Roche v. Metropolitan Life Insurance

94 So. 2d 20, 232 La. 167, 232 La. 168, 1957 La. LEXIS 1174
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedFebruary 25, 1957
DocketNo. 40835
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 94 So. 2d 20 (Roche v. Metropolitan Life Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Roche v. Metropolitan Life Insurance, 94 So. 2d 20, 232 La. 167, 232 La. 168, 1957 La. LEXIS 1174 (La. 1957).

Opinion

FOURNET, Chief Justice.

The plaintiff, Mrs. Florence A. Roche, instituted suit to recover on a policy of insurance issued by the defendant, Metropolitan Life Insurance Company, on the life of her late husband, William T. Roche, in which she is named as beneficiary. The defendant in its answer admitted issuance of the policy but made the affirmative defense that in the application for the policy in suit the insured had made certain false and fraudulent answers for the purpose of deceiving the defendant as to the true condition of his health, and that the policy would not have been issued had the true facts been disclosed. The answer adds that the defendant has no interest in the sum of $321.36 paid to it as premiums on said policy, which amount had been tendered to plaintiff before suit was filed, but refused, and that it wished to deposit said sum in the Registry of the Court. The deposit was made, and following trial there was judgment, rendered in accordance with the verdict of a jury, rejecting plaintiff’s demand. The plaintiff has appealed.

The record shows that on July 12, 1945, the defendant company issued its Policy No. 15,585,393A, agreeing, upon the death of the insured, to pay the sum of $3,000 to the named beneficiary, the plaintiff herein. The application for the policy is divided into Parts A, B and C. Part A, dated May 31, 1945, was, according to testimony in the record, completed by the agent from answers of the insured, and contains applicant’s name and personal data as well as the statement: “It is understood and agreed that: 1. The foregoing statements and answers are correct and wholly true and, together with the answers to questions on Part B hereof, shall form the basis of the contract of insurance, if one be issued. * * Part B, dated June 28, 1945, is labeled “Continuation of the Application, Applicant’s statements to the Medical Examiner.” Part C, the Medical Examiner’s Report, is headed by the printed notation that it is “No part of the Applicant’s Declaration.” It is in Part B that the insured answered “No” to four questions in which he was asked, respectively, if he had “ever [171]*171been an inmate of a hospital, sanatorium, asylum or cure whether for observation, examination or treatment ?” if he had “ever had any ailment or disease of the heart or lungs,” had “ever raised or spat blood,” or “consulted a physician for any ailment or disease not included in your above answers;” and to a fifth question, “What clinics, hospitals, physicians, healers or other practitioners, if any, not named above, have you consulted or been treated by, within the past five years?” he answered “None” — whereas the uncontradicted record of the Charity Hospital at New Orleans shows that the insured visited the outpatient clinic of that institution, for the purpose of being treated for tuberculosis, several times each year beginning in 1938 and extending through 1945, having spent four days as a patient in the hospital in 1938 when his condition was diagnosed as pulmonary tuberculosis; and that X-Rays were taken of his lungs on various occasions in each of those years, the last having been made on March 15, 1945.1

Counsel for appellant argues that the insured considered his illness to be trivial and of no consequence,2 and, relying on Cunningham v. Penn Mut. Life Ins. Co., 152 La. 1023, 95 So. 110, submits that his misstatements should not be held to void the policy. Counsel also points to the fact (established on the trial of the case) that the policy was written at the insistence of defendant’s agent who, having sold Roche two policies some eight or nine years previously, sought to induce him to take a new one for $10,000 — yet the insured applied for only the $3,000 policy contested here; and he argues that this negates any attempt to defraud the defendant.

The instant contract was confected prior to the adoption of Act 195 of 1948, the Insurance Code of Louisiana (now incorporated in the Revised Statutes as R.S. 22:1 et seq.), and the law applicable is set out in Act 52 of 1906, as amended by Act 227 of 1916.3 A purpose of this and enactments of other states containing similar provisions was to abolish the highly tech[173]*173nical doctrine of warranty, the intent of the Legislators being to transform a warranty into a representation, thus saving a policy of insurance from forfeiture for false statements contained therein unless they are found to be material or fraudulent. See Vance, Handbook of the Law of Insurance (3rd ed. 1951) 417, Sec. 74. In Goff v. Mutual Life Ins. Co. of New York, 131 La. 98, 59 So. 28, this Court commented on the difference between warranties and representations, observing that in the case of the latter, their falsity does not vitiate the policy unless material, and that a statement in an application for life insurance, to be material, must have been an inducement to the contract. See 45 C.J.S., Insurance, § 595d(3), p. 406; 29 Am.Juris. 422, Insurance, Sec. 524; annotation, 63 A.L.R. 846 et seq., in particular at 854, subdivision “n”; annotation 131 A.L.R. at 617 et seq.; Rhodes v. Metropolitan Life Ins. Co., 5 Cir., 172 F.2d 183.

■ The rule universally obtaining is clearly and succinctly stated in 45 C.J.S., op. cit. supra, thus: “To avoid a policy on the ground of false representation, the representation ordinarily must relate to a matter material to the risk, the test of materiality being whether knowledge of the facts would have influenced the insurer in determining whether to accept the risk or in fixing the amount of premiums. In the absence of statute, a causal connection between the facts misrepresented and the death of the insured is not necessary to establish the right to forfeiture.”

A case having many points of similarity to the one now being considered, and which we think is controlling here, is that of Lee v. New York Life Ins. Co., 144 La. 445, 80 So. 652. In that case, as here, the application for insurance was made on the solicitation and insistence of defendant’s agent, who sought to induce the insured to take a policy for a much larger amount than that applied for; there, as here, the insured denied ever having had any ailment or illness of various named organs of the body, and gave an untrue answer about having [175]*175ever consulted a physician;4 the medical examination in both cases revealed no past or present disease, and in the Lee case, as here, the insured had the appearance of a healthy man, led an active life attending to his business — yet suffered from a chronic condition (Bright’s disease) for which he had received treatment from physicians over a period of years and had been given certain tests which are usually identified with the disease. This Court, in affirming the lower court’s judgment dismissing the suit of the beneficiary under the policy, held that if the insurance company had been advised of those tests, some of which occurred a short while before the application for insurance, “it would not have insured his life without knowing the result of those tests, and * * * the information that was withheld was therefore material.” 144 La. at page 454, 80 So. at page 655.

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Bluebook (online)
94 So. 2d 20, 232 La. 167, 232 La. 168, 1957 La. LEXIS 1174, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roche-v-metropolitan-life-insurance-la-1957.