60 Ga. App. 128 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1939
1. The defendant demurred to the petition. On June 25, 1937, the court passed the following order: “It is ordered that the within demurrer be and the same is hereby sustained and said suit dismissed, unless plaintiff amends said petition within twenty days to meet the demurrer.” An amendment, which met the demurrer, was presented to and allowed by the court on July 1, 1937; and the amendment was left with the judge, at his request, together with the other pleadings, to be returned to and filed with the clerk of said court, but this was not done until August 12, 1937. The defendant made a motion to strike the amendment on the ground that it was not filed in time; that is, within twenty days from the date of the order on the demurrer, June 25, 1937. Upon a hearing the judge denied this motion, reciting in his order that the amendment was presented to and allowed by him on July 1, 1937, and that the amendment was left with the court at the court’s request, together with other pleadings, to be returned to and filed with the clerk of said court, and that the court inadvertently failed to return the pleadings and amehdment to the clerk until August 12, 1937, and for reasons satisfactory to the court the motion to strike was denied, and the order passed on June 25, 1937, allowing the plaintiff twenty days within which to amend, was so modified as to allow the plaintiff sixty days from the date of said order on the demurrer within which to file the amendment therein referred to. The order on the demurrer and the order denying the motion to strike were all passed during the June term, 1937, of the city court of Carrollton. Under the facts and circumstances above stated we are of the opinion, and so hold, that the court did not err in denying the motion to strike the amendment. The order on the demurrer required that the petition be
2. This was a suit by the beneficiary, Lawrence Kimberly, against the Bankers Health and Life Insurance Company, upon a policy of insurance for $210 on the life of his wife. The plaintiff obtained a verdict for the amount sued for, and the defendant’s motion for new trial was overruled.. The insurance company denied liability, and set up that the policy was procured by fraud in that the insured made false answers to certain questions in the application for insurance, which were material to and affected the risk and rendered the policy of insurance void. Mrs. Lillie Kimberly was the insured, and it was contended by the insurance company that her answers to the following questions were untrue and were
"The plaintiff, who was the husband of the insured, testified: "The condition of my wife’s health at the time she took out this policy, as far as I know, she was in good health. She had not been a sickly woman. She had always been a healthy woman. I didn’t know what caused her death. She was taken sick, I can not express just what day, but it was right around a week before she died. She died the 2d of September, 1936.” He further testified that his wife gave birth to a premature child in 1934;
E. C. McCord, brother of the insured, testified that he went with Grogan and Pope to the home of his sister when the application for. insurance in question was made; that he told them on the way over there that his sister, Mrs. Lillie Kimberly, was in a “family way;” that there was a conversation between Grogan, Pope, and Mrs; Kimberly when the application for the insurance was prepared by Grogan; that “as to what was said there, if anything, about former sickness or anything or doctors—here is the only thing I heard him say: He asked my sister had she had any chronic disease in the last year or two. She said ‘No, except the baby.’ That’s all I heard said about it. I heard all the conversation between them.” Just from observation the witness could tell by looking at Mrs. Kimberly that she was pregnant at the time the application was written.
Dr. W. L. Hogue testified to the effect that he had known Mrs. Kimberly for a good many years, and was her family physician; that he attended her in 1934 when she gave birth to a premature child, and at that time she did not have any trouble at all; that he was next called to see her about the middle of July, 1936, some two weeks before she gave birth to the child; that he made an
E. D. Grogan testified for the insurance company, to the effect that he was one of the assistant superintendents for the company; that he went to the home of Mrs. Kimberly to write the insurance ; that she was sitting on the porch; that he had known her for some eighteen months; that he wrote the answers to the questions in the application, and put them down as she answered them; that to question No. 19, “Are you in good health?” she answered “Yes;” that to question No. 20, “What medical or surgical attention have you had in the last five years?” she answered “None;” that to question No. 21, “If female, are you now pregnant?” she answered that she was not; that she was a large woman, was sitting down, and he did not notice anything to indicate that her answer to the question as to pregnancy was untrue; that E. C. McCord went with him to Mrs. Kimberly’s when he wrote her application for insurance, but did not tell him anything about her being pregnant; that she seemed to write a good hand; that he handed the application to her and saw her sign; and that he put a cross-mark on the application to show her where to sign.
(a) A statement in an application for an insurance policy, that the applicant is in good or sound health at that time, is not to be construed to be a warranty upon the part of the applicant that his health is absolutely perfect. “Good health,” as used in a policy of life insurance, means that the applicant or insured has no grave impairment or serious disease and is free from any ailment that seriously affects the general soundness and healthfulness of his system. Atlantic & Birmingham R. Co. v. Douglas, 119 Ga. 658 (46 S. E. 867), and cit.; National Life & Accident Ins. Co. v. Falks, 57 Ga. App. 384, 387 (195 S. E. 463), and cit. Under the evidence the jury was authorized to find that the insured was in good health at the time the application for insurance was made.
(c) ‘‘"Where soliciting and forwarding applications for policies of insurance was within the scope of the duties of an agent of an insurance company, and such agent undertook to prepare for another an application for insurance and wilfully inserted therein a false answer to a material question, he will be regarded in so' doing as the agent of the company and not of the applicant, and the agent’s knowledge of the falsity of the answer will be imputed to the company. . . Although, in such case, the application was, by its terms, a part of the contract of insurance, and was signed by the person to whom the policy was subsequently issued, if the latter was fraudulently misled and deceived by the agent as to the contents of the application in the respects indicated, and was in fact ignorant that it contained the false answer in question, the company will not be allowed to avoid the policy on the ground of a false warranty in relation to that answer.” Clubb v. American Accident Co., 97 Ga. 502 (25 S. E. 333). See also German American Life Asso. v. Farley, 102 Ga. 720, 735 (29 S. E. 615); Travelers Protective Asso. v. Belote, 21 Ga. App. 610 (94 S. E. 834); Wilkins v. National Life & Accident Ins. Co., 23 Ga. App. 191 (2-b) (97 S. E. 879). Under the evidence in the present case
The cases cited and relied on by counsel for plaintiff in error are distinguishable on their facts from the case at bar. In those cases the uncontradicted facts showed material and fraudulent misrepresentations or material and fraudulent concealments in the answers to the questions in the applications for insurance, which as a matter of law demanded findings in favor of the insurer. For instance, in National Life &c. Ins. Co. v. Strother, 53 Ga. App. 241 (185 S. E. 373), the applicant represented that he was in good health, that his doctor was Dr. M. K. Jenkins, and that he had never had any illness except children’s diseases in infancy. The uncontradicted facts showed that the application for insurance was made on August 7, 1934; that the policy was issued on August 13, 1934; that the insured died September 11, 1934; that Dr. C. A. Rhodes attended and treated him continuously from June 25, 1934, until in July 1934; that he was seriously ill during that time with a temperature of 104 degrees; that he had coleo cystitis and infected gall bladder, and this doctor recommended that he have an operation for this trouble; that he was treated by Dr. Olin D. Gofer on August 1, 2, 3, and 4, 1934, who advised an immediate operation for the gall bladder trouble and chronic appendicitis, and this doctor put him under treatment, getting ready for an operation on August 7, 1934; that on August 6, 1934, he telephoned to this doctor that he wanted to see his mother before he went to the hospital, and the doctor heard nothing more from him until he
Judgment affirmed.