Metropolitan Life Insurance v. Dabudka

204 N.W. 771, 232 Mich. 36, 1925 Mich. LEXIS 811
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 16, 1925
DocketDocket No. 52.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 204 N.W. 771 (Metropolitan Life Insurance v. Dabudka) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Metropolitan Life Insurance v. Dabudka, 204 N.W. 771, 232 Mich. 36, 1925 Mich. LEXIS 811 (Mich. 1925).

Opinion

Sharpe, J.

Anna Dabudka, wife of defendant, made application to the plaintiff for insurance on her life, in the sum of $500, on April 8, 1918. Pursuant thereto, a policy was issued on April 24th, and delivered to her. The defendant was named as beneficiary therein. The insured died on October 31, 1918. Proofs of death were furnished. Plaintiff refused to pay. Defendant brought suit to recover. Plaintiff thereupon filed the bill in this case, praying for the cancellation of the policy on the ground of fraud, concealment and misrepresentation of material facts on the part of the insured in her application. The trial court entered a decree dismissing the bill, from which plaintiff appeals.

The application was signed by the insured by her mark. A copy of it was attached to the policy .when delivered. It is not claimed that any false statement was made in the application as signed by her. Attached to and made a part of it were certain statements purported to have been made by her to plaintiff’s medical examiner, Dr. McKinley. This was also signed by her by mark, the doctor signing his name as a witness thereto. These statements were in answer to questions put to her by the doctor. These questions and answers contained statements that she had not theretofore been attended by a physician, and had never been under treatment in any hospital. • To *38 maintain its case, plaintiff offered a certified copy of the death certificate, signed by Dr. Sherwood, who attended deceased “from Oct. 27, 1918, to Oct. 27, 1918,” in which the cause of death was stated to be “dilated heart and influenza.” Plaintiff’s counsel offered in evidence a paper, headed “Attending Physician’s Statement,” signed by Dr. C. E. Watson, which was received over the objection of defendant. This statement was made on a blank prepared by the plaintiff. Preceding it, on the same page, was a “Declaration Made by Claimant,” and signed by defendant as follows:

“I desire to file the following statement by attending physician with and as part of the proofs of death submitted by me to your company on account of policy No. 2483707-C.”

It was dated December 10, 1918. In this statement appeared certain questions and answers, written by the doctor, stating that he had treated the deceased in October, 1917, for “bronchial asthma and valvular heart trouble and dropsy.” Plaintiff’s assistant manager, Mr. Bozyk, testified that the company furnished blanks for proof of death to defendant. These were filled out and delivered to him. They do not appear in the record, but it may be inferred that one of them was a certified copy of the “Medical Certificate of Death” signed by Dr. Sherwood, above referred to. The only provision in the policy relative to such proof was the undertaking of the company to pay to the beneficiary the sum of five hundred dollars “upon receipt at the home office of the company in the city of New York of due proof of the death of Anna Dabudka.” There is no suggestion that the proof furnished by the defendant did not fully comply with this requirement.

The manner in which the affidavit of Dr. Watson was secured is testified to by Mr. Bozyk as follows:

*39 “Q. When the claimant, Nicholas Dabudka, made this claim to your office after the death of his wife, you gave him that slip to fill out, didn’t you?
“A. No, I took that to the doctor personally.
“Q. Who furnished you with the name of the doctor?
“A. Well, I got that by investigating in the neighborhood. I got that, I think, from Dr. Sherwood. He thought there was other doctors attending her.
“Q. Well, Dr. Sherwood made the statement there were no other doctors to his knowledge?
“A. He wasn’t sure, but he thought there was. When he told me that I inquired in the neighborhood and I found that there was this doctor attended her, so I called on this doctor and he completed the statement. After it was completed I took it to the claimant and he signed it.
“Q. Then the information of the doctor was on there at the time the claimant signed?
“A. Yes.
“Q. Did the claimant know it was information?
“A. I told him it was information from the doctor.
“Q. He didn’t try to conceal it, did he?
“A. No.”

This court has decided that proofs of death are to be treated as evidence of the facts stated in them, being in the nature of an admission (John Hancock Mut. Life Ins. Co. v. Dick, 117 Mich. 518 [44 L. R. A. 846]), subject, however, to such explanation as the beneficiary may offer. Hubbell v. North American Union, 230 Mich. 668.

In our opinion, the affidavit of Dr. Watson, procured in the manner above set forth, was not such a part of the proofs of death furnished by the beneficiary as entitled it to be treated as evidence within the rule above stated. It was not furnished voluntarily by the defendant. It was not read over by him, or to him, before he signed the declaration which preceded it. Had the affidavit not been procured, and had Dr. Watson been called as a witness, he would not have been permitted to testify to the facts therein stated, upon which plaintiff relies to establish misrepresenta *40 tion. 3 Comp. Laws 1915, § 12550; Gilchrist v. Mystic Workers, 188 Mich. 466 (Ann. Cas. 1918C, 757). In the Gilchrist Case, a waiver of the statute, contained in the application for insurance, was held to be against public policy and void. A somewhat similar statement was considered and held not to be competent proof in Repala v. Insurance Co., 229 Mich. 463.

In a “Notice to Policyholder,” indorsed on the policy, it is said:

“It is not necessary to employ an attorney or any other person to collect the insurance under this policy, or to secure any of the benefits it provides.”

A beneficiary may not thereby be lulled into security and advantage taken of his legal rights by the course here pursued to secure evidence on behalf of the company not otherwise admissible.

Helen Wheelock, record clerk at the Harper hospital, was called as a witness. She was handed “a group of papers,” which she testified were “records of this case of Mrs. Anna Dabudka.” None of the entries on the exhibit were made by the witness, nor did she have any personal knowledge as to who made them. The record showed that “Mrs. Nicholas Dabudka (Anna),” residence, “93 Mercier street,” entered the hospital on February 23, 1918, and was discharged March 11,1918. We have no statute permitting such records to be used as original evidence. The witness had no personal knowledge relative to them.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
204 N.W. 771, 232 Mich. 36, 1925 Mich. LEXIS 811, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/metropolitan-life-insurance-v-dabudka-mich-1925.