137 Tenn. 685 | Tenn. | 1917
delivered the' opinion of the Court.
On the 23d of March, 1914, the plaintiff issued to Walter King a policy providing for a weekly premium of twenty-five cents, a maximum weekly allowance for sickness or accident of $5, and the amount of $70 payable in the event of his death. He died on February 25, 1915, and the present action was shortly thereafter brought to recover the $70.
Both sides moved for peremptory instructions, and the trial court overruled that of the plaintiff in error, and granted that of the defendant, in error,, the wife of the deceased, to whom the policy was payable in case of death. The case was then appealed to the court of civil appeals, where the judgment was reversed, and the cause remanded for new trial. Both sides have brought the case to this court on petitions for writs of certiorari.
The application for the policy was taken by the company’s agent C. G-. Floyd, and the answers reduced to writing by him. In this paper King made reply to the following questions, as now stated:
“Are you.in good health? A. Tes. Q. When last-sick? . A. January, ,1914. > Q. Of what disease? A. Indigestion. Q. Name and address of attending*690 physician? A. Dr. Beecham. Q. Did any insurance company ever decline your application? A. No.”
There was appended to this application the following statement, signed by Walter King:
. “I do hereby declare that the foregoing answers are strictly correct and truthful, in which there is no suppression of any facts; and I acknowledge and agree that this statement shall form the basis of the agreement with the company, and if. any misrepresentation or fraudulent, or untrue answers have been made, or any omission or neglect to pay any premiums, on or before the day on which they shall fall due, shall take place, that then this agreement shah become null and void, and I'shall not be entitled to any benefits or privileges under said agreement, and all moneys which shall have been paid shall be forfeited to the said company for its sole use and benefit ; and I do further agree that if any policy shall be issued, to conform to its requirements.” ,
The policy also contained the following stipulation :
“If the representations of the application on which this policy is granted be not true, or if the conditions of this policy be not in all respects observed, or if any erasure or alteration shall be made in this policy except by indorsements signed by the proper officers, this policy shall thereupon become void; and whenever for any cause this policy shall terminate or become void, all premiums previously paid shall be for*691 feited to the company unless otherwise provided herein. ’ ’
On the back of the policy the following conditions appear:
“(4) The applicant must be alive and in sound health when this policy is delivered, and no liability is assumed by the company prior to the date hereof, nor unless on said° date and delivery of this policy the first payment has been legally made. .
“ (6) No benefits will be paid for sickness or death resulting, directly or indirectly, from diseases contracted or injuries received before the delivery of this policy; nor will any benefits be paid for sickness or death resulting, directly or indirectly, from intemperance, immorality, or venereal diseases.”
It was agreed at the bar of the court that the record showed that the deceased died of “Hodgkin’s disease.” This is shown to be a disease of the glands of the body, that it is slow in its progress, but almost uniformly fatal. The evidence shows, that the insured had been afflicted with this disease for two years prior to his death. Dr. Beecham treated him in February, 1914, and it was giving him a good deal of trouble at that time. This was just about one month prior to the time he made his application, and less than two months before the date the policy was issued. Prior to this time, and during the year 1913. he had been operated on at the city hospital for a swelling in his neck caused by this disease.' Dr. Beecham told him, in February, 1914, that he con
On the second examination of Tankie King, the defendant in error, she testified that the application was taken on Sunday morning, at the home of the insured; that the “knot on the neck” of the insured was spoken about in the presence of the agent; that the agent had been urging the insured to take the policy for two or three months; that the insured said none of the companies “seemed to want to take him on account of the knot on his neck;” that the insured asked the agent if he had a doctor to examine his
The witness Floyd testified that no one was present at the time the application was taken but the insured and himself; that it was not at the home of the insured but at the mill where he was working; that nothing was said about his having been in the hospital; that he saw no scar on the neck of the insured, and he had no scar; that the insured told him nothing about having been treated for “Hodgkin’s disease.”
This disease is more particularly described than has already been stated by one of the medical witnesses as follows:
“It is an enlargement of all the glands of the bod} through progressive anemia. Usually the disease, continues some time before it produces death, but occasionally there are very acute cases in which persons die in two or three months. It is like tuberculosis; some die right away and some live eight or ten years. A man might suffer with this disease without knowing that he was afflicted with a fatal disease. He would not necessarily have to be in bed, but would be going around yét ailing. It usually grows in intensity, but it is variable in all cases. The disease usually comes by swelling. The disease usually comes, first, you notice a little enlargement*694 of the glands of the neck. It can be localized in any gland of the body — swelling of the glands. It wouldn’t be very much for three or four years; just stay in these glands; then gradually go down; in back of this bone — the inguinal glands would enlarge and affect the lymphatic system. Then there can be an acute type through all the glands being enlarged at the same time, and then it might be what you call localized and stay in one region a long time before it spreads to the rest of them.”
The medical witness further testified that from the time the first symptoms would manifest themselves up to the time of 'death the patient would not ordinarily be disabled; that a man suffering from the disease, however, would, know that he had a chronic disease of some description, from the first symptom, that is the enlargement of the gland. The witness then corrected himself by saying that the patient might not know that the disease was chronic; that all he would know was that the gland was enlarged, but would not know that it would remain; that some people might not even know that it was abnormal; that this would depend on the intelligence of the patient. The witness testified that, from the symptoms the insured exhibited when he. came to the hospital shortly before his death, he had been affected with the disease for about two years.
The agent who took the application was not only a soliciting agent, but also cashier of the company.
We are of the opinion that the trial judge and the court of civil appeals erred in holding that the application was not a part of the policy. It is urged in support of the conclusion reached in the lower courts that chapter 441 of the Acts of 1907 necessitates such a result. That act provides:
“That every policy of insurance issued to or for the benefit of any citizen or resident of this State on or after the first day of July, 1907, by any insurance company or association doing business in this State, except fraternal beneficiary associations and mutual insurance companies or associations operating on the assessment plan, shall contain the entire' contract of insurance between the parties to said contract, and every such contract so issued shall be*696 held as made in this State, and construed solely according to the laws of this State.”
Standing alone, this act would cover the point adequately, and would fully sustain the conclusion reached in the two lower courts. Plowever, this act must be construed in pari materia with chapter 457 of the'Acts of the same year, which was passed on the same day by the legislature. That act is entitled:
“An act establishing standard provisions and conditions to be contained in policies of life insurance issued by companies organized under the laws of this State and companies licensed to do business in this State.”
This act begins:
“That no policy of life insurance shall be issued in this State or be issued by a life insurance company organized under the laws of this State unless the same shall contain the following provisions.”
Then follow thirteen provisions. All of these are subdivisions of the first section. The second section catalogues certain provisions that shall not appear in any policy. The third mentions certain permissive provisions; the fourth, a requirement as to the filing of the form of the policy in the office of the insurance commissioner; the fifth contains certain permissive provisions with respect to foreign companies.
The sixth section reads:
*697 “That this act shall not apply to annuities, industrial policies, or to corporations or associations operating on the assessment or fraternal plan.”
The fourth'provision, under section 1, is-a requirement “that all statements made by the insured shall, in the absence of fraud, be deemed representations and not warranties, and that ho such statement shall void the policy unless it is contained in the written application, and a copy of such application shall be indorsed upon or attached to the policy when issued. ’ ’
In volume 2 of Words and Phrases (2 Series), p. 1054, it is said:
“Industrial insurance means small policies issued in consideration of weekly payments in contradistinction to the ordinary insurance, where premiums are payable annually, semi-annually, or quarterly” — citing Russell v. Insurance Co., 176 N. Y., 178, 68 N. E., 252, 253, 98 Am. St. Rep., 656.
The plaintiff in error, as will be seen from the description of its business contained in the first sentence of this opinion, falls directly within the definition. Therefore section 6, quoted supra, applies to it, and it is relieved of the duty of obeying- subsection 4 of section 1 of chapter 457, also quoted supra. If the language of chapter 441 be held to cover industrial insurance policies, companies issuing such policies are required to incorporate the applications
The next question we shall consider is the validity of the fourth condition on the back of the policy quoted supra. Is that condition void because of its generality? Certainly not. However, this conclusion is stated in view of the definition which the term “good health” bears in the authorities relating to this subject. The term “good health,” when used in a'policy of life insurance, means “that the applicant
The same definition is found in note on page 173, L. R. A. (N. S.), 1916F, citing Horne v. John Hancock Mutual L. Insurance Co. (1913), 53 Pa. Super. Ct., 330. To the same effect, see 14 ,R. C. L., 900, 1068, 1071. Our own cases are substantially in accord. Rand v. Life Assurance Society, 97 Tenn., 291, 37 S. W., 7; Insurance Co. v. Lauderdale, 94 Tenn., 635; 30 S. W., 732; Knights of Phythias v. Cogbill, 99 Tenn., 28, 41 S. W., 340. See, also, Eminent Household v. Prater, 24 Okl., 214, 103 Pac., 558, 23 L. R. A. (N. S.), 917, 20 Ann. Cas, 287, and note 291 et seq.
That such clauses are valid there is abundant authority. 14 R. C. L., 900, 138 Am. St. Rep., 62, 43 L. R. A. (N. S.), 725, note.
We see no objection to the sixth provision. This is in the nature of a condition subsequent, and provides for the forfeiture of the insurance in case the
When the three points of the contract bearing on good health are taken together, it appears that in the application the insured was required to speak to the condition of his health at that time; in the fourth clause provision was made for a change in the condition of his health between the date of the application and the delivery of the policy; and in the sixth, a provision to protect the company as far as possible from fraud’, it was declared that if the insured should die of any disease contracted, or injury inflicted, before the delivery of the policy nothing- should be collectible thereon — in other words, that the policy should stand forfeited.
The evidence is uncontradicted that the insured was afflicted with “Hodgkin’s disease” at the time he made his application, and continuously thereafter until his death, and that he died of that disease. It is also undisputed that he was informed by his physician, Dr. Beecham, within a month before he made his application, that he was affected with that dis-' ease.
It .follows, from what has just been said, that the plaintiff in error, the insurance company, was entitled to a peremptory instruction unless there was
There is no evidence that the insurance company actually knew that he had this disease, hut there is evidence that its agent saw the swelling on the neck of the insured, which was an ordinary indication of the disease, but, hot being' aware of its significance, he thought it was only a wen, and so informed his company at the foot of the application. It was testified by the defendant in error that her husband informed the agent that “none of the companies seemed to want him on account of this knot on his neck.” The agent denied this statement, bnt the evidence was in the record, and we are to determine whether this raised a conflict in the evidence of a material character requiring a remand for submission of the case to another jury.
The general rule is well stated in 18 Ann. Cas., 687, in a note to Damms v. Humboldt Fire Insurance, Co., viz.:
“That where the insurer, at the time of the issuance of a policy of insurance, has knowledge of existing facts which, if insisted upon, would invalidate the contract from its very inception, such knowledge constitutes a waiver of conditions in the contract inconsistent with the known facts, and the insurer is estopped thereafter from asserting the breach of such conditions” — citing Gurnett v. Atlas Mutual Insurance Co., 124 Iowa, 547, 100 N. W., 542; Wisotzkey v. Niagara F. Insurance Co., 112 App. Div., 599,
It is held that the same rule applies where the agent soliciting the insurance knows of the existing facts, and such knowledge is imputable to the insurer. Irwin v. Westchester F. Ins. Co., 58 Misc. Rep., 441, 109 N. Y. Supp., 612; Id., 133 App. Div., 920, 118 N. Y. Supp., 1115; Fludd v. Equitable L. Assurance Society, 75 S. C., 315, 55 S. E., 762; 14 R. C. L., p. 1159, section 340.
The 'reason of the rule is stated in the same note in a quotation from Gurnett v. Atlas Mutual L. Insurance Co., supra, thus:
“The law is charitable enough to assume, in the absence of any showing to the contrary, that an insurance company intends to execute a valid contract in return for the premium received; and when the policy contains a condition which renders it void at its inception, and this result is known to the insurer, it will be presumed to have intended to waive the condition, and to execute a binding contract, rather than to have deceived the insured into thinking his property is insured when it is not, and to have taken his money without consideration.”
The question remains, however, whether a waiver or estoppel arises where the insurance company has information at the time which, if pursued with rea
We are of the opinion that, in such case, there is an estoppel. North British, etc., Co. v. Steiger, 124 Ill., 81, 16 N. E., 95; Gandy v. Orient Ins. Co., 52 S. C., 224, 29 S. E., 655; Morrison v. Wisconsin Odd Fellows Mutual L. Ins. Co., 59 Wis., 166, 18 N. W. 13; Porter v. Ins. Co. of North America, 29 Pa.Super. Ct., 75. See, also, as to the effect of knowledge or notice to officers or agents of the company, 25 Cyc., 862 to 865.
But we are of the opinion that there was nothing sufficiently definite in the information which Tankie King says her husband gave the agent, even if true, to put the company on inquiry, since it does not appear therefrom that W/alter King had ever offered himself to any company for insurance and been rejected. Nor is there any evidence in the record that he had ever applied for insurance and been rejected. And while the knot on King’s neck attracted the agent’s attention, he supposed it to be only a wen, which is defined to be, “An indolent encysted tumor of the skin,” especially “a sebaceous cyst,” something far different from the malignant swelling which indicates “Hodgkin’s disease;” and he so reported his impression to the company, viz., that King