Weil v. New York Life Insurance

17 So. 853, 47 La. Ann. 1405, 1895 La. LEXIS 649
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJune 17, 1895
DocketNo. 11,800
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 17 So. 853 (Weil v. New York Life Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Weil v. New York Life Insurance, 17 So. 853, 47 La. Ann. 1405, 1895 La. LEXIS 649 (La. 1895).

Opinion

[1406]*1406The opinion of the court was delivered by

Watkins, J.

This suit has for object the recovery of $5000 as the amount for which the defendant insured the life of Oonrad Weil, deceased, on policy bearing the No. 577,832 and bearing the date December 12, 1893, the insured having died January 22, 1894.

The defendant’s answer admits the execution of the policy, but denies all liability, charging violation of the warranty clauses of the application and the policy. There was a trial of these issues, a judgment in favor of the defendant, and an appeal on part of the administrator of Oonrad Weil’s estate.

The salient features of defendant’s answer we will reproduce, and they are as follows, viz.:

“ That the late Oonrad Weil, * * * to induce this defendant to issue said policy and to undertake to insure his life, made application in writing for said policy, which said application is a contract of insurance which was issued, only upon the faith of the statements and declarations made and contained in said application.”

That in said application the deceased “made certain statements and representations and gave answers to certain questions propounded to him, and concerning facts then and there unknown to the defendant, but necessary and material to defendant’s risk, in insuring the life (of the deceased) and issuing the policy,” etc.

That in the course of the applicant’s medical examination he was asked if he had “ever had severe headaches, vertigo, fits, or any nervous or muscular trouble,” and answered “no.”

That in truth and fact the deceased had an attack of trigeminal neuralgia in May, 1893, for which he was treated by a physician for the space of one week; that he had a convulsion on the 22d of October, 1893; and that in November, 1893, he was sick of la grippe for the space of about two weeks. “ That all of said facts were concealed by (the deceased), and not reported to the medical examiner of this-.respondent. ’ ’

That he was farther interrogated as to the name and residence of his physician, to which he answered, “ Dr. Randolph, of Alexandria; ” and that he was requested to state “when and for what have his services been required,” to which he answered “Dengue fever, last month.” Thereupon the answer charges that the deceased concealed from the respondent the other diseases above set forth, for which he had consulted a physician and been treated by him.

[1407]*1407That he was further asked “ what other physician have you consulted, when and for what,” and his reply was, “none, and for nothing.” Thereupon the answer represents that “said statements were false and untrue, for the reason that in addition to consulting Dr. Randolph as hereinabove set forth he had, from May 25, 1898, consulted Dr. Smith Gordon of Alexandria, La., for supra-orbital neuralgia, and in June or July (or perhaps later), 1893, the exact date of which is unknown to this respondent, but shortly before the issuance of said policy, the deceased visited the city of New Orleans for the purpose of being examined and treated by Dr. Rudolph Matas. That he was sent to Dr. Matas by his regular physician, the said Dr. Randolph, as an epileptic. That he was treated by the said Dr. Matas several times; was treated by him and received medicine from him.”

Having thus enumerated the various particulars in which the statements and representations of the application of the insured are and were “false and untrue,” and averred that the truthfulness of same was “ necessary and material to defendant’s risk,” the answer declares :

“ That the failure of the said Weil to disclose the material facts herein set forth caused the policy to be absolutely null and void, for the reason that in the application which it was agreed should be the basis of the contract between him and your respondent he warranted the answers to the medical examiner to be full, complete and true, and that the warranty was a condition precedent to and consideration for said policy, which was subsequently issued.

“ That the answers aforesaid being untrue were a breach of the warranty, vitiating the policy and destroying the right to recover thereon.”

The application contains the following clause, on which defendant places reliance, viz.: “That the statements and representations contained in the foregoing application, together with the declarations made by me to the medical examiner, shall be the basis of the contract between me and the New York Life Insurance Company; that I hereby warrant the same to be full, complete and true, whether written by my own hand or not, this warranty being a condition precedent to and a consideration for the policy which may be issued thereon.”

The policy contains a similar provision, viz.:

“ This contract is made in consideration of the written application [1408]*1408for this bond policy, and of the agreements, statements and warranties thereof, which are hereby made a part of this contract,” etc.

Upon the reverse of the policy an abstract of the application, the warranty clause and the declarations of the insured are endorsed, and made parts thereof; and a comparison instituted between the said declarations and the averments of the answer shows that the recitals therefrom in the latter are correct.

The physician who attended deceased during last illness certifies that he died of epilepsy, after a brief illness of three or four days, That he had been his medical adviser for about one year previous, and that he treated the deceased once in May of that year for supra-orbital neuralgia. With regard to the cause of his death, that statement is concurred in by two other physicians who were in attendance during the fatal illness. The statement of one of them is that he also attended the deceased during his attack of neuralgia in May, 1893. That he treated him for a fainting spell on October 22, 1893, and for la grippe in November, 1893. That the attack in May lasted one week, that in October one day, and that in November two weeks. He states that, under the treatment in each instance, the deceased was cured completely. These attacks were previous in date to the application which bears date December 7, 1893.

An examination of the testimony taken at the trial does nob differ materially from the statements of the witnesses made parts of the proof of the death of the insured, which were furnished to the defendant.

The theory of the defendant’s answer is that the application is the primary evidence, on the faith of which only the policy was issued to the insured, and that the validity and binding force of the policy necessarily depends upon the statements and representations which are made in the application.

Upon this theory the answer avers that the deceased made, in his application, certain statements and representations, and gave answers to certain questions propounded to him in the course of his medical examination, which is made part of the application, concerning facts “ then unknown to the defendant, but necessary and material to the defendant’s risk;" and it further represents that “said statements were false and untrue,” and that the truthfulness of same was necessary and material to the defendant’s risk.”

Reiterated the representations and statements- alleged to be un[1409]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
17 So. 853, 47 La. Ann. 1405, 1895 La. LEXIS 649, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weil-v-new-york-life-insurance-la-1895.