United States v. Helen McCarthy Willoughby

250 F.2d 524, 1957 U.S. App. LEXIS 4172
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedDecember 2, 1957
Docket15504_1
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 250 F.2d 524 (United States v. Helen McCarthy Willoughby) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Helen McCarthy Willoughby, 250 F.2d 524, 1957 U.S. App. LEXIS 4172 (9th Cir. 1957).

Opinion

LEMMON, Circuit Judge.

“Men,” said Mr. Associate Justice Holmes, “must turn square corners when they deal with the government.” 1

In the instant case, the insured, when dealing with the Government, constructed a labyrinth of falsehoods and evasions that would hamper any administrative Theseus seeking the Minotaur of truth.

1. Statement of the Case and of the Facts

This action was brought by the appellee to recover benefits, as primary beneficiary, under her deceased son’s National Service Life Insurance policy. The appellant defended under 38 U.S. C.A. § 802 (w), 2 on the ground that rein-statements of the policy had been obtained by fraudulent misrepresentations of the insured.

On November 21, 1956, the District Court, sitting without a jury, entered judgment for the appellee, and the appellant filed a notice of appeal on January 16, 1957.

The undisputed facts are as follows;

In September, 1944, John R. Willough-by, while in military service, was issued a National Service Life Insurance policy in the amount of $10,000. He received a medical discharge from the service in November, 1945, as suffering from diabetes mellitus, commonly called “diabetes”, or sometimes known as “sugar diabetes”. The Army Retiring Board found that Willoughby was incapacitated as “the result of an incident of service”.

On October 1, 1947, Willoughby permitted the policy to lapse by failing to pay the premiums. On July 12, 1948, he applied for reinstatement of his lapsed insurance, pursuant to Veterans Administration regulations. Those regulations provided for such reinstatement on a comparative health basis; i. e., where the applicant is in as good health when he applies as he was on the due date of the premium in default.

In filling out the prescribed form, Willoughby answered the following questions as shown below, by marking X’s in the appropriate places:

“8. Are you now in as good health as you were on the due date of the first premium in default ? Yes.”
*526 “9. Have you been ill, or suffered or contracted any disease, injury, or infirmity, or been prevented by reason thereof from attending your 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 lapse of this insurance? No.”
“10. Have you ever applied for disability compensation, retirement pay, pension or waiver of insurance premiums? Yes. (If ‘yes’ give
Claim No. below) C-No........”

Willoughby did not list a “C-No.” (“C-Number” or “Claim-Number”) in the space provided following Question 10.

On the basis of the representations as to comparative health contained in this application, and upon payment of the due premiums, Willoughby’s policy was reinstated in July, 1948, without requiring a medical examination. He continued to pay the premiums on this policy until December 1, 1949, when the insurance again lapsed for the nonpayment of premiums.

On February 6, 1950, Willoughby executed another application for reinstatement on a comparative health basis, in reply to “comparative health” question, supra, he again checked the “Yes” blank, but answered “No” to the question as to whether, since the lapse of his insurance, he had been ill, or had consulted a physician, etc. This second application blank did not contain a question similar to Question 10, supra, relative to an application for disability compensation, etc.

Again on the basis of Willoughby’s statements as to comparative health, the Veterans Administration, on February 9, 1950, reinstated his policy without requiring a medical examination. Payment of premiums continued until September 1, 1950, when the policy lapsed for the third time for failure to pay premiums.

On October 19, 1950, Willoughby for the third time applied for reinstatement of his insurance. This application was identical in form to the second application, and his answers were the same. Because the application was dated August 30, 1950, and not mailed until October 19, 1950, Willoughby was informed by the Veterans Administration that it would be necessary to execute a supplemental comparative health statement covering the period from August 30, 1950, through October 19, 1950. Wil-loughby was also required to certify that “I am now in sound condition, mentally and physically, excepting as follows. íf * *

Without making any insertions in the space provided therefor Willoughby executed this statement on December 1, 1950. In this connection, the District Court found:

“If the Insurance Section had followed up the answer given to the veteran to Question 10 on the first application, the falsity of the veteran’s statements would have been disclosed.”

Be that as it may, the Veterans Administration reinstated the policy, and Willoughby continued to pay premiums until his death in May, 1952.

The District Court found:

“That each and all of said representations * * * were untrue, and known by said John B. Wil-loughby to be untrue, and they and each of them were material facts; and that it must be presumed they were made with intent to deceive.”

This finding was based in substance upon evidence that Willoughby had visited physicians in Fresno and Visalia, California; had been hospitalized in the Fresno Veterans Hospital, where he had received two blood transfusions, etc. All this medical history occurred between the lapse of his insurance on October 1, 1947, and his discharge from the Fresno hospital on September 8, 1950, “as having attained maximum hospital benefit with a diagnosis of ‘diabetes, mellitus, severe’ and ‘glomerulus nephritis, chronic, severe, with azotemia’.” It was the *527 progression of these diseases that resulted in his death.

The appellee filed a claim for the proceeds of the policy, which claim was denied on May 14, 1953, by the Director of the Claims Service of the Veterans Administration’s District Office at Denver, on the ground that Willoughby had secured reinstatements of the policy by fraud in misrepresenting the state of his health in his applications for reinstatement.

After a denial of her appeal by the Board of Veterans’ Appeals, the appellee brought this action in the court below to recover the $10,000 payable under the policy. The appellant raised the defense of fraud.

Although, as we have seen, expressly finding that the insured had knowingly made false representations as to material facts in his applications for reinstatement, with intent to deceive the Administration, the District Court stated that, under this Court’s decision in United States v. Kelley, 9 Cir., 1943, 136 F.2d 823

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250 F.2d 524, 1957 U.S. App. LEXIS 4172, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-helen-mccarthy-willoughby-ca9-1957.