Peoples Life Insurance v. Medairy

258 A.2d 429, 255 Md. 534, 1969 Md. LEXIS 732
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedNovember 11, 1969
Docket[No. 14, September Term, 1969.]
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 258 A.2d 429 (Peoples Life Insurance v. Medairy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Peoples Life Insurance v. Medairy, 258 A.2d 429, 255 Md. 534, 1969 Md. LEXIS 732 (Md. 1969).

Opinion

Barnes, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The principal question in this appeal is whether or not the Circuit Court for Frederick County erred in denying the motion of the appellant, Peoples Life Insurance Company, the defendant below (Peoples), to direct a verdict in its favor because the appellee, Jeannette E. Medairy, the plaintiff below, presented no evidence that the proposed insured, Paige T. Medairy, husband of the plaintiff, met any objective standard of insurability, the proposed insured having paid the original premium, received a “satisfaction” receipt but having died the day after the receipt was issued.

The proposed insured on October 11, 1967, made two applications to Peoples for two policies of life insurance, totalling $15,000.00. At the time of completing these applications, a check was given to Peoples in the amount of $25.85, representing the full first premium required under the mode of premium (monthly payment) selected by the applicant for the insurance for which application was made. The agent of Peoples, E. E. Pur key, *536 had come to the Medairy home, at the suggestion of Mrs. Medairy, the plaintiff, to discuss the acquisition of some additional life insurance, Mr. Medairy having recently changed his employment and not being covered by the group insurance program of his former employer. Mr. Medairy, the proposed insured, filled out Part 1 of the respective applications (one for $10,000.00, the other for $5,000.00 of life insurance), Part 1 being the standard type used in the life insurance business to acquire non-medical information. Upon receiving the check for the original premium, Mr. Purkey then gave Mrs. Medairy — the intended beneficiary if living at Mr. Medairy’s death, otherwise to the two daughters of the Medairys— a receipt which provided in relevant part, as follows:

“ ‘RECEIPT’ ”
“‘THIS RECEIPT MUST NOT BE DETACHED UNLESS THE FULL FIRST PREMIUM HAS BEEN DEPOSITED AT THE TIME OF APPLICATION AND IT SHALL OPERATE AS A CONDITIONAL RECEIPT ONLY UNDER THE CONDITIONS HEREAFTER SET FORTH UNDER PARAGRAPH
❖ * *
“ ‘A. If the above payment is made at the time of signing Part 1 of the application and is equal to the full first premium in accordance with the mode of payment selected and the published rates of the Company for the form of policy applied for in Question No. 4, and if Part 2 of the application is duly completed (Part 2 shall be deemed to include medical examination if such examination is required by the Company), then the insurance applied for shall be in force as of the date hereof or of Part 2 —Medical Examination, whichever date is the later, provided that the Company is satisfied that on the later of such dates the applicant is *537 a risk acceptable to the Company tinder its rales, limits and standards on the plan and for the amount of insurance applied for and at the rate of premium declared paid, such insurance being in accordance with and subject to the terms and conditions of the policy contract applied for and in use by the Company at said date; * * *’ ” (Emphasis supplied.)
“ ‘B. If a policy differing in form, amount, or premium from that applied for is offered, no insurance shall be in force under the application herein referred to unless and until the first premium Is paid and a policy actually delivered to and accepted by the applicant during the continued insurability of the applicant as stipulated by the terms of the agreement appearing on the reverse side hereof.’ ”
“(Reverse)”
“ ‘A. This application consisting of Part 1 and Part 2 (including a Part 2 medical examination which will be promptly completed if required by the Company) and any policy or policies issued in consequence thereof shall constitute the entire contract of insurance, and the Company shall not be bound in any way by any statements, promises or information made or given by or to any agent or other person at any time unless the same be reduced to writing, submitted to the Company at its Home Office, and made part of such contract. The agent has no authority to waive the answer to any question in the application, to modify the application, or bind the Company by making any promise or representation.’ ”

Mr. Medairy was examined for Peoples by Dr. Mc-Kendree Boyer the evening of October 16, 1967, who filled out Part 2 of the application (Medical Information). The information obtained relevant to this case, *538 was as follows: Mr. Medairy was 45 years of age, had a height of five feet, five inches in his shoes and weighed in his ordinary clothing 170 pounds, with no change of weight during the past year. His blood pressure readings were done at rest and indicated a pulse rate of 72, with no irregularities, with a systolic pressure of 140 over a diastolic pressure of 88. The pulse rate returned to 80 immediately after exercise and was again 72 three minutes after exercise. In regard to the applicant’s heart, there was no hypertrophy present; and Dr. Boyer in the blank entitled “Diagnosis of the heart condition” wrote “Normal heart.” Under the heading of “Family Record,” it was stated that both parents lived to the age of 72, the mother having died of heart disease. A sister of the applicant died after open heart surgery. Doctor Boyer completed Part 2, the Medical Information Form, the same evening of the examination, October 16, put it in an envelope addressed to Peoples, stamped the envelope and mailed it the next morning at around 9:30 A.M., there being no mail collection or delivery the evening of October 16.

Mr. Medairy had been previously treated by Dr. Boyer as a private patient on two occasions, but not in connection with any difficulty with the patient’s heart. The patient had apparently enjoyed good health throughout his life. In the afternoon of the following day, October 17, however, while seated at the telephone, he suffered a heart attack from which he died. The death certificate, signed by Dr. John G. Ball, indicated the cause of death as “Coronary Insufficiency, acute.”

The deceased had a $3,000.00 life insurance policy with Peoples issued in 1950. About two weeks after the decedent’s death, Mr. Purkey came to see Mrs. Medairy with two checks, one for the proceeds for the $3,000.00 policy and one for a return of premium paid on October 11, 1967. He also had a paper to sign. Mrs. Medairy declined to accept the check for the return of premium and to sign the paper. She demanded the payment of $15,000 *539 from Peoples and after Peoples declined to pay, filed an action in the Circuit Court for Frederick County to recover that sum alleging, inter alia,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
258 A.2d 429, 255 Md. 534, 1969 Md. LEXIS 732, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peoples-life-insurance-v-medairy-md-1969.