Schneider v. Washington National Insurance

465 P.2d 932, 204 Kan. 809, 1970 Kan. LEXIS 416
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedMarch 7, 1970
Docket45,733
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 465 P.2d 932 (Schneider v. Washington National Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schneider v. Washington National Insurance, 465 P.2d 932, 204 Kan. 809, 1970 Kan. LEXIS 416 (kan 1970).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Fatzer, J.:

This was an action to recover monthly benefits under a health and accident disability income insurance policy. The case was here previously and the facts and issues giving rise to the present appeal are stated in the court’s opinion in Schneider v. Washington National Ins. Co., 200 Kan. 380, 437 P. 2d 798, and will not be repeated here. The opinion is incorporated herein by reference.

The plaintiff claimed total disability from accidental injury to his back while lifting a 50-pound sack of feed on September 8, 1960, and that he had not worked since September 14, 1960. He applied for his health and accident disability insurance on July 17, 1960. After keeping the completed application form overnight, on July 18, 1960, the plaintiff’s brother, Frank Schneider, delivered the signed application form to the defendant’s agent Robert H. Bridewell.

The policy was issued and delivered to the plaintiff by Bridewell on September 13, 1960, and a copy of the application was attached. *810 The plaintiff made application for monthly benefits on October 24, 1960, based on the injury to his back on September 8. The claim was supported by a doctor’s certificate of disability and defendant commenced paying the disability benefits of $400 per month effective as of September, 1960. The defendant ceased the benefit payments August 4,1961, having paid a total of $4,280, and the plaintiff commenced this action to recover benefits for total permanent disability.

In discovery proceedings, the defendant discovered several false answers in plaintiff’s application, which are set forth in our previous opinion. The defendant counterclaimed, seeking rescission of the policy. When the false answers were discovered, the plaintiff admitted the answers were false and claimed they were inserted by the defendant’s agent Bridewell, without his knowledge. Bride-well asserted the answers were given by plaintiff and that he wrote them in the application as given by the plaintiff. The plaintiff also asserted his brother who signed the application for the insurance policy, did so without authority.

Following reversal of this case, the district court which previously tried the case disqualified, and the Honorable Jay Sullivan was assigned. A pretrial conference was had at which the district court stated the reporter’s transcript of the pretrial conference would serve as the pretrial order. We point out the best practice of pretrial procedure is that a specific order be prepared and approved by counsel and signed by the district court in which the issues are fully stated. However, the statement of the district court at the conclusion of the pretrial conference fingered the issues presented as follows:

“The Court: When you speak of defenses you are referring to each question as being an affirmative defense. Their defense is that false answers were given in the application. If truthful answers had been given, the policy would not have been issued. That is one of their defenses. This is your case, based on this contract of insurance, and it provides for many things. I am sure that it provides that the application is a part of the contract along with the various types of disability benefits. The defendant contends that the plaintiff was not disabled; and that, if he was disabled, it was the result of sickness rather than accident and also that if he was disabled, that it was a partial disability. Insofar as the sickness part is concerned, it is confined to just one thing here, and that is as to the deterioration of the disc. It was the disc or was around the disc or, in any event, something was caused by the aging process rather than from a blow or twist or some type of trauma. That is the only part of sickness that enters into this picture. The court is going to submit *811 general verdicts and also special verdicts. I am going to submit general verdict. We are going to either decide it for the plaintiff or for the defendant. Then, we will have a special verdict; but, I am going to submit now, under this policy, the terms of this policy as to whether or not this person is totally disabled or whether or not he was partially disabled, or whether or not it was a result of accident or a result of this sickness. I don’t think that the defendant has waived any defenses that he has on this policy and the matter in which the evidence has been introduced here. It is complicated enough. I am going to try to simplify it if I can. I am not satisfied with the definition of total disability, so I will have to do a little research on it before I can determine in my own mind how to draw that instruction. I don’t believe there is much question as to where the proof lies. The burden of proof is with the plaintiff to prove first, that he was disabled; and, secondly, that this was the result of a twist or fall that occurred on September 8, 1960, that disabled him. Right here is something I would like to inquire about. We tried this case, as I understand, from the time of September 8, 1960, to the time of the alleged accident on November 15, 1965, and that there was no question but that is on which it is to be submitted to the jury, is there?
“Mr. Siefkin: That is correct.
“The Court: Okay. The defendant has the burden of proving first, that the plaintiff answered the questions asked by the agent and those answers were correctly written into the application and the plaintiff’s brother, who had authority, signed his name to the application.
“Mr. Siefkin: All right.
“The Court: That is about it, Gentlemen.”

At the conclusion of the evidence of both parties, the district court instructed the jury in accordance with the issues as disclosed by the evidence and pretrial order so as to enable it to make answers to six written interrogatories and to render a general verdict. The jury returned its verdict and answered the special interrogatories as follows:

“VERDICT
“We, the jury empaneled and sworn in the above entitled cause, do upon our oath find Plaintiff is entitled to recover from defendant in the amounts as provided in the insurance policy for partial disability.”
“The Court’s Interrogatories
“1. Do you find that the plaintiff was totally disabled from performing the work of his usual occupation between August 4, 1961 and November 15, 1965 as a result of a twist or fall while lifting a bag of seed or feed?
“Answer: No.
“2. If your answer to the above question is no’, do you find that the plaintiff was partially disabled from performing the work of his usual occupation between August 4, 1961 and November 15, 1965 as a result of a twist or fall while lifting a bag of seed or feed?
“Answer: Yes.
“3. If your answer to Question No. 1 or No. 2 is ‘No’, do you find that *812

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
465 P.2d 932, 204 Kan. 809, 1970 Kan. LEXIS 416, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schneider-v-washington-national-insurance-kan-1970.