Murray v. Brotherhood of American Yeomen

180 Iowa 626
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJune 25, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 180 Iowa 626 (Murray v. Brotherhood of American Yeomen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Murray v. Brotherhood of American Yeomen, 180 Iowa 626 (iowa 1917).

Opinion

Preston, J.

Defendant is a fraternal beneficiary association organized under the statute. On April 15, 1914, deceased made and executed her application for a benefit certificate in defendant association. On the 20th of the same month, a benefit certificate ivas issued to her, and on May 5 thereafter, she was duly initiated or adopted as a member, and received the certificate as issued. A copy of [628]*628the application appears on the back of the certificate. She died of tuberculosis of the lungs March 29, 1915, in good standing in the association. No question is now made as* to the cause of death. No controversy is made but that notice and proper claim was made for the amount due under the certificate. Defendant association rejected the claim and refused payment. The contentions of the defendant, as its counsel state them, are: First, that the answers of Jessie B. Murray to the questions propounded to her in her application were false and untrue, and constitute, each of them, a breach of warranty, which avoided the contract; second, that her death resulted from a disease or disability existing prior to the date of her benefit certificate; third, that the warranties contained in the certificate were breached by the insured, and the contract thereby rendered void. The errors assigned are that the court erred in admitting evidence regarding the ailment of her brother, which was communicated to deceased; that the court erred in holding that defendant was required to prove that deceased had knowledge of the falsity of the answers in her application, and erred in sustaining the motion of plaintiff, and overruling defendant’s motion for a directed verdict.

The application contains, among other things, the following:

“I hereby warrant all my answers herein to' be full, complete and true, without suppression, evasion or concealment, and I agree that this application with questions and answers thereto shall be copied on the certificate to be issued hereon, and that such certificate and application, together with the constitution and by-laws now or hereafter in force, shall form the contract between me and the Brotherhood of American Yeomen, and that such contract shall bind me and all my beneficiaries. * * * And I agree that any untrue answer to any question in Parts one [629]*629and two of this application shall. immediately, without process, render the certificate issued thereon null and void.”

The certificate provides:

“This certificate is issued and accepted upon the following warranties and conditions and agreements. That the statements in the application of said member, including answers in the medical examination, a copy of which appears upon the back hereof and which is hereby made a part of this agreement, are true in every particular, and shall be held to be strict warranties. That, if the application or any part thereof shall be found to be untrue, then this certificate shall be null and void; no claim resulting from disease or disability existing prior to the date hereof shall be valid against this association; I hereby warrant that I am in good health and that no change has occurred in my condition as set forth in my application, and I accept this benefit certificate, and agree to all the conditions therein contained at date of my adoption.”

The list of questions in the application was headed by the words: “Warranties of applicant for membership, etc., in the Brotherhood of American Yeomen.” The application contained questions upon family history, and her answer that her brother, aged 25 years, had died of lead poisoning, after one year’s sickness.

Defendant pleaded affirmatively breach of warranty on the jjart of the insured because of the alleged falsity of her answers to certain of the questions. These are, in substance, that her statement that she was in good health was false and untrue, and so as to her consulting a physician within 10 years, and her answer that she had last been attended by a physician two years ago for two fractured ribs, and that there was a prompt recovery, for that she had been treated by physicians less than two years pri- or to the date of her application, and for an ailment other [630]*630than fractured ribs, and that she concealed the fact of such consultation, treatment, and ailment from the defendant; that she had consulted several physicians other than the one mentioned, and for ailments other than stated, within 10 years; that her answer to the question as to whether she had any disease of the throat, heart or lungs was false and untrue, for that, at said time, she was afflicted with disease of the lungs; that her statement that no blood relative, including brothers, had had consumption was false and untrue, for that a brother had had consumption; that her ■statement that she had never had any ailment, disease, injury or operation other than stated Avas false and untrue, in that, about one year prior to the date of her application, she was afflicted with symptoms of disease the same as those with which she Avas afflicted in her last illness. Defendant also alleged that the insured Avas- not in good health at the time the certificate Avas signed by her and as warranted in the certificate, and that the certificate provided that no claim resulting from, disease or disability existing prior to its date should be valid against the association, as to which last, defendant alleges that the insured died as the result of a disease, to wit, tuberculosis of the lungs (consumption) , existing prior to the date of the certificate, May 5, 1914. The certificate provided that it should “not be valid unless delivered to applicant during applicant’s good health.” Defendant alleges that she was not in good, health when the certificate Avas delivered. Because of certain matters appearing in the record, and particularly in regard to the question of the court’s sustaining plaintiff’s motion to direct a verdict, and whether deceased had knoAvledge of the alleged falsity of her ansAvers, and whether her disease, tuberculosis of the lungs, developed before or after the beneficiary certificate became effective, which will be referred to later in the opinion, Ave think it advisable to refer to the [631]*631evidence somewhat in detail, but without attempting to give all of it.

A witness testifies that he was the medical attendant of deceased for about nine months, during which time she was confined to the house and prevented from attending to business for about seven and one-half months; that he treated her for pulmonary tuberculosis, which was the remote cause of her death; that the history and symptoms of the disease during its progress were typical.

Another medical witness testified that he had known deceased two years; had not treated her for any ailment-prior to her last illness; attended her during her last illness for tuberculosis of the lungs; that the remote cause of death was tuberculosis. Another medical witness testified that he had met deceased at the sanatorium at Oakdale, where he was superintendent, and that this was June 25, 1914. Witness identified an exhibit as the record of deceased, and answers, to questions put to her by an attendant, that Dr. Peck was the sanatorium examiner in June, 1914; identified another exhibit as Dr. Peck’s report on deceased to the sanatorium.

Dr. Peck testified that he examined deceased June 17, 1934, for admission to the sanatorium; that she was referred to him by Dr.

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180 Iowa 626, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/murray-v-brotherhood-of-american-yeomen-iowa-1917.