153 A. 121 | Pa. | 1930
In this action on a policy of insurance providing for the payment of sick and accident benefits, the jury found a verdict for the full amount of plaintiff's claim and from the judgment entered defendant has appealed.
The defense interposed was that plaintiff untruthfully answered questions, propounded to him by the company in the written application which he signed, material to the risk, and it is urged by appellant that because of these false answers the contract of insurance is avoided and plaintiff as a matter of law cannot recover.
To the question "Have you been disabled by either accident or illness, or received medical or surgical attention during the last five years? If so, state when, and for what duration?" plaintiff answered "No." It is undisputed that this answer was false. Plaintiff's own testimony and that of his family physician shows that he had been disabled by accident and had received medical and surgical attention within the period named. During that time he had suffered an injury to his hand caused by a falling window and as a result of it was disabled for about a week. At the same time he had an attack of tonsillitis. For both ailments he was attended by his family physician. Within two years of signing the application he had been injured by a street car and suffered for about a week from a sprained back and received benefits from a casualty company. Less than a year and a half before making the application, he had sustained severe injuries in an automobile collision, having his eighth and ninth ribs fractured, the muscles and ligaments of his back sprained, his chest sprained and his nervous system badly and severely shaken and unbalanced. From these injuries he was disabled and unable to attend to business for six weeks and was attended by his family physician. *111
Another question addressed to him in the application was "Do you understand and agree that the right to recovery under any policy which may be issued upon the basis of this application shall be barred in the event that any of the foregoing statements material either to the acceptance of the risk or to the hazard assumed by the company, is false, or in the event that any one of the foregoing statements is false and made with intent to deceive, or that the insurance hereby applied for will not be in force until the delivery of the policy to you while you are in good health and free from all injury and that the company is not bound by any knowledge of or statements made by or to any agent unless written hereon, and that you will pay the annual premium of __________ dollars in advance without notice?" To this he answered "Yes."
One of the leading cases dealing with the legal effect of false answers in an application for life insurance and their materiality is March v. Metropolitan Life Ins. Co.,
In Skruch v. Metropolitan Life Ins. Co.,
Plaintiff presented his case, by offering the policy, with the application, and by his own testimony, proving the injuries he had sustained entitling him to the indemnity which the policy provided. In cross-examination it was brought out that he had received the injuries heretofore detailed, which he had not mentioned in the application. In rebuttal it was proposed to prove by him that the agent who solicited the insurance had written the answers in the application that plaintiff informed him about the former accidents, that the agent told him they were not material, and, that, when, all the answers were written down by the agent plaintiff signed the application without reading it. The offer was excluded by the trial judge because not covered by the pleadings and also by reason of the agreement in the application that the company should not be bound by *114
any knowledge of or statements made by or to any agent unless written in the application. Thereupon plaintiff's counsel asked leave to amend the statement to cover the offer, the amendment was allowed and the offer renewed and it was again excluded on the ground that plaintiff had agreed in his application that the right to recovery under the policy should be barred in the event that any of his statements material to the acceptance of the risk or to the hazard assumed by the company were false and because of the provision in the application as to statements to or by an agent. The agent was then offered by plaintiff as a witness to prove the same facts and his testimony was excluded for the same reasons. We are of opinion that the court properly refused to receive the testimony offered on the ground that plaintiff had agreed with the company in the application which he signed that it was not bound by any knowledge of or statements made by or to any agent unless written in the application. By the express terms of the contract, the application was made part of it. Plaintiff, perfectly able to read and write English, could not escape from his agreement in this respect after having signed it, under the plea that he had not read it: Rinker v. Ætna Life Ins. Co.,
Defendant called a witness named Brusso, one of its officials, who testified that the answer of plaintiff as to his having had no previous injuries was material to the risk. Why defendant called this witness we are unable to see. The question and the answer under plaintiff's own admissions in his testimony as to previous injuries and medical and surgical attention spoke their own materiality to the risk without anything else. In Livingood v. New York Life Ins. Co.,
The court submitted to the jury as the one and controlling question in the case whether they believed the witness Brusso when he said that plaintiff's answer in the application was material and if the company had known the true facts it would not have issued the policy. This was not the true issue in the case at all. The issue was a legal one. Plaintiff had permitted an application to be sent in to the company over his signature stating that he had not been disabled by accident during the preceding five years. He admitted that his answer as written was false. He had also stated in the application that in the period named he had not *118 received medical or surgical attention. This also he admitted to be false. These statements were manifestly material to the risk, should have been so declared by the trial judge as a matter of law and binding instructions for defendant should have been given.
The judgment is reversed and here entered for defendant.