Powalka, Appellant, v. State Mutual Life Assurance Company of America, Respondent.*
No. 78
Supreme Court of Wisconsin
Argued December 2, 1968. Decided December 20, 1968.
March 4, 1969
163 N. W. 2d 162
* For disposition of motion on rehearing, see post, p. 158a.
By the Court. —Orders affirmed.
For the respondent there was a brief by Foley, Sammond & Lardner, and oral argument by Gilbert W. Church, all of Milwaukee.
OPINION
ROBERT W. HANSEN, J. If the medical examiner did not make a statement of fitness for insurance, statements by the insured which were false and increased the risk destroy the right of the widow to recover on the policy.1
If, however, the medical examiner made a statement of fitness for insurance, or issued a certification as to the health of the insured, then the insurance company can defeat recovery on the policy only if it can establish actual fraud or deceit on the part of the insured.2
If
The question of whether the report of a medical examiner in this case constituted as a matter of law a “certificate of health” or a declaring “the applicant a fit subject
Of course, not every report of a medical examiner to an insurance company is to be considered a certification of general health or specific insurability. There is a distinction between an examining physician‘s statement which reflects his findings on the medical examination and the statement which constitutes an evaluation based on such findings.4
It is clear from the Kelly Case that there must be a something extra that moves an ordinary or usual examiner‘s report into a certification of health or insurability. In the Kelly Case, this something more was found in the fact that the medical examiner not only answered the questions asked of him on the company‘s form but made the following statement in the place for “Remarks” at the end of the report: “Applicant appears to be healthy state at present time.”
In the case before us, we deal not with a single medical examination, but with two. In the first examination, the company‘s examining physician reported to the company
Based on the second examination, the company‘s doctor reported that the applicant had cardiac hypertrophy, an increased heart size over what would be normal. The heart chart by its form and the second examination by its nature were alike directed to inquiring into whether or not the applicant had a heart condition. It is against this backdrop of a second examination and the purpose of it, that the doctor‘s statement that there was no “doubt of health or vigor in the applicant‘s appearance” must be evaluated. (The statement was made at the first examination and was not qualified or changed at the second one.)
In Kelly, the examiner said, “Applicant appears to be healthy state at present time.” In this case, the examiner answered “No” to the question: “Is there any doubt of health or vigor in the applicant‘s appearance?” The trial court found this negative answer to be “not the same” as the remark in the Kelly Case, finding it to be “nothing more than a physical observation of the applicant.” We disagree. There was no need for a second physical examination if all that the company wanted was a description of Powalka‘s physical measurements. These would not, in fact could not, change much in the brief
It follows that, given a certificate of health or declaration of fitness for insurance, the company in this case can defeat recovery on the life insurance policy it issued only if it can establish the fraud or deceit required by
However, the defendant-respondent asserts that “Assuming, for purposes of argument only, that the trial court should have applied sec. 209.07 rather than sec. 209.06, the trial court‘s decision still must be upheld.” This argues that fraud and deceit, the grounds for avoidance under
“. . . we do not find any intent to deceive defendant‘s insurance company but we do find that the misrepresentations referred to increased the risk and contributed to the loss.”
This comes close to a conclusive finding negativing an essential element of a defense based upon fraud or deceit.
By the Court.—Judgment reversed, and cause remanded for a new trial.
The following memorandum was filed March 4, 1969.
PER CURIAM (on motion for rehearing). The last sentence in the opinion is changed to read: Having here found that
The mandate is changed to read: “By the Court.—Judgment reversed, and cause remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.”
