200 Misc. 1111 | Albany City Court | 1951
This action is brought by the plaintiff as beneficiary of a certain contract of insurance, entered into by and between the plaintiff’s wife and the defendant insurance com-
On the 24th day of October, 1950, plaintiff’s wife made application for a certain policy of insurance on her life, making an initial weekly premium payment, at that time, of fifty cents, and at the same time the defendant insurance company, through its authorized agent, delivered to the assured, its form of printed receipt, which by its terms, provided that the defendant company would pay to the plaintiff, the named beneficiary, the proceeds, in accordance with the terms of the policy applied for, in the event that the assured died on that very day or within twenty-one days thereafter. Two days thereafter, and before the issuance of any formal policy, the assured died.
No serious issue is raised by the general denial since the uncontradicted evidence discloses the death of the assured within the prescribed time, proper proof of death and notice of claim was presented to the defendant company and that by the terms of the policy applied for, the proceeds, which the defendant agreed to pay, ivas the sum of $720. The lack of any formal policy of insurance is of no consequence, since by the terms of the defendant company’s receipt, given in return' for the payment of the initial premium, the defendant company entered into a binding contract to make payment without reference to the issuance of a formal policy and without the requirement that any formal policy be in effect. Accordingly, I find that the plaintiff’s wife, the assured, and the defendant entered into a binding contract, at the time of the payment of the initial premium.
The only real issue in the case is presented by the defendant’s defense of misrepresentation and fraud. The evidence discloses, without any question, that the assured, by her answers to the questions on the application for insurance, made factual misrepresentation in that she failed to disclose a certain condition of vaginal bleeding which had required treatment and attendance at the Albany Hospital and from which condition she had suffered for some extended period, prior to the time of making the application in question. From the evidence, however, it appears that the cause of the assured’s death was, “ cerebral vascular accident or cerebral thrombosis.”
Undoubtedly, and the plaintiff’s attorney in his brief so concedes, under section 58 of the Insurance Law of the State of New York, prior to January 1, 1940, such misrepresentation
Judgment for the plaintiff in the sum of $720.