New York Life Ins. Co. v. Griffith

35 F.2d 945, 1929 U.S. App. LEXIS 3123
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedOctober 29, 1929
Docket65
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 35 F.2d 945 (New York Life Ins. Co. v. Griffith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth 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. Griffith, 35 F.2d 945, 1929 U.S. App. LEXIS 3123 (10th Cir. 1929).

Opinion

COTTERAL, Circuit Judge.

The appellant insurance company filed a bill seeking cancellation of a poliey of life and disability insurance issued of date July 15, 1924, to Raymond K. Cave, the assured, and naming his mother, Stella Cave, as beneficiary. Summons was served on both defendants. She filed an answer and cross-bill, purporting to be in behalf of both defendants, in which she resisted cancellation of the policy, and prayed judgment for disability of the assured up to the time of his death on June 27,1926, and for liability due to his death. On motion, the cross-bill was stricken by the court. The company filed an amended and supplemental bill. Later, the assured and benefiei-. ary having both died, it was stipulated the appellee, Barton E. Griffith, administrator of both estates, be substituted as defendant, and he might plead in his answer his demands for recovery on the poliey. A formal action of revivor was entered, and the administrator filed a separate answer and cross-petition for each estate.

The suit was brought within the two years during which by its terms the poliey was contestable. The grounds on which the company sought to avoid liability were, first, that in the application for the insurance, which was by its terms made a part of the contract, the insurance was to be effective only if the applicant had not consulted or been treated by any physician since his medical examination, and he had .consulted and been treated by Dr. F. E. Wrightman, on July 14, 1924, between the date of that examination and the delivery of the policy, whereby a condition precedent to the validity of the policy had failed; and, second, the assured made the false representations in his application that albumin and sugar had not been found in his urine, that he had not been found to have a high blood pressure, and that he had not consulted a physician or suffered from any ailment or disease of the stomach, or intestines, liver, kidneys, or bladder, whereas, as he knew, he was theretofore afflicted with nephritis, and albumin was found in his urine, and thereby the company, having a right, by the terms of the application, to rely on the representations, was induced to issue the poliey, and is entitled to rescind the contract. Both these grounds of suit were explicitly denied in the answer. After a trial to the court, a decree was rendered, dismissing the original and the amended and supplemental bills, and awarding recovery to the defendant, as administrator of Raymond K. Cave, of $640, with interest, and as administrator of Stella Cave, of $3,427.50, with interest, and taxing the costs to the company.

The case was tried as an equity suit upon the issues made by bill and answer, and properly before the administrator’s demands at law were heard. Liberty Oil Co. v. Condon National Bank, 260 U. S. 236, 43 S. Ct. 118, 67 L. Ed. 232; Horbach v. Coyle (C. C. A.) 2 F.(2d) 702. However, objection to the answer was waived, and there was no dispute that, if the company should fail in its suit, a recovery would follow as of course, in favor of the administrator. Such was the result in the case, and the company appeals.

It is well settled that both grounds taken to avoid the poliey are valid defenses. The controversy is whether they are sustained in fact by the evidence.

In support of the first ground, the company introduced a prescription of potassium iodide given by Dr. Wrightman, purporting to be for the assured, bearing the doctor’s initials, filled July 14, 1924. He could not say whether he saw the assured personally, or the prescription was given to his father. The father, O. M. Cave, testified he was treated by the doctor in the summer of 1924, and the prescription was given for him supposedly for a cold, that the assured both obtained it and was sent to have it filled, that the first time assured consulted Dr. Wrightman was on September 28, or 29, 1924. The assured testified by deposition when ill on June 24, 1926, that he never consulted or was treated by any other than the company’s doctor before delivery of the policy.

While, on appeal in an equity suit, the evidence is reviewed de novo, the findings of a chancellor are presumptively correct and should be accepted, unless a serious mistake has been made in the consideration of the evidence. Fienup v. Kleiman (C. C. A.) 5 F.(2d) 137; Larson v. Crowther (C. C. A.) 26 F.(2d) 780; Unkle v. Wills (C. C. A.) 281 F. 29. The finding for the administrator was well justified, and in view of its weight in this court, it is approved. There was a failure to sustain the first ground of attaek on the policy.

The second ground, based on the alleged false representations, is more serious. Coneededly the assured and his mother both died of nephritis, the former on June 27, 1926, and the latter on February 11, 1928. Dr. Wrightman testified to treating the assured in September, 1924. Drs. Shafter and Keith testified by deposition to a diagnosis of his *947 ailment as chronic glomerular nephritis, at the Mayo Clinic, in Rochester, Minnesota, on February 9, 1925. The former recorded his history and the latter the consultation notes of the ease, from which it appeared he had some retinal disease and high blood pressure, he stated he had had pneumonia, influenza in 1918, and other ailments, albumin had been found in his urine over two years, and he.had been on a low protein diet. These witnesses depended on their record, without a personal recollection of the consultation. Dr. Keith in particular may not have been present when all the questions were asked of the assured, and “he was just one of thousands coming through the clinic.”

Dr. Good’s affidavit was read as his deposition, relating to assured’s admission to the Noyes Hospital at St. Joseph, Mo., when he went there on January 24, 1925, with his mother. He took the history of the ease from both, consisting of seven sheets written by him, another doctor and a nurse not called as witnesses. It showed in the main a diagnosis of chronic nephritis, and imputed to the assured a statement that.he had Bright’s disr ease and headaches, and first found he had kidney trouble when he applied for insurance two years before, he had reduced vision, etc.

For the defense there was contradictory testimony. The assured in his deposition also stated neither sugar nor albumin had been found in his urine, and he had never consulted a doctor for anything, except the company’s doctor and Dr. Heryford, who gave a violet ray treatment for headache, two weeks before he had an examination for his kidneys by Dr. Wrightman, in September 1924. He did not remember any previous examination therefor, nor the influenza attack, nor telling the doctors of examination for his kidneys. He testified to answering the questions as he remembered the facts. After Dr. Wright-man, he consulted Dr. Hibbard for nephritis. He had a high blood pressure examination by Dr. Wrightman in September, 1924, who with Dr. Murdoek, conducted the hospital at Sabetha, Kan. He was four or five days at the Noyes Hospital and at Mayo’s two days, where he was thoroughly examined, and was told he had nephritis. He refused the order there to go to the hospital and receive a diet list. Drs. Keith and Shafter told him what his trouble was. He was totally disabled. He had consulted Dr. Wrightman for headaches. All advised diet. At the time of testifying, he had headaches, swelling of his feet, bad eyes, the headaches having been first noticed when he saw Dr. Heryford. On July 3, 1924, he saw the races at Kansas City, and that summer he worked and pitched on a ball team.

Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
35 F.2d 945, 1929 U.S. App. LEXIS 3123, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/new-york-life-ins-co-v-griffith-ca10-1929.