Moore v. United Benefit Life Insurance Company

115 S.E.2d 311, 145 W. Va. 549, 1960 W. Va. LEXIS 50
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 22, 1960
Docket11091
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 115 S.E.2d 311 (Moore v. United Benefit Life Insurance Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moore v. United Benefit Life Insurance Company, 115 S.E.2d 311, 145 W. Va. 549, 1960 W. Va. LEXIS 50 (W. Va. 1960).

Opinion

Haymond, Judge:

In this action of assumpsit instituted in the Circuit Court of Calhoun County in 1958, the plaintiffs, Franklin Blain Moore and Ida Madeline Moore, seek to recover from the defendant, United Benefit Life Insurance Company, a corporation, the amount of a policy of insurance issued by the defendant upon the life of Nancy Lynne Moore, infant daughter of the plaintiffs, in which the plaintiffs are the named beneficiaries. Upon the trial of the case the jury returned a verdict in the amount of $3,350.00. By final order entered February 24, 1959, the circuit court overruled the motion of the defendant to set aside the verdict and grant it a new trial and entered judgment upon the verdict for the amount of the verdict and costs. To that judgment this Court granted this writ of error and supersedeas upon the application of the defendant.

To the declaration, which followed the statutory form and with which was exhibited a copy of the policy of insurance, the defendant filed its specifications of defense in which it charged that the plaintiff Franklin Blain Moore had made false answers to certain questions set forth in the application which rendered the policy of insurance void, its special plea of fraud in the procurement of the contract of insurance, and its plea of the general issue. The plaintiffs filed *551 their special reply to the specifications of defense and their special reply to the special plea of fraud, and the defendant filed its rejoinders and its demurrers to the special replies of the plaintiffs. The demurrers to the special replies were overruled hy the court and issue was joined on the foregoing pleadings.

The plaintiff Franklin Blain Moore who was only slightly acquainted with Haeman G-ainer, a representative of an insurance agency which acted as an agent for the defendant, was solicited hy G-ainer to purchase insurance upon the life of Nancy Lynne Moore, the infant one year old daughter of the plaintiffs, who was horn on October 16, 1956; and on the evening of October 19, 1957, G-ainer went to the home of the plaintiffs for the purpose of obtaining their acceptance of a policy of insurance. At the time of G-ainer’s visit, which lasted approximately an hour, the plaintiffs, their infant daughter and Gainer were the only persons present when the written application, on the form provided by Gainer, was completed and signed hy the plaintiff Franklin Blain Moore. After the application was completed hy the insertion of the answers to the various questions set forth in the application and the signature of the plaintiff Franklin Blain Moore, it was delivered to Gainer and the policy of insurance, upon which the plaintiffs seek to recover in this action, was issued by the defendant upon the life of Nancy Lynne Moore. Approximately a month after the application was signed and delivered to Gainer, the policy of insurance was delivered hy Gainer to the plaintiff Ida Madeline Moore at the home of the plaintiffs and the policy, with a photographic copy of the application attached, was delivered hy her to her husband who placed it in a chest in his home where it remained without having been read by the plaintiffs until after the death of Nancy Lynne Moore which occurred on December 16, 1957. At the time the application was signed and delivered to Gainer the plaintiff Franklin Blain Moore paid him the annual premium of $31.14 which the defendant, after it re *552 fused to pay the claim of the plaintiffs for the face amount of the policy, has offered to refund to the plaintiffs who have declined to accept it. The foregoing facts are undisputed.

During the time the application was being prepared Gainer, who sat on a couch a few feet from the plaintiff Franklin Blain Moore, read to him certain questions and requested answers to them from the plaintiffs and answers were inserted in the application by Gainer. To a number of the questions the answers inserted in the application by Gainer were correct, but other answers inserted in- the application to certain questions were not- correct or were not complete. The evidence on that point is conflicting. The plaintiff Franklin Blain Moore testified that to such questions as were propounded to the plaintiffs by Gainer the answers which they gave were true and correct; that Gainer did not insert in the application the answers actually made by the plaintiffs but instead ¡inserted different and incorrect answers to some of the questions; that he did not ask the plaintiffs all the questions contained in the application, or obtain answers to all of them; that he did not ask or receive any answer to question 15; that they did not read the application or the policy, except to see that their names and the name of their child were correct, until after the death of their infant daughter and did not know until then that the answers inserted by Gainer were incorrect and different from those given to him by the plaintiffs; and that the plaintiff Franklin Blain Moore did not read the application because he assumed that Gainer had correctly recorded the answers actually given by the plaintiffs. The testimony of the plaintiff Ida Madeline Moore was substantially similar to that of her husband. On the contrary Gainer testified that he asked the plaintiffs all the questions contained in the application; that they made answers to all of them; that he correctly inserted in the application the answers made to him by the plaintiffs; that the plaintiff Franklin Blain Moore had an opportun *553 ity to read the application before he signed it; and that Gainer did nothing to: induce the plaintiff Frank-, lin Blain Moore not to read the application before he signed it.

After the plaintiffs notified the defendant of their claim for payment of the insurance the defendant made an investigation concerning the health of the insured and, having learned that answers to questions 6(d), 7, 8(a) and 8 (b) were false, denied liability under the policy of insurance. The plaintiffs then instituted this action.

The foregoing questions and the answers to them contained in the signed application are: “6(d) Is the Child dumb, deaf or blind, or is there any other infirmity or physical deformity? NO; 7. Name below all causes for which Child has consulted a physician in the last ten years: NONE; 8(a) Has the Child now, or has Child ever had, any other disease or injury? NONE”; and “8(h) Is the Child now in good health? YES.” The application also contained this question and this answer to it: “15. Do you hereby declare that all statements and answers herein are full, complete and true, whether written by your own hánd or not, and agree that they are to be considered the basis of any insurance issued hereon, do you further agree that there shall be no liability hereunder until a policy shall be issued to the Child and delivered to you while said Child is in good health, and free from injury, and the first premium thereon actually paid in cash during the Child’s lifetime, and that your acceptance of any policy issued on this application, whether or not upon the form applied for herein shall constitute a ratification by you of any change of the form of the policy or correction in or addition to the application, made by the Company, photographic copy of which shall constitute sufficient notice to you of the change made? Yes.”

The evidence is undisputed that the child had been hospitalized and treated by Dr. Arch M.

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115 S.E.2d 311, 145 W. Va. 549, 1960 W. Va. LEXIS 50, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moore-v-united-benefit-life-insurance-company-wva-1960.