26 S.E.2d 675 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1943
The evidence demanded a finding that the misrepresentations were such as to void the policy.
Fowler, a witness for the plaintiff, testified that he had known the insured for about 12 or 13 years; that he saw him every day or two and "if he was ever sick I did not know it until in July when he got sick;" that the insured did not seek the agent of the insurer to get a policy, but on the contrary, the agent sought out the insured; that at the time the application for insurance was given, the agent of the insurance company had been soliciting the policy for about two hours before the insured agreed to take it; that the agent "had been up there before trying to write the insured a policy; that the insured had a peculiarity about his speech. I asked him about it and he told me his palate had been taken out; that he had a growth on his palate. That was about 1930."
The mother of the insured testified: "I first took him to *827 Steiner Clinic when he was something like four years old, I reckon, three. I took him to Steiner Clinic because he fell and stuck a stick in his mouth and it caused something to grow in his mouth. I didn't take him to a doctor to be treated after he fell because I was working and my mother kept him for us. I just thought it would be all right and never did take him until after he developed that little place in his mouth. I can't remember the doctor I taken him to first, but he didn't suggest that I take him down to Steiner Clinic. Mrs. Hollis, a friend of mine, suggested that. I took him down there. They operated on him." In November, 1941, about a year after the policy had been issued, she took him to Dr. Lingo in Florida. She said she knew that he was a cancer specialist. She further testified that the insured "was a perfectly well and healthy child. I positively did not know that he was suffering from cancer. I know it now" (since Dr. Stewart's testimony in the trial).
The following questions and answers appeared in the application: "21. Are you in good health? A. Yes. 23. What illness, injury or accident have you ever had? Give details. A. Childhood ailments. O.K. now. 25. Have you ever had heart disease, asthma, tuberculosis, cancer, ulcers, diabetes, fits, kidney disease, syphilis, paralysis, rheumatism, sciatica, vertigo, or any illness or disorder of the brain, lungs, spine or nervous system, or any disease not common to both sexes; or suffered the total or partial loss of a hand, foot, eye, or the use thereof? Are you deformed? Do you use intoxicating liquors, morphine, or other narcotics to excess? If yes give particulars. A. No." With reference particularly to question 23, the agent of the company who took the application, in explanation of the answer thereto, testified that the applicant said he had had no diseases, or rather his answer was "none." The agent then asked him if he had had measles, mumps, whooping cough, and things like that; diseases that most children have during childhood. The applicant said, "Yes." After the applicant had said that he had had only childhood ailments, the agent wrote an answer to question 23, "Childhood ailments. O. K. now." Thus this appears as the answer to question 23, as shown above.
The insurance in the instant case is what is known as "industrial insurance" and is for small amounts only. In issuing this type of insurance the insurance companies rely uponthe truthfulness of the statements made by the applicant for insurance in his written application. Such contracts are entered into by the insurance companies in the "utmost good faith" and they have the right to expect that "every application for insurance shall be made in the utmost good faith." Our courts have held that this is especially true where the insurer, because of the smallness of the amount of the policy, relies entirely on the statements of the insured in the application and his responses to the questions of its agent, without requiring amedical examination. See National Life Accident InsuranceCo. v. Strother,
The uncontradicted evidence showed that the insured was born in 1921, and that he knew that he was first treated in 1925; that he was given radium treatment seven times, the last of which was in June, 1927. Then he had an operation in August, 1928, when he was almost strangled with "a large tumor of the palate half as big as one's fist." He was again operated on on September 13, 1928; also on March 13, 1929, "some more tumor of the same variety was removed." He went back to the hospital "for visits, merely observation," sixteen times, the last of which was on July 28, 1933. He made no more visits to the hospital until October, 1935. At that time he "seemed to be quite all right." Then on July 22, 1940, the doctor at the clinic saw him again and testified that at that time "he was a strong able-bodied boy." About six months thereafter, the policy in question was taken out [December 30, 1940]. After the policy was taken out, the doctor at the clinic saw the deceased on June 28, 1941, and operated again for ulceration of the left tonsil. He was also operated on in July, 1941. The doctor testified that this was "an entirely different tumor from the one years ago." The doctor further testified: "We fear that [the last ulceration] was probably caused from the treatment that we had given him to remove the birthmark" on the palate. The evidence further showed that the insured had to know that he had had his palate removed, which caused him to talk in a "peculiar manner," for he told his friend that "he had a growth *829 on his palate and he had it removed." Thus the insured knew, as above indicated, that he had been operated on three times, hospitalized, and had returned for the number of times as above stated for observations by the doctors at the hospital prior to his application for insurance.
In the instant case the application for insurance was not attached to the policy and was not a part thereof. Code, § 56-904 And "although the unattached application could not be admitted for the purpose of showing a breach of the contract, since it form no part of the contract, still, where the defense is that the policy was fraudulently procured by reason of false and fraudulent representations material to the risk, the application is admissible, not as a part of the contract, and not for the purpose of showing that the policy was void under the contract, but to show that it was fraudulently procured." Couch v.National Life Accident Insurance Co.,
It is our opinion that under the provisions of the law as stated above, the evidence demanded a finding that the misrepresentations were such as to void the policy. See alsoVaughn v. National Life Accident Insurance Co.,
Judgment reversed. Broyles, C. J., and Gardner, J., concur. *831