Maryland Casualty Co. v. Gehrmann

54 A. 678, 96 Md. 634, 1903 Md. LEXIS 106
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMarch 31, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 54 A. 678 (Maryland Casualty Co. v. Gehrmann) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Maryland Casualty Co. v. Gehrmann, 54 A. 678, 96 Md. 634, 1903 Md. LEXIS 106 (Md. 1903).

Opinion

*644 Pearce, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

On April 6th, 1901, Charles Gehrmann of A., brought suit against the Maryland Casualty Company of Baltimore City, a corporation, upon a policy issued by it to him, and insuring him in the amount of a principal sum of five thousand dollars in event of death resulting from external, violent, and accidental means, ocurring during the continuance of the policy, and in the amount of twenty-five dollars weekly indemnity, for a period not exceeding one hundred and four consecutive weeks, against bodily injuries sustained in like manner, and continuously and wholly disabling and preventing him from performing any and every kind of duty pertaining to his occupation as business manager of a lace manufactory.

On March 22nd, 1900, during the continuance of this policy, and while the plaintiff was crossing the street, after leaving an electric car, he fell upon the track and seriously injured his right knee, resulting immediately and continuously in complete disability within the terms of the policy. No question is made to the happening of the accident, or the extent of the injury, but defense is made on other grounds which will be stated later.

The plaintiff claimed the stipulated weekly indemnity from March 22nd, 1900, to March 22nd, 1902, being 104 weeks, but the Court restricted recovery to April 6th, 1901, the date of bringing the suit. The only exception taken, was to the ruling on the prayers, and the verdict and judgment being for the plaintiff, the defendant has appealed.

The policy states upon its face that the insurance was made in consideration of twenty-five dollars, and “of the warranties made in the application for this policy, copy of which is endorsed on the back hereof.” Looking to this copy, and to the original which is embraced in the record, it appears that in answer to a question put therein, the plaintiff stated he had never received indemnity for any accident except from the Standard Company, and in answer to another question, that he was in sound condition mentally and physically, whereas he testified in chief that in 1865 he received a blow on the *645 right knee which for two days gave him some trouble but no longer, and that afterwards his leg was as strong as ever; and he admitted upon cross-examination that he had received about fifteen years before from the United States Company, an indemnity of $205 for an accident. The alleged falsity of the two answers referred to, are claimed to be breaches of warranty avoiding or forfeiting the policy. ' The answer to the first question was admittedly untrue in fact, whether made deliberately or inadvertently, but the falsity of the other answer is a matter of inferences dependent upon the view taken of the testimony relating to it.

Dr. Steel, the plaintiff’s family physician for twenty-two years, says that he saw the leg when attending him for other ailments, and that it was perfectly sound, though slightly curved ; that after curvature a leg is just as sound as before, and the bone absolutely healthy and good. Dr. Blake, who was called in consultation after the accident' of March 22nd, said the plaintiff’s leg was deformed, but not diseased or unsound, though he also said that after curvature a bone is more likely to set up inflammation in case of an accident by a blow or fall; and both these physicians said this leg had never been broken. Dr. Brinton, chief sergeon for the defendant company, saw the leg the day after the accident and said such a leg was more liable to inflammation from any accident than a normal leg, and that plaintiff told him the curvature was caused by a fracture 25 or 30 years before, though this was denied by the plaintiff in rebuttal; Dr. Brinton also said on cross-examination that when he looked at the leg he knew it had never been broken.

Dr. Trimble, the local surgeon of the defendant company, saw the leg on May 19th, and said that he did not consider that plaintiff when insured was in sound physical condition for work which would require him to walk a great deal, or to stand on his legs to work as a policeman, for instance, must do.

. Upon this testimony, plaintiff offered eight prayers, of which only the fifth, sixth and eighth were granted, and defendant offered ten, of which only the third and tenth were granted.

*646 The plaintiff’s 5th prayer was to the effect that if the jury found the representations as to physical soundness, and as to the receipt of indemnity against accident, were made in good faith, then the burden was on the defendant to show that these representations were false and material to the risk of insurance. The plaintiff’s 6th prayer placed upon the defendant the burden of proving physical unsoundness at the time of making application for insurance, ahd the 8th prayer stated the measure of damages, in event of finding for plaintiff, tobe $25 per week from the date of the accident to the date of bringing suit.

Of the defendant’s granted prayers, the 3rd was that plaintiff could not recover unless the injuries complained of, independently of all other causes, continuously and wholly disabled him from prosecuting his occupation, and the tenth was, that as the statement of the plaintiff that he had received no indemnity for accident except from the Standard Company, was admittedly untrue, though warranted to be true, the verdict must be for defendant if the jury found such untrue statement related to a matter material to the risk of the insurance.

Of the defendant’s rejected prayers, the 1st, 2nd, 6th and 7th sought to take the case from the jury ; the 7th, because there was no legally sufficient evidence to warrant recovery; the 1st, because it did not appear that the injury complained of, independently of all other causes, continuously and wholly disabled the plaintiff; the 2nd, because the uncontradicted evidence showed that defendant was not in sound condition physically when the application for insurance was made, and the 6th, because the uncontradicted evidence showed that plaintiff had received indemnity for accident other than that received from the Standard Company.

The defendant’s 4th prayer went upon the theory that the plaintiff warranted the truth of his statement that he was in sound physical condition, and that if this statement was not true in fact he could not recover, although made in absolute good faith.

The defendant’s 5th prayer asserted that if plaintiff had a *647 curvature of the leg which rendered it more susceptible to injury from a blow or fall, he could not recover unless the jury found his leg was an exception to this rule.

The defendant’s 8th and 9th prayers asserted the measure of damages to be $25 per week from March 22nd, 1900, to May nth, 19DO, both these prayers being based upon evidence that on May nth, 1900, plaintiff prematurely left his house and went upon the street, thereby bringing on a hemorrhage of the knee to which his subsequent disability must be attributed.

The main question in the case, and that upon which the correctness of most of the rulings of the lower Court depend, is whether the warranties made in an application for an accident insurance policy, are within the scope and operation of chapter 662 of the Acts of 1894, codified in

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Bluebook (online)
54 A. 678, 96 Md. 634, 1903 Md. LEXIS 106, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maryland-casualty-co-v-gehrmann-md-1903.