Succession of Dekan v. Life Ins. Co. of Virginia

172 So. 37
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 25, 1937
DocketNo. 16515.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 172 So. 37 (Succession of Dekan v. Life Ins. Co. of Virginia) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Succession of Dekan v. Life Ins. Co. of Virginia, 172 So. 37 (La. Ct. App. 1937).

Opinion

WESTERFIELD, Judge.

Ernest Dekan died in the city of New Orleans April 26, 1935. Albert W. New-lin, public administrator, qualified as the administrator of Dekan’s succession and in that capacity brought this suit against the Life Insurance Company of Virginia claiming $235 as the proceeds of an industrial life insurance policy which had been issued to Dekan by the defendant company, without medical examination, on December 18, 1934. To this suit the defendant company answered, denying liability upon the ground that a fraud had been committed on the company by Dekan who, it is averxed, misrepresented the condition of his health in his written application for the insurance. The premiums which had been paid on the policy amounting to $4.25 were tendered to and refused by plaintiff.

There was judgment below in plaintiff’s favor as prayed for, and defendant has appealed.

The record indicates that Dekan was an habitual drunkard and drug addict. He had been an inmate of the City Hospital for mental diseases, having been confined to that institution as a heroin addict on June 6, 1934, and having been released on June 30, 1934.

Abe Creidman, defendant’s agent, who had known Dekan for some time, having sold him another policy in the defendant company on a previous occasion and having for two years collected premiums thereon, persistently solicited Dekan for the purpose of selling him the present policy and, on December 18, 1934, was finally successful. Creidman knew Dekan’s habits and knew of his confinement to the City Hospital and obtained Dekan’s signature to the application when Dekan was staggering drunk. All the answers to the questions in_ the application were filled in by Creidman, either before or' after Dekan signed it. Creidman claims that he propounded the interrogatories to Dekan and wrote the answers as Dekan gave them to him. There is evidence to the contrary and Creidman himself stated “that he (Dekan) just signed the signature and I had to fill out the rest of it.” The following questions, each of which is conceded to have been falsely answered In the negative in the application, constitute the basis of the defense of fraud:

“Has life proposed been attended by a physician during the past twelve months?
“Has applicant ever used opium, cocaine, or other alcoholic stimulants to the point of intoxication or ever had delirium trem-ens?
*38 “Has said life ever been under treatment in any dispensary, hospital, or asylum, or been an inmate of any alms house or other institution?

It is contended that the evidence to the effect that defendant’s agent had filled in the application was inadmissible and that-the objection to its introduction should have been sustained by the trial court. Our attention is called to the following language in the application: “I hereby apply for insurance for the amount and on the life named herein; and I declare that the answers to the above questions * * * are complete, strictly correct and true; that the several questions were duly asked and that the answers given by me are truly recorded hereon. * * *”

The case of New York Life Insurance Company v. Stewart, 69 F.(2d) 957, a Louisiana .case decided by the United. States Circuit Court of Appeal for' the Fifth Circuit, and the case of Provident Mutual Life Insurance Company v. Parsons (C.C.A.) 70 F.(2d) 863, are cited in support of this contention. These cases sustain the general proposition advanced, but are without application here because the policies under consideration there were not industrial life insurance policies with -which certain statutes of Louisiana, to which we shall hereafter refer, are concerned.

The case of Shuff v. Life & Casualty Insurance Company, 164 La. 741, 742, 114 So. 637, wherein it was held that limitations upon the authority of insurance agents in dealing with prospective policyholders were reasonable and valid and not against public policy, is said to be a decision of our Supreme Court directly in point because it involves “an industrial life insurance policy. — just as does the present case.” In the Shuff Case, decided in' 1927, the policy under consideration was for the principal sum of $1,000. 00 and styled “an industrial limited payment life policy.” According to .the definition of an industrial life insurance policy, as contained in Act No. 65 of 1906, one of the characteristics of an industrial life insurance policy is that it is limited to $500. Moreover, the opinion contains the following significant statement: “If the policy in this case had been issued without a medical examination, the Act No. 97 of 1908 would be very favorable to the plaintiff; for the statute declares that in such cases, if the agent of the company knew, or' might have ascertained with reasonable diligence, the true condition of the applicant’s health, such knowledge of the agent who wrote the application, or of the collector of the premiums from the insured, shall be imputed as notice to the company, as to the health, habits, or occupation of the insured. See Brown v. Continental Casualty Co., 161 La. 229, 108 So. 464 [45 A.L.R. 1521]. But the act of 1908 is not applicable to this ‘case, because, by its title as well as its text, it applies only to companies issuing policies of insurance without a medical examination; and the policy sued on was issued after a medical examination of the applicant.”

Act No. 97 of 1908 provides, as was stated in the foregoing excerpt from the opinion in the Shuff Case, that where a policy is written without medical examination, knowledge of the agent or of the collector of the premiums shall be imputed to the company, and that “it shall. * * * be presumed that the company has waived its rights to claim a forfeiture of the policy based on the ground that the assured did not make -true and full answers in the application as to the health, habits or occupation, whenever it shall appear that the agent of the company knew, or might have ascertained with reasonable diligence, the .true condition of the applicant’s health.” See Eagan v. Metropolitan Life Insurance Company, 181 La. 16, 158 So. 575.

■ Act No. 52 of 1906, as amended by Act No. 227 of 1916, provided that every policy of life insurance issued in this state shall contain the entire contract between .the parties and that no statement or statements not indorsed upon or attached to the policy when issued “shall be used in defense of a claim under the policy unless contained in the written application and unless a copy of such statement or statements be endorsed upon- or attached to the policy when issued. Any waiver of the provisions of this section shall be void.”

Act No. 134 of 1934 amended Act No. 97 of 1908 by adding an additional section reading as’ follows: “Nothing in this Act shall be construed to require an insurance company to cause a medical examination of an applicant to be made before issuing a policy.”

Act No. 160 of 1934 provided that an application for an industrial life insurance *39 policy should form part of the contract of insurance whether attached to the policy or indorsed thereon when issued, provided it be in writing and signed by the applicant and, to that extent amended Act No. 52 of 1906.

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Bluebook (online)
172 So. 37, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/succession-of-dekan-v-life-ins-co-of-virginia-lactapp-1937.