This,was a suit on a life-insurance policy. The insurance company sought to defeat a recovery on the ground that material misrepresentations affecting the risk were made in the application for the policy. The court charged the jury, in effect, that if false answers were made to the questions in the application for insurance, before they would avoid the policy and preclude a recovery they would have to be fraudulently made as well as material to the risk. Such a charge was error. The application was a part of the policy; and the answers to the questions being untrue and not amounting to a mere concealment of facts, and being material to the risk, a fraudulent intent on the
The beneficiary contended that the insured told the agents who solicited the insurance that she had been treated for nervousness, and that if they wanted to know the truth as to her condition they could find out from her physician, who was also the physician of the insurance company (but not authorized under the policy to accept the information); and that in the absence of an inquiry the company waived the truth such an inquiry would have revealed. Waiver in such cases can not be predicated upon constructive knowledge of an agent. Wiley v. Rome Insurance Co., 13 Ga. App. 186 (
Judgment reversed.
