Kilpatrick v. Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen Insurance Department

42 S.E.2d 891, 210 S.C. 379, 1947 S.C. LEXIS 41
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedMay 26, 1947
Docket15950
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 42 S.E.2d 891 (Kilpatrick v. Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen Insurance Department) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kilpatrick v. Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen Insurance Department, 42 S.E.2d 891, 210 S.C. 379, 1947 S.C. LEXIS 41 (S.C. 1947).

Opinion

Bakér, CJ.:

This action was brought by respondent, the wife of insured, who has since remarried, as the beneficiary of a .policy of life insurance issued by appellant, a fraternal benefit association, upon the life of William Eugene Dennis, who died of pulmonary tuberculosis at the Florence-Dar-lington Sanatorium on May 25, 1944. Application for in *382 surance was made on October 1, 1943, and was approved soon thereafter. The certificate of insurance was delivered through the mails, the effective date being October 1, 1943. The amount of insurance was $1,000.00, and it was issued on the basis of the information contained in the application and without medical examination.

There was only one application for insurance in this case, applying for two classes of insurance, vis., life and endowment insurance, and accident and health insurance, with benefits for loss of limb, etc. Two “certificates” of insurance, bearing the same date, covering the two types of insurance mentioned, were issued by appellant and forwarded to the insured under the same cover at the same time. Attached to the accident and health certificate was a copy of the sole application for all insurance. Nothing was attached to the life policy involved in this action, but the insured at all times had a copy of his application for the combination insurance, and it is in evidence in this case as a part of the health and accident certificate, which was introduced to show that such copy of the application was at all times in the insured’s possession. The significance of the foregoing will be apparent later herein.

Under the health and accident certificate, the insured, within approximately sixty days from its receipt by him (although effective as of October 1, 1943), gave the appellant notice of his illness, and upon receiving the appellant’s form for filing a claim, filled same out, it being dated January 4, 1944, and received by appellant on January 18, 1944, showing that he had been confined in Florence-Dar-lington Sanatorium since December 19, 1943, suffering from tuberculosis. The appellant immediately commenced an investigation in reference thereto, and learned from Dr. E. C. Hood, the physician in charge, in a letter from him dated February 12, 1944, received by appellant on February 15, 1944, that the insured’s case had been diagnosed as a far advanced bilateral pulmonary tuberculosis; and further, that *383 within “the past year,” a brother of the insured had died in this same sanatorium from tuberculosis, which fact was known by the insured as he had visited his brother on several occasions at the sanatorium, and had been advised to have his chest A-rayed. Upon further investigation, the appellant undertook to cancel the life certificate (the basis of this action) as of March 3, 1944, and following the insured’s death in May, 1944, refused payment of the benefit under said certificate. We will go more into detail as to the facts in discussing the issues involved.

Action on the life certificate was commenced within one year of date of issuance of the policy. The case was tried before the Judge of the Civil Court of Florence, and a jury, and resulted in a verdict in favor of the respondent for the face amount of the policy. Motions for non-suit, for direction of verdict, and for judgment non obstante veredicto, and failing in the latter, for a new trial, were seasonably made by the appellant.

In the view we take of this , case it is probably unnecessary, although appropriate to first consider respondent’s additional ground for affirmance of the judgment, that is whether the appellant, by reason of the provision of Section 7987-1, Code of 1942, is precluded from rescinding the contract of insurance on account of fraudulent statements contained in the application for the insurance. That section requires insurance companies and associations to deliver with each policy of insurance over $500.00 in amount, a copy of the application made by the insured, in default of which no defense shall be allowed on account of anything contained in or omitted from such application. Respondent contends that, since a copy of the application was not physically attached to the certificate of life insurance, appellant is precluded from taking advantage of false statements in the application. The presiding Judge held that the purpose of the statute was to give the insured the opportunity of knowing what was contained in the ap *384 plication, which purpose was subserved by the furnishing of the insured with a copy w'hen the two certificates were contemporaneously delivered, and that it would be too strained a construction of the statute to hold in this case, that such defense was foreclosed by reason of the fact that a copy of the application for the combination insurance was not physically attached to the certificate representing the life insurance contract or certificate. To hold otherwise would be to sacrifice substance for form, and we adopt the trial Judge’s constuction of the statute as applied to the facts of this case.

We now come to one of the important questions raised by the appeal: Was the policy voidable by reason of false statements in the application for the insurance, if such false statements were material to the risk?

Insured’s written application, upon which the certificate was issued, and which was a part of the contract, provided that the statements therein were “the basis of the contract between said Brotherhood * * * and myself.” He further agreed that he had read the questions and answers, that they were full, complete and true, and that the “answers * * * shall each and all be treated as material to the risk and form a part of the certificate” of insurance issued pursuant thereto. In response to question No. 21 of the application, the insured represented that none of his relatives had ever suffered from tuberculosis. The testimony is undisputed that this question was asked, and answered in the negative. The fact was that insured’s brother had died of tuberculosis a little more than six months prior thereto at the same institution where the insured later died, and the insured had visited his brother there frequently and it had been strongly recommended to him by the doctor in charge of that institution that he himself be examined and ^r-rayed. There is likewise no dispute that a true answer to this question was material-to the risk. It is made so by the application. The agents of the appellant who took the application *385 testified that they would not have taken same if they had known there was tuberculosis in the insured’s family. The medical director of the appellant testified that if he had known that the insured had a brother who had died of tuberculosis, the application would not have been approved without further information, and probably a medical examination.

If there was no waiver of this condition, it follows that the contract was rendered voidable by the false representation of the insured in this respect. It should be kept in mind that we are here dealing with a representation and not a warranty. As to the difference, see Kizer v. Woodmen of the World, 177 S. C. 70, 78, 180 S. E. 804.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Vereen v. Hardee
328 S.E.2d 666 (Court of Appeals of South Carolina, 1985)
Windham v. CITY OF FLORENCE
70 S.E.2d 553 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1952)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
42 S.E.2d 891, 210 S.C. 379, 1947 S.C. LEXIS 41, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kilpatrick-v-brotherhood-of-railroad-trainmen-insurance-department-sc-1947.