196 A. 543 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1937
Argued December 13, 1937. This action on a policy of life insurance has been tried four times, resulting each time in a verdict for the plaintiff, which the court in banc — with the full approval of the trial judge — set aside as contrary to the weight of the evidence and shocking to the judicial conscience.
We are now asked to reverse the lower court and enter judgment on the verdict on the theory that three orders granting a new trial on the ground above mentioned is the limit to which a trial court may go.
In view of the clear pronouncement of the Supreme Court on the subject and the prior decisions of this court we cannot so hold.
In Maloy v. Rosenbaum Co.,
A review of the evidence in this record does not satisfy us that the learned trial judge who wrote the opinion for the court in banc was not warranted in saying that "a consideration of all the evidence leaves no doubt that the insured made misrepresentations concerning matters material to the risk. The defense is established by the overwhelming weight of the evidence, and the testimony to controvert it is manifestly unreliable and incredible. A new trial must again be granted because the verdict, in our judgment, is against the weight of the evidence and shocking to judicial conscience."
The order is affirmed. *434