National Council Knights & Ladies of Security v. Owen

1916 OK 936, 161 P. 178, 61 Okla. 256, 1916 Okla. LEXIS 879
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedNovember 14, 1916
Docket8071
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 1916 OK 936 (National Council Knights & Ladies of Security v. Owen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
National Council Knights & Ladies of Security v. Owen, 1916 OK 936, 161 P. 178, 61 Okla. 256, 1916 Okla. LEXIS 879 (Okla. 1916).

Opinion

Opinion by

GALBRAITH, C.

The defendant in error, Lula Owen, sued the plaintiff in error, the National Council Knights and Ladies of Security, on a benefit certificate issued to her late husband, Edward G. Owen, during his lifetime and payable to her at his death. It was alleged in the petition that this certificate, for a valuable consideration, had been issued on October 13, 1910, in the sum of $3,000, payable to the plaintiff as surviving widow, in the event of the death of the insured, and that Edward G. Owen died on the 16th day of November, 1910, and that the policy provided that if the death of the assured occurred within six months of the date of issuance of certificate then the same might be discharged on the payment of 60 per cent, of the face thereof, and that the plaintiff had complied with all the conditions of the policy to be kept and performed by the beneficiary, and that the same was in full force and effect on the date of the death of the assured, and that demand for payment had been made, and that $1,800 was due thereon; that no part of the same had *257 been paid. The action was commenced on the 27th day of April, 1911. The society denied liability on the ground that the assured had made false statements in bis application for tbe certificate, and tbat sucb statements being false, under the terms of the contract, rendered the certificate void. There was a trial to the court and jury, and a judgment rendered in favor of the plaintiff, which, on appeal to tbis court, was reversed for errors at the trial. See National Council Knights and Ladies of Security v. Owen, 47 Okla. 464, 149 Pac. 231. On tbe second trial tbe plaintiff again recovered judgment, and tbe cause is here again for review.

Tbe answer of tbe society raised but one defense; tbat is, the breach of warranties made by the assured in bis application for the certificate. It is contended that in the application for the certificate the following questions were asked and answers given:

“Have you or have you ever bad any of tbe following diseases or symptoms or any disease of tbe following named organs?” To which the applicant answered “No” as follows :

“Kidneys, disease of” — -“No.”
“Liver, disease of” — “No.”
“Loss of consciousness” — “No.”

And further:

“Is there anything to your knowledge or belief in your physical condition, family history or habits tending to shorten your life, which is not distinctly set forth above?”' To which the applicant answered, “No.”

And also:

“Have you had any illness, constitutional disease or injury during the past five years requiring the services of a physician or surgeon?” To which the applicant answered, “No.”

And it is alleged that each of the answers made by the applicant to the questions was false, and that:

“The said Edward G. Owen has been treated for disease of the kidneys within a few days prior to th¿\ signing of said application. and had been treated for loss of consciousness, and had been unconscious for a period of two or more days within three weeks before the date of making the application, and bad been informed by his family physician that his physical condition was such as to end his life within three or six months. By reason of such representations and false statements and answers, and breach of such warranties, said certificate was of no effect and void.”

A reply was filed denying that any false answers were made to the questions, and alleging that there had been no breach of the warranties in the contract of insurance. It seems that the argument of the plaintiff in error on this branch of the case is fully answered by the court in Continental Casualty Co. v. Owen, 38 Okla. 107, 131 Pac. 1084, which was an action by the defendant in error on an accident policy issued and delivered to the said Edward G. Owen, wherein the court says, in the first paragraph of the syllabus, as follows:

“In an action on an accident insurance policy, there was a sharp conflict in the evidence as to whether the insured was suffering frota acute or chronic nephritis about 30 days prior to the issuance or the policy. A physician who was called into the ease at that, time, and who attended the insured until a few days prior to his death from an accidental gunshot wound inflicted about 30 days after the issuance of the policy, testified that he found the insured suffering from an acute attack of nephritis; that he responded readily to treatment for that disease, and within a few days commenced to show marked improvement; that within two or three weeks he was practically restored to health; that ‘his color was as good and he was as healthy looking as anybody during the latter part of the time I was treating him;’ and that an examination of the urine and the symptoms indicated that his recovery was complete. Held, that whether the insured was suffering from a ‘defect in the body,’ within the meaning of that phrase in a statement of the insured indorsed on the policy to the effect that he had no ‘defect in body,’ was a question for the jury.”

In the case at bar there was likewise a sharp conflict in the testimony as to the physical condition of the applicant at the time of making the application for the certificate, and a few weeks prior thereto. According to some of the physicians testifying, he was stricken with a, fatal disease of the kidneys and liver, and could only possibly live a very few months at the best. While the testimony of other physicians, especially that of the examining physicians for the society, was to the effect that the trouble was a temporary ailment which yielded readily to treatment, and that the assured was in ordinary health at the time the application was signed, and that he, as examining physician for the society, after a thorough examination of the applicant, recommended the issuing of the certificate, and that the assured did not die of a disease but on account of a gunshot wound. In this state of the evidence, the question of the falsity of the answers returned to the questions was peculiarly one for the jury.

Again, complaint is made of two instructions of the court to the jury, one being instruction No. 5, wherein the court presents to the jury the theory of the plaintiff, and the burden of this complaint being that it *258 does not also state the theory of the defendant. Inasmuch as this instruction is followed by Nos. 6 and 7, in which the theory of the defendant is fully set out to the jury, it seems that this objection is not well taken. As was said by this court in Grant v. Milam, 20 Okla. 672, 95 Pac. 424:

“It is not required that tlie entire law of the case shall be stated in a single instruction, and it is therefore not improper to state the law as applicable to particular questions or particular parts of the case in separate instructions, and if there is no conflict in the law as stated in different instructions, and all the instructions considered as a series present the law applicable to the ease fully and accurately, it is sufficient.”

See, also, G., C. & S. F. R. Co. v. Taylor, 37 Okla. 99, 130 Pac. 574; First National Bank v. Ingle, 37 Okla. 276, 132 Pac. 895; and Chickasha Street R. Co. v.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1916 OK 936, 161 P. 178, 61 Okla. 256, 1916 Okla. LEXIS 879, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/national-council-knights-ladies-of-security-v-owen-okla-1916.