129 P. 503 | Ariz. | 1913
The age of an applicant for insurance upon his life is regarded by all insurance companies as very important, both as affecting the risk assumed and in fixing the premium to be charged.
When an applicant for insurance misrepresents his true age, he has imposed upon the company in such a material matter as to invalidate the contract of insurance, and thereby relieves the company from liability thereunder. The issue raised in this case is the true age of the insured, and the question for solution is whether the affidavits offered by the defendant are competent testimony tending to establish his true age as different from his age as represented by him in his application for insurance.
The courts are not altogether uniform on the question of the admissibility of the declarations and admissions of the insured, made by him before or after his application for his insurance, relating to his health or his age. The weight of •authority appears to establish the general rule that such declarations or admissions of the insured, subject to the general rules relating to evidence of declarations or admissions as a part of the res gestae are inadmissible to show the falsity of his statements in his application and answers in his medical examination. Case-note, 11 L. R. A., N. S., 92, to Taylor v. Grand Lodge A. O. U. W.
In a case decided as late as October, 1908, the Wisconsin supreme court in Johnson v. Fraternal Reserve Assn., 136 Wis. 528, 117 N. W. 1019, passing upon this question, says: “The beneficiary in a policy of insurance, whether issued by a fraternal society or otherwise, has such a vested interest therein that, upon its maturing without such interest having been devested and an action being brought by such beneficiary to enforce the policy, alleged misrepresentations made by the assured in taking it out cannot be supported by evidence of his declarations, unless they were made so near the time of the application and so closely related thereto as to so characterize some act or fact respecting his then condition as to be a part of the res gestae; that otherwise such evidence is not admissible, in the absence of independent proof of the falsity of the application in respect to matters'referred to in the declarations, and then only to prove knowledge of such falsity on the part of the assured.” In Supreme Lodge K. of H. v. Wollschlager, 22 Colo. 213, 44 Pac. 598, the court, on the issue of age of the insured, holds that declarations made by hi-m in applications for membership in the Grand Army of the Republic, also.for membership in other orders, and for pensions and increase of pensions, are not admissible to contradict statements made in the application for the insurance policy in suit. In Yore v. Booth, 110 Cal. 238, 52 Am. St. Rep. 81, 42 Pac. 808, the question is the admissibility of
We think the weight of reason, as well as the weight of authority, clearly supports the rule rejecting such declarations where they are no part of the res gestae, explain no fact in the application for insurance, and are made in a transaction where the exact age of the insured is not material to the matter then before the mind of the declarant. The ruling of the court in excluding the affidavits for the purpose of registration was without error.
It follows that it was immaterial that such order was made at a late stage of the trial. The appellant could suffer no injury from the exclusion of incompetent testimony at any stage of the trial. At most, the appellant could only complain that the logical time to exclude the testimony was at the time it was offered.
The order in which a trial is conducted, evidence is offered, received or excluded, is in the sound legal discretion of the trial court, and nothing less than a clear abuse of such discretion, resulting in apparent injury to a party, should eall for a reversal by this court. No such condition is shown by this record.
The judgment and order of the trial court are affirmed.
FRANKLIN, C. J., and ROSS, J., concur.
Application for rehearing denied.
As to materiality of representation by the insured, see note in 3 Am. St. Rep. 633.