New York Life Insurance v. Parker

64 S.W.2d 556, 188 Ark. 39, 1933 Ark. LEXIS 33
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedOctober 16, 1933
Docket4-3133
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 64 S.W.2d 556 (New York Life Insurance v. Parker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas 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 v. Parker, 64 S.W.2d 556, 188 Ark. 39, 1933 Ark. LEXIS 33 (Ark. 1933).

Opinion

Butler, J.

Appellant company issued its policy of life insurance on the life of Pliny L. Parker on October 2,1930. This suit is brought by appellee, the beneficiary named in the policy to recover on the same for the death of said Pliny L. Parker, which occurred on April 20, 1931. Appellant answered denying liability and made his answer a cross-complaint and asked for the cancellation of the policy on account of fraud alleged to have been practiced by Parker in the procurement of the contract of insurance. The fraud was alleged to be in these particulars: That the application contained a warranty of the truth of the answers and that certain false answers were made to questions propounded, the questions being, did lie have any disease serious or not serious within the past three years, and the name of the physician with whom he had consulted dr by whom he had been treated; and what physicians he had consulted within the past three years, and if within the past three years he had been continuously, and was then, in good health, and if he had consulted a physician for, or suffered from, any disease of the heart, and what physician not already named had he consulted or been examined or treated by within the past five years 1 It was alleged that all these questions had been falsely answered in the negative, when in fact Parker had been treated on September 3, 1930, for a disease of the heart by Dr. J. T. Irby who had then and there diagnosed the said disease as angina pectoris, and had informed the said Parker at the time of its nature and character.

The motion to transfer to equity was denied, and on the issues presented evidence was adduced which resulted in the verdict and judgment for the appellee, from which is this appeal.

Dr. J. T. Irby testified on behalf of the appellant on the questions presented by its answer and cross-complaint, and stated that he had been called to treat the assured about nine or ten o ’clock on the night of September 3, 1930; that he was with him thirty or forty minutes, examined him with a stethoscope, took his blood pressure, and “I was under the impression that he had an attack of angina and told him so.” He testified that angina was a disease of the heart, and that he discussed the condition with Parker and told him to avoid .any excitement — to live as quietly as he could — that any excess of overeating, or anything" like that, would bring on another attack, which might be his last; that he gave the patient a hypodermic, left two or three tablets for his use and described angina, its causes and effect. He further stated that he saw Parker a day or two after, and that he looked pretty badly washed out as if he was weak; that he looked like a very sick man.-

On the part of the appellee, Mrs. Parker testified that she was with her husband all the time, that Dr. Irby was present, and that the doctor did not give a hypodermic or take the blood pressure of tbe patient; that she was present in the room all the time except for a few moments when she went out to get a glass of water. She stated that her husband had eaten a large meal, and about thirty minutes after supper had an attack of indigestion, from which he frequently suffered causing his stomach to feel too full and press against his heart and cause a pain in his chest; that just before she called Dr. Irby that night she gave her husband some soda and water, after which he was better, and when Dr. Irby arrived he prescribed two little tablets that looked like aspirin, but that her husband wouldn’t take them, saying he was feeling better and didn’t need it. She also said that Dr. Irby did not tell her husband that he had trouble with his heart, and that her husband had only consulted a physician within the past five years on account of a gun shot wound; that in October or November of 1930 Parker had influenza. Dr. Watkins, who examined Parker for the insurance testified that he had treated Parker for a gun shot wound and for influenza; that he had examined him for the policy sued on and that during the. examination Parker told him that Dr. Irby had called to see him a night or two before the application for insurance was made, and that the doctor left a little medicine and told him if he had any trouble to take it, but he was all right and did not need it. He said that this information he treated as a visit for a trivial matter and attached no importance to it, and did not think it necessary to include it in the answers to the questions. He stated that he had treated Parker for a number of years, and had never observed any indication of heart disease.

It was in testimony that there was a certain ailment called pseudo or false angina., and its characteristics and its symptoms resembled real angina, except that the pain would endure for an hour or longer, whereas in true angina pectoris the attacks would last only a few minutes and would either disappear or the patient die.

There was testimony given by Dr. LeRoy, called as an expert witness by the appellant company, to the effect that the symptoms in angina pectoris developed suddenly, generally in the extreme or upper left side, the pain spreading down the arm and very violent and excruciating in the region of the heart, extending more or less one way or the other. In addition to that, there was a very great weakness, sweat, fear and a sense of impending death. In addition to that, there is a distinct shortness of breath, headache and things of that sort, the principal thing, however, being great weakness, terrible pain an apprehension of immediate death, pallor and poor circulation.

Dr. Irby did not state that the patient had any of these symptoms. He said “he had quite a bit of pain in his chest and upper part of the abdomen; the pain was in the region of the heart, left side of chest and left shoulder. He (Parker) stated, he had been suffering some little bit when I arrived, possibly an hour or two.”

On this state of the testimony, the court, on its own motion gave the following charge to the jury: “Gentlemen of the jury, the plaintiff, as beneficiary named in a certain policy of insurance, New York Life Insurance Company, sues for recovery of the amount of said policy, and the defendant defends on the ground that the policy is voided by an incorrect answer of the deceased, made to one of the questions in the application. You are charged that the burden of proof is upon the defendant to show the incorrectness of said answer.” And at the request of defendant, appellant, continuing, the court charged the jury that: ‘ ‘ The application of the deceased for a policy of the defendant company reflects, in answer to a question in the application as to whether or not he had ever had a disease of the heart, that the answer was in the negative. You are charged that if you find from the evidence that the deceased had, a short time 'before the application, had an attack of angina pectoris, a disease of the heart, and had been treated by a physician therefor, and that the answer to this question in the application was made by him knowing that he had had such an attack, and been so treated, your verdict will be for the defendant. . If you fail to find such fact, jmur verdict will be for the plaintiff for the amount sued for. ’ ’ And on its own motion the court added to this instruction the following sentence: “That is the only issue, gentlemen, in this case.”

This was all the instruction requested and given.

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Bluebook (online)
64 S.W.2d 556, 188 Ark. 39, 1933 Ark. LEXIS 33, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/new-york-life-insurance-v-parker-ark-1933.