Tupper v. United States

165 F. Supp. 399, 1958 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3699
CourtDistrict Court, M.D. Alabama
DecidedAugust 22, 1958
DocketCiv. A. No. 1395-N
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 165 F. Supp. 399 (Tupper v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, M.D. Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tupper v. United States, 165 F. Supp. 399, 1958 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3699 (M.D. Ala. 1958).

Opinion

JOHNSON, District Judge.

The above-styled cause, coming on to be heard, was submitted to the Court, without a jury, on the issues made up by the pleadings and proof. Upon consideration of the evidence, consisting of a written stipulation entered into by and between the parties, together with the several exhibits thereto, the written briefs and the oral arguments, this Court now proceeds to make and enter in this memorandum opinion the appropriate findings of fact and conclusions of law.

This action is brought by the plaintiffs as the named beneficiaries and is brought to recover from the United States of America the sum of $10,000, that amount representing the proceeds of National Service Life Insurance Policy No. V-407-99-91, which policy was issued by the United States upon the life of Brig. Gen. Tristram Tupper. Originally, a National Service Life Insurance policy was issued to Tristram Tupper in the principal amount of $10,000, effective March 1, 1942, while he was on duty with the United States Army. Upon the expiration of this policy in 1950, the insurance was renewed, as provided by law, for an additional five-year term, which term became effective March 1, 1950. Premiums on this policy, which is the one now being sued upon, were paid by Tristram Tupper until the policy lapsed because of the nonpayment of the premium which was due on February 1, 1952. The policy provides that the insured was to be allowed thirty-one days’ grace for the payment of the delinquent premium after the due date for such premium, and that during the grace period the policy was to remain in full force and effect. This thirty-one day grace period expired March 3, 1952. Tristram Tupper was advised of the lapse of this insurance policy by letter from the Veterans Administration dated April 16, 1952, and was at that time furnished an application form for reinstatement. This application for reinstatement, dated April 26, 1952, was received by the Philadelphia Office of the Veterans Administration on April 30, 1952, in an envelope bearing a postmark of Atlanta, Georgia, April 28, 8:00 p. m., 1952. On the application for reinstatement, Tristram Tupper answered in the affirmative the following question: “Are you now in as good health as you were on the due date of the first premium in default?” On the same application he answered in the negative the following question: “Have you beeen ill or suffered or contracted any disease, injury, or infirmity, or been prevented by reason thereof from attending the usual occupation, or consulted a physician, surgeon, or other practitioner for medical advice or treatment at home, hospital, or elsewhere, in regard to your health since the lapse of this insurance?” In an appropriate space on the form Tristram Tupper inserted, “Regular physical checkup. Nothing physically wrong.” The application for reinstatement also including the following:

“As a condition to the reinstatement of this insurance I certify that the answers to the following questions are complete and true to the best of my knowledge and belief. I understand that statements made by me in this application are relied upon in reinstating insurance; that any deception or false statement either by inference, omission, or otherwise, may result in cancellation of the insurance or in refusal to pay claim on the policy; * * * ”

It is not disputed between the litigants in this case that Tristram Tupper while on active duty with the Armed Forces in the European Theater of operation suffered severe pain in the left lumbar region and along the left leg in November of 1944. When this pain persisted, he consulted several army physicians from time to time, and his condition was [402]*402diagnosed as sciatica and/or anemia. Various treatments were prescribed, from which Tupper found some relief, but the pains continued intermittently on up until he was separated from the service in October of 1945; and the pains continued intermittently on up until about February 10, 1952, at which time Tupper testified1 that he consulted Dr. John R. Gill of Miles, Virginia, for treatment and examination. Tupper also stated in the records submitted to the Court that he consulted Dr. Gill on this first occasion because the pain in his back and leg had increased in severity. A second visit was made between February 10, 1952 and February 22, 1952— this latter date being the date of the third visit — for “general treatment and examination.” On the third visit, Dr. Gill performed a rectal examination and discovered that Tupper’s prostate gland was enlarged, nodular and fixed. Dr. Gill testified that he suspected that Tupper had cancer of the prostate gland, far advanced, with metastasis to the hip bone. There were no X-ray or laboratory facilities in Miles, Virginia, and Dr. Gill’s diagnosis was therefore a tentative one. He did not inform Tupper of his diagnosis, but to put it in the same form that the insured put it in a letter dated March 19, 1954:

“My third and last visit to Dr. Gill was on February 22. He gave me another check-up, including a rectal examination — the first I had ever had. Again he assured me that my heart, lungs, kidneys and other vital organs were normal. Also, he said my prostate gland was enlarged and that he believed that this was the cause of the pains in my back and le-g. He told me to stop working so hard and advised a thorough examination at an early date. I told him I expected to finish the work I was doing some time in March and proposed going to Atlanta for a business conference and a long vacation. He said, ‘Have one of those good Emory Diagnosticians give you a thorough going over while you are in Atlanta * * * ’ There was nothing alarming in what Dr. Gill said or the way he said it. He did not tell me or indicate that there was anything serious in my condition. In fact, if an enlarged prostate was the cause of the pains I had suffered, intermittently, through the years, this condition must have existed since 1944 and consequently I had no feeling that it was of a serious nature.” (Emphasis supplied.)

On February 2, 1954, after he had been advised by the doctors that he had a cancer of the prostate gland, which was far advanced, Tupper filed a claim for waiver of premiums. This claim was filed with the Philadelphia Veterans Administration District Office. Along with his claim, Tupper submitted his own statement and a statement from Dr. John R. Gill, Dr. Gill’s statement revealing he had examined Tupper in February of 1952. With this claim for waiver of premiums was submitted a letter elated February 13, 1954, from Dr. Milton H. Freedman of Atlanta, Georgia, Dr. Freedman’s statement reflecting that he examined Tupper on April 28, 1952.2 In a letter dated February 24, 1954, the Veterans Administration advised Tupper that his visits to Dr. Gill and Dr. Freedman were contradictory to his representations on his application for reinstatement, which was dated April 26, 1952, which representations were to the effect that he had not been ill or consulted a physician, and he was requested to explain the discrepancy. Thereafter, on March 26, 1954, the In[403]*403surance Claims Division of the Veterans Administration District Office, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, determined that because of the misrepresentation of material facts by Tristram Tupper on his reinstatement application dated April 26, 1952, which facts were relied upon by the Veterans Administration, the reinstatement which had been effected as of April 28, 1952, was contestable upon the ground of fraud and should be can-celled. National Service Life Insurance Policy No. V-407-99-91 was therefore cancelled.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
165 F. Supp. 399, 1958 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3699, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tupper-v-united-states-almd-1958.