193 Mass. 215 | Mass. | 1906
These cases were tried together, and the exceptions raise certain questions relating to the admission and exclusion of evidence, to the refusals to rule as requested, and to the rulings given. Under' the terms of the contracts the plaintiffs were required to prove the death of the insured to the satisfaction of the company before the amount of the insurance became payable. If this event had been admitted by the pleadings, or at the trial, any real or supposed prejudice affecting the defence which the answers to certain of the questions propounded by the company may have contained would have been avoided. Instead of making such admission, among other allegations, the defendant’s answer contained a general denial, which put in issue this material fact, and therefore the papers constituting the proofs of death became relevant. The defendant argues that if admitted for this limited purpose, they should not have gone to the jury as they tended to impair its defence to the other issues on trial. Having been put in evidence generally, it was within
When a witness has made material statements contrary to those given by him in his testimony such statements may be introduced for the purpose of contradicting him, and the admission during the cross-examination of Dr. Cooley, a witness called by the defendant, of a medical certificate signed by him in which he stated that he had examined the insured on September 19, 1904, was competent for the purpose of contradicting his previous evidence that he had not made an examination at that time. Handy v. Canning, 166 Mass. 107, 109. See Jennings v. Rooney, ubi supra; Robinson v. Old Colony Street Railway, 189 Mass. 594, 596. The description of the physical appearance of the insured in the evidence in reply also was competent to rebut the testimony of the defendant’s witnesses that he appeared to be in unsound health, and that his general appearance showed indications of the excessive use of intoxicants.
- The remaining and principal exception is to the exclusion of a negative answer to an inquiry whether the insured ever had used malt or spirituous liquors to excess. A policy of life insurance may contain conditions not found in the application, but outside of an independent agreement the application and policy together usually form the contract. Commonwealth Ins. Co. v. Knabe Manuf. Co. 171 Mass. 265, 270. Millard v. Brayton, 177 Mass. 533, 537. In themselves these policies contained neither the medical examination and the agreement of the application therewith connected, nor any express condition that as such they were included. It is plain, however, that they were intended to be incorporated, as these declarations and answers relating to his past and present condition of health and family history were essential inquiries which upon their face showed that the life
We do not consider the exception to the giving of the plaintiffs’ fifteenth request as it has been waived, and the defendant’s remaining requests also were rightly refused, and the rulings given correctly stated the law; By pleading that the policies were avoided by the material misrepresentations of the insured as to his health and habits of sobriety, the burden rested on the defendant to prove these allegations, which if established would have worked a forfeiture of the insurance. Cluff v. Mutual Benefit Ins. Co. 13 Allen, 308, 316. Campbell v. New England Ins. Co. 98 Mass. 381. Ferguson v. Union Ins. Co. 187 Mass. 8. Kidder v. United Order of the Golden Cross, 192 Mass. 326, and cases cited.
Exceptions overruled.