25 F.2d 77 | 3rd Cir. | 1928
The plaintiff brought this suit on two policies of life insurance and had judgment. The defendant sued out this writ of error raising in several forms one question, — whether the trial court erred in not directing a verdict in its favor on a holding as matter of law that premiums were not paid in accordance with the contracts of insurance, or, stated in another way, whether the court erred in holding that the policies went into force as of the date of the actual payment of the first premiums, under its construction of a provision of the applications, made a part of the contracts of insurance, which (with the critical words italicized) reads as follows:
“I declare that the above answers are full and true and '* * * ; that said policies shall not take effect until the first premium has been paid during my life and good health; that no premium shall be considered paid unless a receipt be given therefor signed by the president or secretary.”
At the trial the main issue of fact concerned the truthfulness of the applicant’s answers to questions put to him by the medical examiner when preparing his application for insurance, and that issue turned on another —whether the insured, being foreign-born and having little-understanding of the English language, was asked by the examiner, speaking through an interpreter, all the questions the applications purport were asked and answered.
These issues now stand settled by the verdict, leaving as the only matter for review the proper construction of the quoted provision of the policies concerning their effective date.
The doings of the parties with pertinent dates are as follows: The deceased applied for insurance on June 1, 1926, and was examined by the company’s doctor on June 29. The policies were issued on July 26 and handed to the insured by a company agent on July 30 with a request for payment of the first premiums. On the next day, July 31, the insured signed and gave the agent a check for the premiums, which the agent himself had prepared.' Receipts for thp premiums, signed by the president a'nd hearing date August 5, were mailed by the company a,nd in due course received by the insured. But on August 2, two days after the payment of the first premiums, the insured entered a hospital and on September 9 he died of.peritonitis,- There is no evidence that the insured was not in good health when, on July 31, he paid the first premiums; nor is there evidence that he was not in good health when, on. August 2, he entered the hospital or when three or four days later he received the receipts for the premiums, other, than the inference to be drawn from the fact that he had gone to a hospital. There is evidence that he did not then have peritonitis.
We construe the provision in this wise: It has two parts separated by a semicolon; and each part, dealing with different things, has,a meaning different from the other. The first part provides that the “policy shall not take effect until the first premium has been paid during [the applicant’s] good health.” That is a valid provision against fraud and also against a variation in the risk occurring in the- interval- between the examination
Some days after the argument in this case the plaintiff in error moved the court for an order remitting the record to the trial court that it might determine whether on motion of the plaintiff in error it would reinstate the rule to show cause why a new trial should not be granted on the ground of newly discovered evidence. This evidence, to be given by a son of the deceased, would be offered to controvert the testimony given by other witnesses that, the deceased was not familiar ^ith the English language.
, We are of opinion that the application does not show the testimony now regarded as. newly discovered was not by proper diligence available at the trial and therefore the application fails to show that legal requisite for the allowance of such a motion.
The judgment is affirmed.