Mutual Life Insurance v. Held

146 A. 755, 157 Md. 551, 1929 Md. LEXIS 126
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 25, 1929
Docket[No. 37, April Term, 1929.]
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 146 A. 755 (Mutual Life Insurance v. Held) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mutual Life Insurance v. Held, 146 A. 755, 157 Md. 551, 1929 Md. LEXIS 126 (Md. 1929).

Opinion

Sloan, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

On March 22nd, 1921, Edward L. Held applied to the Mutual Life Insurance Company of New York, appellant, for two policies of insurance on his life for $5,000 each, which were issued to him. He died on February 6th, 1928, and, on the refusal of the appellant to pay the insurance, his wife and beneficiary, Katherine I. Held, .entered suit and, judgment thereon being against the appellant, it appealed. Hine exceptions were reserved, of which eight were to rulings on the evidence and one, the ninth, to the rulings on the prayers. The first eight exceptions have been abandoned, leaving for consideration on this appeal the court’s action in granting the plaintiff’s three prayers, in overruling the defendant’s exceptions to the plaintiff’s first and second prayers, and in refusing the defendant’s second to tenth and twelfth to twen *553 ty-first prayers inclusive, its first, eleventh and twentieth prayers having been withdrawn.

The defendant’s second prayer was a demurrer to the evidence, and the third asked for an instructed verdict on the ground that the uncontradicted evidence showed that certain statements of the insured in his application for insurance were untrue and were material to the risk. These prayers, therefore, require a recital of the facts set up in the application which reflect upon the medical history of the assured up to the time of the application.

Question 1G is: “What illnesses, diseases, injuries, and surgical operations have you had since childhood ? Answer: Typhoid fever in 1900, duration 42 days, and a broken arm when a boy. 17. State every physician or practitioner who has prescribed for or treated you, or whom you have consulted in the past, five years for any ailment, serious or not serious” ? To which the applicant stated that he had been overcome by heat July 5th, 1926, when he was treated by Dr. John S. Green of Towson, and in November, 1926, he had nine teeth extracted by Dr. Pennington of Baltimore. Question 18 was: “Have you stated in your answer to question 16 all illnesses, diseases, injuries and surgical operations which you have had since childhood” ? .To which he answered “Yes.” Question 19: “Have you stated in answer to question 17 every physician and practitioner consulted during the past five years and dates of consultation” ? Answer: “Yes.” (32) “Have you been under any restriction of diet or medical observation of any kind within one year for any purpose”? Ansswer: “No.”

The medical examination was made by Dr. H. Warren Buckler for the appellant, who reported that the applicant’s appearance was healthy, pulse rate 70, regular; urinary analysis clear, no albumen or sugar, and that “a careful inquiry and thorough physical examination show (no) evidence of past or present disease or functional disturbance of” brain or nervotis system, heart, arteries, respiratory organs, kidneys, digestive organs,” etc. The company accepted the risk and issued the policy subject to a fifty per cent, increase of *554 premium on account of the heat prostration and conditioned on the use of a truss for a hernia.

After the death of the insured, his family physician, Dr. Green, signed the death certificate, wherein he gave the cause of death as “coronary occlusion,” preceded and complicated by arterio sclerosis. At the trial Dr. Green testified that he had been Edward L. Held’s physician for six years; that for five years, except for the heat exhaustion, he had treated him for ordinary ailments, “for colds and he would come feeling tired and run down and wanted a tonic and he would sometimes come on account of nervousness. Just nothing of any serious nature that he ever complained of to me.” He could not say how often he came, as the charges were for attention to wife and son as well, and all charged to Mr. Held, but says the visits were “not usually frequent, not any more than you would have your average patient,” and estimated the number of visits at six times a year for 1925 and 1926. “I should say in taking it over the last two or three years that his main complaints were that he felt tired out and nervous, sometimes inability to rest properly and lack of appetite and sometimes towards the last few months of his life he complained of some digestive disturbances, inability to digest his food properly.” “On these occasions he had some arterio sclerosis, that is, the surface vessels.” The last time he saw Mr. Held prior to March, 1927, he was in good health. His condition was nothing unusual for a man fifty years of age. He said arterio- sclerosis is a symptom and not a disease, and is a condition existing in practically everyone of fifty or more and grows with age. In answer to the question, “Did you ever tell him he had any kind of arterial sclerosis,” Dr. Green answered, “Ho.” He said he only recalled having gone to Mr. Held’s house on two or three occasions, the night of the heat prostration, the day of his death, and he thought he was there the night following the teeth extraction. On all other occasions he saw him at his office. Dr. Green also testified that the ailments about which he had complained to him were not attributed to his arterial condition, and that there was no-necessary connection between the sclerosis in the radial *555 arteries, which could be discovered by contact with the arteries themselves, and the coronary arteries.

The appellant’s contention is that the complaints or illnesses for which the applicant consulted Dr. Oreen were material to the risk and should be so held as a matter of law, not because any of them were necessarily serious, but because of the assumption that if they had been disclosed the appellant would have rejected the application for insurance. In support of this contention it cites Bankers Life Ins. Co. v. Miller, 100 Md. 1, in which the insured failed to state she had been operated upon in a hospital for a malignant growth; Mutual Life Ins. Co. v. Mullan, 107 Md. 457, where the applicant stated that he was temperate and had never been treated for alcoholism, the proof being that he was a common drunkard who had been treated for years for alcoholism; Forwood v. Prudential Life Ins. Co., 117 Md. 254, another temperate ( ?) drinking case; Metropolitan Life Ins. Co. v. Jennings, 130 Md. 622, wherein the applicant said he had never been in a hospital or sanatorium, though for nearly two- years before his application he had rarely been anywhere else; and Loving v. Mutual Life Ins. Co., 140 Md. 173, which was a tubercular case. In all of these cases the ailments concealed were patent, serious, and organic, whereas in the instant case the insured did not know he had arte rio sclerosis, which had not affected his general health, and failed to mention consultations for ailments which in themselves were not serious and which, it was testified, were not related in any way to his arterial condition. In the opinions of this court in all of the cases mentioned, it was declared that ordinarily it is the province of the jury to determine the falsity and materiality of the representations made in the application for insurance, with the burden on the defendant, but where the falsity and materiality of the representations are shown by clear, convincing, and uncontradicted evidence, it may be a question of law for the court.

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Bluebook (online)
146 A. 755, 157 Md. 551, 1929 Md. LEXIS 126, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mutual-life-insurance-v-held-md-1929.