Keller v. Home Life Insurance

69 S.W. 612, 95 Mo. App. 627, 1902 Mo. App. LEXIS 82
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 22, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 69 S.W. 612 (Keller v. Home Life Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Keller v. Home Life Insurance, 69 S.W. 612, 95 Mo. App. 627, 1902 Mo. App. LEXIS 82 (Mo. Ct. App. 1902).

Opinion

BARCLAY, J.

Plaintiff brought this action to collect the amount of an insurance policy for $2,000, issued by defendant on the life of her husband. Defendant is a life insurance company, incorporated in New York, and authorized to do business in Missouri. The date of the policy is October 30, 1899. Plaintiff’s husband died June 15, 1900, having paid one annual premium of $79.72.

The petition on the policy is in ordinary form. Besides demanding the amount of the policy it claims, furthermore, ten per cent damages thereon and a reasonable attorney’s fee on the ground that the refusal by the defendant to pay was vexatious, within the meaning of section 8012, Revised Statutes 1899.

The main features of the answer are a general denial and several special defenses. Defendant alleges that the policy was issued on the faith and in consideration of certain representations concerning the health and habits of the insured, submitted in his application to defendant for the insurance, and that these representations were false and then known to him so to be. [632]*632The statements of the insured are set forth at length in the answer. Their substance is that the insured did not drink wine, spirituous or malt liquor; had never used them to excess; was in perfect health, had never been subject to coughing or to spitting blood, or to chronic cough, asthma, or other symptoms indicating-pulmonary weakness, etc. It is alleged that each of the answers was false and known to be by the insured at the time; that by them the insurance was fraudulently procured, and that his death was caused by tuberculosis of the lungs existing- to his knowledge at the time he obtained the insurance.

The answer is quite long. We give merely an outline of it.

One feature was that it alleged a tender of the premium to plaintiff on discovery of the alleged fraud before the action was begun. The defendant further renewed by its answer the tender (including- lawful interest) and paid the principal and interest into court for plaintiff.

A reply by plaintiff put in issue the new matter.

At the trial before the learned circuit judge and a jury plaintiff introduced in evidence the policy, on the back of which appeared a copy of the application of the insured. Some parts of these documents will be quoted presently.

Plaintiff then gave proof of the death of the insured and of her relationship to him as wife, as well as of circumstances from which a waiver of proof of loss might be inferred. These circumstances consisted of the tender to plaintiff of the premium and an absolute denial of liability on the part of defendant, after demand of payment. Jefferson v. Life Ass’n, 69 Mo. App. (St. L.) 126.

Defendant offered in evidence, without objection, a paper having this caption: “Declarations made to the medical examiner of the Home Life Insurance Company. ’ ’ It contained first a series of questions in [633]*633regard to other insurance, family and health history of the applicant. The answers in regard to the applicant’s health and habits were, in all material particulars, identical with the statements in the application which conformed generally to the recitals thereof in the answer.

Following the answers to the questions of the medical examiner, on the paper just described, appears this language:

“I warrant on behalf of myself and of any person who shall have or claim any interest in any policy issued hereunder each of the above answers to be true, full and complete.
“I hereby declare that the accompanying application to the Home Life Insurance Company for an insurance on my life, dated September 18, 1899, was signed by me.
“I expressly waive, on behalf of myself and of any person who shall have or claim any interest in any policy issued hereunder, all provisions of law forbidding any physician or surgeon from disclosing any information acquired while attending me in 'a professional capacity.
“Witnessed by A. L. Franklin, M. D.,
“Medical Examiner.
“August W. Keller.
“Signature of the Applicant.”

The policy itself opens in this way (omitting caption) :

“Home Life Insurance Company, by this policy of insurance, in consideration of the statements and agreements made in the application for this policy, which are hereby made a part of this contract, and of the payment in advance of seventy-nine dollars and seventy-two cents, and of the payment of the same amount to be made thereafter, at the office of the said company in the city of New York, on or before noon [634]*634of the nineteenth day of September, in every year during the continuance of this contract,” etc., “does promise and agree to pay two thousand dollars to Mary M. Keller, if living, if not, then to her husband, August W. Keller, his executors, administrators, or assigns,” etc.

The application of the insured contains, besides the answer to questions, the following statement:

“I warrant on behalf of myself and of any person who shall have or claim any interest in any policy issued under this application that all the foregoing statements and answers are true, full and complete, whether written by my hand or not, and are offered to the company together with those contained in the declarations to. the- Home Life Insurance Company medical examiner, as a consideration for, and as the basis of, the contract with said company under any policy issued under this application.”

Other statements not necessary to quote appear in the application which purports to, be duly signed by the insured, September 18, 1899.

The defendant in the course of the trial offered the evidence of two physicians who had severally attended the insured in a professional character, in the spring of 1899; but the trial court refused to permit either to testify to his observations of the insured or to his opinion of Mr. Keller’s physical condition or health (with reference to the points of the alleged .misrepresentations). The ground of objection bn which the testimony along that line was excluded appears to be that these medical gentlemen were disqualified as witnesses by the force of section 4659 (R. S. .1899). Defendant duly saved exceptions to the various rulings to that effect. ■

It will not be needful to review particularly the testimony at this time. The defendant, according to the'theory of the learned trial judge in the instructions, gave testimony tending to prove some of its charges of [635]*635misrepresentation within the purview of section 7890 (R. S. 1899).

When rebuttal testimony was in order, plaintiff introduced as a witness the insurance solicitor who secured Mr. Keller for defendant as a risk. It appeared that, at the time of the trial, witness was general manager of another company. He deposed that as agent for defendant he solicited Mr. Keller to take the policy, that he went to his residence and asked him to insure. On his further testimony there occurred certain rulings which can be shown best by an excerpt from the record before us:

“Q. .Did you ask him questions about his health and that of his family? A. Such questions as I am prompted to ask in soliciting insurance.
“ Q.

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Bluebook (online)
69 S.W. 612, 95 Mo. App. 627, 1902 Mo. App. LEXIS 82, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/keller-v-home-life-insurance-moctapp-1902.