8 Ga. App. 857 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1911
Allen Hill sued the Southern Life Insurance Company on four certificates or policies on the life of his mother, Pauline A. Hi-11, in which he was named as beneficiary.. A verdict was rendered in his favor, and the defendant’s motion for a new trial was overruled. The company set up three defenses: (1) that the policies were never really and in fact issued by the company; that they got out of its possession through a mistake by one of its clerks before the application for the policy had been passed upon or approved by the company’s secretary and treasurer, whose duty it was to pass upon and approve such applications, and thereupon to have the policies issued; (2) that the policies were procured by misrepresentations in the application, material to the risk, and by concealment of material facts as to the health of the applicant; (3) that by their terms the policies were not to become binding contracts upon the company until delivered to the insured while in good health, and that when they were delivered to the beneficiary, the insured was not in good health, which fact was known both to the insured and the beneficiary, and not known to the company.
The evidence -applicable to the' issues may be briefly stated as follows: The plaintiff, who was the sole beneficiary in the policies on his mother’s life, was himself an insurance agent. At his earnest and persistent requests the local agent of the defendant company procured from his mother the application for the policies. He represented to this local agent that his mother was in good health and was an insurable risk, and that he desired to procure on her life as many policies of insurance as the company would issue. On May 28, 1909, the local agent procured from the insured the application for the policies. In this application it was stated, among other things, that the applicant had never been afflicted with any serious illness, had never suffered from any tumor or ulcer, and had never been refused any insurance in other companies. The representations in the application were expressly warranted to be true by the applicant. This application was by the local agent submitted to the company’s local medical advisor, whose duty it was to give his opinion as to the insurable character of the applicant. This local medical advisor endorsed upon the application a statement that he
The foregoing opinion would seem to make- it unnecessary for this court to pass upon the other defenses relied,upon, of .fraud in the procurement of the policies both by the beneficiary and the in
A great many assignments of error are specifically made in the amended motion for a new trial, but these will not be considered, because, in our opinion, on the merits of the case the verdict should be set aside and a new trial granted. Judgment reversed.