Raymond v. National Life Ins. Co.

273 P. 667, 40 Wyo. 1, 1929 Wyo. LEXIS 13
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 17, 1929
Docket1524
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 273 P. 667 (Raymond v. National Life Ins. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Raymond v. National Life Ins. Co., 273 P. 667, 40 Wyo. 1, 1929 Wyo. LEXIS 13 (Wyo. 1929).

Opinion

*9 Rineb, Justice.

On September 26, 1926, Willard E. Raymond, residing at Lander, Wyoming, and engaged in business as an oil well driller in one of tbe oil fields located some distance from that town, made application to the National Life Insurance Company, a corporation organized under the laws of the state of Vermont and authorized to transact business in Wyoming, for a $2,500 policy of life insurance. In that application, over Raymond’s signature, among other statements, there appears the following language, relative to the payment of the premium on the insurance sought:

“It is understood and agreed * * * (2) that if the amount of such premium is paid to the agent at the time of making this application the company shall consider and act upon said application in accordance with its rules and practice of selection; that if it is satisfied that I was at the time of my medical examination insurable upon the plan and for the amount of insurance hereby applied for, this application shall be approved and the insurance shall be effective in accordance with the terms of the policy applied for from the date of said medical examination, notwithstanding the provisions of the policy as to delivery in my lifetime and good health, which provisions, in event of, and in consideration of said advance payment, are hereby waived, and such policy will be delivered to me or to my personal representatives; but the company may at any time before delivery of said policy, on receipt of additional information, reconsider any approval hereof and. decline the insurance if it is not then satisfied that I was insurable on the date of said medical examination, and that if said company shall not be so satisfied the amount of premium paid shall be returned. ’ ’

Raymond also stated in his application that:

“I understand and agree that the agent taking this application has no authority to make, modify, alter or discharge any contract hereby applied for.
“I hereby agree that this application and the answers made to the medical examiner and’the policy applied for shall constitute the entire contract between the parties hereto. ’ ’

*10 The agent of the insurance company, one R. A. Williams, called on Raymond at the latter’s home and they discussed the proposed application there and part of it was written up at that time. In the course of the conversation, the matter of the payment of the premium on the proposed policy was considered, and Raymond not having the money then, Williams told him that the Central Trust Company would advance this premium on the understanding that if the policy was not issued, the money would be returned and then delivered to the trust company, in order to cancel the note which Raymond would give the trust company to evidence the loan. Raymond assented to this arrangement and executed a note, due November 1, 1926, to the Central Trust Company for $17.13 — this amount being the first quarter annual premium on the policy of insurance applied for by him. After concluding the discussion at the applicant’s home, he and the agent went to the office of a physician residing in Lander, who conducted the medical examinations locally for the insurance company, and applicant submitted himself to an examination and also answered certain printed questions, the answers being written down immediately following them by the doctor. Among these questions and answers were the following:

“Q. Are you now in good health ? A. Yes. Q. Have you ever had: dyspepsia, chronic diarrhoea, appendicitis, fistula, jaundice, gallstone colic, or disease of liver or bile passages? A. Yes, appendicitis, 1910. Q. Malaria, rheumatism, gout, scrofula, dropsy, cancer or other tumor? A. No. Q. Have you had sicknesses not already mentioned? A. No. Q. Have you ever received any serious injury, or undergone surgical operation? A. Yes, appendectomy, 1910; complete recovery. Q. When did you last consult a physician and for what ? A. 1910, appendectomy. ’ ’

Relative to these questions and answers, which were stated to be “in continuation of and forming a part of” Raymond’s application to the National Life Insurance Company and relative to the application itself, at the conclusion *11 of the questions and answers, and over Raymond’s signature, the following clauses are set out:

“I HEREBY CERTIFY that I have read all statements and answers in this application (Forms A and B), and agree, on behalf of myself and of any person who shall have or claim any interest in any contract issued hereunder: That no material circumstance or information has been withheld or omitted touching my past and present state of health and habits of life, and that said statements and answers, together with this declaration, are complete and true and shall be the basis of the policy hereby applied for; that there shall be no contract of insurance until a policy shall have been issued and delivered to me and the premium thereon paid to the company, or its authorized agent, during my lifetime and good health; ’ ’

After the medical examination of the applicant had been completed by the local physician, the latter, in response to an inquiry, told the agent, Williams, that as far as he knew, he would recommend the applicant. Thereupon Raymond was given by the agent a receipt for the amount of the premium above mentioned and the latter then read to the former the provisions on the back of that receipt, which contained the language quoted above and numbered (2). The receipt itself stated that:

“Said payment is made subject to the terms and conditions of agreement 2 contained in said application, as per copy on the back of this receipt.”

Subsequent to giving the receipt to the applicant, the agent informed him that this receipt placed the insurance applied for in force “subject to the investigation which the company always makes.” Raymond was also told by the agent that a check-up would be made by the insurance company to determine whether the applicant’s answers to the medical examiner and in his application were true and correct, and whether he was a good moral and financial risk; whether his occupation was particularly hazardous *12 and various other matters to be considered by the company in connection with the applicant’s insurability; the agent further1 told Baymond that if he paid the premium in advance and proved to be a good risk, and the ‘ ‘ check-up was O. K. ” with the company, he would be insured from the date of the medical examination if the application was approved. Applicant’s wife testified that at their home the agent told Baymond that “if he would be examined that day, he would be insured from that day on.” She stated also, however, that being engaged in household duties, she was in and out of the room where the conversation of the agent and her husband took place and did not hear all of it.

The application, including the medical report with its accompanying questions and answers, as well as the premium of $17.13 advanced by the Central Trust Company, was then sent by the agent Williams to the general branch office of the insurance company at Salt Lake City, Utah, whence it was transmitted to the home office of the company at Montpelier, Vermont.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
273 P. 667, 40 Wyo. 1, 1929 Wyo. LEXIS 13, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/raymond-v-national-life-ins-co-wyo-1929.