Smith v. New York Life Insurance

209 N.C. 504
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedFebruary 26, 1936
StatusPublished

This text of 209 N.C. 504 (Smith v. New York Life Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smith v. New York Life Insurance, 209 N.C. 504 (N.C. 1936).

Opinion

Schenck, J.

The provision of the policy under which the plaintiff claims is as follows: “Disability shall be considered total whenever the insured is so disabled by bodily injury or disease that he is wholly prevented from performing any work, from following any occupation, or from engaging in any business for remuneration or profit, provided such disability occurred after the insurance under this policy took effect and before the anniversary of the policy on which the insured’s age at nearest birthday is sixty.”

It should be noted that the disability benefits under the policy are specifically excepted from the incontestability clause thereof, said clause being in the following words: “This policy shall be incontestable after two years from its date of issue, except for nonpayment of premium, and except as to provisions and conditions relating to disability and double indemnity benefits.”

The plaintiff contended and offered his own testimony and other evidence tending to prove that his eyes were good when the policy was issued and took effect in 1926, and gave him no trouble at that time, and that he was in good health and under no disability until January, 1932, and that he filed claim in August, 1932, and that when the policy was sold to him in 1926 he was not nineteen years old and had several years before been a pupil in a school conducted by the agent of the defendant who solicited his insurance, that he was wearing glasses at the time, and told her about his eyes having been treated, and that he accepted the statement of that agent when she told him that the treatment of his eyes made no difference; that the agent filled out the application and sent him [507]*507to the doctor, that the doctor had personally known him for nine years, and had had an office within 50 yards of his father’s store, where the doctor was seen by the plaintiff practically every day, and where the plaintiff went several times a week; that in making the examination the doctor asked him only four or five questions and nothing about his eyes, although he had glasses on at the time and would have told him about his eye treatment if the doctor had asked him; that in signing the paper containing the questions and answers he did as directed by the doctor, and did not know he was responsible for what the doctor had written, and in putting his name on the paper he obeyed the doctor, whom he, as a child, had obeyed many times before; that he is now totally and permanently disabled by practical blindness caused by glaucoma simplex.

The “Answers to the Medical Examiner,” which is a part of the policy upon which this action is based and which was introduced in evidence, contains, among other questions and answers, the following: “7. A. Have you had any accident or injury or undergone any surgical operation? Yes, appendicitis, 12 years ago. Operation. Recovery. 7. B. Have you been under observation or treatment in any hospital, asylum, or sanitarium? Yes, appendicitis. . . . 8. D. Have you consulted a physician for or suffered from any ailment or disease of the skin, middle ear, or eyes? No. . . . 10. Have you consulted a physician for any ailment or disease not included in your above answers? Yes, malaria fever, 1922, two weeks, moderate, recovery.”

The plaintiff stated on cross-examination that the first time he went to the hospital for trouble with his eyes was in 1925, and that before that he had consulted Dr. Daniels of New Bern and bought glasses, and that Dr. Daniels had told him that he had a decayed nerve of the right eye, and that about six months after consulting Dr. Daniels he went to Johns Hopkins Hospital and there consulted Dr. McLean for treatment on 16 September, 1925, and that Dr. McLean performed an operation on his eye, he bored a hole in it and put a little gold wire in the eye, that Dr. McLean operated the first time he consulted him, and that the eye did not pain him any more until 1926, at which time he made a second visit to Dr. McLean and he performed another operation in his other eye and told him that the condition which existed in September, 1925, had spread to the other eye, that the operation on his left eye was a different operation, a trephine, the doctor just opened the eye but did not put a wire in this one.

On further cross-examination the plaintiff also stated: “I found my statement in the application was false; I did not know it then; I found out it was false when the company sent me the check for the return premiums; the statement about my eyes is not true, but I didn’t make it; the one about not having consulted a physician in the last five years is not true; if the operation on the eyes was a surgical operation, my [508]*508statement that the operation for appendicitis was the only operation I had had was not true; I don’t know if I would call the eye operation a surgical operation. When I stated that malaria was the only disease I had had, that was not true. I don’t know that I would call it a surgical operation. Except as to my eyes I had not been treated by a doctor within five years next to the date of the policy, except for malaria.”

When asked why he did not tell about the operations on his eyes at the time he was asked if he had consulted a doctor about any other disease, the plaintiff said: “I don’t know. I didn’t have my mind on my eyes then. I had on glasses; it looks to me like he would have asked me about my eyes.” The plaintiff further testified that he knew he was undergoing a physical examination for the purpose of finding out whether he was able to get the policy, and when asked why he did not tell the doctor what he told the soliciting agent, said: “I thought he was going to make the examination; I didn’t know it was a questionnaire”; and further stated, “If he didn’t find it out, I was not going to tell him; it looks to me like he could find it out; I knew it; I never told him because he didn’t ask me anything about it, and I knew at the time that I had had treatment for my eyes, that a wire had been put in my right eye, and that it had been drained, and that another operation had been performed on my left eye during my second trip to Baltimore.”

It appears from the plaintiff’s own testimony that he withheld from the medical examiner of the company the fact that he had been but a short time previously to Johns Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore and had had an operation performed upon one eye within shortly over a year before making the application for insurance, and upon the other eye in considerably less than a year before. It is also apparent that the representations made by the plaintiff to the defendant’s medical examiner to the effect that he had not been in a hospital and that he had not been treated by any physician except for appendicitis and malaria, when as a matter of fact he had been in the hospital and had both of his eyes operated on, were false representations of material facts.

The questions and answers contained in the medical examination are followed by this provision: “On behalf of myself and of every person who shall have or claim any interest in any insurance made hereunder, I declare that I have carefully read each and all of the above answers, that they are each written as made by me, and that each of them is full, complete, and true, and agree that the company believing them to be true shall rely and act upon them,” and immediately following this provision is the plaintiff’s signature.

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Bluebook (online)
209 N.C. 504, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-new-york-life-insurance-nc-1936.