O'Rourke v. John Hancock Mut. Life Ins. Co.

57 L.R.A. 496, 50 A. 834, 23 R.I. 457, 1902 R.I. LEXIS 132
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJanuary 6, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 57 L.R.A. 496 (O'Rourke v. John Hancock Mut. Life Ins. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
O'Rourke v. John Hancock Mut. Life Ins. Co., 57 L.R.A. 496, 50 A. 834, 23 R.I. 457, 1902 R.I. LEXIS 132 (R.I. 1902).

Opinion

Stiness, C. J.

This is an action on a policy of life insurance, in which the plaintiff is the beneficiary, upon the life of her son, a boy fifteen years old when the policy was issued.

The defence is that the application contained false answers to questions which are made warranties by the terms of the policy.

To the question : " Has this company ever refused to issue a policy on this life?” the answer was “No.”

The plaintiff admits in her testimony that she knew that *459 the boy had been previously rejected by this company, and says that she and her husband stated the fact to the agent who took the application and wrote in the answers, but that she did not know what he wrote.

A question and answer of the same import is repeated on the back of the application in the statement to the medical examiner.

Another question : “ When did you last consult a doctor, and for what? ” was answered : “ Two years ago; bronchitis, not predisposed.”

Another question, asking if the boy had ever had any serious illness from either one of fifteen diseases named, including rheumatism, was answered “No.”

A previous application had an answer that the boy had consulted a doctor for rheumatism in January, 1893.

The case was tried to a jury, and a verdict was rendered in favor of the plaintiff for the sum of $243.40, the amount claimed ; and the defendant petitions for a new trial upon the grounds that the verdict was against the evidence and that there were errors of law in rulings at the trial.

(1) The first, third, fifth, and sixth exceptions were to the admission of testimony by the plaintiff that at the time of this application the defendant’s agent was told that the applicant had been previously rejected by this company, and as to the powers of the agent.

Taken by themselves, the rulings were erroneous. In Reed v. Equitable Co., 17 R. I. 785, this court adhered to the rule, recognized in this State since Wilson v. Conway Co. (1856), 4 R. I. 141, that an agent in simply procuring insurance is the agent of the applicant, and not of the company, in drawing the application, and that the applicant is responsible for his mistakes and false answers. See also Bryan v. National Co., 21 R. I. 149. Testimony of what was stated to or by the solicitor was therefore immaterial. The effect of these rulings will be considered later.

The second exception related only to the form of a question claimed to be leading, which is not important.

(2) The fourth exception was to the refusal of the trial judge *460 to direct a verdict for the defendant, because of failure to prove the warranties embraced in the questions and answers stated above.

It was held in Sweeney v. Metropolitan Co. 19 R. I. 171, that such answers are warranties which must be proved by the plaintiff, but which, for convenience of trial, may stand on presumption or prima facie evidence until contradicted, like the signature and consideration of a promissory note. There was, however, testimony that the answers were true except as to rheumatism and the previous rejection, which will be considered under the seventh and eighth exceptions.

(3) The seventh exception relates to an alleged statement by the solicitor that the former rejection was an immaterial matter, which statement, if made, would bind the company. It does not appear from the charge that the judge so ruled ; but .inasmuch as the jury were allowed to consider the fact whether the agent made the statement, the exception is applicable. The solicitor, in making the application, being, as we have said, the agent of the insured, would not bind the company by his statements. But another question is presented which rendei’s this question of fact, of what the agent said, quite unimportant. The previous application was in the hands of the company. The rejection of it was by the defendant itself. The purpose of warranties in a policy is not to set a trap for applicants, but to inform the company about important facts upon which the contract is based. When, therefore, a company is in actual possession of knowledge of a fact and by turning to its own record can assure itself better than by the imperfect memory of an applicant, it is a perversion of the purpose of a warranty to allow it to avoid a contract. It is evident injustice for one party to allow another to enter into a contract which the former knows or is bound to know is invalid. As stated in Reed v. Equitable Co., 17 R. I. 785, it is taking advantage of one’s wrong. See also Greene v. Equitable Co., 11 R. I. 434.

The defendant argues that it is unreasonable to hold that a company is bound to have present knowledge of all that appears on its previous files. To this suggestion at the trial *461 the judge asked the very pertinent question : “Any more so than it was to ascertain that fact just after the boy died ? They have taken the money. Now just as soon as the boy died and the beneficiary asks to be paid, then their records are looked up; then they saved the record.” The company had exactly the same information in its possession at the time the contract was made that it has now. If it is available at one time it ought to be imputable at the other. But it is said that the company cannot be supposed to know that it is the same person, even though the name may be the same. While this might be so in some cases, we do not see that there would be any uncertainty in this case, because the applications identify the same applicant by date of birth, age, town, occupation, and parents’ names. There was ample opportunity for examination, as the application was dated July 22, 1896, the medical examination was August 22, 1896, it is stamped, doubtless by the company, September 2, 1896, and the policy was not issued until September 9, 1896.

In Jerrett v. John Hancock Co., 18 R. I. 754, there had been a previous rejection, but the policy was held to be void because neither application stated the fact, called for by a question, that a sister of the assured had died of consumption. This was a fact that the company could not be held to• know, and hence the case was essentially different from the case at bar.

The answer about rheumatism stands in a somewhat different relation.

The first application was dated March 3, 1893, and it stated that the boy had consulted a physician for about four attacks of rheumatism in January. The company had no possible knowledge from this that he had rheumatism, and may have relied upon the denial of it in the present application as showing that his trouble, which he thought to be, turned out not to be rheumatism. The evidence of the plaintiff was that he had rheumatism. This might have been after the first application, and so outside of any implied notice.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Clark v. Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc.
7 F. Supp. 3d 169 (D. Rhode Island, 2014)
Highlands Insurance v. Allstate Insurance
688 F.2d 398 (Fifth Circuit, 1982)
Elfstrom v. New York Life Insurance
432 P.2d 731 (California Supreme Court, 1967)
Violin v. Fireman's Fund Insurance
406 P.2d 287 (Nevada Supreme Court, 1965)
Pieri v. John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance Co.
168 A.2d 277 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1961)
Putman v. Deinhamer
70 N.W.2d 652 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1955)
Modern Woodmen of America v. Stevens
219 P.2d 322 (Arizona Supreme Court, 1950)
Carrizales v. W.O.W. Life Insurance Society
167 S.W.2d 509 (Texas Supreme Court, 1943)
Carrizales v. W. O. W. Life Ins. Soc.
167 S.W.2d 509 (Texas Commission of Appeals, 1943)
New York Life Ins. Co. v. Zivitz
10 So. 2d 276 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1942)
E. A. Boyd Co. v. United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co.
94 P.2d 1046 (California Court of Appeal, 1939)
Pellon v. Connecticut General Life Insurance
168 A. 701 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1933)
Supreme Tribe of Ben Hur v. Owens
1915 OK 597 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1915)
Metropolitan Life Insurance v. Brubaker
96 P. 62 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1908)
Rhode v. Metropolitan Life-Insurance
93 N.W. 1076 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1903)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
57 L.R.A. 496, 50 A. 834, 23 R.I. 457, 1902 R.I. LEXIS 132, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/orourke-v-john-hancock-mut-life-ins-co-ri-1902.