Linz v. Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance

8 Mo. App. 363, 1880 Mo. App. LEXIS 31
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 17, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 8 Mo. App. 363 (Linz v. Massachusetts Mutual 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
Linz v. Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance, 8 Mo. App. 363, 1880 Mo. App. LEXIS 31 (Mo. Ct. App. 1880).

Opinion

Hayden, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an action on a policy by which the defendant insures “ the life of George and Barbara Linz in the amount of $2,000,” payable to the survivor of them. George Linz died, and the plaintiff, the widow, brings suit. The defences are, that the deceased had become so intemperate as to seriously impair his health and induce delirium tremens, whereby his policy by its terms became void ; and .that the assured in their application represented the age of the deceased to be thirty-four years, when in fact it was forty years. There was judgment below for the defendant.

There can be no serious doubt as to the construction of the clause, “ in case the said person whose life is hereby insured shall * * * become so far intemperate as to impair his health seriously and permanently, or induce delirium tremens, .* * * this policy shall thereupon terminate, and be void and of no effect.” The policy is payable to the survivor of the two, ninety days after due notice and proof of the death of either of them. There is no uncertainty here, nor need intemperance on the part of both persons be shown to establish a breach. If Barbara, Linz had [367]*367died first, the habits of her husband would not have been in question. By the terms of the policy, in the event that one dies before the other, — and this the policy anticipates and provides for, though they might die together, — the one dying, and not the other, becomes the subject of insurance. That the subject was contingent does not prove two persons were insured.

It is objected by the plaintiff that physicians were allowed to testify upon the ti'ial as to information which they obtained from George Linz while he was their patient and they were attending him in a professional capacity. The rule which the court below adopted appeal’s from the directions which the court gave to Dr. Spiegelhalter, when objection was made by the plaintiff to the question whether, from the witness’s observations of the symptoms he saw in his patient, the witness could state from what disease the patient died. The court said: “You may state without regard to anything that he (the patient) may have said to you, without regard to any information which you may have derived from him. If the information you are about to give is in any manner founded upon information which you derived from a statement of the patient to you, you will not answer the question.” Comparing this ruling with the statute, we find the words are (sect. 8) : “ The following persons shall be incompetent to testify : * * * fifth, a physician or surgeon concerning any information which he may have acquired from any patient while attending him in a professional character, and which information was necessary to enable him to prescribe for such patient as a physician, or do any act for him as a surgeon.”

Not so much because it is in derogation of the common law as because it is in exclusion of the best evidence on the ground of privilege, this exaction should be carefully limited to what the statute requires. In proportion as the sources of the best evidence are closed to courts of justice,, will be the inability of those courts to render judgments that [368]*368are morally satisfactory even to themselves. The extension of the domain of privilege — whether placed upon the method of communication, as in case of the fancied inviolability of telegrams, or upon more plausible grounds of analogy to common-law exceptions — should be carefully watched by the courts. Yet when the exemption rests upon something tangible, as in the case of a statutory provision, the courts are bound to consider the intent of the Legislature and to apply well-settled rules of construction. True, in the clause just quoted we are not authorized to insert the word “ oral ” before the word “ information,” so as to make the words read, “ concerning any oral information,” etc. Information may be communicated otherwise than by the voice ; and the patient who, being urged by his necessities, exposes parts of his person where a secret disease lurks, is certainly entitled to the protection of the statute, unless for the purpose and intent of the Legislature we are to substitute the immaterial incident of vocal communication. It is the acquisition of information through the medium of professional attendance that is the essential thing. When the patient submits his person to the physician, no word may be necessary; and if necessary, this makes no difference, since in both cases the information is acquired from the patient. It is only when the information is such as is apparent on that casual inspection which any one might make, without disclosure of any kind on the part of the patient, that it can fairly be said that there was no information acquired from the patient under the conditions expressed in the statute. All the words of the statute must receive their due force; and that construction is worthless which disregards the peculiar significance of the word “ information,” and refuses to give any meaning to the phrase — peculiar to our statute and inserted, no doubt, ex industria — “ from the patient.” There must-be information ; it must be from the patient, — which indicates disclosure, or at least •submission, on the patieut’s part,— and the information [369]*369must be acquired from the patient while attending him in a professional character. It is evident that a physician will often have knowledge of his patient that is not information thus acquired ; and if so, it does not promote the exclusion, that his outside knowledge is “ information necessary to enable him to provide for such patient as a physician.” All the conditions of exclusion must exist, and, one failing, the presence of the others amounts to nothing. It is a direct violation of the statute to say that a physician, because he has attended the patient, shall not testify at all. It is the relation of physician and patient that is the reason and the basis of the whole exclusion ; and the bridge ought not to be broader than the flood. When this relation is not involved, — and the burden is on the objector to show that it is, — the first condition is not met. What occurs outside that relation, or before the patient submits himself to the physician or the latter addresses himself to his duty, is not excluded, else the basis of exclusion is altered and the statute extended. Thus, objective signs which are obvious on such an observation as implies no disclosure, — symptoms which are apparent before the patient submits himself to any examination,— the statute gives no authority for excluding. That a patient had an inflamed face, a bloodshot eye ; that fumes of alcohol proceeded from his person ; that he talked deliriously, could be excluded only on the basis that the statute forbids a physician to be a witness. These objective signs, and others which imply no knowledge obtained as the result of submission or exposure by the patient*, and which would be apparent before the initial act of service on the physician’s part, the latter should testify to under our statute. It is not an objection to this view that the trained eye of a physician might thus detect sure signs of the existence of a given disease. Nor is it an objection that the witness would be required to acutely discriminate as to the sources of his knowledge. The statute is not to be wrongly interpreted because there is a difficulty in applying it rightly.

[370]*370The industry of the counsel in this case, and that of Gartside v. Connecticut Mutual Life Insurance

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Bluebook (online)
8 Mo. App. 363, 1880 Mo. App. LEXIS 31, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/linz-v-massachusetts-mutual-life-insurance-moctapp-1880.