50 Ga. App. 132 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1934
This was an action on a policy of group life insurance, containing a total disability clause, by an employee of a cotton mill, who was in ill health at and before the issuance to her of the certificate in the group insurance, which certificate was issued without any medical examination. The case was tried in the municipal court of Macon, and when the defendant moved the court to direct a verdict in its favor because it appeared from the testimony that the plaintiff did not become disabled while said policy was in force, but, on the other hand, it appeared that plaintiff’s condition in August, 1931, at which time she claims to have become disabled, was the same as in December, 1926, and that this condition had continued from 1926 up to the date of the trial,
Counsel for the insurance company, plaintiff in error in this court, in their brief concede that there is no assignment of error on the direction of a verdict. “The case was tried in the municipal court of Macon. . . A motion for new trial was made in the municipal court, which was overruled, and the case went by certiorari to Bibb superior court. There was no assignment of error in the motion for new trial or in the petition for certiorari which will raise the question whether the court should have submitted the ease to a jury rather than direct a verdict for the plaintiff. The question, therefore, is whether or not there was any evidence to support the verdict.” The position of plaintiff in error is “that the verdict in favor of the plaintiff and against the insurance company . . was unsupported by any evidence, and that a verdict for the insurance company was demanded. . . We now concede that the question is whether the verdict was contrary to law as being unsupported by any evidence, and not whether it was error for the court to direct a verdict as it did, rather than to submit the case to a jury.”
1. There was evidence in this case from which a jury might well infer that plaintiff’s physical condition was not such as to absolutely prohibit her from doing any remunerative work for a living until August 1931, when she had to quit on account thereof, and that she was not totally and permanently disabled within the meaning of the policy sued on until August, 1931; the policy providing that if an employee, while the insurance is in full force and effect, “shall become totally and permanently disabled or physically or
2. Whether the acceptance by the insurer of the extra premium for total-disability coverage would estop it from denying liability to the insured for total disability is not for decision in this case, in the absence of any evidence that the insurer knew that the insured was totally disabled at the time it issued the policy. The policy was a valid and binding contract of life insurance, in the absence of any fraud perpetrated upon the insurer at the time of its issuance. The fact that the insurer made no examination of the insured at the time of its issuance would not impart notice to the insurer that the insured was totally disabled from heart disease at that time.
3. A verdict in favor of the insurance company was not demanded under the evidence, but, on the contrary, the verdict finding that the insured did not become so totally and permanently disabled as to prevent her from thereafter working for compensation or profit until August, 1931, was supported by some evidence, and, no error of law appearing, the trial judge did not err in overruling defendant’s petition for certiorari.
Judgment affirmed.