12 N.W.2d 582 (Kayser v. Occidental Life Insurance Co. of California) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kayser v. Occidental Life Insurance Co. of California, 12 N.W.2d 582, 234 Iowa 310, 1944 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 529 (iowa 1944).

Opinion

Mantz, J.

Plaintiff commenced this action at law, alleging'that on the 6th day of July 1938, the Occidental Life -Insurance Company of California, a corporation, engaged in business in the state of Iowa, issuing policies of insurance upon the lives of persons, duly issued and caused to be delivered to Walter John Kayser, a policy of insurance upon his life, in which the plaintiff, the wife of said insured, was named as sole beneficiary; that under the terms of said policy the insurance company agreed to pay to the beneficiary $1,000 upon receipt of due proof of death of the insured; that she has duly performed all the conditions of the policy demanded of her. The defendant filed answer, admitting that the policy was issued as set out in the petition; and then stating that the policy described in plaintiff’s petition and upon which action was brought was obtained from the defendant by false and fraudulent representations made by the assured, Walter John Kayser; that said representations were made in the written application for said policy. The defendant then sets out that part of the application containing statements which it claims were false, fraudulent, and untrue; and alleges that the said Walter John Kayser knew and had actual knowledge that said statements and representations were not true; that the defendant company believed the said statements to be true and relied thereon; that it would not have issued said policy had it known that said statements in said application were false and untrue; that the defendant company, immediately upon discovery of the falsity of said representations, tendered to plaintiff all premiums paid by the said Kayser, in the sum of $33.60, and all accrued costs of this action.

Plaintiff filed reply in which she denied each and every statement and allegation in defendant’s answer, except such as she expressly admitted. She admitted that a true and correct copy of the policy was attached to the defendant’s ansiver: She admitted that Walter John Kayser was examined by the defendant’s *313 medical examiner. She denied that a true and correct copy of the application referred to in said answer was attached to said policy or endorsed thereon.

Evidence was offered by the plaintiff and hy the defendant and at the close of all of the evidence the defendant made a motion for a directed verdict in favor of the defendant. This motion was overruled. The cause was submitted to the jury, which later returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiff in the amount of $1,161, and judgment was rendered on this verdict. The defendant later moved to set aside the verdict and to grant a new trial, which motion was overruled and the defendant appealed.

The first ground urged and argued by the appellant is that the trial court erred in overruling appellant’s motion for a directed verdict. The record shows without conflict that Kayser, in an application which he signed on June 28, 1938, stated that he did not 'have nor had he ever had any illness or disease; that he had never consulted any physician other than Dr. Shellatol, of Independence, and that he had never been Operated upon save for a broken right hip in 1923; that he had never been X-rayed; that he never had been a patient in any hospital or sanitarium, and that he was in good health. There is evidence in the record from which the jury could have found that these statements were false; that the assured had not broken his hip when a boy but had been operated on for osteomyelitis, which he contracted through sickness; that lie had been afflicted with this malady for more than fourteen years; that he had been attended by numerous physicians at the University Hospital in Iowa City and by at least two in Independence; that he had been a patient in the University Hospital, appellant claims, on eighteen different occasions, and at the Peoples Hospital on at least four occasions; that he was, far from being in good health, the victim of a dread, incurable disease which he must have known would bring him to an early and untimely end. He was about twenty-eight years old at the time of his death.

This ease has been tried three times in the district court. At the first trial the jury failed to agree; at the second trial *314 the court directed a verdict in favor of the plaintiff which, upon appeal was reversed by this court. Kayser v. Occidental Life Ins. Co., 231 Iowa 620, 1 N. W. 2d 715. A second appeal was taken on a practice question. Kayser v. Occidental Life Ins. Co., 231 Iowa 632, 1 N. W. 2d 720. In the opinion filed on the former appeal this court held that the cause should have been submitted to the jury. We are confronted with a like question here, only in this ease the motion for a directed verdict was made by the defendant. We have gone over the evidence in this ease, and also that available in the former appeal, and it seems to us that we would not be warranted in holding that the lower court was in error in refusing to direct a verdict in favor of the appellant. The applicant was examined by Dr. Artis, who was a representative of the appellant. Dr. Artis gave testimony in all of the cases. In answer to a question in the last case tried, as to whether he had any independent recollection of what was actually said or done at the time of the examination of Kayser in 1938, Dr. Artis answered, “No, sir.” In the last trial Dr. Artis testified as to his reliance upon Kayser’s answers to the questions propounded, while in the former trial this witness stated that he relied upon his own examination. There are other uncertainties, contradictions, and discrepancies in his testimony as given in the different trials. While the lapse of time, or other circumstances, might account for some of these, yet we believe there are in this last trial certain changes, inconsistencies, and uncertainties in his testimony which warrant the submission of that issue to the jury in order' that it might pass upon his credibility and the weight to be given to his evidence.

We think the record in the present case shows facts and ' circumstances quite similar to those appearing in the case of Faber v. New York Life Ins. Co., 221 Iowa 740, 265 N. W. 305. In that case, as in 1his, there was in issue the question of whether or not the examiner for the insurance company had been deceived by the applicant to such an extent that he was led to issue what is termed a “certificate of insurability.” That is one of the real issues in the present case, and, as we view the situation, if is a fact question and therefore proper for the jury to pass upon.

It is sufficient to say that in the present case the testimony *315 of Dr. Artis reveals that lie had no independent recollection of some of the questions and answers given and in some instances he made answers to questions propounded which he thought or felt expressed the meaning of the applicant.

We can see no good reason for setting out the evidence in detail. We think that the testimony of Dr. Artis is such that it generated a jury question and that the court did not err in submitting the case to that body. See Olson v. New York Life Ins. Co., 229 Iowa 1073, 295 N. W. 833; Boulting v. New York Life Ins. Co., 182 Iowa 797, 166 N. W. 278; Boos v. Mutual Life Ins. Co., 205 Iowa 653, 216 N. W. 50, and cases there cited.

In the medical examiner’s report, dated June 28, 1938, the following question was directed to Dr.

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12 N.W.2d 582, 234 Iowa 310, 1944 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 529, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kayser-v-occidental-life-insurance-co-of-california-iowa-1944.