Manuel v. American Income Life Insurance Company

212 So. 2d 169
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 20, 1968
Docket2368
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 212 So. 2d 169 (Manuel v. American Income Life Insurance Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Manuel v. American Income Life Insurance Company, 212 So. 2d 169 (La. Ct. App. 1968).

Opinion

212 So.2d 169 (1968)

Saluce MANUEL, Plaintiff-Appellee,
v.
AMERICAN INCOME LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY, Defendant-Appellant.

No. 2368.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Third Circuit.

June 18, 1968.
Dissenting Opinion June 20, 1968.
Rehearing Denied July 29, 1968.

*170 Dubuisson & Dubuisson, by James G. Dubuisson, Opelousas, for defendant-appellant.

Young & Burson, by I. J. Burson, Jr., Eunice, for plaintiff-appellee.

Before FRUGE, HOOD, and LEAR, JJ.

FRUGE, Judge.

This is a suit to enforce a policy of disability insurance. In September, 1965, plaintiff, Saluce Manuel, purchased from defendant, American Income Life Insurance Company, a disability policy to provide plaintiff with cash benefits in the event that he should become disabled from sickness or accident. Based upon the representations of the agent for defendant insurance company, plaintiff purchased the policy, and paid quarterly premiums of $54.00.

In April, 1967, Mr. Manuel was hospitalized for nineteen days as a result of a "severe myocardial infarction". Since that time, Mr. Manuel has been unable to perform any type of work or conduct any sort of business.

Defendant resisted payments under the disability policy on the grounds that plaintiff had misrepresented his health condition in his application for insurance. The insurer maintains that Mr. Manuel fraudulently represented that he had received no medical treatment ten years prior to the date of his application for this disability policy, when, in fact, several years previously he had undergone shock treatments.

The case went to trial. The trial court found that Mr. Manuel, in the presence of his wife, had told the defendant's agent of his previous shock treatments, but apparently that agent failed to mention such in the application he filled out. The court thus concluded that if there was any error made on the application forms, such error was caused by defendant's agent, and defendant was bound by its agent's acts. The district court then awarded plaintiff full payment under the disability policy, from which award defendant has taken this appeal.

In passing, the defendant-appellant requests this court to reverse the district court's finding that plaintiff had disclosed to defendant's agent that he had undergone shock treatments less than ten years before the day of the application for insurance, and to declare the policy null and void.

We find no manifest error in the trial court's conclusion. This factual determination becomes a question of credibility of witnesses, and the trial court accepted the testimony of plaintiff and his wife over that of defendant's agent. See Roy v. Trans-World Life Insurance Co., 199 So.2d 416 (La.App.3d Cir., 1967); Fruge v. Woodmen of World Life Insurance Society, 170 So.2d 539 (La.App.3d Cir., 1965). Defendant-appellant is bound by the knowledge and actions of its agent, although the blanks on the application form were filled incorrectly.

The paramount issue for our determination is the amount of recovery to which the plaintiff is entitled under the policy. Defendant-appellant concedes that plaintiff is totally and permanently disabled from performing any kind of work as to which he was previously accustomed.

The insurance policy under which plaintiff is seeking recovery is a "Personal Compensation Disability Policy".

There are two provisions in the insurance policy which provide for sickness benefits. One is Part 10, titled "CONFINING TOTAL DISABILITY BENEFITS FOR LIFE", which states:

"If `such sickness' causes continuous total disability and total loss of time, and requires continuous confinement within doors and regular and personal attendance *171 by a licensed physician, * * * the Company will pay at the rate of the Monthly Benefit * * * from the first medical treatment so long as the Insured lives and is so disabled and confined, suffers such loss of time and requires such personal attendance.
"The phrase `continuous confinement within doors', as used in this policy, shall mean that such sickness shall necessitate whole, total and continuous confinement by the Insured within doors; however, if the Insured shall go to the office of a licensed physician, * * * due to such sickness, confining sickness shall be considered to have continued without interruption."

The other sickness benefit is provided in Part 11, which is entitled "NON-CONFINING TOTAL DISABILITY BENEFITS FOR FOUR MONTHS", and which provides:

"If `such sickness' does not require continuous confinement within doors but does cause continuous total disability and total loss of time and requires regular and personal attendance by a licensed physician, * * * the Company will pay at the rate of the Monthly Benefit * * * from the first medical treatment for the period the Insured is so disabled, suffers such loss of time and requires such personal attendance, but not exceeding four months for any one sickness".

The trial court awarded plaintiff full monthly benefits of $200.00 per month for life under Part 10 relating to "Confining Total Disability". Defendant-appellant contends that plaintiff's total disability was not a confining one within the definition of Part 10 and that, therefore, plaintiff is only entitled to monthly benefits of $200.00 per month for four months, as stipulated in Part 11.

The district court found:

"At the time the policy was sold, Stanley Levy emphasized to Mr. and Mrs. Manuel that the policy would insure Mr. Manuel an income of $200.00 per month whenever sickness or accident prevented him from working. The Manuels were told that the only condition necessary to collect $200.00 per month for life under the policy was disability from whatever cause. Being functionally illiterate, Mr. Manuel was unable to read the policy when he received it, but relied solely on the information he had been given by Levy as to its contents."[1]

Defendant-appellant relies upon the case of Clesi v. National Life and Accident Insurance Co., 195 La. 736, 197 So. 413 (1940), while plaintiff-appellee, the cases of Newton v. National Life Insurance Co., 161 La. 357, 108 So. 769 (1926); Lewis v. Liberty Industrial Life Insurance Co., 185 La. 589, 170 So. 4, 107 A.L.R. 286 (1936); Powell v. Liberty Industrial Life Insurance Co., 197 La. 894, 2 So.2d 638 (1941); Bankson v. Mutual Benefit Health & Accident Association, 208 La. 1008, 24 So.2d 59 (1945).

In Newton v. National Life Insurance Company, supra, the Supreme Court was called upon to interpret the following language:

"* * * insured is by reason of illness * * * necessarily confined to bed * * *."

The Supreme Court remarked:

"The District Judge found as a fact that plaintiff's illness incapacitated him from work of any kind, and while the plaintiff frequently visited the office of his attending physician for treatment, he construed the word `confined' as used in the policy to mean inability to do work rather than physical inability to leave the house. We think this interpretation was correct, especially *172 as plaintiff was totally incapacitated * * *." (108 So. 770)

In Lewis v. Liberty Industrial Life Insurance Co., supra, plaintiff had become insane and sought recovery under an accident and sickness insurance policy, where recovery was contingent upon insured's being "necessarily confined to bed".

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

Related

Duncan v. JC Penney Life Ins. Co.
388 So. 2d 470 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1980)
Tiner v. Aetna Life Insurance Company
291 So. 2d 774 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1974)
Caswell v. Reserve National Insurance Company
272 So. 2d 37 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1973)
Carlisle v. Washington National Insurance Co.
250 So. 2d 418 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1971)
Manuel v. American Income Life Insurance
215 So. 2d 122 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1968)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
212 So. 2d 169, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/manuel-v-american-income-life-insurance-company-lactapp-1968.