New York Life Ins. Co. v. Gay

36 F.2d 634, 1929 U.S. App. LEXIS 2227
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedDecember 13, 1929
Docket5242
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 36 F.2d 634 (New York Life Ins. Co. v. Gay) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
New York Life Ins. Co. v. Gay, 36 F.2d 634, 1929 U.S. App. LEXIS 2227 (6th Cir. 1929).

Opinion

HAHN, District Judge.

The plaintiff below brought this action in the circuit court for Clark county, Ky., as beneficiary of a policy of life insurance by which the defendant had insured the life of his testator, David S. Gay. The ease was removed for diversity of citizenship to the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Kentucky. The application for said insurance policy was dated March 13, 1923, and a policy in the *635 «mount of $20,000 was dated March 20, 1923, •and was delivered to the insured on the 29th .day of April, 1923.

The insurance company defended upon •the grounds, inter alia, that the plaintiff’s testator on the 13th day of March, 1923, had made false and fraudulent answers in his application for said insurance, in that he stated in said application that he had never consulted a physician for, and that he had never suffered from, any ailment or disease of the stomach; that he never consulted a physician for any ailment or disease not included in the application, except that he had been treated •in the five years before said application by Doctor B. J. Johnson; and that said treatment was for a cold, from which he completely recovered in two weeks. The insurance ■company claimed that these answers were false and fraudulent because said David S. ‘Gay had in fact consulted said Dr. B. J. Johnson, Dr. W. S. Wyatt and Dr. Kennon Dun-ham for a serious ailment of the stomach, which had developed or which afterwards developed as carcinoma of the stomach. The .answer further alleged that on or about the 19th day of March, 1923, which was six days after the date of the application, said David •3. Gay went to Kelly’s Sanitarium, in Baltimore, Md., and there consulted Dr. Curtis F. Bumam; that Gay at that time was suffering from carcinoma of the stomach and knew that he was suffering from that disease; and that he submitted to radium treatment for a period of three weeks.

This case was tried twice in the District Court. Upon the first trial, because of the fraud of the insured, the court directed a verdict for the defendant. Upon a motion for a new trial, the court reconsidered its finding and conclusions, granted a new trial, and, upon said trial, directed a verdict for the plaintiff. The decision of the court was based upon two statutes of the Commonwealth ■ of Kentucky, as construed by the Court of Appeals of that commonwealth. These statutes (Ky. St.) are, in part, as follows: “Section 656. Nor shall any sueh company or any «gent thereof make any contract of insurance or agreement as to such contract, other than is plainly expressed in the policy issued thereon.”

And section 679 is, in part, as follows: “All policies or certificates hereafter issued to persons within the commonwealth of Kentucky by corporations transacting business therein under this law, which policies or certificates contain any reference to the application of the insured, or the by-laws, or the rules of the corporation, either as forming part of the policy or contract' between the parties thereto, or as having any bearing on said contract, shall have sueh application, bylaws and rules, or the parts thereof relied upon as forming part of the policy or contract between the parties thereto, or as having any bearing on said contract, attached to the policy or certificate, or printed on the face or reverse side thereof, and unless either so attached and accompanying’ the policy or printed on the face or reverse side thereof, shall not be received as evidence in any action for the recovery of benefits provided by the policy or certificate, and shall not be considered a part of the policy, or of the contract between the parties. The policy or certificate, and the rules and regulations, shall be printed, and no portion thereof shall be in type smaller than brevier.”

The District Court came to the conclusion that, whether either or both statutes applied to the case, the court was precluded by at least seven decisions of the Kentucky Court of Appeals construing the statutes from permitting a defense of fraud arising out of material misrepresentations in the application for life insurance unless a sufficient copy of such application accompanied the policy; that under the holding in the case of Fidelity Mutual Insurance Co. v. Preuser (1922) 195 Ky. 271, 242 S. W. 608, the application attached to the policy in suit was insufficient because it was a photostatic copy unduly reduced in size, and that neither the application nor parol proof of the questions and answers of the application (Southern States Mutual Life Insurance Co. v. Herlihy [1910] 138 Ky. 359, 128 S. W. 91) was admissible ■ in evidence. The court considered all of the evidence of fraud and nondisclosure as being reflected in the alleged false answers in the application, and did not give independent consideration to evidence of fraud alleged to have occurred after the date of the application and prior to the delivery of the policy, or between March 13,1923, and the 29th day of April, 1923.

The insurance company here urges that the court below erred in the application of the statutes above quoted and the decisions of the Court of Appeals of Kentucky, and that the court further erred in not giving full ' and independent consideration to the alleged fraud occurring after the date of the application. It is urged that the court did not give that consideration to the facts which is re^ quired by the decision of the Supreme Court of the United States in Stipcich v. Metropol *636 itan Life Insurance Co., 277 U. S. 311, 48 S. Ct. 512, 514, 72 L. Ed. 895. The latter case was decided after this case had been disposed of in the court below.

The Stipeich Case did not deal with the effect of alleged false answers in an application for insurance, but dealt solely with the effect of nondisclosure of material facts occurring between the date of the insured’s application and the delivery of his policy. The facts were that after applying for insurance, but before the delivery of the policy to him, the insured suffered a recurrence of a duodenal ulcer which later caused his death, and that he failed to reveal this information to the company. The court considered the effect of these facts independently .of the alleged fraud in the answers of the insured’s application, and held that the insurance company was entitled to disclosure of them.

The reasoning of the Stipeich Case as applied to this case is, briefly, to the effect that insurance contraéis are traditionally contracts ubérrimas fidei; 1 that a failure by the insured to disclose conditions affecting the risk, of which he is aware, makes the contract voidable at the insurer’s option; that, while the modem practice of requiring the applicant for life insurance to answer questions prepared by the insurer has relaxed the rule to some extent, the reason for the rule still obtains with added force as to changés materially affecting the risk which come to the knowledge of the insured after the application and before the delivery of the policy; that if, while the company deliberates, the insured discovers facts which make portion's of his application no longer trae, then the most elemental spirit of fair dealing requires that !he make full disclosure; and that, in a suit upon a policy issued under circumstances when such disclosure was not had, the insurance company has a valid defense based upon such nondisclosure.

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Bluebook (online)
36 F.2d 634, 1929 U.S. App. LEXIS 2227, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/new-york-life-ins-co-v-gay-ca6-1929.