Northwestern Life Insurance v. Muskegon Bank

122 U.S. 501, 7 S. Ct. 1221, 30 L. Ed. 1100, 1887 U.S. LEXIS 2129
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMay 23, 1887
Docket288
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 122 U.S. 501 (Northwestern Life Insurance v. Muskegon Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Northwestern Life Insurance v. Muskegon Bank, 122 U.S. 501, 7 S. Ct. 1221, 30 L. Ed. 1100, 1887 U.S. LEXIS 2129 (1887).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Miller

delivered the opinion of the court.

The Muskegon National Bank recovered a judgment, in the Circuit Court of the United States for the Southern District of New York, against the Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Company, upon a policy of insurance on the life of Erwin G-. Comstock for $23,717.04:, and to this judgment the present writ of error is directed.

The bank had an insurance upon the life of Comstock, its debtor, for the sum of $20,000. On the trial before the jury, although some other issues were made in the pleadings, the contest turned, so far as the assignments of error are' presented here, on the condition of Comstock in regard to the habit of drinking alcoholic liquors. The policy and the application for it, the answers to which were signed both by Com- *503 stock and the bank through its president, present the foundation of the controversy. The sixteenth interrogatory is as follows: “ Are you, or have you ever been, in the habit of using alcoholic beverages or other stimulants ? ” The - answer to this was, “Yes, occasionally.” The twenty-second interrogatory, “ Have you read and assented to the following agreement?” was answered, “Yes.” This agreement, so far as it •touches the present issue, reads .as follows: “ It is hereby declared that the above are the applicant’s own fair and true answers to the foregoing questions, and that the applicant is not, and will not become, habitually intemperate or addicted to the use of opium.” The body of the policy declared that if Comstock shall become intemperate, so as to impair his health or induce delirium, tremens, or if any statement in the application, on the faith of which the policy is made, shall be found to be in any material respect untrue, the policy is void.

Upon this language in the application and the policy, the defendant founded two separate pleas or defences:

First. That “at the time of making and presenting said application as aforesaid, and of the issuing of said policy, the said Erwin G-. Comstock was and prior thereto had been habitually intemperate, and that the said statement in said application contained that said Erwin G. Comstock was not then habitually intemperate, was untrue and fraudulently made, and a suppression of facts material to the risk assumed by said policy of insurance.”

Second. That “said policy was issued by this defendant and accepted by said plaintiff upon the express condition, amongst others contained therein, that if said Erwin G. Comstock should become either habitually intemperate or so far intemperate as to impair health or induce delirium tremens, the said policy should be null and void; that in fact, as this defendant is informed and believes, the said Erwin G. Com-stock did, after the issuing of said policy, become habitually intemperate, and so far intemperate as to impair his health and induce de'tvrium tremens, and that thereby the said policy became and is null and void.”

The issues were tried, upon the two allegations of habitual *504 intemperance before 'and after the issue of the policy. The company, discarding other issues, assumed the affirmative on these two pleas, and on a plea of suicide, which seems to have been abandoned, and thereby obtained the opening and the' conclusion to the jury. The assignments of error raise objections to the action of the court in excluding answers to questions propounded to witnesses for the defendant company on the trial, as well as its refusal to give certain instructions prayed for by the defendant to the jury.

A witness for the defendant, named Torrent, testified that .he knew Comstock at Muskegon from 1868 to 1875. The policy of insurance was taken' out in New York in 1879. The witness further stated that he was well acquainted with Comstock in Muskegon, and knew that he was addicted to the use of intoxicating liquors during the period of their acquaintance ; had seen him drunk; knew of his being on prolonged sprees, and gave other testimony to the effect that he did use int'oxicating liquors to' excess. He was then asked this question,: “Up to the time your acquaintance with him ceased,what would you say as to whether his drinking had affected his health or impaired his vital powers in any respect? ” To this he answered: “ I think it had affected him materially; I think it had affected his nerves and impaired his health generally, general debility; the symptoms of that were his general looks, and that the time he went away, or just before, he was taken very sick, and they didn’t know whether he was going to .be alive or die; that was the general impression.” The court excluded this answer, and the defendant excepted. The witness also testified that he saw him during that sickness, and that he was then sick for about three weeks, adding: I think he had the delirium tremens.” This expression of opinion was also excluded.

It is to be observed that the witness had testified to all the facts which he knew, without objection, that tended to establish a habit of intemperance in Comstock prior to 1875. What he was next asked, and what he then testified to, was his opinion in regard to the effect of this intemperance upon the health of the assured. It will be noted that all this occurred *505 between four and five years before the execution of the policy. ¥e are of opinion that while the facts recited by this witness and received in evidence might have some remote tendency to show Comstock’s habits in regard to temperance at the time to which they related, his opinion of their effect upon his health at the date of the policy, four years later, was inadmissible as to that or his habits, as he knew nothing of these during that period.

The exception to the testimony of Barney, who undertook^ to detail conversations with a doctor attending Comstock prior to 1875, as to whether Comstock was threatened with delirium tremens or not, and the statement of the witness that he was afraid Comstock was going to have delvriMm tremens, which was excluded by the court, depend upon the same principle and are otherwise incompetent. We see no érror in those rulings.

The remaining assignments of error have regard to prayers for instructions by the court to the jury, which were refused. No assignment of error is founded on any exception taken to the charge of the judge who tried the case, which seems' to have been eminently fair and very full, and in our op’"' ' embraced all that was necessary to be said to the jury on the subject. The questions which the jury had to respond to were whether Comstock was of intemperate habits at the time the policy was taken out, and whether he became habitually intemperate after that period. The whole case turned, so far as the jury was concerned, upon the true definitions of the words “habitually intemperate,” taken in connection with the testimony on- the subject, at these two different periods-. The plaintiff was not bound to prove that the assured was temperate, or that he was a temperate man, but the defendant was bound to prove not only that Comstock was intemperate at those periods, but that he was habitually so.

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Bluebook (online)
122 U.S. 501, 7 S. Ct. 1221, 30 L. Ed. 1100, 1887 U.S. LEXIS 2129, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/northwestern-life-insurance-v-muskegon-bank-scotus-1887.