43 A.2d 534 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1945
Argued March 12, 1945. The beneficiary of a life insurance policy issued by the defendant insurance company appeals from the granting of a judgment non obstante veredicto after verdict of a jury for appellant in a suit on the insurance policy. The policy was issued November 13, 1941. The insured died April 6, 1943.
The defense to the suit on the policy was false and fraudulent misrepresentations inducing the insurance, and the judgment of the Court below was granted on that defense. Defendant admitted liability to repay the premiums which had been received.
The misrepresentations on which the defense was based were made in the insured's answers to material questions relating to hospitalization, disability benefits received, blood in urine, and medical attendance within three years prior to application for the policy and the issuance thereof.
Among the questions asked by the medical examiner, with the insured's answers, were the following: 4E. "Have you ever applied for or received any disability benefit under any life, accident or health policy, fraternal insurance membership, or workmen's *473 compensation provision; or any pension, or allowance, government or otherwise?" Answer, "No" . . . . . . 6A. "What serious illness have you had?" Answer, "Yes". "Have you ever been in a hospital, sanitarium, or other institution for observation, diagnosis, rest or treatment?" Answer, "Yes" . . . . . . 7A. "Have you ever had albumin, blood or sugar in your urine, or had abnormal blood pressure? (If yes, give particulars including treatment below.)" Answer, "No" . . . . . . 9A. "Have you consulted or been attended by a physician or other practitioner during the past three years? Give dates, complaints, doctors' or practitioners' names and addresses." Answer, "Tonsils removed, 1940. Temple Hospital." . . . . . . 10A. "Have you ever had (Answer yes or no. If yes, underscore diseases or disease and give particulars in space below.) Disease of kidneys, bladder or prostate, kidney colic or stones?" Answer, "No." . . . . . . 10B. "Do the answers to all parts of questions 6, 7, 9 and 10A with details given in space below constitute a complete statement of all your illnesses, surgical operations and sojourns in hospitals, sanitaria and other institutions?" Answer, "Yes" . . . . . . "Details of 6, 7, 9, 10 should be given below. Include dates (month and year), nature of illnesses, time disabled and results, attending physicians' names and addresses, and names of hospitals, sanitaria or other institutions, if any." Answer, "Gall bladder and appendix removed 3/3/38, St. Joseph Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa. Tonsils removed, 1940, Temple University Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa."
The question of previous hospitalization was a fair and reasonable one. Harkins v. John Hancock Mutual Life InsuranceCompany,
It was established by the pleadings and by the records of the insured's employer that he was absent from work because of illness from March 2, 1937 until March 11, 1937; from September 5, 1939 to September 21, 1939, and from March 1, 1940 to April 7, 1940, for which he received disability benefits in the total amount of almost five hundred dollars. It was shown by the records of Mt. Sinai Hospital that insured was a patient in that hospital from September 5, 1939 to September 8, 1939, suffering from severe pain or kidney colic, which had persisted for some eighteen hours prior thereto and was associated with blood in his urine. These records were confirmed by the pleadings and were admitted without objection. They also showed that he had been referred to the hospital by Dr. Solomon Berull, who testified that he had treated the insured for acute pain in the back which he diagnosed as urteral calculus and that he had referred the patient to Mt. Sinai Hospital.
Insured was a competent person. We may assume that he knew the purpose of the questions in the application and the importance of answering them properly and completely to aid the insurer in determining *475 whether to grant or reject the application for insurance. He "declared" that the statements and answers in the application were "complete and true", yet he stated that he had not received any disability benefits, failed to report his hospitalization in Mt. Sinai Hospital, that he had, for eighteen hours previous to his admission to the hospital on September 5, 1939, a pain in the groin or that his urine had blood in it the "last twelve hours"; and nowhere does the name of his family physician, Dr. Berull, appear in the application.
The insurance company asked for and was entitled to be advised whether insured had ever received disability benefits, whether he had ever been in a hospital, whether he had ever had blood in his urine and the names of physicians whom he had consulted or by whom he had been attended. Good faith required complete and correct answers. Derr v. Mutual Life Insurance Company,
The Supreme Court in Evans v. Penn Mutual Life InsuranceCompany,
Judgment affirmed.