Werth v. Minnesota Mutual Life Insurance

47 P.2d 76, 142 Kan. 255, 1935 Kan. LEXIS 318
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJuly 6, 1935
DocketNo. 32,188
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 47 P.2d 76 (Werth v. Minnesota Mutual Life Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Werth v. Minnesota Mutual Life Insurance, 47 P.2d 76, 142 Kan. 255, 1935 Kan. LEXIS 318 (kan 1935).

Opinions

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Hutchison, J.;

This was an action against the defendant insur[256]*256anee company for the amount claimed to be due the plaintiff, as beneficiary under a life insurance policy on the life of her son, with, a double accidental death benefit rider attached. Payment was made of the face of the policy, but it is alleged she did not know at the time of the payment that the death of her son had resulted from an accident, but being so informed later brings this action within' five years from the date of his death.

The answer is a general denial that the death of the insured was accidental and also pleads estoppel on account of the long lapse of time and a receipt in full.

The reply admits the receipt of the face of the policy in satisfaction of the ordinary death claim, but nothing else, and specifically denies the acceptance of the check and the giving of the receipt as constituting a settlement, compromise or release of her claim for additional payment for accidental death under the policy in question, or constituting an accord and satisfaction of such claim. And she further alleges that she signed such receipt under a misapprehension as to her rights in the policy and under a mistaken belief as to the facts of her son’s death, and states that the defendant company has-received-proof as to the accidental death of her son.

At the close of the evidence the jury was instructed and brought in a verdict in favor of the defendant, from which judgment the plaintiff appealed after the overruling of her motion for a new trial. The errors assigned are principally with reference to the introduction of testimony and the giving of instructions.

The first error assigned was in overruling an objection of the plaintiff to a question asked in cross-examination of a doctor called by the plaintiff as an expert witness, concerning the attending physician, whose deposition had been taken and was on file and later read by the defendant. It is said the two doctors were close friends and had once offioed together, although their opinions were widely different in this case. The question asked Doctor Butler in cross-examination about' Doctor Greever, the physician who attended the deceased, was as follows: “You would respect his (Doctor Greever’s) opinion if he handled the case, would you?” The objection was made that it was improper cross-examination. The objection was overruled and the witness answered, “Why, I certainly would, yes, sir.”

In the case of Sanders v. Railway Co., 86 Kan. 56, 119 Pac. 552, an expert witness -was asked a similar question about an engineer [257]*257in charge of a locomotive that was charged to have been handled with negligence — the defendant asking its own witness about its own employee, and he answered such similar question that he considered him a first-class engineer, and the court in the consideration of that testimony said in the syllabus:

“. . . without deciding upon the competency of the testimony under the issues presented it is held that it does not appear that the rulings, if erroneous, injuriously affected the substantial rights of the party objecting thereto, and that the judgment cannot be reversed therefor.” (Syl. It 3.)

In 28 R. C. L. 607 it is said concerning cross-examination in collateral matters that it is “one of the chief agencies for the development of the truth in judicial inquiries . . . Any question may be put which reasonably tends to explain, contradict, or discredit any testimony given by him, or to test his accuracy, memory, veracity, or credibility.” And on page 609 it is said:

“. . . an appellate court will not interfere with the exercise of discretion by the trial court unless a clear abuse thereof is made to appear. In order to warrant a reversal, it must plainly appear that the ruling has resulted to the prejudice of the exceptor.”

While we would not want to say that the question asked was proper cross-examination, we have no hesitancy in concluding it was not an abuse of judicial discretion in overruling the objection thereto, and that such ruling did not constitute prejudicial error.

Two other errors assigned were the overruling of objections to the questions asked by the defendant of two of its witnesses, Mr. Ford, under whose supervision the insured was working at the time of the alleged injury, and the other physician who attended the insured during his illness, as to whether anything was said by the deceased about having received an accidental injury, and whether the deceased made any statement to Mr. Ford in regard to an accidental injury, and whether the deceased ever stated to the attending physician anything to the effect that the condition of the toe was caused by an accident or an external blow. Both answered these respective questions in the negative. The theory of the plaintiff was that the second toe on the right foot had been injured by being stepped on by another boy in a basketball game. Appellant frankly states that while the answers to these questions may not, strictly speaking, be hearsay evidence, yet inasmuch as they are preliminary in their nature and if the answers had been in the affirmative the statements made by the deceased would have been hearsay evidence, that such [258]*258preliminary questions were necessarily incompetent and improper. Appellant cites 1 C. J. 500 where the text is that declarations or statements of the insured as to the cause of his injury made some time after the event and not a part of the res gestee cannot be admitted even though made to an attending physician. The preliminary' questions and the answers thereto, either affirmative or negative, should not be controlled by the same rule as that which has to do with the statements made by the deceased. The fact that he mentioned or did not mention the accident or injury was some evidence on the main question of fact involved in this case, viz., Was there an accidental injury which resulted in the death of the insured? The fact that the deceased did mention the injury or did not mention it to the one under whom he was working or to his attending physician was certainly competent and material evidence on this issue of fact.

The third error assigned is in permitting Mr. Ford to answer a question of defendant’s attorney as to “athlete’s foot” being a common disease at a certain time among the companions of the deceased. We see no error in this question, because the issue was whether or not the death resulted from an accidental injury.

The errors assigned concerning the giving and refusing of instructions relate to the question of giving a receipt or release and the burden of proof upon the plaintiff to show a mistake in giving the same. Appellant calls attention in the reply brief to the language of the reply alleging that the receipt given by the plaintiff for the face of the policy was given by her because “she was under a misapprehension as to her rights in the policy and that she signed said receipt and accepted said check under a mistaken belief as to the facts of said death.” The trial court instructed on the theory of mutual mistake, although no such allegation is in the reply. The case of Clark v. Marbourg, 33 Kan. 471, 6 Pac. 548, and some other cases are cited in support of appellant’s theory that her mistake alone was sufficient to fully relieve her from the binding force of a receipt she gave.

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Related

McMillin v. Farmers & Bankers Life Insurance
206 P.2d 1061 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1949)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
47 P.2d 76, 142 Kan. 255, 1935 Kan. LEXIS 318, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/werth-v-minnesota-mutual-life-insurance-kan-1935.