Praetorians v. Thompson

79 S.W.2d 886
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 12, 1935
DocketNo. 11537
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 79 S.W.2d 886 (Praetorians v. Thompson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Praetorians v. Thompson, 79 S.W.2d 886 (Tex. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

JONES, Chief Justice.

Appellee, Ewell Thompson, instituted this suit in a district court of Dallas county as sole beneficiary of a policy of insurance issued to his wife, Myrtle M. Thompson, deceased, by appellant, The Praetorians. From a judgment awarding appellee the amount named in the face of the policy, the statutory 12 per cent, damages, and attorney fee for $300, ap.pellant has duly perfected an appeal. The following are the facts:

The insurance policy in question was duly issued by appellant on September 19, 1931, and deceased, Myrtle M. Thompson, died January 2,1932. Proper proof of death was made 'by appellee, and payment on the policy was soon thereafter refused by appellant. The statutory notice, required in order to fix liability 'for 12 per cent, damages .and a reasonable attorney fee, was duly given and the suit instituted.

At the time deceased made written application for said policy of insurance, and in connection with such application, and in response to printed questions purportedly asked, the application signed 'by her shows that she never had had a surgical operation or been advised to do so ; that she had never been for observation, care, or treatment in any hospital, sanitarium, asylum, or similar institution; that she had never had goiter ; that she had had no children, and at the time of the application was pregnant; and that she had not consulted a physician in the last ten years. At the close of these and a great many other questions answered by her, but not necessary to be considered, there is in the printed statement: “I hereby warrant to The Praetorians that all the foregoing answers to questions asked herein are true and certify to said The Praetorians that said an[887]*887swers have been set down correctly as they were made by me, whether written by me or not.”

The application is what is styled a “non-medical application” — i. e., there was no medical examination previous to the taking of the application. A medical examination could have i>een ordered by appellant’s director if, in his opinion, the answers of the applicant indicated the necessity for such an examination, and deceased, in her answers, stated that- she was willing for such examination. None was required in the instant ease. Appellant’s agent was intimately acquainted with appellee and his deceased wife, had lived as a neighbor to them, and had been so acquainted with them for seven years prior to the application. In his capacity as agent, on a blank prepared for such purpose, he made a statement as to his knowledge of the fitness of deceased as an insurance risk, and the answer to these questions were all favorable to the insured.

The written application was taken by the agent R. M. McAllister, who had been employed by appellant in such capacity for some time. There was present, at the time the application was taken, deceased, appellee, and the agent, McAllister, who read from the blank form the questions asked and recorded the answers. When this was completed, deceased signed same at once, without either reading it or having it read in her presence, relying on the agent for a correct statement of her answers.

■ It is undisputed that in May, 1926, an operation for goiter was performed upon deceased, and that at such time she was confined in the hospital for some weeks. Appel-lee gives positive testimony to the effect that no question was asked deceased, at the time of the application, as to whether she had ever suffered from goiter; that the question as to whether she had consulted a physician, as read to deceased and answered by her, was whether she had consulted a physician in the last five years, and also as to whether she had undergone a surgical operation within the last five years, and also whether she had been under observation in a hospital within the last five years. McAllister, agent for appellant, testified that the questions were read as they appear in the application, and the answers made were in response to the written questions. The testimony further shows, that the operation for goiter was a success; that she had been given the recognized test as to the success of such operation, at the-recognized time for such a test, subsequent to the operation, and she was pronounced entirely well. . . .

The undisputed evidence shows that deceased died in childbirth, and that' the immediate cause of her death was toxemia of pregnancy, though she had heart trouble at the time. The medical testimony of a com! petent physician, offered by appellee, is to the effect that the goiter, from which she had recovered more than five years previous to her death, was in no way a contributing cause to the disease from which she died. There is also medical testimony from appellant’s medical director that, because of the poison in her system by reason of goiter, and the consequent strain on her heart during the time she suffered from such trouble, this could have been a contributing cause of her death.

Dr. Grigsby, appellant’s medical director, who passes upon all written applications of the character made by deceased, testified that all such applications were placed before him for recommendation, and if rejected by him no policy would be issued; that if her application had stated that she had theretofore suffered from goiter and had been operated upon for such trouble, he would have at once rejected her application, for he considered such a person an undesirable risk for life insurance.

In its answer, appellant pleaded the fact that deceased was stricken with goiter in 1926 and had undergone an operation therefor ; that such illness of the thyroid gland causing such operation was of a severe character, and that the facts in reference thereto were concealed from appellant; that the answers made in the written application formed the basis for the issuance of the insurance policy, and that if such answers had been truthful and recited the real facts in reference thereto, no insurance policy would have been issued; and it alleged that, because of such concealment of facts,- the policy was void.

Appellee filed a supplemental petition, in which was alleged what is claimed to be “the true facts” in reference to the written application, as given above, and also alleged actual knowledge on the part of the agent, McAllister, as to the goiter operation, and as to the truth of the questions actually propounded to deceased, and which she truthfully answered, as propounded by the agent, and made these allegations the subject of a plea of estoppel on the part of appellant to rely upon the special defense pleaded. Appellant demurred to the allegations in the supplemental. petition, which demurrer was overruled [888]*888by the court and error assigned on such ruling. The case was tried to a jury, submitted on special issues, and, in response to the verdict on such issues, the above-recited judgment was rendered. Appellant, at the close of the evidence, moved for peremptory instructions, which motion was overruled, and the ruling of the court on such motion is duly assigned as error. Appellant objected to the submission of each special issue and assigned error on the overruling on such objections.

We deem it pertinent to copy the special issues and the verdict on each issue. They are:

“No. 1. Do you find from a preponderance of the evidence that the question and the answer in the application of Mrs. Myrtle M.

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79 S.W.2d 886, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/praetorians-v-thompson-texapp-1935.