239 F. 477 | 6th Cir. | 1917
This suit was brought in the court below by Mrs. Eddy to recover the amount of a policy insuring her husband against death by external, violent, and accidental means. He was found dead in a hotel room, and, for the purposes of this opinion, it may be assumed that his death was caused by an overdose of chloral, taken by him to induce sleep, and without suicidal intent. The defenses were that the issue of the policy^had been procured by false representations, and that the death was not of the class covered by the policy. Upon the trial, the court denied the defendant’s motion to take the case from the jury, and the jury found in plaintiff’s favor upon the issues submitted. The insurance company brings this writ of error.
The policy, dated September 2, 1913, began with these words:
“In consideration of tbe statements in the application for this policy, a copy of which is indorsed hereon and made a part hereof, and of $25 premium, the * * * company * * * hereby insures,” etc.
The copy indorsed, as well as what purported to be the original application offered in evidence, commenced:
“Application is hereby made for a * * * policy to be issued upon the following statements, viz.”
These statements were numbered upon the copy, and upon the application itself, from 1 to 15. The numbered paragraphs were, by the caption, denominated “statements,” and, by a footnote upon the application, “warranties.”
(1) No. 14 was, “My habits of life are correct and temperate.” The .evidence tended to show that the applicant had gone on periodical drinking sprees; that he had taken the so-called “gold cure” with only temporary good results; that at a time not fixed by the record, but seemingly not long before the application, he had taken another kind of medical treatment for the cure of the liquor habit; and that he died in a relapse of the habit.
(2) A part of statement No. 9 was:
“No application ever made by me for accident * * * insurance bas been declined or notice of action withheld.”
In fact, two years before this application,’ his application for a $25,000 accident policy in the Travelers’ Insurance Company had been declined.
(3) Another part of statement No. 9 was:
“Nor has any such [accident] policy of insurance been canceled or renewal been refused.”
In fact, a $5,000 accident policy in the Travelers’ had been canceled within the previous four months, upon the stated ground that Mr. Eddy was an undesirable accident risk, because too reckless in driving automobiles.
As to the statement regarding his temperate habits of life, the excuse is that he believed he was completely cured, and that he therefore did not intend to deceive. As to the statement that no application had been declined, the explanation is that this declined policy was of a special class, issued only to preferred risks, and hence Mr. Eddy was justified in supposing that the refusal to issue such a policy was not a material matter. Upon both of these subjects we may assume that there was an issue for the jury; but as to the third statement, above recited, we find in the record no suggestion of explanation or excuse. Mr. Eddy had been notified of this cancellation; he talked it over with the local agent of the Travelers’; this same local agent was a soliciting broker for the Maryland Company; and the application for the policy in suit was made with the purpose by both of getting insurance to replace that which had been canceled'. Under this situa
However, before accepting’ this conclusion as controlling upon the present record, we must observe what effect, if any, is to be given to the relation between the parties and Rankin, the so-called agent, who took the application. Rankin himself, a witness for plaintiff, says that, while he was agent for the Travelers’, he was “just a broker” for the Maryland; and there is nothing expressly to the contrary.
“In any matter relating to this insurance, no person, unless duly authorized in writing, shall be deemed the agent of this company.”
In the absence of statutory regulation, such an agreement is binding upon those who take a policy containing it. Ætna Co. v. Moore, supra. There is, in this record, no effective evidence of any authority in writing from the Maryland Company to Rankin; but, as there are some vague allusions to such authority, it may exist, and we prefer not to dispose of the case on this ground. We therefore assume that in some substantial sense Rankin may have been the agent of the company.
It is to be noted, also, that we have not here a case where the applicant stated the truth to the agent, and the agent either changed the answer without applicant’s knowledge, or gave applicant advice as to
“An. agent has no authority to change this policy, or to waive any of its provisions, nor shall notice to any agent or knowledge of his or any other person be held -to effect a waiver or change in this contract or any part of it. No change whatever in this policy and no waiver of its provisions shall be valid unless an indorsement is entered hereon, signed by the president, vice president, or secretary of the company, expressing such change or waiver.”
That this provision is valid and binding on the insured is clearly held in Ætna Co. v. Moore, supra; and the.substance of plaintiff’s position must be that the provision attached by law to the words of the contract, by which provision a knowingly false and material statement avoids the contract, was “changed” or “waived” because the agent had knowledge of the falsity. If this provision had been expressed in words, it would be entirely clear that there could be no change or waiver by the agent even by his most express consent, and we see no satisfactory distinction between that case and one where the condition or provision said to be waived is read into the contract by the law, with which both parties must be deemed familiar.
If it be said that Ætna v. Moore is to be distinguished because the agreement there involved was that notice to the agent should not be notice to the company, we’ find, perhaps, even closer analogy in the companion case of the Prudential Company v. Moore, 231 U. S. 560, 34 Sup. Ct. 191, 58 L. Ed. 367. In the latter case, it had been agreed that:
“No agent has power * * * to modify this * * * contract, * * * to * * * waive any forfeiture or to bind the company by making any promise, or making or receiving any presentation or information.”
The court said (231 U. S. 567, 34 Sup. Ct. 194, 58 L. Ed. 367):
“It is contended here, as in the ÜStna Case, that the company is estopped by the knowledge of the agent, and the same eases are cited as were cited*482 there. We answer here, as we answered there, that the terms of the policy constituted the contract of the'parties and precluded a variation of them by the agent.”
In this disposition of the matter, the conclusion seems necessarily-involved, although not spelled out, that to say that the company is estopped to rely upon such a false answer because its agent had knowledge, is to say that the terms of the contract are to be changed. Upon the subject of knowledge by the agent under similar circumstances, see, also, Mutual Co. v. Hilton, supra, 241 U. S. at page 623, 36 Sup. Ct. 676, 60 L. Ed. 1202 and Mutual Co. v. Powell, supra, 217 Fed. at page 568, 133 C. C. A. 417.
We imply no opinion as to whether the evidence sufficiently tended to show death by “external, violent, and accidental means,” as distinguished from an intentional taking of an amount of chloral which proved to be too much, but which otherwise involved no element of accident.
The judgment must be reversed, with costs, and the case remanded for new trial, if it is thought that other evidence may give the case' a different aspect. ■ ’
The Michigan statute, upon the books when this policy issued (section 6, Act 264, of 1913), states a rule which seems to be consistent with Phœnix Co. v. Raddin, 120 U. S. 183, 189, 7 Sup. Ct. 500, 30 L. Ed. 644, and by which a materially false statement, even without intent to deceive, would avoid the policy; but this statute was postponed in its taking effect to January 1, 1914.
<@=>For other cases see same topic & KEY-NUMBER in all Key-Numbered Digests & Indexes