Keatley v. Grand Fraternity

198 F. 264, 1912 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1294
CourtDistrict Court, D. Delaware
DecidedJanuary 24, 1912
DocketNo. 5
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 198 F. 264 (Keatley v. Grand Fraternity) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Keatley v. Grand Fraternity, 198 F. 264, 1912 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1294 (D. Del. 1912).

Opinion

BRADFORD, District Judge.

[1] The questions now for determination arise on demurrer to certain pleas and replications in an action of covenant brought by Mary C. Keatley, widow of William J. Keatley, against The Grand Fraternity, a fraternal organization and a corporation of Pennsylvania, on a certificate of beneficial membership under seal issued by the defendant to him, to recover damages for the nonpayment of the sum of $3,000, being the amount alleged to have become payable to the plaintiff as a death benefit under the certificate of membership, and to remain wholly unpaid. It appears from the facts admitted on demurrer that Keatley made written application to the defendant June 24, 1909, for beneficial membership, and that on or about July 1, 1909, the sealed certificate of membership in question was issued to him, whereby it was certified that he was a beneficial member and entitled to all and! every right, option and benefit given and granted in, to and by its constitution and by-laws, under a death certificate in the above-mentioned sum, payable to the plaintiff in manner and as prescribed in and by such constitution-and by-laws, upon satisfactory proof of Keatley’s death during the continuance in full force of such certificate of membership. . The declaration contains three- counts, and the defendant has filed ten pleas, each of which is interposed to all of the counts. The plaintiff has demurred to the third, fifth, seventh and tenth pleas. She has filed replications to the fourth and sixth pleas, in their application to the second count, and to the eighth and ninth pleas in their application to the third count. To these four replications the defendant has demurred. There has been joinder in all the demurrers. The third plea sets forth in substance, among other things, that Keatley in and by his application for membership promised and agreed for himself and his beneficiary or beneficiaries that each and every statement and answer in the application should be deemed a warranty;' that in case any statement or answer should not be absolutely true in every respect, or in case of. any misstatement or misleading statement, or omission or concealment of [267]*267fact by or on his behalf, the benefit certificate issued upon such application should be absolutely void; that the application contained the following question: “When, and for what complaint, did you last consult a physician? Give particulars, with name and address of physician” ; that Keatley made answer to these questions as follows: “Indigestion. 1909. April. Dr. Kelly, 9th & West, Wll. Del.”; that this statement or answer was not then and there absolutely true in every respect, and that Keatley did thereby omit and conceal from the defendant the fact that about one month prior to the date last mentioned he had been afflicted with and was subject to and! infected with a certain other and more serious complaint, to wit, cystitis, for which he had consulted a physician and received treatment, and from which complaint, as the defendant was informed and believed and therefore averred, Keatley had¡ not reasonably had time to recover before making his application, all of which was unknown to the defendant at the time of receiving his application and delivering the certificate of membership; and that by reason of the premises the defendant was deceived and misled and the death benefit certificate thereafter issued to him was rendered void. To the third plea there is a general demurrer. Keatley was asked when he last consulted a physician, and said it was in April, 1909. There is nothing in the plea showing or tending to show that the answer was not absolutely correct. He was asked for what complaint he consulted a physician, and he said it was indigestion. The truthfulness of this reply is wholly unchallenged by the plea. He was asked to give the name and address of such physician, and he replied Dr. Kelly, 9th & West, Wilmington, Delaware. The plea contains nothing to impeach this statement. He truthfully and directly answered all he was required to reply to. There was no misstatement or misleading statement. Nor was there any omission or concealment of fact within the meaning of the conditions of the application. He did not conceal or omit to state any fact which the questions addressed to him called for. .Furthermore, while it is stated that he had previously been afflicted with cystitis, it is not alleged that he fraudulently omitted to state the fact, nor is it even stated that Keatley had not wholly recovered from that ailment before making his application. It is merely alleged that as the defendant is informed and believes, and therefore avers, Keatley “had not reasonably had time to recover.” Keatley in truthfully and directly answering the questions put to him observed good faith and fully performed his duty. To hold otherwise would be practically to decide that although the defendant was at liberty fully to interrogate him touching all matters material to the'risk and had formulated in the application the questions it desired answered, and although he answered in good faith and truthfully all questions addressed to him, yet the death benefit should be forfeited if he failed to mention some matters that in the judgment, not of himself, but of physicians or experts, might have a bearing upon the risk assumed. Such surely is not law. In Penn Mut. Life Ins. Co. v. Mechanics’ Savings Bank & Trust Co., 72 Fed. 413, 435, 19 C. C. A. 286, 308, 38 L. R. A. 33, 70, the circuit court of appeals for the sixth circuit well said;

[268]*268“Tlie subject of life- insurance is always present for physical examination by medical experts of the insurer, who often acquire, by lung and heart tests, and by chemical analysis of bodily excretions, a more intimate knowledge of the bodily condition of the applicant than he has himself. Then, too, the practice has grown of requiring the applicant for both fire and life insurance to answer a great many questions carefully adapted to elicit facts which the insurer deems of importance in estimating the risk. * * * When the applicant has fully and truthfully answered ail these questions, he may rightfully assume that the range of the examination has covered all matters within ordinary human experience deemed material by the insurer, and that he is not required to rack his memory for circumstances of possible materiality, not inquired about, and to volunteer them. He can only be said to fail in his duty to the insurer when he withholds from him some fact which, though not made the subject of inquiry, he nevertheless believes to be material to the risk, and actually is so,, for fear it would induce a rejection of the risk, or, what is the same thing, with fraudulent intent.”

The demurrer to this plea must be sustained.

[2, 3]

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Bluebook (online)
198 F. 264, 1912 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1294, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/keatley-v-grand-fraternity-ded-1912.