This is аn action to recover permanent and total disability benefits, upon an ordinary life insurance policy carried by Cassie B. Kendall from March, 1928, to the date of his death, in February, 1940, and to recover premiums paid by him on the policy from 1929 to 1934, inclusive, plus interest. Suit was institutеd by the plaintiff, as administrator of the estate of his deceased father, in the state court on December 28, 1940, and subsequently removed to this court, by reason of diversity of citizenship, where it was tried by the court in lieu of a jury.
The policy in suit was issued in 1924 upon conversion of an earlier term insurance policy taken out in 1923. It provided for life insurance coverage of $3,000 and disability .benefits of $30 per month if the insured became totally and permanently disabled prior to the anniversary date of the policy (February 1, 1931) nearest the sixtieth birthday of аssured. Assured died February 1, 1940. The face amount of the policy was paid to the beneficiary. The administrator claims that his father became totally and permanently disabled prior to February 1, 1931, and should have been paid disability benefits for a period of almost ten years prior to his death. The defendant denies permanent and total disability prior to February 1, 1931, but says that if such disability did exist, plaintiff is estopped from claiming such disability because of the lapse of almost ten years before filing suit, and because of other conduct of аssured, as the result of which defendant has been greatly prejudiced in its defense, by dea.th of its assured and most of its material witnesses.
Assured was a real estate dealer, at Mannington, W. Va., except for a period of two years (1921-1923) when he managed a garage business in Elkins, W. Vа. On January 27, 1923, assured applied for the original policy, stating in his written application that he had never had tuberculosis or any other disease within a period of five years. The medical examiner reported that his lungs were “normal”. There is no very definite evidencе as to just when the assured terminated his real estate activities, but he continued to manage and rent several parcels of real estate owned by him or his family until a few years before his death. Assured sold his garage business in Elkins in September, 1928, for $20,000 and returned to Mannington. He had аn average monthly income of about $100 from real estate.
On December 13, 1929, he filed a claim for disability benefits, claiming that he had been totally and permanently disabled since March 15, 1928, because of a “general breakdown”. An adjuster by the name of Conley investigated the claim, and reported the claim unfavorably, as a case of retirement rather than total disability. On December 14, Drs. M. F. Hamilton and D. D. Hamilton, the assured’s attending physicians, filled out and sent to the defendant a printed form of “Attending Physician’s Statement”. No mention was made of tuberculosis, but it said that Kendall would be disabled from “hard work” because of a chronic cough and general weakness. Conley testified that later he went to see Dr. D. D. Hamilton, to ask him what he meant by “hard work” and the doctor explained that he meant insured would be unable to do oil field work — only able to do light work that was not confining. On December 23 Dr. Frank E. Flowers, defendant’s medical examiner at Mannington, examined assured and reported in writing as follows: “Cannot see where (he) is at present disabled more than a slight degree * * *. After careful examination of this man, it seems to me he is in as good physical condition as the average man of his age. He is a chronic asthmatic, but I do not believe there is sufficient disease to seriously disable him from performing most of the duties of his' occupation as a real еstate dealer”. Dr. Flowers died in March, 1939. The defendant offered this signed statement, to which plaintiff objected, and it became necessary for the court to exclude this important evidence. It amounted to hearsay and was not such a statement as to come within any exception to the hearsay rule. Wig-more on Evidence, Vol. 3, Sec. 1576.
In 1939 Arthur G. Clayton, defendant’s agent at Mannington, died. Dr. M. F. Hamilton died in 1933. Assured died February 21, 1940. Dr. D. D. Hamilton certified that the cause of death was uremic poisoning resulting from diseased prostate.
An autopsy was performed at the request of the family by Dr. D. D. Hamilton and a Dr. Frye. No notice of the autopsy was given to defendant. The doсtors both testified that in addition to the diseased prostate, 'they found evidence which they believed to reflect a tubercular condition.
Proof of death was made and the original policy surrendered on March 5, 1940, without mention of any disability claim. On March 19, 1940, the insured’s widow аcknowledged receipt of the check for life insurance coverage, but stated that “I believe the estate of my husband has a claim against your company on account of disability clause in policy No. 1035513”. No further proofs of claim were submitted to defendant, and this suit was instituted in December, 1940.
Dr. D. D. Hamilton, the chief witness for plaintiff, testified that in his opinion assured had an active tuberculosis since before 1919, but this statement is at variance with all the other medical evidence. The examination and written report of Dr. Golden in 1923 denied existence of tuberculosis. Such disease was not mentioned by any of the three doctors, including Dr. D. D. Hamilton himself, who examined Kendall in 1929 for the specific purpose of fixing the cause of any. disability then existing. Dr. Hamilton admits that he treated assured throughout his illness, but never referrеd him to a tuberculosis specialist or to a sanitarium for observation or treatment. It would seem that Dr. D. D. Hamilton based his statement as to tuberculosis almost entirely upon the autopsy conducted in 1940. Both Dr. Hamilton and Dr. Frye admit that if he had tuberculosis in 1940 it is impossible to fix the date оf its inception. Dr. Hamilton testified from memory and was unable to fix dates very definitely after lapse of so many years. The plaintiff offered a number of friends who were asked to testify as to their recollection of his condition from time to time more than ten years prеvious. Their evidence was to the effect that his condition had grown gradually worse up to the date of his death in 1940. Most of them indicated that it was between "1930 and 1935 that they first noticed any failure in his health. These witnesses made it clear that assured had not done much in the way of actual work, except handle a little real estate, since returning to Mannington in 1923, and none, of them could say definitely when such activities ceased. Assured’s widow, with whom he lived until his death, was not called as a witness.
Even though the examination and written report made by Dr. Flowers in 1929 bе excluded, I am still of the opinion that the plaintiff has failed to prove by a preponderance of the evidence that assured was totally and permanently disabled prior to February 1, 1931. The recollection of the witnesses after so many years was necessarily so uncertain and indefinite as to carry little weight. There is no uncertainty, however, about the attitude of assured toward his own claim for disability. Defendant rejected the claim in February, 1930. Assured apparently abandoned his claim, and never again asserted it, althоugh he lived for ten years thereafter. On the contrary, his subsequent conduct with regard to this policy was wholly inconsistent with permanent and total disability. Payments of future premiums “without any objections or protest”, the borrowing of $500 upon the policy in 1933, and requesting that the policy bе placed on extended term basis in 1936, without ever again mentioning the disability claim, are strong “ evidence that assured did not himself have much faith
These conclusions make it unnecessary to decide the question of estoppel. Hоwever, I am of opinion that plaintiff is likewise estopped to assert this claim at this late date. Defendant believed, and had reasonable ground to believe, that the claim had been abandoned after its rejection in 1930. Defendant relied, and had the right to rely upon the course of conduct of assured. The prejudice resulting to the defendant by reason of assured’s conduct, and the long delay of more than ten years in filing suit is clear and convincing. The insurance company was entitled to examine its insured while he was alive. Hinklеy v. Penn Mutual Life Ins. Co., D.C.,
There are many West Virginia cases in which this principle has been applied. Jenkins v. New York Life Ins. Co., 1940,
The South Carolina Court further added: “ * * * Any other rule, in this State, would put it in the hands of the claimant to furnish any flimsy so-called ‘due proof,’ and when the company declared it insufficient, wait until the opportunity for the company to show the falsity of the claim has passed, as was done in this case, and then bring action on it * * *
Defendant’s motion for judgment, made at the conclusion of the trial, is sustained. An order may be entered accordingly.
