Williams v. St. Louis Life Insurance

87 S.W. 499, 189 Mo. 70, 1905 Mo. LEXIS 66
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMay 24, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 87 S.W. 499 (Williams v. St. Louis Life Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Williams v. St. Louis Life Insurance, 87 S.W. 499, 189 Mo. 70, 1905 Mo. LEXIS 66 (Mo. 1905).

Opinion

VALLIANT, J.

This is a suit on a life insurance policy. The defendant is a domestic corporation, authorized to issue life insurance policies. On May 26, 1898, it issued its policy of insurance on the life of Cora A. Williams, in favor of her husband, John W. Williams, the plaintiff in this case, for $1,000. Cora A. Williams died January 12,1901, while the policy was in force. Due proof.of death was given the defendant; in proper time payment ivas demanded, and refused. The petition alleges that the defendant has vexatiously refused payment, and prays judgment for the $1,000 and interest, 10 per cent statutory damages, and reasonable attorney’s fee.

The answer admits the issuance of the policy, avers that on August 8, 1898, it lapsed for non-payment of premiums, on April 5, 1899, it was reinstated, on April 29, 1899, it again lapsed for non-payment of premium due, and on May 15, 1899, was again reinstated; it avers that when assured made application for the policy she imposed on the company by substituting an[74]*74other woman in her stead to stand the medical examination, and also when she made the application for reinstatement of the policy after it lapsed she practiced the same imposition.

The answer then goes on to state that the policy sned on is on the assessment plan, and that it was issued in compliance with the written application of the assured and upon certain representations therein made and also made in her medical examinations, all of which she warranted to he true, and covenanted that the policy should he void if they were not true. These representations were to the effect that the applicant was in good health and had never been afflicted with certain diseases, among them consumption, that there was no consumption in her family, that her father died of paralysis at fifty years of age, also that there was no other insurance on her life, all of which representations the answer alleges were false and the policy was thereby rendered void. The reply put the averments of the answer in issue.

The evidence for the plaintiff tended to prove that the assured was in good health up to a short time before her death, that in the latter part of 1900 she became afflicted with a quick-consumption, and died in January, 1901.

The evidence on the part of defendant in reference to the fraudulent substitution of another woman for the medical examinations was that of the physician who made the examinations, and who at the trial was shown a photograph of the assured, and was asked if he recognized it as the photograph of the woman he examined; he said that he would not say that it was not a photograph of her because he might be mistaken, but he did not recognize it as her photograph.

He testified that on the occasions when he made the examinations he went to the home of the assured early in the morning without having made an appointment with her; he asked for Cora Williams, and a woman [75]*75there present answered to that name and he examined her. He also testified that the woman he examined was a healthy woman and that she signed the medical examination paper at the time and did not have before her the original application for the policy signed by her. There was some expert testimony to the effect that the signature to the original application and that to the medical examinations were not written by the same hand, but there was other expert testimony that they were written by the same hand. The only other testimony on that point was in an affidavit for a continuance which was to the effect that affiant expected to prove by one Catherine Buford, an absent witness, that she impersonated the assured and stood the medical examination in her stead, and plaintiff to avoid a continuance admitted that if she were present she would so testify. The affidavit for continuance did not state that Catherine Buford ever said that she had done so or what reason affiant had for expecting she would so testify. But when the affiant was afterwards on the witness stand he testified on cross-examination that one Eosie Kibby had told him so. There was on file an affidavit of Catherine Buford used on a motion for a continuance in a former trial of the ease, in which she stated among other things that she had not been in St. Louis for nearly four years. The affidavit was admitted in evidence for the plaintiff over the objection of the defendant on the ground that it was competent to impeach the witness.

Testimony for defendant also tended to show that th§ assured was not a healthy woman when she took out the policy, but had been under medical treatment and that she had had a cough indicating consumption; also that at the time she took out the policy there was another policy on her life for $196. There was also evidence pro and eon on the question of the defense being vexatious, and as to the amount of a reasonable attorney’s fee for the plaintiff.

[76]*76The above is a very brief summary of the oral evidence, but in the view of the policy as we interpret it and of the pleadings it is sufficient. The terms of the* policy will be presently considered.

The cause was given to the jury on instructions by the court of its own motion to the effect that if they should find from the evidence that the policy in question had issued on the life' of Cora A. Williams, that she died on January 12, 1901, that the premiums were paid and the policy in force at the time, that the plaintiff was the husband of Cora at the time of her death and due notice and proof of death had been given to the defendant, the plaintiff was entitled to recover $1,000 and six per cent interest from February 25,1901, unless the jury should find from, the evidence that in the application for the policy or in the medical examinations some representations as to the health or physical condition of the assured were made which were false and which concerned a matter which actually contributed to her death, or that some other person was substituted for the assured in the medical examinations, or that representations were made in the application or medical examinations either concerning other insurance on her life or concerning her health or previous condition or physical history or death of her father, or the health of her sister, or of medical attendance on herself, and that the representations were false and known by the assured to be false, in either of which event the verdict should be for the defendant. The instruction also authorized the jury if they should find for the plaintiff and should also find that the defendant had vexatiously refused to pay the loss, to add to the principal and interest damages not exceeding ten per cent and a reasonable attorney’s fee.

The defendant asked a number of instructions, all of which were refused and which were, first, a peremptory direction to find for defendant, and then singling out the various alleged representations, in the applica[77]*77tion and the medical examinations, directed the jury to find for the defendant if they found that either one of them was false. Exceptions to the giving and refusing of the instructions were taken.

There was a verdict for the plaintiff for the amount of the policy, $1,000, and six per cent interest, and $200 attorney’s fee, total $1,359.50, and judgment accordingly, from which defendant appealed to the St. Louis Court of Appeals.

The circuit court construed this to be an old line policy, and instructed the jury on that theory. The St. Louis Court of Appeals took a different view and held it to be an assessment policy and reversed the judgment.

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Bluebook (online)
87 S.W. 499, 189 Mo. 70, 1905 Mo. LEXIS 66, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-st-louis-life-insurance-mo-1905.