258 Mass. 249 | Mass. | 1927
This is an action upon an insurance policy issued June 21, 1920, in this Commonwealth, upon the life of the plaintiff’s intestate (his wife), who died January 27, 1922. Application was made in writing by the intestate, but the policy did not refer to the application. G. L. c. 175, § 131. The policy contained the following: “Conditions No obligation is assumed by the Company prior to the date hereof, nor unless on said date the insured is alive and in sound health. This policy contains the entire agreement between the Company and the insured. This policy is void if the insured before its date has been rejected for insurance by this or any other Company, order or association, or has been attended by a physician for any serious disease or complaint; or has had before said date any pulmonary disease or disease of the heart, liver or kidneys.”
The undisputed evidence of a daughter and an attending physician of the intestate warranted a finding that the intestate was “pretty sick” in 1919; that she was attended by physicians, had hemorrhages, and was at a hospital three
The plaintiff contends that the evidence as to the intestate’s health, or lack of it, before the policy was issued is impertinent in respect to the purposes of the bill of exceptions, whether the evidence is viewed in its bearing upon the question as to health or on the question whether representations made by the insured were on her part “false, fraudulent or misleading,” and cites G. L. c. 175, §§ 123, 124. These sections, so far as pertinent to the issue here involved, in substance provide that in any claim arising under a life policy, issued in this Commonwealth without previous medical examination or without the insured’s knowledge and consent, “the statements made in the application as to . . . physical condition . . . shall be held to be valid and binding on the company.”
During the trial the plaintiff, in support of his contention that there was no previous medical examination, called a registered medical practitioner (sometimes employed by the defendant) who testified that he went to the house of -the intestate after the application for the policy had been turned over to him by the defendant; that he could remember only that he “asked those questions” (indicating questions printed
For the purpose of showing that a previous medical examination was not made, the plaintiff offered to prove that the doctor was paid twenty-five cents for what he did on the occasion when he took the application to the intestate and made the examination, if any were in fact made in connection with the policy. The evidence was excluded rightly. The amount of money the doctor received in fact for his services was not relevant evidence to prove that he did not render full service, or that such did not include a medical examination in the sense those words are used in the statute.
There is nothing in any exception to the charge which calls
The short answer to the plaintiff’s contention, that under G. L. c. 175, § 124, the statements in the application as to the physical condition of the intestate are binding on the company, is that the policy never issued as an obligation of the company because the intestate was not in “sound health” when the application was made or when the policy issued in reliance on the statements of the intestate as to her health. Ansin v. Mutual Life Ins. Co. of New York, 241 Mass. 107. Fondi v. Boston Mutual Life Ins. Co. 224 Mass. 6.
Exceptions overruled.