106 Tenn. 347 | Tenn. | 1901
This is an action upon a life insurance policy. It is brought by Mrs. Susie E. Pox, the widow of the assured and the beneficiary named in the policy. It -was issued September 10, 1898, and the insured . died December 12, 1898, or about three months after the issuance of the policy. The pause was tried before a jury in the Court below, and there was judgment for $2,078.35, the amount of the policy, and the company has appealed and has assigned errors.
Passing over the details of the pleadings, the principal question presented to this Court is whether, under the terms and stipulations of the policy, fraud perpetrated by the insured in procuring the policy is available as a defense to a recovery upon it. Upon this feature the Court charged the jury as follows:
“It [the company] further files several pleas alleging fraud in procuring the policy, and alleging that the assured; Jno. E. Pox, falsely answered questions propounded to him in his application for insurance, to wit:
“As to the sanity or insanity of his father, himself, and his sister, and as to his previous illness, as set out in its pleas. You are instructed that if you 'find the policy introduced in
It is insisted this instruction . was erroneous, and it presents the question now to be considered. In the face of the policy the following provisions appear, to wit: .
“On consideration of the statements made in the application for this policy, which application is hereby made a part of this contract,” etc.
Again, “This policy is issued and accepted subject to the benefits, provisions, and conditions on the second page hereof, which are made a part of this contract.”
Turning to the application we find the following provisions which are pertinent and proper to be considered:
“1. It is hereby agreed ' and warranted that should the company issue a policy upon this application its interest shall not be affected by verbal statements made to its agents or others, or by the knowledge of such agent, but it shall be affected only by the statements herein made, including those made to the medical examiner, which are hereby warranted to be full and correct as facts, and they shall constitute the basis of any policy which may be issued hereon.
2. In the statement to the medical examiner it. is said: “I hereby further declare that . I have
The conditions referred to as being on the-second page of the policy are as follows:
“1. The failure to pay, if living, any of the-first three annual premiums, or the failure to pay any notes, or interest upon notes, given to the company for any premium, on_ or before the days-upon which they become due, shall avoid and nullify this policy, without action on the part of the company or notice to the insured or beneficiary; and all payments made upon this policy shall be ' deemed earned as premiums during its-currency. Any and all notes, with their conditions, which may be given for premiums or loans-,upon the security of this policy are hereby made a part of this contract of insurance.
“2. No suit to recover under this policy shall be brought after one year from the death of the insured.
“3. If the insured should, without the written consent of the company, at any time enter the military or naval service, the militia excepted, or become employed in a liquor saloon, or if the in
The real controversy arises out of the true meaning and proper construction of the phrase, “except as hereinbefore provided.” It is said by the company that the phrase applies to and embraces everything. contained in the face and on the back óf the policy coming before this excepting clause; in other words, it embraces not only the conditions set forth on the second page, but also the warranties and representations made in the application and on the face of the policy on its first page. The different results reached by these different constructions are apparent at a glance. If the phrase is limited to the conditions set out on the second .page, then the policy is contestable only for a breach of those conditions, while under the other construction it would
It is further stated that if the clause should-be so construed as to make the policy incontestable for fraud in obtaining it, then the contract itself would be void, because contrary to public -morals and a sound public policy.
The question involved in this controversy 'was before the Supreme Court of Iowa in the case of Verona H. Welch v. The Union Central Life Insurance Company. In that case the policy involved was the same as in the present case, issued by the same company. That Court held that the phrase, “except as hereinbefore provided,” applied not only to the conditions indorsed on the second page of the policy, but also the application and the statements contained in it, and that- to hold the policy incontestable for fraud would be to deny any effect to the warranty and agi’eement of the applicant, while -to hold otherwise gives full effect to all parts of the contract.
That Court says if . the policy may never • be contested for fraud in its -procurement, why include the warranty and agreement in it? That Court also intimates that a provision in a policy that it should not be- contestable for fraud would be void, and render the contract itself invalid.
The Court also draws a distinction between
If fraud may be waived at all, certainly the-parties may stipulate the grounds upon which the waiver may be made, and if a company can stipulate ' that its policies shall be incontestable, it may fix the conditions upon which inconstestability shall rest, and may fix a time limit upon the right to contest.
We think that a consideration of the manner in which insurance is effected and policies are written, will remove much of the difficulty in determining the proper decision of this ease. When a party applies for a policy, he is rer quired to make an application, and in it to reveal and state everything that the company deems material to the risk. A large number of questions are put to him to elicit the facts. These questions are framed by the company, and he is obligated by the terms of his application to commit no fraud and make no material mistake in answering them. Not only so, but the company by its own medical examiner subjects the ' appli- , cant to a physical, personal examination, and to a course of questions calculated to bring out and make plain his physical history and condition.
With this statement of the applicant, and report of its own examiner before it, the company
We can see no difference in principle between the present case and the. Clements case. In that case the company stipulated for twelve months’ time after it issued its policy; in the present case it took the time it deemed necessary before accepting the’ policy. It may, therefore, 'well be held to have waived the .effects of fraud, since it had such time to discover it as it saw proper. We can therefore see no good reason why these parties may not have entered into such contract if they saw proper so to do. Joyce on Insurance, Sec. 3132.
We are not passing upon the wisdom of such a provision, but upon .the rights and liabilities of the parties if it has been made. But the question remains, Did the company intend to cut itself off from the defense of fraud in obtaining the policy ?
In the Clements case the incontestable clause read as follows: “After the policy shall have been in force one full year, if it shall become a claim by death, the company will not contest its payment, provided the conditions of the policy as to payment of premiums have been observed.”
Now, in the present case, it is evident that the company intended to stipulate that it would not contest the policy upon any ground except misstatement of age, and “except as hereinbefore provided.” We cannot construe this exception as leaving the company an option to contest the policy for any matter contained in the application and medical , examination, but only for such matters as are stated in the conditions indorsed upon it. These conditions are, in brief:
1. Failure to pay premiums as agreed upon.
2. Bringing suit within one year after the death of the insured.
3. The entrance by insured into . military or naval service, engaging in saloon business, death by self-destruction within three years.
4. Misstatement of age.
To hold that all the statements made in the application are to be excluded from the clause of incontestability would be to deny any scope or effect to that clause.
These statements of the application and examination contain all the grounds of contest of which the policy is susceptible, so far as its terms are concerned. If they are all excepted, and contest may be made upon any or all of them, then the noncontestable .clause has no opera
The true meaning is that no defense will be interposed by reason of the terms and form of the policy except those embraced under the head of conditions, including the express' provision as to misstatement of age. To illustrate, the company might defend under the policy on the ground that plaintiff was not dead; that .the policy had never been delivered; because such defenses do not amount to the contest of the terms, provisions, conditions, and stipulations of the policy.
We are of opinion that' the causes set out in the “conditions,” and the misstatement as to age, are the only grounds upon which the company, under the terms of' this policy, has the right to contest liability, and it has Avaived the right to make any contest on any other ground covered by the terms' and provisions of the policy.
We can come to no other conclusion, and give any effect to this clause in reference to non-contestability, nor to give effect to the different provisions of the policy.
It is assigned as error that the Court .refused to charge, upon defendant’s request, that “if . Jno.
The defendant had already made two requests bearing upon this feature of the" case, both of which were given,- and are as follows:-
“If John Eox refused to take- nourishment, and the proximate cause of his death was starvation, and he refused to take nourishment in order to bring about that result, there can be no recovery by plaintiff in this case. That would be so although John Eox may have been so- sick from scurvy that it would ultimately have caused, his death. If John Eox was fatally ill with scurvy, and his death was hastened by such starvation, there can be no recovery by plaintiff.”
Again, ‘Tf John Eox was desperately ill with scurvy, and became weary of life, and deliberately starved himself to death, there can be no recovery by plaintiff in this case.
, “If the lack of. nourishment was the proximate cause of his death, this, would be so even though he was so afflicted with scurvy that it would have ultimately resulted in his death.”
This, we think, is ample on this feature of the case, and embraces the request refused.
We can see no error in the proceedings and judgment of the Court below, and it is affirmed with costs.