Union Trust Company Of Maryland v. Kansas City Life Insurance Company

300 F.2d 606, 1962 U.S. App. LEXIS 5576
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedMarch 26, 1962
Docket8490_1
StatusPublished

This text of 300 F.2d 606 (Union Trust Company Of Maryland v. Kansas City Life Insurance Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Union Trust Company Of Maryland v. Kansas City Life Insurance Company, 300 F.2d 606, 1962 U.S. App. LEXIS 5576 (4th Cir. 1962).

Opinion

300 F.2d 606

UNION TRUST COMPANY OF MARYLAND, a body corporate, Trustee
of the Trust Estate of Raymond Kent Tongue, Jr.,
deceased, Appellant,
v.
KANSAS CITY LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY, a body corporate, Appellee.

No. 8490.

United States Court of Appeals Fourth Circuit.

Argued Jan. 12, 1962.
Decided March 26, 1962.

William H. Zimmerman, Baltimore, Md. (W. Frank Every, Baltimore, Md., on brief) for appellant.

William B. Kempton, Baltimore, Md. (Forrest F. Bramble, Jr., Baltimore, Md., on brief) for appellee.

Before SOPER, HAYNSWORTH and BOREMAN, Circuit Judges.

HAYNSWORTH, Circuit Judge.

The District Court entered a judgment N.O.V. for the insurance company because of false answers in the applications for the life insurance policy it had issued. On this appeal, the only substantial contention is that the evidence presented a jury question. We agree with the District Court that it did not.

The facts are fully and clearly stated in the comprehensive opinion of the District Court.1 We need refer to them here in less detail.

In July 1957, Dr. Raymond Kent Tongue, Jr., an orthodontist of Baltimore, Maryland, then thirty-eight years old, was advised by his attorney and a trust officer of the bank which later became the trustee of his estate, to procure additional life insurance. A week later, pursuant to an earlier appointment, he consulted Dr. Robert W. Garis, a medical doctor specializing in cardiology who had also served as the Tongue family physician. Dr. Tongue reported to Dr. Garis recent experiences of tightness across his chest and difficulty in breathing. These had been experienced on the first few holes of golf courses, particularly when he had only recently eaten. He asked Dr. Garis to check his heart.

A Double Masters Electrocardiogram indicated coronary insufficiency. Dr. Garis sent Tongue to a Dr. Frank W. Davis, Jr., who did a 'ballistocardiogram,' the result of which, as interpreted by Dr. Davis, was reported to Dr. Garis to be abnormal and highly suggestive of coronary heart disease.

Dr. Garis reported to Dr. Tongue that, on the basis of his findings and those of Dr. Davis, he had come to a 'working diagnosis' of coronary disease. The results of the tests did not establish the presence of coronary disease beyond all doubt, but it was indicated with sufficient definiteness to enable the doctor to proceed upon that assumption. Tongue asked Dr. Garis not to report the diagnosis to his family.

It was on August 7, 1957, that Dr. Tongue learned of the 'working diagnosis' of Dr. Garis. Later that month he applied to the defendant insurance company for a policy of life insurance in the principal amount of $50,000. In that connection, he was examined on August 31, 1957 by Dr. T. C. Siwinski, and on September 5 he was examined by R. C. Allan Spier. On each occasion, he informed the examining physician that he was in good health, and that he had never suffered any ailment or disease of the heart. He was asked if he had 'ever consulted or been examined or treated by, or under the care of any physician * * *,' to which he replied that he had consulted Dr. W. Winkenwerder for treatment of allergic rhinitis. He did not disclose his recent examination by Drs. Garis and Davis, their diagnosis or their treatment of him.

These answers were incorporated in applications, signed by Tongue, on the basis of which the insurance was issued.

In June 1959, Dr. Tongue suddenly died while playing golf.

An autopsy disclosed extensive heart disease involving both coronary arteries. There were old scars in the left coronary artery and a recent clot in the right one. It is undisputed that the cause of death was coronary disease, though the precipitating cause was the recent clot.

The findings during the autopsy enabled the medical witnesses to express the opinion that Dr. Tongue had suffered from coronary disease for many months prior to his death. They testified that if all the scarrings were fresh, the time of onset of the disease could be estimated with some accuracy, but, when there were old scarrings, all that could be said was that the onset of the disease occurred many months before the death. It might have been several years earlier.

The District Court concluded that the jury might have drawn a permissible inference that Dr. Tongue was in good health when he applied for the policy of insurance and when it was delivered. He came to this conclusion because the diagnosis of Dr. Garis in August 1957 was not unconditional or entirely certain, while the findings made as a result of the autopsy did not enable the doctors to express a positive opinion that the coronary disease, of which there was then abundant evidence, was actually present in August 1957. He found, however, that the insured's statements in his applications that he had never had any ailment or disease of the heart and his failure to disclose the consultations, examinations and treatment of Drs. Garis and Davis were false beyond doubt, and that his answers to those two questions were material to the risk as a matter of law.

On appeal, most of the effort of the Trustee is directed to the answer to question No. 5B of the applications, in which Dr. Tongue had responded, 'No,' when asked if he had ever suffered from any ailment or disease of the heart. The position, essentially, is that while Dr. Tongue may have had reason to believe that he then had a disease of the heart, the diagnosis was inconclusive, and the evidence obtained as a result of the autopsy did not require a finding that Dr. Tongue had heart disease in August and September 1957. It says, whether or not he had actually had heart disease at the time he signed the applications, like the question of his good health at that time, is open to a difference of opinion.

There is no question, however, of the falsity of the answer to question No. 6E, in which the applicant reported a minor ailment and gave the name of the doctor who had treated that minor ailment some years earlier, but in which he failed to disclose the fact of his very recent consultations with Drs. Garis and Davis, their examinations, treatment and diagnosis. The unquestioned falsity of the answer to questions No. 6E is compounded by the answer to question No. 5B, for, in combination, they effectively conceal the fact that he had very recently been examined in an effort to determine whether or not he had heart disease, and that the result of the examinations was a working diagnosis that he did. Whether there may be doubt that, as an objective fact, he had heart disease in September 1957, his unequivocal answer to question No. 5B was part of the misrepresentation of his fatally incomplete answer to question No. 6E.

If we should agree with the Trustee that the answer to question No. 5B, considered alone, was not so clearly false, as a matter of law, as to warrant withdrawal of the question from the jury, the answer to question No. 6E is clearly false.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Monumental Life Insurance v. Taylor
129 A.2d 103 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1964)
John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance v. Adams
107 A.2d 111 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1954)
Heidenreich v. Metropolitan Life Insurance
131 A.2d 914 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1957)
Loving v. Mutual Life Insurance
117 A. 323 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1922)
Bankers' Life Insurance v. Miller
59 A. 116 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1904)
Mutual Life Insurance v. Mullan
69 A. 385 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1908)
Metropolitan Life Insurance v. Jennings
101 A. 608 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1917)
Metropolitan Life Insurance v. Samis
192 A. 335 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1937)
Schloss v. Metropolitan Life Insurance
9 A.2d 244 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1939)
Commercial Casualty Insurance v. Schmidt
171 A. 725 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1934)
Great Eastern Casualty Co. v. Schwartz
122 A. 647 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1923)
Forwood v. Prudential Insurance Co. of America
83 A. 169 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1912)
Union Trust Co. v. Kansas City Life Insurance
197 F. Supp. 471 (D. Maryland, 1961)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
300 F.2d 606, 1962 U.S. App. LEXIS 5576, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/union-trust-company-of-maryland-v-kansas-city-life-insurance-company-ca4-1962.