30 N.Y.S. 775 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1894
This action was brought upon two certificates issued by the defendant to Henning D. Lund in his lifetime, in which the defendant undertook to pay the plaintiff, as the wife of Lund, the sum of $2,000 upon the certificate issued in Class B, and the sum of $3,000 upon the certificate issued in Class C, upon satisfactory proofs of his death; payments to be made by the association by an assessment upon its members, levied in accordance with its by-laws. The certificates were dated June 23, 1890. Upon the trial it was conceded that an assessment under the first certificate would have realized the amount thereof, and that an assessment under the second certificate would have realized $1,734.90. Lund died at the Buffalo General Hospital, in the city of Buffalo, on the 11th day of May, 1891. The defense interposed was false and fraudulent statements of the assured in his application, by which the association was misled, and induced to issue to him certificates. In his application he stated: “I am correct and temperate in my habits, and, to the best of my knowledge and belief, have no injury or disease, constitutional or otherwise, that will tend to shorten my life. Am now in good health, and able to gain a livelihood; and I promise, if accepted, to conform in all respects to the by-laws, rules, and regulations now in force, or which may hereafter be adopted by the association or its board of directors.” In answer to the question whether he had ever had stricture, he answered, “No.” To the question, “Have you ever had any serious personal injury, or undergone any surgical operation?” he answered: “Yes;” that he was shot in the knee, and the shell lodged there; that he was in the hospital seven weeks, but that it does not trouble him now. The plaintiff, in her proofs of death, states that he “had operation at hospital about three years ago. Was there one week. Had operation for something about his water. He was well when he went to the hospital, except what he told me was a rupture.” And in answer to the question of “What was the immediate cause of death?” answered: “I think he died from the operation. Was at the hospital from Friday until Monday, the 11th of May.” As a part of the proofs of death, she furnished a certificate of the attending physician at the time of his death, who states that the deceased was afflicted with a chronic disease of the urinary organs; that on the 9th day of May, 1891, he “dilated an old cicatrix made about two years before in an external urethrotomy. He became comatose, following convulsions, and died on the 11th. Post mortem showed extensive disease of the bladder, urethra, kidneys, and brain.”
Upon the trial the application was introduced in evidence by the defendant, and exception was entered by the plaintiff to its reception. We think that the evidence establishes that it was his application. Tiffany, the general agent and secretary of the defendant, identified the application as the one upon which the certificates were issued. Leonard, his clerk, testified that the application was filled out in his handwriting, and that he saw Lund sign Ms name thereto, but that he had never seen Mm but at that time, and had no knowledge that he was the Lun. now in controversy.
Again, it is contended that the proofs of death, including the physician’s certificate, ought not to have been received in evidence. But the plaintiff was of full age, acting for herself, and the proofs were such as were made out by her or by her direction, and forwarded to the association. No claim is made that any of the statements made in the proofs of death are false or incorrect, or that
“The presentation of the physician’s certificate that the deceased died from* the cause stated operated as an admission by the guardian that the fact was-as stated. It derived its force from the fact that the claimant communicated, to the defendant a statement of the cause of death which, if true, vitiated the-policy. The statement was embodied in the physician’s certificate. If it. had been contained in the guardian’s own statement, or that of any nonprofessional person, it would equally have been an admission of the fact stated. The certificate was a part of the proofs furnished.”
It is true in that case the court finally held that the beneficiary,, being an infant, was not bound by the admissions of its guardian, and for that reason the court sustained the recovery. But, as we-understand the case, it was distinctly held that, in case the beneficiary had been an adult, he would have been bound by the admission contained in the proofs of death.
The motion for a new trial should be denied, with costs, and judgment ordered for the defendant upon the verdict. All concur..