This case may be considerably simplified by stating the following facts in the record: 1. The application is attached to and is made a part of the policy, and the case accordingly comes under the provisions of Code § 56-820, which provides that the representations contained in the application shall .be considered as covenanted to be true, and any variation by which the nature, extent or character of the risk is changed shall void the policy. 2. No language of the insurance contract refers to or states the effect of the application, and no language of the application refers to or limits the policy. Further, no language in the application limits the authority of the company’s agents. 3. The defendant introduced no evidence, and the plaintiff’s evidence demands the following conclusions: (a) The plaintiff informed the agent that he had had a pre-existing hernia, and in good faith divulged all the details he knew concerning it. (b) The agent, also presumably in good faith, informed the plaintiff that the hernia would make no difference since it had been repaired and therefore cured, (c) The agent wrote in the word “no” to the question as to whether the plaintiff had ever had a hernia, but he did so with the plaintiff’s knowledge, (d) The plaintiff’s signature on the application therefore contained a material misrepresentation which was not fraudulently made but which resulted in a mistaken interpretation to him by the agent as to the meaning of the question, and which materially increased the risk.
Given these undisputed facts, the following law should apply: (a) The application, being attached to the policy, becomes a part thereof.
Life & Casualty Ins. Co. of Tenn.
v.
Williams,
200
Ga.
273 (
We recognize the rule stated in
Faircloth
v.
Taylor,
147
Ga.
787 (4) (
As shown by special ground 4 of the motion for new trial, a motion for a directed verdict was made on the ground that the plaintiff’s disability was not covered under the policy, which insured for expense “resulting from sickness the cause of which originates while this policy is in force and more than 15 days after the date hereof, hereinafter referred to as such sickness.” The evidence is undisputed that the policy was dated March 20, 1953; that the defendant had an inguinal hernia in 1949 which, after treatment, had apparently disappeared and healed; that it was not giving any trouble and was in the same condition as it was when the policy was written, until a disease, influenza, which was contracted by him months after the insurance became of force and while the policy was in effect, was accompanied by violent coughing which caused the hernia condition to “flare up” or recur in the latter part of 1954. The operation and expenses in connection with which this claim was made occurred in 1956.
While the insuring clause of the policy provides that it covers expenses “(b) resulting from sickness the cause of which originates while this policy is in force and more than 15 days after the date hereof,” the limitation clause in Part II provides: “2. Tuberculosis, cancer, abdominal hernia or rupture, or any disease of the heart or circulatory system, shall be covered under this policy only if hospital confinement begins after this policy has been in force for six months or more.” This we take to be a plain statement that the hospital expenses relative to repair of a hernia, which expenses occur after the policy has been in force for six months or more, will be covered. The policy must be construed as a whole, including the application which is a part of it, and if this is not the meaning of this clause when taken in connection with the insuring clause and the application, then, at the very least, the provisions are ambiguous and will be construed against the insurer who drew the contract and in favor *554 of the verdict rendered. Special ground 4 of the amended motion for new trial relating to this issue, as well as the general grounds of the motion and the motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict do not require a reversal of this case.
The bad faith of the insurance company which will authorize the imposition of penalty and attorney’s fees under Code § 56-706 refers to the time when the company refuses to pay on proper demand made at least 60 days after proof of loss, and not to the time of the trial.
Independent Life & Accident Ins. Co.
v. Hopkins, 80
Ga. App.
348 (3) (
Judgments affirmed on condition that the plaintiff write off the attorney’s fees and penalty; otherwise, the judgment denying the motion for new■ trial is reversed.
