National Reserve Life Insurance v. Jeffries

75 P.2d 302, 147 Kan. 16, 1938 Kan. LEXIS 5
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJanuary 29, 1938
DocketNo. 33,582
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 75 P.2d 302 (National Reserve Life Insurance v. Jeffries) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
National Reserve Life Insurance v. Jeffries, 75 P.2d 302, 147 Kan. 16, 1938 Kan. LEXIS 5 (kan 1938).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Wedell, J.:

This action was brought by the insurance company to cancel a life insurance policy on the ground of fraud. Plaintiff alleged this particular policy was issued and delivered without a medical examination and on the strength of the statements contained in the application proper and those contained in a health certificate executed by the applicant. Defendant, beneficiary and wife of the deceased, filed an answer and cross petition, in Which she denied the fraud and sought recovery for $2,000, the face value of the, policy, and interest. She prevailed, and plaintiff appeals. ,

A word concerning the practice of the plaintiff insurance company as to the issuance of policies similar to' the instant one, without a previous medical examination, may be helpful. The plaintiff company had adopted a plan of issuing additional insurance policies upon the life of its policyholders whose existing policies were in good standing and whose previous records showed a good medical history, without requiring an additional medical examination, where the new application of the insured and the new health certificate, signed by the applicant, disclosed certain desired information, which information or representations formed the basis for the new contract of insurance.

The deceased had previously, in 1921, been insured by the plaintiff company in a $5,000 policy, which was in good standing. Plaintiff elected the insured as a proper prospect for such insurance. Plaintiff’s petition alleged, and it contends:

“VIII. The plaintiff issued its contract of insurance upon the life of Joseph J. Boyle in reliance upon the statements and representations made by the said Boyle, now deceased, with particular reference as to the sound and good health of said Boyle. In truth and in fact the said Boyle was not in good and sound [18]*18health at the time of making the application and the issuance and delivery of the policy, and said statements contained in the application and in the health certificate aforesaid were false and untrue and known by the said Boyle to be false and untrue. Had the plaintiff known that said statements were false and untrue and that said Boyle was not in good health, it would not have issued its policy of insurance'.
“Plaintiff issued its contract of insurance upon the life of Joseph J. Boyle in reliance upon the statements and representations made by the said Boyle in his health certificate, and with particular reference to his sound and good health and the fact that he had not undergone medical treatment since the date of his last medical examination upon which a policy of insurance had been issued. Li truth and in fact Boyle was not in good health at the time of the issuance and delivery of the policy and at the time he made the health certificate, and in truth and in fact he had previously undergone medical treatment at the date of his last medical examination upon which a policy of insurance had been issued on his life, which fact was known to him at the time he signed the declaration of health, and said statement and representation with reference thereto as contained in the health certificate was false and untrue' and known by the said Boyle to be false and untrue. Had the plaintiff known of the falsity and untruthfulness of the representations contained in the health certificate, and particularly with reference to previous medical treatment and the condition of good health, it would not have issued its policy of insurance.”
“XI. On account of the false and fraudulent representations made by the deceased Boyle and relied upon by plaintiff in issuing its contract of insurance and because it has no adequate remedy at law, the plaintiff is entitled to have said contract canceled and set aside.”
“XII. On or about April 2, 1934, the defendant, Jennie A. Boyle, furnished written proof of death to the plaintiff company, which proof of death disclosed that Joseph J. Boyle, the deceased policyholder, was not in sound and good health at the' time of the making of said application for insurance in the plaintiff company, or on July 26, 1933, when he executed the health certificate and accepted delivery of the policy in controversy. Said proofs of death also disclosed that the said Boyle had undergone medical and surgical treatment prior to the issuance of said policy and prior to the execution of said health certificate on July 26, 1933, and subsequent to the date of his last medical examination, which was on November 20, 1921. The plaintiff company had no previous knowledge of the actual condition of deceased’s health and the fact that he had undergone medical treatment and the falsity of his statements and representations as made in the application and health certificate, and the fraud of the deceased was first discovered when the proof of death was furnished to it as aforesaid.”

The policy was issued June 17,1933. The insured died March 25, 1934. The present action was filed July 2,1934, and hence was filed within the two-year contestable period provided in the policy. The action was tried without a jury. The complaints pertain to orders overruling plaintiff’s motion to set aside findings of fact and conclu[19]*19sions of law, and the overruling of the motion for a new trial. The findings of fact made were:

“I. Joseph J. Boyle, deceased, was insured in the plaintiff company under policy No. 1883, in the face amount of five thousand (85,000) dollars, the policy being dated the 30th of November, 1921, registered in the office of the insurance department of the state of Kansas on December 16, 1921, payable on its face to his wife, Jennie Boyle, at which time Boyle gave his age as thirty-five years. The application is dated the same date of the policy, and the medical examination is attached as part two of the policy, dated the same date of the policy, and recites, among other things, that he had had a right shoulder broken in a wreck in 1909; that he had had typhoid fever in 1900, and that his father had died of apoplexy at the age of sixty-nine. This policy was kept in force until Boyle’s death on March 26, 1934, and upon proof of death submitted, the plaintiff company paid the full face of that policy to Boyle’s mother, Julia Boyle, the then beneficiary.
“II. On the 3d of June, 1933, an application was executed by Joseph J. Boyle for an additional contract of insurance on his life in the sum of two thousand (82,000) dollars, and at the same time, on the 3d of June, 1933, a premium note or loan agreement was signed by the said Joseph J. Boyle and delivered to the company’s agent, E. J. Newbegin, which loan agreement provided in substance that the National Reserve Life Insurance Company of Topeka, Kan., on the 3d of June, 1933, had made a loan to Joseph J. Boyle of sixty-five dollars and twenty-six cents ($65.26) on policy No. 1883, and the said Boyle assigned the benefits of that policy, No. 1883, to secure the payment of this loan of sixty-five dollars and twenty-six cents ($65.26). This loan agreement is dated the' 3d of June, 1933, and signed by Joseph J. Boyle and witnessed and delivered in the presence of E. J. Newbegin, as of that date. On the back of this loan agreement appears in writing, among other things, ‘Paid to 6-17-34.’
“Contract of insurance No. 20775, for two thousand ($2,000) dollars, was issued to Joseph J. Boyle, of Osawatomie, Kan., payable to his mother, Julia Boyle, with the right to change beneficiary.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
75 P.2d 302, 147 Kan. 16, 1938 Kan. LEXIS 5, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/national-reserve-life-insurance-v-jeffries-kan-1938.