Ashford v. Metropolitan Life Insurance

98 Mo. App. 505 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1903

ELLISON, J.

This action is based on a life insurance policy. The judgment in the trial court was for plaintiff. The case was before this court on a former appeal wherein the judgment was reversed and a new trial ordered. By reference to the report of the case (80 Mo. App. 638) it will be seen that the deceased in obtaining the policy represented that plaintiff was his-wife. That, the defense was mainly based on the allegation that she was not his wife and that he willfully, falsely and fraudulently represented her to be for the purpose of inducing defendant to issue the policy payable to her upon his death. He also- represented that he did not have syphilis.

Whether plaintiff was the wife of deceased was a disputed question at both trials, and the disease aforesaid was a prominent issue at the last one. Plaintiff claimed to be the wife through a common-law marriage, and there was put forward in her behalf at the first trial the claim that even though she was not deceased’s-wife and that he willfully and falsely represented her to be for the fraudulent purpose and design of inducing the defendant to issue the policy, yet since that matter did not contribute to his death, then, under section 5849, Eevised Statutes 1889, now section 7890 in the revision of 1899, providing that “no misrepresentation made in *508obtaining a policy” would avail as a defense unless the matter misrepresented “actually contributed” to his death, it was of no importance whether she was his wife or concubine. We reversed the former judgment for error in the trial of the question whether plaintiff was the wife of deceased, and we also decided that the statute aforesaid, properly construed, did not include within its terms a willfully false misrepresentation made'to induce the issuance of the policy and which did induce it.

The last trial was in substantial accord with the opinion referred to. The question of whether there was a common-law marriage was duly and properly submitted by instructions. But whether it was or not can make no difference, for the following reason: The deceased represented that plaintiff was his wife and that he did not have syphilis or other disease of the blood.

It was submitted to the jury whether these representations were true; and whether, if false, they or either of them, actually contributed to the death of deceased. The jury necessarily believed the representations were true, or if untrue, that they did not contribute to his death. Under the rulings of the Supreme Court, those representations may have been willfully false and made with the fraudulent purpose of securing the policy from defendant, and but for which the defendant would not have issued the policy, yet if they were made of a matter which did not actually contribute to his death, the policy was validated by the terms of section 7890, Revised Statutes 1899. Schuermann v. Ins. Co., 165 Mo. 641; Kern v. Ins. Co., 167 Mo. 471. Those cases overrule the views expressed by us on that head in this case on the former appeal, as well as in the case of Van Cleave v. Ins. Co., 82 Mo. App. 681.

The judgment will be affirmed.

All concur.