39 Ga. App. 609 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1929
1. In a suit upon a life-insurance policy, where the defendant pleaded that the policy was void because the insured in his application had given materially false answers to the questions, “Have you been disabled or received medical or surgical attention within the past five year's?” and “Have you consulted a doctor for any cause not included in the above answers?”, it was permissible for the defendant to prove that a few months before applying for the insurance the insured made to third persons declarations contrary to the facts stated in the application, the same being admissible as declarations of a person, since deceased, against his interest, and not made with a view to pending litigation. Civil Code (1910), § 576S; Chandler v. Mutual Life &c. Asso., 131 Ga. 82 (61 S. E. 1036) ; Murdock v. Adamson, 12 Ga. App. 275 (3) (77 S. E. 181); Freeman v. Metropolitan Life Ins. Co., 35 Ga. App. 770 (4) (134 S. E. 639).
2. While it is true that where a defense to a suit upon an insurance policy is such as to impute fraud to the insured in obtaining the policy, and where the fact of perpetration of the fraud is otherwise issuable under the evidence, proof of the good character of the insured may be relevant and admissible for consideration by the jury' in determining the preponderance of evidence in regard to such defense, yet the testimony of witnesses who are uneontradicted and are not otherwise impeached or discredited, and who swear positively to facts sustaining the defense, should not be discarded by the jury merely because of evidence of the insured’s previous good character. In such a ease the evidence as to the insured’s character for honesty and integrity would not, as against the other evidence, be sufficient to make the question of
Judgment affirmed.