Salts v. Prudential Insurance

120 S.W. 714, 140 Mo. App. 142, 1909 Mo. App. LEXIS 135
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 8, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 120 S.W. 714 (Salts v. Prudential Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Salts v. Prudential Insurance, 120 S.W. 714, 140 Mo. App. 142, 1909 Mo. App. LEXIS 135 (Mo. Ct. App. 1909).

Opinion

GOODE, J.

(after stating the facts).- — The contention is put forward by defendant that the entire evidence showed beyond inference to the contrary, the insured was not in sound health, but had tuberculosis of the lungs when the policy was granted, and showed further, the statements made by her in her application for the policy and warranted to be true, were not true. We will dismiss this contention by saying the record teems with evidence to prove the insured was not afflicted with tuberculosis, but died from excessive use of morphine, or a congested condition of the liver due to that habit. The doctor who attended her in her last illness so testified, and there is much other testimony to the same effect. There was also abundant evidence from which the jury might have found that when deceased applied for insurance and also when the policy was issued, she was not suffering from any disease, spit[150]*150ting of blood, cough, physical .defect or infirmity, and never had been seriously sick-. In other words, might have found the statements in the application were true. It is worthy of note in this connection, not as constituting a waiver of any right of the company, but as an item of evidence, that defendant’s agent solicited deceased to take out a policy and defendant’s regular examining physician, who had examined risks, for years, passed her as a good average risk, specifically stating her lungs were not diseased in the report of his examination sent to the company. We overrule the assignment of error based on the supposed conclusive proof the insured was not in sound health, but had consumption, when the policy was written, or similar proof the statements in her application were false, citing as an opposite authority Kelly v. Insurance Co., 198 Mo. 440.

2. We do not understand counsel for defendant to contest the proposition that even though there was a misrepresentation by the insured in the application regarding the state of her health, this fact would not preclude recovery unless the matter misrepresented caused or contributed to her death. Whatever representations were made were part of the policy, according to the terms of both the application and the policy itself. The former said the statements made in it were true, should form the basis of the contract of insurance, the policy should be subject to the agreements and conditions contained in it, and no obligation should arise against the company on account of the application and payment of premiums, until the policy had been issued and delivered. One clause of the latter instrument said it should become void if any representations on which it was obtained were not true, thus referring to the application in a way to show the intention was to embrace it as part of the contract. [Angell, Insurance, sec. 141; Kerr, Insurance, p. 826; 1 May, Insurance, secs. 158, et seq.] The statements in the application were warranties. A warranty in the law of insurance is not mat[151]*151ter collateral to tbe contract, stated as an inducement to tbe other party to enter into tbe agreement, as a representation is. It is parcel of tbe contract, and, in tbe absence of a statute to tbe contrary, invalidates tbe obligation if not strictly true; and this tbougb tbe thing warranted does not affect tbe risk. [Aloe v. Insurance Co., 147 Mo. 561; Angell, Insurance, sec. 140; Bliss, Life Ins. (2 Ed.), sec. 34; Bacon, Ben. Soc. (3 Ed.), sec. 194; 1 May, Insurance (4th Ed.), sec. 156.] “The effect of untrue warranties is now controlled in this State by tbe statute which declares no misrepresentation made to obtain and secure a policy of life insurance shall be deemed material or render tbe policy void unless tbe matter misrepresented shall bare actually contributed to tbe contingency or event on which tbe policy is to become due and payable; whether it so contributes in a case shall be a question for tbe jury.” [R. S. 1899, sec. 7890.] Tbe word “misrepresentation” used in tbe statute, has been construed to embrace statements in tbe nature of a warranty, which are introduced into the policy as part of it. [Jacobs v. Assn., 146 Mo. 523; Jenkins v. Insurance Co., 171 Mo. 375; Keller v. Id., 198 Mo. 440.] One question propounded to tbe insured in tbe blank application related to tbe present state of her health, and she answered it was good. Tbe question and answer became a term of tbe contract of insurance, and were a warranty that she was in good or sound health at tbe time. That is to say, they were equivalent to tbe clause of tbe policy requiring her to be in “sound health” at the date of it. While counsel for defendant concede that if tbe warranty regarding tbe state of deceased’s health when she made the application was false, and she was not then in good health, the misrepresentation would have no effect on tbe contract, unless tbe state of her health at said time caused or contributed to her death seven months afterwards, they contend, nevertheless, if she was not in sound health on June 17th, when the policy was delivered, there can be [152]*152no recovery; and this though her health at said date had nothing to do with her death, and even though she was unaware her health was impaired. They contend the statute takes effect only on misrepresentations made in the application for insurance and not on conditions and stipulations contained in the policy. This cannot be true in full measure, because when the contract is worded like the one at bar, statements in the application are as much part of the policy after the latter is executed as any other condition of the instrument. The distinction really attempted is between a warranty and a condition precedent. The argument is this: The provision of the policy that no claim would he paid unless the insured was alive and in sound health when delivered is a condition precedent, and if she was not then in sound health, the policy never took effect as a contract. Before going into this supposed distinction between conditions precedent and warranties, we will scrutinize the language of the clause relied on to see if, in truth, it purports to be a condition precedent to the taking effect of the policy. The language did not say the contract shall not take effect unless she was in sound health, but merely said no claim would be paid by the company if she was not; whereas other clauses of the policy provided expressly it should be void if certain things ivere not done. It is Avorthy of note too that one clause declared if the insured died in one or more years after its date, Avith all premiums paid, the policy should be incontestable. How can that clause be construed harmoniously with the one invoked by defendant, if the latter prevented the policy from taking effect unless the insured was in sound health at the date of it? If it never took effect, Iioav could it become incontestable in any contingency? The idea that a contract not in existence should become incontestable, is elusive. In truth the clause relied on by defendant is no condition precedent in the strict sense of that term, and such is the sense to be attached Avhen a forfeiture is invoked. [153]*153“A condition precedent calls for the performance of some act or the happening of some event, after the terms of the contract have been agreed upon, before the contract shall take effect; that is, the contract is made in form, but does not become operative as a contract until some future act is performed or some subsequent event occurs.” [4 Ency. Law, p. 627.; Redman v. Insurance Co., 49 Wis.

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Bluebook (online)
120 S.W. 714, 140 Mo. App. 142, 1909 Mo. App. LEXIS 135, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/salts-v-prudential-insurance-moctapp-1909.