Forty-five days before Ms death Peter A. Pierre applied to the Metropolitan Life Insurance Company, through its soliciting agent, for a policy of life insurance in the sum of $5,000, payable upon his death to his wife Elsie T. Pierre. Six days later he signed the second part of the application, which contained his answers to printed questions concerning his previous medical history. Twenty-nine days before his death the agent delivered the policy to him while he was sick in bed. Upon the insurer’s refusal to pay, the beneficiary brought the present action, in which she recovered a judgment, based upon the jury’s ver■dict, for the amount of the policy plus accrued interest. The insurer appeals, claiming, principally, that the judgment should be reversed because of the erroneous denial of its motion for a directed verdict, which it had made upon the ground that the policy was voidable at its instance, because the insured had failed to disclose (1) by his answers to the questions in the application that he had suffered various illnesses and had been treated therefor by a physician and (2) by advice to it that his physical condition had changed between the dates of the application and the delivery of the policy. Since the determination, that the motion should have been granted for the reasons subsequently stated, is decisive of the appeal, other alleged errors need not be considered.
In the application questions were asked of the insured and answered by him as follows: “Q. 12 (a) Have you ever had Paralysis or Insanity? A. No. Q. 12 (g) Have you consulted a physician for any ailment or disease not included in your above answers ? A. No. Q. 13 What physician or physicians, if any, not named above; have you consulted or been treated by, within the last five years and for what illness or ailment? If none, so state. A. Dr. Thurlow—Lacerated finger in 1931. Results good.” Over his signature the insured certified that his answers were full, true and complete and agreed that they should form the basis of the contract of insurance, if issued. The policy provided that it was issued in consideration of the application, which was incorporated therein, and that together both constituted the entire contract. Answers to questions in an application are generally considered to be material representations of fact, which if false will vitiate the contract.
(Iverson
v.
Metropolitan Life etc. Co.,
If the uncontradicted evidence shows that the insured, by false answers, misrepresented or concealed material facts, the jury should have been instructed to find for appellant.
(Whitney
v.
West Coast Life Ins. Co., supra.)
It is undisputed that the insured, about three years before his death, was sick for a week with quinsy or sore throat, caused by an abscess behind a tonsil, and was treated therefor on three occasions by Dr. Thurlow, who advised the removal of the tonsils as a preventive of a recurrence of the trouble. There is evidence from which it readily could have been inferred that the quinsy was a symptom of an infection whose subsequent development in virulence caused his death, but the doctor stated that at the time he believed the ailment was minor. Accepting his testimony, the insured was not required to disclose such minor indisposition and his failure so to do did not invalidate the policy. It is also nil-
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questioned that about one year before his death the insured was stricken for several days with a functional rather than an organic paralysis which caused him suddenly and completely to lose control and use of his legs. His wife (the respondent) testified that the trouble was caused by his pressing a lever with his foot repeatedly for a considerable time in taking tickets to a football game and that his limbs were numb, not paralyzed. Giving full weight to her testimony, still it is clear that he was paralyzed for he suffered at least a partial abolition of function in his legs. (46 Cor. Jur. 1177.) Although Dr. Thurlow who cared for this paralysis expressed the opinion that the ailment was minor, yet the insured’s denial of having had paralysis was a material representation, since the insurer’s question showed it considered it material and the insured’s answer thereto evidenced his assent to the insurer’s view.
(Westphall
v.
Metropolitan Life Ins. Co.,
The insured was obligated to disclose to the insurer any material change in his physical condition which occurred in the period between the date of his application and the date of the policy’s delivery.
(Security Life Ins. Co.
v.
Booms,
The judgment is reversed.
Tyler, P. J., and Kinght, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing of this cause was denied by the District Court of Appeal on September 18, 1937, and an application by respondent to have the cause heard in the Supreme Court, after judgment in the District Court of Appeal, was denied by the Supreme Court on October 18, 1937.
