Sterling Life Insurance v. Rapps

130 Ill. App. 121, 1906 Ill. App. LEXIS 585
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedNovember 27, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 130 Ill. App. 121 (Sterling Life Insurance v. Rapps) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sterling Life Insurance v. Rapps, 130 Ill. App. 121, 1906 Ill. App. LEXIS 585 (Ill. Ct. App. 1906).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Baume

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an action in assumpsit hy appellee „against appellant to recover the amount of a benefit certificate issued to Edward Rapps in his lifetime, for the sum of $1,000, wherein appellee, the wife of the insured, is named as beneficiary. A trial by jury resulted in a verdict and judgment against appellant for $1,076.49, being the face of the certificate and interest.

During the summer of 1903, appellant, which was organized as an assessment life insurance company, was engaged in procuring the required 500 applications for life insurance necessary to procure its charter. The requisite number was procured, and a license issued to appellant October 13, 1903. On July 21, 1903, Oscar Becker, a canvasser for appellant, procured the application of Edward Rapps for a policy of insurance on his life in favor of appellee, in the sum of $1,000, and on September 21, following, Becker in company with Dr. Colby, the medical examiner of appellant, called upon Rapps at his place of business to make the required medical examination.

The questions and the alleged answers of the insured thereto relative to his health and habits, so far as such questions and answers are here involved, appear in the medical examination, attached to and made a part of the application, as follows: “12. A—=■ For what have you had medical advice during the past seven years?” “Answer—No.” “B—Dates?” “Answer—No.” “C—Duration?” “Answer—No.” ■ “E—Have you named everything?” “Answer—Yes.” “19. A—What is your present use of liquors and narcotics? (State amount and kind used and whether daily.)” “Answer—Drink oce.” “B—• Have you indulged in excess in the past five years in Wine, Spirits or Malt Liquorá ? (If so state when and how often.) ” “Answer —No.”

An assessment of $3.85 was due and payable by the insured on the 21st of each month, and was usually collected by a collector for appellant who called upon the insured at his residence or place of business for that purpose. When such collector so called for the second assessment due November 21, 1903, the deceased was absent, but on the following morning he paid said assessment at the office of appellant. The assessment due February 21, 1904, was not paid by insured upon that day. Afred Lanphier, then employed by appellant as a collector, testified that he called at the residence of the insured to collect the assessment due February 21, but failed to find any one and reported that fact to the office. Appellee testifies that no collector having called for the assessment up to February 23, she called up the office of appellant by telephone and inquired why a collector had not called to collect the assessment due February 21, and was informed that appellant did not have any collector then and that she would have to come to the office to pay the assessment. Be that, as it may, in the latter part of February, or the -first of March, the insured, or appellee acting for him, sent Robert Owens, a bartender in the employ of the insured, to the office of appellant to pay the assessment. Owens paid the assessment as directed and received a receipt therefor indorsed, “Subject to reinstatement, subject to health certificate.” Owens was then given a blank application for reinstatement and directed to procure the signature of the insured thereto and return the same to appellant. On March 2, the application for reinstatement was signed by the insured, and returned to appellant, and the insured was on that day recorded as reinstated.

The application for reinstatement is as follows:

“Application For Restoration op Policy.
To the Sterling Life Insurance Company, Springfield, Illihois. I hereby request the reinstatment of my Policy No. 274, issued by the Sterling’ Life Insurance Company, which became forfeited on account of the non-payment of premium due February 21, 1904, and for the purpose, and in consideration of such reinstatement I do declare, guarantee and warrant on my honor that I am by occupation a saloon proprietor, that I am of sound constitution, good health and temperate habits, and that since the date of my application I have sustained no personal injury, nor been afflicted with any disease or sickness whatever, except, to wit, ........................................ from which I have fully recovered, and that I have not made application to any other company, association, or society, upon which a policy or certificate has not been issued. This statement is given as a part of the consideration for the reinstatement of said policy, which shall be void if. the above representations are untrue in any respect.
Dated this 2nd day of March, 1904.
Witness: W. B. Pickrell.
(Sign here) Edward Rapps.”

The insured died March 18, 1904, of acute diabetes. It is insisted on behalf of appellant that the answers of the insured to the questions propounded in his medical examination relative to his having had medical advice during the period of seven years prior thereto, and his habits with respect to the use of intoxicating liquors, were material to the risk, were false, and were known by the insured to be false and that the certificate of insurance was thereby voided. The blank provided by appellant for application for membership and the medical examination of the applicant requires that the answers to the several questions, here involved, must be written by one of the appellant’s examiners. The evidence is uncontroverted that the questions were propounded to the insured by Becker, the solicitor of appellant, while Dr. Colby was conducting the physical examination, and that the answers to the questions were written by Becker. Becker testifies that in answer to the question, “For what have you had medical advice during the past seven years ? ’ ’ the insured said, “No, sir; he had no doctor,” or words of similar import; that he wrote the word “No,” to represent the answer of the insured that he had not had any doctor; that he did not propound to the insured the questions designated “B,” “C” and “D,” but considered that the answer to the question “12A” covered the whole thing and so wrote “No” in answer to the several subdivisions of that question. It is manifest that the answers are not responsive to the questions. Conceding that the explanation given by the witness Becker is true, it indicates a gross laxity in appellant’s method of conducting an examination, and as gross carelessness upon its part in passing upon the sufficiency of an examination submitted to it for approval. It may well be that if the •questions which Becker did not propound to the insured had been specifically brought to his notice, they would have directed his attention to certain circumstances, which had escaped his general recollection, and thus enabled him to answer the questions truthfully. There is evidence tending to show that prior to his application for insurance the insured had on three or four different occasions consulted Dr. "W. 0. Lang-don professionally and received medical treatment. Once in the year 1898 for an attack of erysipelas, and two or three times subsequently for attacks of biliousness. These attacks of illness were of short duration, and in each instance the insured was discharged by his physician as being well.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
130 Ill. App. 121, 1906 Ill. App. LEXIS 585, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sterling-life-insurance-v-rapps-illappct-1906.