192 S.W. 800 | Tex. App. | 1917
The appellant is the beneficiary named in a policy of insurance for $500 issued by the appellee upon the life of his wife, Mary Collins, in 1910. In 1914 Mary Collins was drowned in a well. The certificate of insurance, together with proofs of death, were sent in, but payment was refused, and this suit followed. The defense was suicide, and false representations as to her age, made by the insured in her application for the policy. The appellee is a fraternal benefit society, and has a constitution which provides that 45 years shall be the age limit for females who may obtain insurance in the order. In response to interrogatories submitted by the court, the jury found that Mary Collins did not commit suicide, but that she had falsely represented her age to be less than 45 years at the time she applied for insurance. The appellant complains of the charge which submitted this last issue of fact, and also of the finding of the jury, upon the ground that the evidence was insufficient to support a finding that Mary Collins had falsely represented her age to be less than 45 years. The evidence did show that Mary Collins was over 45 years of age at the time she made application for insurance. The presumption would be that she stated her correct age in her application, and it devolved upon the appellee to prove to the contrary. Compton v. Marshall,
The evidence further showed that the original certificate had been delivered to the appellee, and that it had been called upon to produce the same upon the trial of the case. The inference is that it was available for evidence at that time. The policy was presumably issued upon a written or verbal application, and was delivered to and accepted by the insured. If it showed her age to be under 45 years it would be binding upon her beneficiary as a representation of material fact. Railway Co. v. Dwyer,
We think the evidence in this case is too unsatisfactory to support the finding of the jury, and the judgment of the trial court will therefore be reversed, and the cause remanded for another trial.