McEwen v. New York Life Insurance

201 P. 577, 187 Cal. 144, 1921 Cal. LEXIS 340
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 27, 1921
DocketL. A. No. 6533.
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 201 P. 577 (McEwen v. New York Life Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McEwen v. New York Life Insurance, 201 P. 577, 187 Cal. 144, 1921 Cal. LEXIS 340 (Cal. 1921).

Opinion

LENNON, J.

This action was instituted for the recovery of the amount of a life insurance policy issued by the defendant, New York Life Insurance Company, in July, 1910, to plaintiff's son, Charles B. McEwen, who died in November, 1910. Defendant resists payment of the policy upon the ground that the decedent procured the issuance of the policy by means of fraud, concealment, and misrepresentations in answering written questions propounded to him by defendant’s medical examiner on June 29, 1910, and that defendant accepted the application and issued the policy in reliance upon the truth of these answers. The present litigation has been pending for over nine years and this is the third appeal which has been taken. The first trial resulted in a verdict in favor of plaintiff, but judgment thereon was reversed by the district court of appeal upon the ground that the trial judge had submitted to the jury the issue of the materiality of the questions claimed to have been falsely answered (McEwen v. New York Life Ins. Co., 23 Cal. App. 694, [139 Pac. 242]); likewise a judgment entered upon a *146 verdict rendered in plaintiff’s favor upon the second trial was reversed by the district court of appeal. (McEwen v. New York Life Ins. Co., 42 Cal. App. 133, [183 Pac. 373].) On the third trial the judge directed a verdict for the defendant, and plaintiff appeals, claiming that a directed verdict was unwarranted by the facts of the case.

The only answer of decedent in the medical examination which is of importance for the purposes - of this appeal is the following: “What illnesses, diseases, or, accidents have you had since childhood? (The Examiner should satisfy himself that the applicant gives Pull and Careful Answers to this question.) Name of Disease, Typhoid pneumonia. Number of Attacks, One. Date, 1891. Duration. Severity, Severe. Results, Complete recovery.” The above-quoted question was asked for the purpose of ascertaining information concerning the condition of decedent’s health in certain particulars deemed deserving of especial consideration' in connection with the issuance of a life insurance policy. The question is neither ambiguous nor misleading. [1] It calls for facts in regard to accidents suffered since childhood, as well as illnesses and diseases, and an answer which omits all mention of accidents is, in effect, an answer that no accidents have been sustained. (Malicki v. Chicago Guar. Fund Life Soc., 119 Mich. 151, [77 N. W. 690].) At the close of the written questions and answers the insured certified “that I have carefully read each and all of the above answers, that they are each written as made by me that each of them is full, complete and true.” It ivas proven by the defendant company, and is conceded by plaintiff, that in July, 1909, just a year prior to the application for the policy, the decedent Charles B. McEwen was injured by being struck or kicked in the chest by the foot of a mule, as a result of which his chest was injured, his back strained and one rib broken; owing to temporary total disability caused by the injury he received from an accident insurance company the sum of $25 per week for a period of- sixteen weeks, amounting in all to four hundred dollars. The injury received for the time being rendered him unfit for "any business whatsoever and seriously impaired his health. Notwithstanding the serious consequences ensuing from the accident sustained by decedent in July, 1909, which disabled him for a period of nearly four months, he failed to set *147 forth the accident in his answers to the questions asked by the defendant company in an examination held on June 29, 1910. Inasmuch as decedent made no mention of accidents in answer to a question calling for disclosures of accidents, and since, on the third trial, it was conceded that decedent had sustained the above-described accident less than a year before answering the said question, the conclusion is inescapable that the question was falsely answered.

Upon the second appeal of this case the district court of appeal held that it was error for the trial judge to submit to the jury the question whether or not the accident tended to effect the longevity of the decedent; that the only question to be passed upon by the jury was the truth or falsity of decedent’s answers, and that a determination of this point would settle the rights of the parties. [2] This statement of the law by the district court of appeal became the law of the case and was binding upon the trial court upon the third trial. “The doctrine [of the law of the case] means simply this: That the court having once decided the law, and the cause having gone back to the lower court for further proceedings in accordance with the law as thus established, and the parties and the lower court having acted in reliance upon that law, this court will not, upon a second appeal, again enter into a consideration of the question, but, if the facts and circumstances are substantially the same, will treat it as settled law, regardless of its accuracy.” (Brett v. S. H. Frank & Co., 162 Cal. 735, 739, [124 Pac. 437, 439].) [3] Since the evidence conclusively shows the answer to the question concerning “illnesses, diseases, and accidents” was untrue and, according to the law laid down for the guidance of the trial court, the truth or falsity of the answers was the determining factor and the only question to be submitted to the jury, it was proper for the judge to direct a verdict for defendant upon the theory that a material question had been falsely answered by decedent. (Wilson v. Alcatraz Asphalt Co., 142 Cal. 182, [75 Pac. 787]; Estate of Baldwin, 162 Cal. 471, [123 Pac. 267].)

It is claimed that, on the third and last trial, the court erroneously sustained objections to certain evidence offered by plaintiff. This evidence, plaintiff contends, tended to show that decedent informed defendant’s medical examiner of the said accident, and that the examiner thought the aeci *148 dent unimportant and for that reason did not include it in the written answer. We may assume, without deciding, that, had that been shown to be the fact, the company, and not decedent, would have been responsible for the failure to mention the accident in the written answers to the medical examination and, therefore, that it would have been error to exclude competent evidence on this point. [4] We are of the opinion that no competent evidence in support of this contention was proffered by the plaintiff. The only evidence sought to be introduced on this point was the testimony of the physician who examined decedent on June 29, 1910. The physician testified that he had no independent recollection whatever of his examination of the decedent. It appears that the witness was seriously ill in September, 1919, and that the trial at which he testified took place in November, 1919. [5] Plaintiff’s attorney sought to have the witness refresh his memory from, or testify from, a written memorandum. Defendant’s counsel objected to the witness testifying from this memorandum, and the court sustained the objection.

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Bluebook (online)
201 P. 577, 187 Cal. 144, 1921 Cal. LEXIS 340, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcewen-v-new-york-life-insurance-cal-1921.