214 Pa. 608 | Pa. | 1906
Opinion by
This was an action to recover the amount of a policy of life insurance issued by the defendant company to Elizabeth M. Rinker, for the sum of $2,000 payable to the plaintiff as beneficiary. A copy of the policy was attached and made a part of the declaration, and, as a part of the policy, there appears a copy of the application for insurance in which all the statements therein contained are warranted to be true. In the application certain questions appear with the
Under the policy then, as it stands, the agreement was to insure the life of Elizabeth M. Riuker, upon condition that she had never undergone a severe surgical operation. Plaintiff made no averment in the statement that a mistake had been made in filling in the answers to the questions; but, on the trial, attempted by parol evidence to contradict and nullify what had been declared as verity in the statement of the cause of action. “ Parol evidence is inadmissible to reform a written contract, according to the intention of the parties, unless the declaration specially sets forth the fraud as a ground for such reformation: ” Renshaw v. Gans, 7 Pa. 117. And Justice
The first assignment of error complains of the rejection of the offer made by plaintiff to prove that the agent wrote down the answers of the applicant to the questions, and that, after finishing the writing, he asked her to sign the paper, which she did without reading it. This offer was properly rejected. There is no allegation that the applicant was blind or deaf or that she was unable to read. The statement simply is that she signed the paper without reading it. If she was incorrectly reported therein, it was then her own fault.
The rule laid down in Greenfield’s Estate, 14 Pa. 489, is perfectly good to-day. Chief Justice Gibson there said (p. 496) : if a party who can read “ will not read a deed put before him for execution ; or if, being unable to read, will not demand to have it read or explained to him, he is guilty of supine negligence, which, I take it, is not the subject of protection, either in equity or at law.”
The second and third assignments also complain of the refusal of the court below of an offer to show that the agent filled out the answers and asked the applicant to sign the paper, which she did without reading, and, further, that the witness heard applicant state to the agent that she had undergone an operation.
Neither of these offers was admissible under the pleadings. Her application was in writing, was signed by her and it was the basis upon which the contract of insurance was issued. This suit was brought upon the policy and upon the applica
In the case at bar when the agent was taking the application of the assured and was explaining the questions and the mean
The assignments of error are dismissed, and the judgment is affirmed.