126 N.Y. 450 | NY | 1891
By the terms of the certificate of membership the defendant obligated itself to pay to the heirs or legal representatives of the assured the sum payable on the policy “ within sixty days after due notice and satisfactory proof of the death (during the continuation of the contract) of the said John Roberts.” There is no requirement that the cause of death shall be communicated to the association by a claimant, nor under the policy could this be exacted. The beneficiary of the policy performed his entire legal obligation under the contract when he gave the association due notice of the death of the insured, and furnished proof that the death has, in fact, occurred. The words “ satisfactory proof ” entitled the association to demand that the fact of death should be shown with reasonable definiteness and certainty, and if the proofs furnished failed to satisfy the association of the fact of the death, the association acting reasonably and in good faith could require further evidence. But the insurer cannot under guise that the requirement
The guardian of the infant plaintiff in furnishing to the defendant, as part of the proofs, the certificate of the attending physician of the insured, did a wholly gratuitous act. If it can be treated as an admission by the infant beneficiary that the death was from the cause so certified, it is plain that the act was extremely prejudicial to the interest of his ward, for upon that assumption the infant, the real plaintiff, has substantially admitted away his cause of action.
The trial judge, upon the proofs being offered in evidence by the defendant, refused to permit the certificate of the physician to be read, and this ruling presents the main question in the case. There are two aspects under which the ruling" may be considered: First, was the certificate inadmissible under section 834 of the Code of Civil Procedure, which declares that “ a person duly authorized to practice physic or surgery shall not be allowed to disclose any information which he acquired in attending a patient in a professional capacity and which is necessary to enable him to act in that capacity; ” and second, assuming that the statute does not apply to the case and that the certificate would be competent as an admission of the fact certified, if the proofs had been furnished by an adult claimant, can the act of the guardian in this case be treated as an admission by the infant beneficiary of the same fact.
Section 834 is a re-enactment óf a similar section in the Revised Statutes. (2 R. S. 406, § 73.) It is contained in the chapter of the Code relating to evidence, and in the article in that chapter entitled : “ Competency of a witness ; evidence in particular cases.” The primary purpose of the section was to declare the rule governing the examination of a
The other ground for excluding the certificate, viz.: That the infant was not bound by the admission of the guardian, is, we think, well taken. The defendant, upon the request of the guardian, furnished blanks for the proofs, including a blank certificate of the attending physician as to the cause, of the death, which were filled in by the guardian and signed and verified by the several persons whose' certificates were required, and returned to the. company. The office of a guardian is one of trust. He is empowered to act for the ward in the matters confided to him as guardian, in furtherance of his interests. Under the law of agency the admissions of an agent, made within the scope of his powers, are admissible in con
The court also properly excluded the records of the board of health of the city of Buffalo and the certificate of the attending physician filed with the board, stating the cause of death of the insured. The statute (Laws of 1870, chap. 519, tit. 12, § 10, subd. 5) makes it the duty of the board of health of Buffalo to supervise the registration of deaths and causes of death in the city, and prescribes that no burial of a deceased person shall take place until a certificate shall have been made and presented of the death and its. cause, if known, and that a refusal on the part of any person whose duty it is to make out and file for registration any such record, shall be a misdemeanor. The ordinances of Buffalo also make it the duty of the attending physician to furnish a certificate setting forth the cause, date and place of death of any person in the city, and file the same in the office of the board of health. The statute and ordinance were police regulations, and the records were required for local and specific purposes, and are not public records in such sense as makes them evidence between private parties of the facts recorded. We have found no case which would justify their admission in a controversy between private parties as evidence of the cause of death recently happening, where that became a material inquiry.
We find no error in the judgment, and it should be affirmed.
All concur.
Judgment affirmed.