256 Pa. 177 | Pa. | 1917
Opinion by
In this action of assumpsit the plaintiff sought to recover the amount of a policy of insurance upon the life of her husband. Payment was refused on the ground that the insured had made false representations in his application, as to his state of health, and as to the time when he had last consulted a physician. The answers alleged to be untrue are contained in the medical examiner’s report, which was filled out by the examiner and signed by the applicant. It was stipulated that these statements were part of the consideration for which the policy was issued, and it was also agreed that the policy should not take effect unless the insured was in good health when the first premium was paid. At the trial, a request by defendant for binding instructions was refused, and the case was submitted to the jury, who found a verdict for plaintiff for the full amount of the policy, with interest. Prom the judgment thereon entered, defendant has appealed, and its counsel now con
The trial judge held there was an ambiguity in questions 24, 24a, b and c, in that it Avas not clear whether they referred to an attending physician or a consulting physician, and he left it to the jury to say Avhether the applicant might not have understood them in the latter sense. If so, his answers to both 24b and 24c, “Names and addresses of consulting physicians?” were not untrue. In his attack of appendicitis, Dr. Swope was the consulting physician, or perhaps more correctly the surgeon. Question 24c refers in terms to a “consulting” physician, that is, one called by the attending physician in consultation, not to one whom the patient had consulted. As the applicant had already answered that his attending physician was Dr. Schuster, he may have taken the subsequent inquiry to refer, not to the same person, but to a consulting physician in the ordinary use of the term. Reference to the facsimile of a portion of the report inserted at the end of the appellant’s paper book shows that the medical examiner had first Avritten the name of Dr. Swope as the attending physician of the applicant, had then erased it and written over the erasure “Dr. A. R. Suster” (meaning Schuster), and had then put down Dr. Swope’s name as applicant’s consulting physician. This change indicates that both the applicant and the medical examiner interpreted the questions in the manner the jury has found they might reasonably have done. The distinction does not seem to be of any great practical importance, for the applicant gave the names of both physicians, and the defendant company could have made inquiry of each of them for particulars, had it seen fit to do so. The evidence does not show that the insured had consulted any physician other than the two named,
Complaint is made in the seventh assignment of the affirmance of plaintiff’s fifth point, in which the jury were instructed that, if made in good faith, a misrepresentation by the insured, as to consultations with Dr. Schuster at times other than those mentioned in the application, would not avoid the policy, unless the misrepresentation was a material one. The point was obscure and difficult to understand, and counsel should have been required to restate and simplify the request. It is dangerous to affirm a point which is not clear to the court, for to the jury it would present even more difficulty. We do not, however, feel that the submission of the point as presented amounted to reversible error. The instruction requested was intended to aid the jury in determining the materiality of the representation, if they
In a number of other assignments error is alleged in the admission of evidence of acquaintances that the insured was apparently in good health, and was able to attend to his business during the spring and summer of 1913. As one of the questions to be determined by the jury was whether the insured was in good health, so far as he knew or believed, when he made his application, it was competent, as having some bearing upon his own good faith and credibility, to show by witnesses, who saw him about that time, that, to ordinary observation, and to all outward appearance, he was in good health.
There is no merit in the fifteenth assignment, which alleges error in admitting, against objection, plaintiff’s testimony that at the time she signed the proofs of death, she had a nervous breakdown, and did not examine the papers for the purpose of correcting errors therein. Whether she did so or not, is immaterial, as there is no controversy as to the statements contained in the proofs of death.
The assignments of error are all overruled, and the judgment is affirmed.