New York Life Insurance Company v. Lee Strudel

243 F.2d 90, 1957 U.S. App. LEXIS 2898
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedApril 5, 1957
Docket15945_1
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 243 F.2d 90 (New York Life Insurance Company v. Lee Strudel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth 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 Insurance Company v. Lee Strudel, 243 F.2d 90, 1957 U.S. App. LEXIS 2898 (5th Cir. 1957).

Opinion

TUTTLE, Circuit Judge,

This is an appeal from a judgment entered on a jury verdict for plaintiff, holding appellant insurance company lia-hie on four insurance policies in spite of ^he fact that the deceased insured had intentionally misstated material facts on his application. Appellant complains of various features of the charge and of the trial court’s failure to direct a verdict, enter a judgment n. o. v., or at least to order a new trial.

In March Henry strudel applied appeliant>g agent for ?20,000 of life insurance; on March 29th he completed app“n: “Aa^ers to the Mfdl,cal Examiner m which he gave ^ncededly wrong answers to several futhat flghJ have foaled the fac* ^ Jad sufferf a heart “ m 194J and had been under treat-f\ent by Vi 1 “ days later> °n March Slat, he entered the¡Mi-am* ^ear* and stayed +ther+e untl1 APrill8tih observation and treatment of his heart condition, but he did not reveal this fact to any agent or mvestigator of the insurance company at any time during the subsequent investigation.

When the application was referred to appellant’s home office the Medical Director evidently had some grounds, unfortunately not inquired into at the trial, for suspecting that Strudel had once suffered from a heart disorder, for on that *92 day he addressed an inquiry through the Medical Information Bureau to other insurance companies about any previous application that had been submitted to them by Strudel, and also instructed the appellant’s Miami doctor, who had recorded Strudel’s original answers to the medical questionnaire, to make a further report on applicant’s history of heart trouble and to complete a “heart chart.” On April 10th a reply was received from the Provident Life and Accident Insur-anee Company, which stated merely:

“We considered Mr. Strudel for insurance in 1949. I am sorry our information is confidential and cannot be divulged.”

« * m ^ nx i i . . , „ ,, . . , again by appellant s Miami doctor who found no abnormality of the heart and also recorded some more of applicants .... , ,, „ , , , misleading answers to the effect that he , , , _, , T , had no history of heart disease. In early „ , . . .... May appellant assigned an investigator x , i xt x xt x- xt , _ to check on the truth of the report of r<x , t, . _, xt t „ xt x Strudels 1947 heart disorder. He first . x • j t x- , . , . interviewed a number of people, mclud- ,, j. ox t t. . f, x ing three of Strudel s neighbors, two , , , , t , . x t t t merchants who had business establish- , , xt- t x- . • ments close to his, a long time business . , j xt xt , x associate, and the owner of an apartment , , , , . x- t t- j tt house where he had formerly lived; all ,. x tt I-gave negative responses to all questions , x t x x . t t -x t x- x about heart trouble, hospitalizations, etc. , x -x xt x , xt t xx x —but it appears that only the latter two ... cx t t x- t . had known Strudel for as long as five m. . x- x t • x • . years. The investigator also interviewed X, ctx t t t • t • t t • the Strudels, who again denied any his-x „ , xx t-t . x « -X» tory of heart trouble, and to prove it referred him to their family doctor, who, upon being questioned, also denied that he had any knowledge of any past or present heart disease in his patient. No attempt was made to contact all the hos-pitáis or doctors in Miami who might have treated Strudel at some time for there were 36 of the former and over 600 of the latter and in any case information could only have been obtained from them pursuant to an authorization from the applicant. No follow-up was made on the report of the Provident Life Insurance Company, and all the other reports being entirely negative, the policies were issued on May 21, 1952.

On October 21, 1952, Strudel died of a heart attack. Appellee, insured’s wife, filed a claim and the required proofs of death, in which, incidentally, both she and the family physician again gave answers calculated to conceal their knowledge of the preliminary stages of the disease that caused the death. Appellant thereupon undertook another investigation which initially covered the same ground as the earlier one, with the same negative result. The investigator testi-fled that he then received an anonymous phone call referring him to a Dr. Nichol and to the Miami Heart Institute, who, upon proper authorization having been obtained from the appellee, revealed the fuU higt of insured,g heart trouble d baek to 1947 including the names , . . , , , , , , of still other physicians who had treated . ., T, , . ,, , ,, Strudel for it. It also appeared that the . , , ., , , , . , family doctor, though he had not par-x--.j-.t_. . j. ,. ,. ,, ticipated m this aspect of his patient s , j , ....... care, had been cognizant of the existence . ,, j.,- . .. . of the condition. An investigator was , , , ,, „ .. , T -j? t also sent to the Provident Life Insurance n „ . . , -x j Company, from whose files it appeared xt_xoxjtt_j t-jxt that Strudel had applied for insurance m Tnxoj • xx t_t t_x 1948, denying any heart trouble, but .i, x n , that an appended confidential report . ... , x j ix x from a credit bureau had indicated that , , , ~ , , , ,, , , . he had suffered a heart attack about a ,, , , ,, , year earlier; the company had then ad- , , . ,, . . . , .. dressed further inquiries to the appli-x j x t • xt j -t t • • cant and to his then family physician, , . • • A t but receiving no answers had taken no ,, -xt x action on the application, either to ac- . . . . ..

At the trial the only issue was whether, in view of the undisputed misrepresentation in the application, appellant was precluded from pleading reliance thereon in order to rescind the policies (an offer to return the premiums with interest having been made) because of the independent investigation it had made or because of the knowledge it had thereby obtained. Appellant unsuccessfully moved for a directed verdict, first at the close of plaintiff’s case during which no evidence relevant to the nature of the inves *93 tigation was presented, and again at the conclusion of all the evidence, at which time the court indicated that he thought that there was some slight evidence on which the jury could find for plaintiff, The court’s charge was then hammered out in a long discussion among counsel and the court, from which it is somewhat difficult to determine what objections were clearly made by the appellant. The jury was instructed, in substance, that if they found that the insurance company had received information indicating the falsity of the statements in the application and instead of choosing to rely solely on them decided to make an independent investigation, which it then failed to pursue with reasonable diligence after they had received or found such further facts as would cause a prudent man to make further inquiry, and that if the investigation if properly conducted would have revealed the truth, then the verdict should be for the plaintiff. The jury did return such a verdict on which the court entered judgment, denying motions for a new trial or for a judgment n. o. v.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
243 F.2d 90, 1957 U.S. App. LEXIS 2898, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/new-york-life-insurance-company-v-lee-strudel-ca5-1957.