75 S.W. 844 | Tex. App. | 1903
Appellee is the surviving widow of W.H. Crawford, deceased, and appellant is a fraternal insurance order chartered under the laws of the State of Pennsylvania, having agents and subordinate rulings or lodges in this State. The suit was instituted by appellee as beneficiary in a benefit fund certificate issued by appellant to her deceased husband; and the defenses were, general denial, nonmembership in the order, and pleas of fraud and false statements upon the part of deceased in his applications for membership and reinstatement in the local ruling.
Appellee replied by plea of estoppel to appellant's right to deny deceased's membership. Upon a trial before the court judgment was entered in favor of appellee for the amount of the certificate, and the insurance order appeals.
The first assignment of error is that the court erred in rendering judgment against appellant because deceased was never initiated into the Fraternal Mystic Circle.
The evidence does show that deceased never appeared before the local ruling for initiation, and was never initiated into the order, but it further appears that with a full knowledge of this fact the ruling received all his assessments and dues and delivered to him the benefit certificate. We think that in thus treating him as a member, and in delivering to him the certificate, the appellant can not be heard to question his membership. It has waived the matter. Order of Columbus v. Fuqua, 1 Texas Ct. Rep., 639; McCorkle v. Association,
The second and third assignments complain that deceased never having been duly examined by an authorized medical examiner of the order, the judgment was for that reason erroneous. The laws of the order provide that, "No examinations for the order shall be legal unless made by an examiner approved by the supreme medical director," and it seems that there was such approved examiner, one Dr. W.W. Wilkes, at Waco, where deceased applied for membership and was examined, whose name is subscribed to the report of the medical examination of the deceased. He denies that he made the examination, but admits that he probably signed the report at the instance of Dr. Southworth, a deputy organizer for the order. Dr. Southworth testified that Dr. Wilkes was present during the latter part of the examination and signed the report. He further testified that he examined deceased himself, through an arrangement with the State deputy of the order, by which he, Southworth, was to examine his own applicants for membership and to have physicians of his own selection to sign the reports, which were to be approved without further examination, and that he had examined many of his applicants and never heard the matter questioned. In this state of the evidence we can not say the examination was not sufficient.
Appellant complains that certain answers of deceased to the medical examiner, the truthfulness of which by the terms of the certificate he *605 had warranted, were in fact false and a concealment of the real facts, and that he knew them to be false and incomplete, notably to the fourth and seventh questions which were: "4. Have you had any serious illness, local disease, or personal injury?" to which he answered "No." "7. Have you ever been subject to, or had any of the following disorders or diseases: Disease of the lung; pleurisy; pneumonia or inflammation of the lungs?" to each of which the deceased answered "No."
It seems to us that the answer of an applicant for life insurance upon his own life, that he has never had any serious illness, should be considered as a mere expression of opinion as to the character of the sickness and should not avoid the policy, even though such answer was untrue, provided, of course, the applicant did not know of its falsity. The form of the question necessarily calls for an opinion, and an agreement to warrant the truthfulness of the answer is no more than to warrant that the applicant will make a bona fide answer as to his opinion of the character of his ailment. See Hogle v. Insurance Co., 29 N.Y. Super. Ct., 567; Illinois Mas. Ben. Soc. v. Winthrop,
We think from this and other similar testimony contained in the record that the trial court was warranted in finding that deceased's various answers and warranties complained of were true.
This disposes of all assignments of error but the fifth, which is to the effect that the court erred in not finding for defendant because the *606 evidence shows a conspiracy upon the part of Crawford and Southworth to defraud the appellant order. But after having carefully examined the testimony we conclude that this assignment too should be overruled. The deceased was a traveling salesman, and while at Waco on business met Dr. Southworth, whom he had formerly known, and there underwent the examination and applied for membership in the local ruling. This is probably sufficient explanation of his not applying to the local ruling in his home city, Weatherford, Texas. While the evidence raises a probable suspicion of fraud, it lacks that certainty or conclusiveness which would require of us a reversal of the trial court's judgment upon this issue.
Appellee's cross-assignment of error is also overruled, and the judgment of the District Court in all things affirmed.
Affirmed.
Writ of error refused.