184 Iowa 301 | Iowa | 1918
At the close of the testimony for. the respective parties, the court sustained the defendant’s motion for a directed verdict, because of the insufficiency of the evidence to sustain a finding in plaintiff’s favor.
Counsel assert and reiterate that defendant or its officers and agents, as witnesses on the trial, admit that a policy was issued. But this is a mistake. One of the expressed conditions of the application is that the company shall incur no liability thereunder, “until it has been received, approved, the policy issued thereon by the company at the home office, and the premium has actually been paid to and accepted by the company or its authorized agents during my lifetime in good health.’” Now, whether the word “issued,” as here employed, is held to mean the sending out or delivery of the duly executed instrument to the' insured, or to someone for his use, or whether we say it is issued, within the mieaning of the application, whenever it is executed and completed, ready for delivery, it must be said that the plaintiff has failed to produce any testimony pointing to either conclusion. True, it is not denied that the application was made, nor that payment of the premium was received by the company conditionally upon its return to the applicant if no policy was issued. It is also conceded that the applicant submitted to the usual local medical examiners, and it may be inferred that their report thereon was favorable to the risk. There is no dispute that the papers were received by the company on January 25, 1915, and that, four days later, January 29, 1915, Straight became very sick, and died on January 31, 1915. There is no scintilla of evidence that any policy was ever sent to Straight or to any other per
There is also in evidence a book or record kept by the company, in which was entered a 'Hist of applications received, and other memloranda relating to each, with a final column, in which, when an application was approved, an entry of the date was made, or if not approved, there was written or penciled the word “rejected.” This record shows the entry of Straight’s application, and in the final column are the words, “Rej. Feb. 5, 1915.” This entry is quite apparently written over an erasure of some other entry. The matter erased is not now decipherable, and the change, whatever it was, is not explained. The defendant shows, without contradiction, that, when the application was received, the matter of investigating the risk was referred to a firm which makes a specialty of such business for insurance companies, and that final action by the company was delayed for a report of such investigation. It also fairly appears that the report of the medical examination of the applicant
Tested by these rules, it • must be said that plaintiff failed to make a case for the jury, and the trial court rightly directed a verdict for the defendant. — Affirmed.