190 Ind. 493 | Ind. | 1921
— Appellee, as beneficiary in a matured benefit certificate issued by appellant to her son, Casper Hall, brought this action to recover the amount due thereon. A complaint containing the usual allegations in such cases, answer in three paragraphs and a reply in denial formed the issues submitted to a jury for trial
Appellants resisted payment upon the sole ground that the by-laws, application, and certificate constituted the contract, and that the insured made false answers to certain questions in the application which, although material or immaterial to the risk, nevertheless were warranties, the untruthfulness of which rendered the certificate voidable.
Our attention is first directed to appellant’s motion for judgment in its favor on the answers of the jury to interrogatories. The questions and answers in the application of the insured averred by appellant in its third paragraph of answer to be false, are as follows: “14a. Have you, within the last seven years, been treated by or consulted any person, physician or physicians in regard to personal ailment? Yes. 14b. If so, give dates, ailments, duration of attacks and name and address of each and all persons or physicians consulted or by whom treated. April 16, ’06, April 26, ’06, Pleurisy, 3 days, Dr. W. L. Parr, Derby, Ind. 14c. Was recovery complete? Yes. 16a. Have you ever had any local disease, personal-injury, or serious illness? No. 16b. If so, explain fully, giving dates. * * * 16c. Was recovery complete? * * * 17. Are you now of .sound body, mind, and health, and free from disease or injury, of good moral character and exemplary habits? Yes. 33a. ‘Have you ever had any disease of the following named organs, or any of the following named diseases or .symptoms: Consumption. No. Habitual
Following the thirty-five questions of the application' is the statement: “I have verified each of the foregoing answers * * * and declare and warrant that they are full, complete, and literally true, and I agree that the exact, literal truth of each shall be a condition precedent to any binding contract issued upon the faith of the foregoing answers.” Then follows a statement agreeing that the answers shall form the basis of and the consideration for the contract applied for, and which may be issued upon this application, and that the certificate and application may be construed together, and that if any answer or statement in the application is not literally true, or if applicant shall fail to comply with the by-laws, the benefit certificate shall be void. The application bears date of April 2, 1910, and the benefit certificate was executed May 21, 1910.
The substance of the answers to interrogatories relied on by appellant to avoid the policy follows: At the time of making the application and issuing the benefit certificate herein, appellant was a fraternal beneficiary society duly admitted to do business in Indiana; that the insured in his application to appellant stated that he had consulted and had been treated by a physician for a personal ailment within seven years, and gave dates, ailments, duration of attacks, and the name of the physician, Dr. W. L. Parr, consulted; and answered “No” to the question “Have you ever had any local disease, personal injury or serious illness?”; that the various questions included in the general question 33a, in the insured’s application, were answered “No”; that the insured consulted Dr. John H. Lee in May, 1904, but there is no evidence that he treated him for hemorrhages. The insured did not have hemorrhages, disease of the lungs, or spitting of blood in May, 1904,
In answering the question thus presented for decision, we look to the complaint, the third paragraph of answer, the general verdict, the interrogatories and answers of the jury thereto. The general verdict amounted to a finding of every material fact essential to a recovery in favor of appellee. It has the benefit of every reasonable intendment, while the answers of the jury are to be strictly construed against the moving party. If, by applying these principles, irreconcilable conflict between such answers and the general verdict is not shown, both may stand and judgment on the general verdict should be sustained. Lavene v. Friedrichs (1917), 186 Ind. 333, 343, 115 N. E. 324, 116 N. E. 421; Chicago, etc., R. Co. v. Fretz (1909), 173 Ind. 519, 528, 90 N. E. 76; Inland Steel Co. v. Smith (1907), 168 Ind. 245, 80 N. E. 538; Pittsburgh, etc., R. Co. v. Lightheiser (1906), 168 Ind. 438, 78 N. E. 1033; Consolidated Stone Co. v. Summit (1899), 152 Ind. 297, 53 N. E. 235; Chicago, etc., R. Co. v. Schenkel (1914), 57 Ind. App. 175,104 N. E. 50; Barker v. Gruhl (1916), 62 Ind. App. 177, 111 N. E. 457; Union Traction Co. v. Barnett (1903), 31 Ind. App. 467, 67 N; E. 205.
In the paragraph of answer mentioned, it is averred “that the answers to -said questions were false and untrue and that within seven years immediately preceding said application for membership the said Casper Hall had been treated by and consulted with a physician, to-wit: Dr. John H. Lee, in regard to hemorrhages, spitting blood and tuberculosis; that at the date of said application he was not of sound body, mind and health nor free from disease and injury and that previous to the making of said application he had had local diseases and serious .illness, and that he had had previous to the
The contract before us is unilateral in character and if necessary will be strictly construed to prevent a forfeiture, nor will it be construed to create a warranty if the language used will admit of some other interpretation more favorable to the insured. Iowa Life Ins. Co. v. Haughton (1909), 46 Ind. App. 467, 87 N. E. 702; Metropolitan Life Ins. Co. v. Johnson (1911), 49 Ind. App. 233, 242, 94 N. E. 785; Smith v. Bankers Life Assn. (1905), 123 Ill. App. 392, 396.
There was no interrogatory submitted calling for the purpose for which the insured consulted the doctor, nor does such purpose appear from any of the answers. In this case appellant was the moving party, and it must succeed or fail in its contention upon the answers to interrogatories unaided by any intendment; and as the general verdict draws to its support all inferences which may be deduced from any evidence admissible under the issues, we must assume that such consultation was with reference to some temporary indisposition.
In Modern Woodmen, etc. v. Miles (1912), 178 Ind. 105, 97 N. E. 1009, this appellant'resisted payment of a matured certificate on practically the same grounds as urged in the instant case. In that case it appeared that the insured, in answer to question 14 of his application, had failed to state that within four months prior
Courts in other jurisdictions have gone much farther than is necessary for us to go in order to affirm the judgment in this case. For instance, in Sargent v. Modern Brotherhood (1910), 148 Iowa 600, 608, 127 N. W. 52, wherein misstatements in the application for a benefit certificate were relied upon by the insurer as.constituting breaches of warranty rendering the certificate void, after quoting from Wilkinson v. Connecticut Mutual Life Ins. Co. (1870), 30 Iowa 119, 127, 6 Am. Rep. 657, relating to the failure to disclose, in answer to a question about previous accidental injuries, a slight injury which the jury specifically found not to be serious, said: “Thus, it has been held that a statement that the applicant is in good health is not shown to be false by proof of a temporary áilment, not indicating a vice in the constitution or so serious as to have some bearing on the general health and continuance of health; that is, such as according to common understanding, would be called a disease. Sieyerts v. National Ben. Ass’n, 95 Iowa 710; Meyer v. Fidelity & Cas. Co., 96 Iowa, 378; Cushman v. United States L. Ins. Co., 70 N. Y. 72; Insurance Co. v. Trefz, 104 U. S. 197 (26 L. Ed. 708) ; Connecticut Mut. L. Ins. Co. v. Union Trust Co., 112 U. S. 250 (5 Sup. Ct. 119, 28 L. Ed. 708) ; Life Ins. Co. v. Francisco, 17 Wall. 672 (21 L. Ed. 698) ; Blumenthal v. Berkshire L. Ins. Co., 134 Mich. 216 (96 N. W. 17, 104 Am. St. Rep. 604) ; Plumb v. Penn. Mut. Ins. Co., 108 Mich. 94 (65 N. W. 611) ; Hann v. National Union, 97 Mich. 513 (56 N. W. 834, 37 Am. St. Rep.
Appellant in support of its motion for a new trial challenges the sufficiency of the evidence to support the verdict; the action of the court in refusing to give its tendered instruction No. 3; and in
There was no error in refusing appellant’s requested instruction for the reason that instruction No. 4, given by the court on its own motion covered the same subject-matter more fully and completely and was more favorable to appellant than the one requested and refused. American Maize Products Co. v. Widiger (1916), 186 Ind. 227, 114 N. E. 457. The instruction given was challenged on the ground that as the application was a part of the contract of insurance, its construction was for the court and not for the jury. It is true the construction of a written contract is for the court, except when parol evidence is required to make the contract intelligible. Zenor v. Johnson (1886), 107 Ind. 69, 7 N. E. 751.
However, the particular point made against this instruction is that it failed to tell the jury that the answers of the insured in his application were warranties, and if any answer was not true ■
From, a careful consideration of the entire record before us-we conclude that appellant had a fair trial with no intervening errors in the record for which the judgment should be reversed. The judgment is therefore affirmed.