New York Life Insurance v. Rigas

168 A. 22, 117 Conn. 437, 91 A.L.R. 1122, 1933 Conn. LEXIS 179
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedAugust 15, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 168 A. 22 (New York Life Insurance v. Rigas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut 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. Rigas, 168 A. 22, 117 Conn. 437, 91 A.L.R. 1122, 1933 Conn. LEXIS 179 (Colo. 1933).

Opinion

Banks, J.

On November 14th, 1929, the plaintiff issued a policy of insurance upon the life of Peter S. Rigas, a resident of Poughkeepsie, New York, in the amount of $2500 payable to the defendant, the brother of the insured. The insured died August 22d, 1930, and the defendant submitted to the plaintiff proof of his death on August 30th, 1930. On October 6th, 1930, the plaintiff repudiated liability on the policy upon the ground of alleged false representations contained in the application, and tendered the defendant a check for the amount of premiums received. One of the terms of the policy was that it should be incontestable after two years from its date of issue, except for the nonpayment of premiums and except as to provisions *439 and conditions relating to disability and double indemnity benefits.

The plaintiff brought this action for the cancellation of the policy by a writ dated September 23d, 1931. The complaint alleges that the insured applied in writing to the plaintiff for a policy of insurance upon his life, that certain representations in his application were false and known to him to be false, that these representations were material to the risk and that the plaintiff issued the policy in reliance upon them and would not have issued it but for its belief that they were true. In his answer the defendant expressly denied that the insured applied in writing for a policy of insurance, denied that he executed the application which was attached to the policy and denied that the questions appearing upon such application were asked or that he made the answers appearing thereon. The original insurance policy was produced in court by the defendant and became an exhibit in the case. Attached to the policy is a photostatic copy of a form of application for a policy of insurance bearing a signature purporting to be that of Peter S. Rigas, and, as a part of the same document, what purport to be questions and answers upon a medical examination to which is appended also a signature purporting to be that of Peter S. Rigas. The original application was not offered in evidence, the only evidence offered by the plaintiff, aside from the policy and its letter repudiating liability with its accompanying check, being that of a physician in its medical department to the effect that the application would have been dismissed if it had contained truthful statements as to certain operations and hospital treatment undergone by the insured. It appeared that the medical examiner who took the application was dead at the time of the trial. The court held that upon the *440 pleadings it was incumbent upon the plaintiff to prove the execution and delivery of the application by the insured, and that, in the absence of any evidence of such execution, the plaintiff had failed to prove its. case.

That certain of the answers to the questions appearing upon the copy of the form of application attached to the policy were not truthful is not disputed by counsel for the defendant, and is found by the court. The plaintiff meets the claim that it was incumbent upon it to prove that the insured signed the application and actually gave to the medical examiner the answers which appear upon the copy of the application attached to the policy, by the assertion that the defendant is estopped to make it. It contends that if the insured knew of the infirmities of the application he must be held to have adopted the fraud practiced upon the company; if he did not know of them, through a failure to study the policy, he was negligent, being the only person in a position to discover them, and that in either event the defendant as beneficiary under the policy, is bound by the failure of the insured to disclose to the company the untruthful character of the answers in the application which he would have known if he had read the copy attached to and made a part of the policy. The plaintiff is a corporation organized under the laws of the State of New York and there located; the policy was issued in New York to the insured when he was a resident there and it is to be presumed was accepted by him there. Under these circumstances the construction and effect of the policy are to be determined by the law of that State. Mullen v. Reed, 64 Conn. 240, 247, 29 Atl. 478; 2 Cooley, Briefs on Insurance (2d Ed.) p. 1026.

The policy contains the following provision: “The *441 policy and the application therefor, copy of which is attached hereto, constitute the entire contract.” This is in compliance with § 58 of the New York insurance law (Laws of 1906, Chap. 326) which provides that the policy must contain the entire contract, and that the application if it is to have effect as a part of the policy must be physically indorsed thereon or attached thereto, so that the insured when he receives a policy may know all its terms by reading it or having it read. Minsker v. John Hancock Mutual Life Ins. Co., 254 N. Y. 333, 173 N. E. 4. Prior to the enactment of that statute the courts of New York had held that if the medical examiner of a life insurance company was truthfully told, by the applicant for a policy, of facts which under the terms of the policy would make it void if not noted upon it, the company could not avail itself of the defense that such facts were not stated in the policy. The copy of the application not being attached to the policy, the insured could not, by reading the latter, ascertain that the medical examiner had incorrectly recorded his answers. Sternaman v. Metropolitan Life Ins. Co., 170 N. Y. 13, 62 N. E. 763. When, however, a copy of the application is attached to and made a part of the policy, as the New York law now requires, and as was done in the present case, the New York courts no longer permit a recovery upon the policy on the theory that the answers of the applicant were incorrectly recorded. “When an insured receives a policy, it is his duty to read it or have it read, and if an application incorporated therein does not contain correct answers to the questions asked by the medical examiner it is his duty to have it corrected. In such circumstances a recovery will no longer be permitted because the medical examiner incorrectly recorded the applicant’s answers or because the insured was unable to *442 read or neglected to read the policy.” Minsker v. John Hancock Mutual Life Ins. Co., supra, p. 338.

In the absence of proof that the insured signed this application, the record does not present the question, discussed in numerous cases, as to whether an insured is barred of recovery where an application signed by him contains false statements, upon the theory that he is charged with knowledge of the contents of a document which he has executed. See cases collected in annotations in 81 A. L. It. 855 et seg. Assuming, as we must, that the insured did not sign the original application, he did receive the policy, to which was attached a photostatic copy of the application, and adjoining it a plainly printed note stating that the copy should be carefully examined and any error or omission immediately called to the attention of the company. Under the decision in the Minsker

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Bluebook (online)
168 A. 22, 117 Conn. 437, 91 A.L.R. 1122, 1933 Conn. LEXIS 179, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/new-york-life-insurance-v-rigas-conn-1933.