McLester v. Metropolitan Life Ins. Co.

179 S.E. 490, 175 S.C. 425, 1935 S.C. LEXIS 112
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedMarch 26, 1935
Docket14027
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 179 S.E. 490 (McLester v. Metropolitan Life Ins. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McLester v. Metropolitan Life Ins. Co., 179 S.E. 490, 175 S.C. 425, 1935 S.C. LEXIS 112 (S.C. 1935).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Bonham.

The respondent is the beneficiary of a policy of insurance on the life of Louisa W. Randolph, issued by the appellant insurance company on the 18th day of October, 1932; the insured died the 9th day of April, 1933. Proofs of death were duly made. The company denied liability, and suit followed. The allegations of the complaint are those which are usual in such cases. For answer, the defendant admitted the allegations of the complaint, but denied its conclusions of law.

For affirmative defense it was alleged that the insured by false answers and fraudulent concealments as to the state of her health and her physical condition, in the application *427 for insurance, had perpetrated a fraud upon the company which operated to render the policy issued to her null and void by its terms and conditions.

The action was brought in the court of Magistrate Reynolds, of the Third Magisterial District of Sumter County. By the Act of the General Assembly, approved the 18th day of March, 1933 (38 St. at Targe, p. 167), this Court was given jurisdiction in civil cases to the extent of SI,000.00. The Magistrate presiding in this case is a lawyer of experience and ability. The case was heard by him, with a jury, the 12th day of January, 1934. At the close of the testimony the defendant made a motion for directed verdict, which was then refused. The Magistrate states thereabouts: “I refused the motion for directed verdict at this time for the reason that the trial of the case had consumed the entire day, and I thought it would be best to submit the case to the jury, and at my leisure study the numerous authorities cited for and against the directed verdict. If I came to the conclusion that a directed verdict should have been granted, I could set aside the verdict and grant the motion for a directed verdict and no harm would be done. If I granted the motion for a directed verdict and the Appellate Court reversed my decision, the county would not be put to the expense of another trial, because the jury had passed on the facts and rendered their verdict. So, for this reason I submitted the case to the jury with the understanding that I would consider the facts in the light of the law cited me, and render my decision later.”

The jury found for the plaintiff; the verdict was set aside by order of the Magistrate, and verdict directed for defendant. Plaintiff appealed to the Circuit Court, which appeal was heard by Hon. Philip H. Stoll, who reversed the order of the Magistrate in an order in which he said: “Upon a full hearing of the same (the appeal) it appears that under the law as laid down in the Wingo case [(Wingo v. New York Life Ins. Co.), 112 S. C., 139, 99 S. E., 436], the McLane case [(McLane v. Metropolitan Life Ins. Co.), 154 *428 S. C., 366, 151 S. E., 608], the Palmer case [(Southeastern Life Ins. Co. v. Palmer), 129 S. C., 432, 124 S. E., 577], and related cases there was evidence of waiver to be submitted to a jury, and for that reason it is hereby ordered that the order appealed from be, and the same is hereby reversed.”

The appeal to this Court is from the order of Judge Stoll.

The waiver to which the order of Judge Stoll refers is waiver by the company of the alleged frauds and concealments of the insured, after knowledge thereof.

A comprehensive reading of all the testimony set out in the brief leaves no particle of doubt that the insured deliberately planned to, and did, perpetrate a fraud upon the insurance company in obtaining this policy. No agent of the company solicited her to be insured. She went of her own volition to the office of the company in Columbia and sought the insurance. She lived some twenty miles away at the village of Gadsden. It appears from the record that the insured was confined in the hospital from February 16, 1932, to March 20, 1932. Her ailment was diagnosed as cancer of the uterus; it was deemed to be a surgical case. She was informed that her case was hopeless, so far as a cure was concerned, that there was nothing that surgery could do for her. The infected place was cauterized to remove the offensive odor, and she nearly died from loss of blood; a transfusion was necessary to save her life. In 1920 she had been operated on for a lesion at the mouth of her stomach. She was a school teacher, and before going to the hospital in 1932 she was several times deterred by illness from discharging her duties.

It is needless to go into all the sordid details disclosed by the record. In the face of these positive proofs of the terrible condition of her health, the insured, in her application for insurance, made statements thereabout which she knew to be false. In answer to questions she said that her health was good; that her last sickness was “painful menstruation, one week”; she was asked if she had ever had any surgical op *429 eration, serious illness or accident, to which she replied “No.” To the question whether she had been attended by any physician within the last five years, she answered, “'Malaria 1929.” To the question, “Have you had any treatment within the past five years at any dispensary, hospital or sanitorium?” she answered, “No.” It is useless to continue. There can be but one deduction from the testimony, and that is that this policy was obtained by the deliberate and designed fraud of the insured.

She agreed in her application that: “It is understood and agreed, 1. That the foregoing statements and answers are correct and wholly true, and together with the answers to Tart B’ hereof they shall form the basis of the contract of insurance if one be issued.”

In other words, these statements and answers were material in showing the true state of her health; the proof of their falsity, by the terms of the contract of insurance itself, renders it null and void.

But the order appealed from holds that “under the law as laid down in the Wingo case, the Mchañe case, the Palmer case, and related cases, there was evidence of waiver to be submitted to the jury.” Let us see.

The Wingo case, 112 S. C., 139, 99 S. E., 436, turns upon the fact that “there was an irreconcilable conflict between the testimony introduced in the case, particularly that of Dr. Bunch and that of Dr. Black, one on the part of the plaintiff and the other on the part of the defense. Dr. Bunch was the agent of the defendant when he examined the applicant. * * * He testified that Wingo never had suffered from tuberculosis and had no spot or focus on his lung. Dr. Black, in behalf of the defendant, testified * * * that Wingo did have tuberculosis, * * * and had a focus on his lung that any doctor could discover.” Certainly that made an issue for the jury.

In the present case, the evidence is uncontradicted that the insured had the serious disease (cancer), and ailments disclosed by the medical witnesses and *430 hospital records, and that she knew it. In the Wingo case in that state of contradiction of the evidence on material issues all the witnesses testified to the good reputaton of Mr. Wingo.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
179 S.E. 490, 175 S.C. 425, 1935 S.C. LEXIS 112, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mclester-v-metropolitan-life-ins-co-sc-1935.