23 N.Y.S. 179 | The Superior Court of the City of New York and Buffalo | 1893
The action is by the plaintiff, as the beneficiary named in a policy of insurance issued by the defendant, for $3,000, on the life of the plaintiff’s husband. It appears that the decedent failed to pay a premium which became due to the defendant February 9,1890, in consequence of which default the policy lapsed, and became void. The decedent, in order to renew Ms policy and induce the defendant to. accept the overdue premium, made, and on February 13, 1890, delivered to the defendant, a warranty in writing, in the form of an application for reinstatement, in which he declared that he was then in sound health and free from any symptoms of disease, and there was then no condition of his person or occupation tending to impair his health, .injure his constitution, or shorten his life, and that he had not been sick or required the services of a physician, and that there had been no change in his family Mstory or physical condition since the date of said policy. The defendant thereupon accepted the overdue premium, and reinstated the policy. The defense is that the statements and warranty aforesaid were false and untrue. The decedent died May 7, 1890, and within three months of the time of his reinstatement. The proofs of loss first served by the plaintiff, and sworn to by her and the attending physician, state that the duration of the last illness of the decedent was “from February 6, until May 7, 1890;” that the remote cause of death was “La Grippe,” and the immediate cause “Acute Bright’s Disease.” On November 1, 1890, and before suit brought, the plaintiff served upon the defendant supplemental proofs, in which she and the attending physician corrected the statement in the first proofs as to the time when the decedent was taken gick.
The defendant claims that the first proofs of loss, unexplained by the personal testimony of the plaintiff at the trial, established the breach of warranty pleaded, and are conclusive against her right to recover, and, if not so considered, they at least shifted the burden of proof from the defendant to the plaintiff. The proofs first served
The defendant insists that the trial judge erred in declining to instruct the jury that, in view of the proofs of loss first served upon the defendant, the burden was on the plaintiff to prove that the decedent was not sick prior to February 13, 1890, and that such error was made more manifest by charging that such burden was on the defendant. The claim is based on the erroneous assumption that the statement contained in the first proofs served, shifted upon the plaintiff the onus of disproving facts which the defendant would ■otherwise have been bound, in the first instance, to satisfactorily establish in support of its affirmative defense. The true rule is that the burden of sustaining-the affirmative of an issue involved in an action is upon the party alleging the facts constituting the issue, and so remains throughout the trial. The giving of evidence sufficient to establish the fact prima facie does not shift the burden. The question is to be determined upon all the evidence, and the jury must be satisfied, from the whole case, that the allegation is established. Lamb v. Transportation Co., 46 N. Y. 271; Heinemann v. Heard, 62 N. Y. 448; Hale v. Smith, 78 N. Y. 483; Heilman v. Lazarus, 90 N. Y. 678; Goldschmidt v. Insurance Co., 102 N. Y. 486, 7 N. E. Rep. 408; Blunt v. Barrett, 124 N. Y. 117, 26 N. E. Rep. 318; Stewart v. Stone, 127 N. Y. 506, 28 N. E. Rep. 595; Bridge Corp. v. Butler, 2 Gray, 130; Perley v. Perley, 144 Mass. 104, 10 N. E. Rep. 726. In other words, where a defendant has (as in this case) the burden of proof, it remains with him throughout