Martinez v. First Texas Prudential Ins. Co.

90 S.W.2d 645
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 17, 1936
DocketNo. 1507.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 90 S.W.2d 645 (Martinez v. First Texas Prudential Ins. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Martinez v. First Texas Prudential Ins. Co., 90 S.W.2d 645 (Tex. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

GRISSOM, Justice.

On November 20, 1930, a soliciting agent for the First Texas Prudential Insurance Company (hereinafter referred to as defendant) obtained an application for life insurance in the defendant company from Estefana Martinez, the beneficiary to be her husband, Vicente Martinez (hereinafter called plaintiff. On November 21st she was inspected by its inspector, who acted in lieu of a medical examiner when policies for a small amount were to be written; the inspector marked the application approved as a first-class risk; on December 1, 1930, the policy was issued and promptly delivered to Mrs. Martinez; January 7, 1931, she gave birth to a fully developed normal child who is still alive; January 28, 1931, she died, the primary (if not sole) cause of her death being influenza. Plaintiff brought suit on the policy for the amount thereof, penalty and attorney’s fees. The defense was that at the time of the application for and issuance and delivery of the policy deceased was pregnant; that she falsely represented her condition in this respect in the application.

In reply to this defense, plaintiff alleged that defendant’s agents at such times had observed the deceased and could see that she was pregnant and that they knew of such condition; that deceased did not make any misrepresentation as to her condition; that no inquiry was made as to whether she was pregnant, and she made no statement relative to such condition.

The application contains this question: “If a female, is she now pregnant?” The answer “No” was written into the application. The policy contains a stipulation that it shall be void “(4) if the insured on delivery of policy * * * was pregnant.”

E. A. Schulze testified, among other things, that at the times in question he was defendant’s cashier. “As applications for a risk are turned in to the Company, I pass on them for the Company, I would go out and look at the applicant as to his physical condition. * * * The Company had me charged with that duty and acted on what I said about it. If I put an O. K. on there it went through, and if I put ‘no good risk’ the application was turned down. * * * I pass on hundreds of risks. I remember going out to see a Mrs. Estefana Martinez and inspecting her * * * I went out there to inspect the risk * * * that was the purpose of my trip. * * * She did not sign anything, she couldn’t write. The procedure the Company follows is they look over the application, I am sent there and I put my O. K. thereon and they follow that. My duties are to go out there and see as to the condition of health of the applicant. * $ * I went out there for the express purpose of knowing something about her physical condition.”

T. C. Robertson, a witness for defendant, testified in part as follows: “I am manager of the First Texas Prudential In *646 surance Company in San Antonio, Texas, and have been * * * for 24 years. I know the procedure in taking applications, they are all handled in the same way and this application was handled in the usual way. I have control over the soliciting agents and collecting agents. The local inspector works direct under the secretary of the company. The duty of the soliciting agent is to go out and solicit these applications for insurance of anybody that wants insurance, and asks the questions on these applications- and makes the answers on the application when they are.given to them. The collector then follows up and collects this insurance weekly * * * I instruct the agents to look at the applicants when they take the insurance, but not to report if they see anything wrong, but are supposed to note it on the application. That is a part of their duty. The soliciting agent is the fellow that attends to that. The inspector works directly under the secretary of the Company. I have no charge over him. * * * After the agent has returned the application that is one check that we have got on the party insured and it is his (inspector’s) duty-to go out there and check again and see if this risk is all right * * * and (he) makes his report on the back of the form. * * * It is the inspector’s job to find out before she died whether she was pregnant.”

The evidence was sufficient to authorize a finding (1) that the agent soliciting the insurance and preparing the application saw deceased several times before she consented to take the insurance and answered some questions which he answered on the application. (2) That she was inspected by the defendant’s inspector who acted in this case in lieu of a medical examiner.' (3) That upon delivery of the policy deceased paid the amount then due to defendant’s agent and that thereafter both before and after the birth of her child until her death she was seen on the average of more than once each week by defendant’s collector and paid him for the insurance in weekly installments. (4) That she was 19 years of age. (5) We deem the evidence amply sufficient to have authorized the jury to believe that she was in the customary physical condition and presented the usual appearance of a woman of her age about 6 weeks before childbirth. That such condition existed at the time the application was prepared, at the time she was inspected, and at the time of the delivery of the policy. We deem the evidence sufficient to have justified a belief and finding that defendant’s said agents did know (as plaintiff alleged) her true condition. (6) The evidence would sustain a finding that deceased was not asked whether she was pregnant and made no statement relative thereto.

Under this situation, was the policy void as a matter of law because of her pregnancy, or was it a question of fact whether defendant had waived such provision of the policy?

In the case of Texas State Mutual Fire Ins. Co. v. Law (Tex.Civ.App.) 3 S.W.(2d) 505, 506, the facts were that Law, having obtained two policies of fire insurance on his property from said insurance company through application to its local agent, and having made improvements on the insured premises, again approached such agent and applied for additional insurance. Whereupon the agent advised Law that his company would not carry fur-' ther insurance, and declined to make the application to the Company. Law then procured additional insurance on the same premises from another company. He testified that the agent “told him both before and after [he] procured the additional insurance that it would be ‘all right’ with him and with appellant company.” The policy contained a provision that,' if additional insurance was had on the property, the company would not be liable for loss. The judgment of the trial court was for Law, which judgment was reversed and' rendered by the Court of Civil Appeals, which last judgment was reversed by the Commission of Appeals, and the judgment of the district court affirmed. Law v. Texas State Mut. Fire Ins. Co., 12 S.W.(2d) 539. The commission in its opinion by Judge Nickels, speaking of the information given by Law to the local agent that he was going to and later that he had obtained additional insurance from another company, said: • i

“In that immediate connection he acquired knowledge that Law proposed to get additional insurance, and immediately thereafter got knowledge that the additional insurance had been effected through another agent. He did not protest at any time; on the contrary, he assured Law ‘it would be all right with him and his company.’

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Bluebook (online)
90 S.W.2d 645, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/martinez-v-first-texas-prudential-ins-co-texapp-1936.