Tegethoff v. Metropolitan Life Insurance

424 S.W.2d 565, 57 Tenn. App. 695, 1966 Tenn. App. LEXIS 213
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedSeptember 8, 1966
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 424 S.W.2d 565 (Tegethoff v. Metropolitan Life Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tegethoff v. Metropolitan Life Insurance, 424 S.W.2d 565, 57 Tenn. App. 695, 1966 Tenn. App. LEXIS 213 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1966).

Opinion

CARNEY, J.

The complainant below, Mrs. Donna S. Tegethoff, has appealed from a decree of the Chancellor dismissing her original bill. A jury was demanded and later withdrawn by consent. Mrs. Tegethoff had sought recovery of $946.93 alleged to be due and owing to her imder the terms and provisions of a comprehensive medical expense policy plus the 25% penalty provided by T.C.A. Section 56-1105.

The primary defense of Metropolitan was that Mrs. Tegethoff had consciously and deliberately withheld from defendant’s agent who prepared the application information concerning her physical condition and failed to disclose several illnesses for which she had recently been .treated by one or more physicians; and that such misrepresentations were material to the risk and that the defendant would not have issued the policy of insiirance . sued upon if it had known the truth. Second, the company [697]*697insisted that the hospital and medical expenses for which the complainant sued were the direct result of preexisting illness and therefore not covered under the express terms of the policy. The policy was issued without medical examination. Defendant returned all of the premiums paid under the policy.

The Chancellor found that the complainant was well aware of the omissions of the medical information from her application; that the policy of insurance was obtained by the complainant by fraud in that she failed to make truthful and full answers to the questions contained in the application. He adjudged the policy to be null and void. The Chancellor found, however, that the hospital bills for which the complainant sued were for a cardiac condition and that such cardiac condition did not pre-exist the issuance of the policy.

The complainant has filed eight assignments of error all of which assail the action of the Chancellor in finding the complainant guilty of perpetrating a fraud upon the insurance company. The defendant Metropolitan Insurance Company has appealed from the finding of the Chancellor that part of the complainant’s expenses sued upon were not the result of a pre-existing condition. We notice the assignments of error of the complainant first.

The complainant is a divorcee, age 37. At the time the policy sued on was purchased she was employed as a secretary for the Mid-South Lions Sight Service in Memphis, Tennessee, a charity organization engaged in helping restore sight to the blind. She had one son, Charles F. Tegethoff, age 18, who was also covered under the policy. At the time of the trial she was employed as a secretary for Southern Builders, Inc.

[698]*698Several days prior to September 27, 1963, Mrs. Tege-thoff was desirous of purchasing, some medical and hospital insurance and called several agencies by telephone and discussed various policies. Among the companies called was the defendant Metropolitan Life Insurance Company and she talked to a manager, Mr. Satterfield. She made appointment for Mr. Satterfield to come to her home and take an application from her. On the appointed date, which was Friday, September 27, 1963, Mr. Satterfield had to leave Memphis and go to Cairo, Illinois, to visit his mother and he asked his coworker, Mr. William Browder, to go out to Mrs. Tege-thoff ’s home and take the application.

Mr. Browder went to the home of Mrs. Tegethoff and took her application for the medical and hospital policy. Mrs. Tegethoff signed the application after he filled in the answers to. the various questions. Mr. Browder did not date nor sign the application at the home of Mrs. Tegethoff but carried the application back to his office. Since the commission was to belong to Mr. Satterfield, he placed the application in Mr. Satterfield’s box at the Memphis office. Mr. Satterfield received the application sometime about September 30, 1963, which date he filled in on the application as the date it was signed by Mrs. Tegethoff. Mr. Satterfield signed the application indicating that he had personally taken the answers of Mrs. Tegethoff to the questions and that he had seen her sign the application. Mr. Browder and Mr. Satterfield both testified that they had been reprimanded by their employer for their conduct in permitting Mr. Satterfield to sign the application instead of Mr. Browder who actually took it.

[699]*699■We copy pertinent questions and answers from the application as follows:

“11. Have yon or any of the said family members, within the past five years, had any treatment, examination, or advice, by a physician or other practitioner, or at a clinic, hospital, dispensary, or sanatorium 1-' (If yes, give particulars.)
Names Charles Details or Reason Removed lower lobe of right lung,, Month and Year 12-28-60 Duration 3 weeks Physician or Practitioner Dr. F. I. Alley Hospital or Institution Methodist Hosp. Memphis, Tenn;- ;
12. Have you or any of the said family members ever:
(a) had a surgical operation? Yes
(b) been advised to have a surgical operation that was-; not performed? No ■ " ■
(If yes in either case, give particulars.) See #11 and-
Donna — Complete Hysterectomy — 1953—St. Joseph Dr. Mackey.
13. (a) Have you or any of the said family members any deformity, or loss of limbs, or known impairment’ of sight or hearing? No .
(b) Have you or any of the said family members ever had, so far as you know, any bodily or mental disease* - disorder, abnormal physical condition, or impairment not referred to in your answers to questions 11 or 12? No (If yes in either case, give particulars.) ’’

The policy was not issued by Metropolitan until December 31,1963. Mr. Satterfield explained that the policy was delayed while the company sought information from Dr. [700]*700Alley concerning the removal of a lobe of the right lnng of Charles Tegethoff and viewed the son’s x-rays.

In addition to the hysterectomy in 1953 shown on the application, proof is nncontradicted that Mrs. Tegethoff had been in poor health for a number of years. In 1955 she was admitted to St. Joseph Hospital in Memphis suffering from lack of sensation in her left hand and fingers and middle forearm. In 1956 she was again admitted to St. Joseph Hospital for kidney stones. In 1958 she was admitted to the Baptist Hospital in Memphis, Tennessee, for paralysis of her left side, being unable to move her left arm and leg. Her illness was diagnosed as multiple sclerosis, probably incorrectly.

Dr. Arthur L. Bellott, Jr. of Memphis, Tennessee, testified that he first began treating Mrs. Tegethoff in March,-1959, that he saw and treated her regularly thereafter for hypertension and for hemiparesis which is a partial paralysis on the left side of the body which accompanied the hypertension. In April, 1964, he diagnosed Mrs. Tegethoff as having sustained or developed a heart condition for the first time. This heart condition gave rise to the medical and hospital expense which the Chancellor found not to have pre-existed the issuance of the insurance policy sued on in the present case.

Upon the trial Mrs. Tegethoff testified that she told the agent Browder at the time the application was filled out that she had been under Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
424 S.W.2d 565, 57 Tenn. App. 695, 1966 Tenn. App. LEXIS 213, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tegethoff-v-metropolitan-life-insurance-tennctapp-1966.