322 Mass. 678 | Mass. | 1948
This is an action of contract, brought in the Municipal Court of the City of Boston, to recover $450 on an industrial life insurance policy issued March 17, 1943, by the defendant on the life of William J. Connolly, then a man forty-four years of age. After a finding for the plaintiff,
The policy provided that it “shall be void if on its date of issue the insured was not in sound health, or if prior to said date, the insured . . . had . . . cancer, [or] sarcoma, ... or if, within two years prior to said date, the insured was attended or treated by any physician or other practitioner, or attended any hospital or institution of any kind engaged in the cure or care of bodily or mental disease, for any serious disease.” In its answer the defendant, after stating these provisions of the policy, denied that on the date of the issuance of the policy the insured was in sound health, and asserted that prior to the said date the insured had cancer or sarcoma and within two years prior thereto had been attended or treated by a physician and had attended a hospital for a serious disease.
The insurance policy was offered in evidence, and a witness testified that the insured applied for the policy on March 1, 1943, making an initial premium payment of $1. The policy was issued on the following March 17. A death certificate was introduced showing that the insured died in the hospital at the State farm in Bridgewater on March 2, 1944, after being an inmate for one half day, and that the cause of death was “Oedema of brain. Narcotism, chronic and acute.” There was no other material evidence. The defendant conceded that it had received proper proof of death under the policy, that all premiums had been paid, and that the policy had been returned to it after the death of the insured.
At the conclusion of the evidence the defendant presented twelve requests for rulings. In accordance with requests numbered 4, 5, 6, 11, and 12, the judge ruled that the burden of proof was upon the plaintiff to show: that the insured was in sound health when the policy was issued; that the insured was not attended or treated by any physician for any serious disease, complaint or surgical operation within two years prior to the date of issue of the policy; that the
The judge’s ruling that the policy was not incontestable was right, and he correctly interpreted the provisions of the policy, referred to in the defendant’s answer, to be conditions precedent which must be proved by the plaintiff. Clark v. Mutual Life Ins. Co. 251 Mass. 1. Kukuruza v. John Hancock Mutual Life Ins. Co. 276 Mass. 146, 151. Lopardi v. John Hancock Mutual Life Ins. Co. 289 Mass. 492, 497.
The plaintiff, following the finding and reasoning of the judge as to the existence of a presumption, contends that the requirement of proof is met by furnishing evidence that the insured was alive when the policy was issued. The reports contain many instances of adjudicated permissible inferences as to the normal mental capacity and physical condition of persons. In Clifford v. Taylor, 204 Mass. 358, 361, in connection with the allowance of a will, it was held that the presumption of the testatrix’s sanity, without evidence to the contrary, was sufficient to enable the proponent of the will to sustain the burden of proof. Baxter v.
As employed in a life insurance policy the words “sound health” refer in general to a state of normal health free from infirmity or disease having a direct tendency to shorten life. National Life & Accident Ins. Co. v. Lewis, 19 Tenn. App. 459, 462. Murphy v. Metropolitan Life Ins. Co. 106 Minn. 112, 114. John Hancock Mutual Life Ins. Co. v. Yates, 50 Ga. App. 713, 715. Stated in syllogistic form the plaintiff argues: most persons are in sound health; the insured was a living person on the date of the issuance of the policy; therefore the insured was in sound health on that date. The reliability of this argument depends on the truth of the major premise and the rational probability of the conclusion. It states a speculative proposition, the merits of which we do not consider, as the law applicable here has been settled by the decisions in the cases above cited.
To sustain the burden of proof the plaintiff is required to prove by evidence that the insured was in sound health at the time the policy was issued. This is the “decisive issue” to which reference was made in Shurdut v. John Hancock Mutual Life Ins. Co. 320 Mass. 728, 731. The burden is not satisfied by assuming the fact instead of proving it. That merely begs the question. The plaintiff has not proved his case.
The defendant was entitled to its requested rulings numbered 7, 8, 9 and 10. The evidence or lack of evidence warranted and required as a matter of law a finding for the defendant and not for the plaintiff. There was therefore error in the denial of the defendant’s requests numbered 1, 2 and 3. The orders of the Appellate Division are affirmed. .
7 oo ordered.