148 Iowa 600 | Iowa | 1910
The defense to this action is predicated on alleged false statements contained in the application for membership, and the questions argued are: First, whether, in the absence of proof of fraud, false statements constituted a defense; and, second, whether the alleged misstatements were in fact false.
The contention for appellant is, in this respect, that the statutory provision just referred to, found in the chapter of the Code relating to life insurance companies and associations, has no relaton to fraternal beneficiary societies, orders, or associations, which are specifically governed by another chapter of the Code and exempted from the provisions of statutes relating to life insurance companies, except as specified in the latter chapter. If the defendant is a beneficiary society or association, and not a life insurance company or association, then the provisions of Code, section 1812, have no applieaton to this case. Smith v. Supreme Lodge, 123 Iowa, 676.
The allegations of the petition are that “defendant is an association organized under the laws of the state of Iowa as an insurance company and fraternity for the purpose of insuring the lives of its members, as indicated by Exhibit A hereto attached.” And it is admitted in the answer “that the defendant is a corporation organized under the laws of the state of Iowa relating to fraternal and beneficiary associations.” This is the only admission as to the character of the defendant association, and by general denial of all allegations of the petition not admitted, any allegation of the petition inconsistent with this admission is denied. There is also a specific allegation that the defendant is a fraternal beneficiary association organized under the chapter of the Code relating to such associations.
By way of stipulation it was agreed on the trial that the certificate set out as an exhibit to the petition was
Under the allegations of the pleadings and the stipulations on the trial, it is clear that the defendant is a fraternal beneficiary society, order or association, and not a life insurance company or association, and, therefore, that the provisions of Code, section 1812, above referred to, do not apply to it. The allegations and the proof clearly distinguish this case from the cases relied upon by the appellant. See Stork v. Supreme Lodge, 113 Iowa, 724; Brown v. Modern Woodmen, 115 Iowa, 450; Krause v. Modern Woodmen, 133 Iowa, 199.
II. The misstatements relied upon by appellant, as constituting breaches of warranty rendering the certificate void, are found in the answers of the applicant to questions by the physician; the answers being written by the regular examining physician'for the defendant, and the application as thus filled out being signed by the applicant and warranted to be true. So far as relied upon for the appellant these questions and answers were as follows:
Question 4. Have you ever had any of the following diseases: (a) Habitual headache? Answer. No.
Question 5. Have you ever had any other disease or surgical operation? Answer. No.
Question 9. When and by what physician were you last attended and for what complaint? Answer. Never have been sick.
Question 14. Have you had during the last seven years any disease or severe sickness? Answer. No.
Question 22H. Is your menstruation regular and normal ? Answer. Yes.
Giving to the questions and answers in this case relating to previous disease or severe sickness the interpretation thus indicated, it is clear that the evidence did not show any falsity in the statements. The tonsilitis or quinsy was not of a character to be denominated a disease, and the stomach trouble appears to have been of a similarly inconsequential character. Headaches due to ' temporary causes, not indicating or resulting in constitutional impairment, are not regarded as matters of enough consequence to be disclosed even where there is a specific question as to habitual headaches. Mutual L. Ins. Co. v. Simpson (Tex. Civ. App.) 28 S. W. 837.
We reach the conclusion that the affirmative defenses based upon the breaches of warranty consisting in false statements, given in answer to the questions propounded to the applicant, were not established by a preponderance of the evidence in any respect.
The judgment is affirmed.