124 Misc. 250 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1924
Plaintiff seeks a rescission of the life insurance policy issued to the defendant Morris Pomerantz for the reason that the latter made certain misrepresentations of fact in his application for such insurance which were of a material nature. The policy, plaintiff asserts, was issued not only in consideration of the payment of the premium but upon the truth of the representations written into the application and that since the latter is part of the contract (Ins. Law, § 58) any statements therein contained, if untrue and material, are sufficient to warrant a rescission, thus vitiating the policy.
The representations are as follows: “ I am not deformed; I have had no bodily or mental disease, nor have I received medical or surgical attention within the past five years * * * except as herein stated.”
In support of its contention of the falsity of such representations, plaintiff produced at the trial certain medical testimony which it claimed fairly indicated that the defendant named had bodily or mental disease within the stated period, but that in any event, he had consulted physicians and received professional attention from them.
This defendant, however, urges strenuously that the testimony, even though given that inference which would be most favorable to the plaintiff, did not necessarily show that he had suffered any bodily or mental disease within the five-year period although the testimony might have shown that during this time he was treated by several physicians. His position is that it was not only necessary for the plaintiff to prove that he had bodily or mental disease but that he received medical or surgical attention within such five-year period for such bodily or mental disease. In other words, this defendant urges that the fact that he received medical attention within five years previous to the issuance of the policy was not a misrepresentation unless that medical attention was for some bodily or mental infirmity or disease. This view, plaintiff contends, is utterly without foundation and argues that no such interpretation could be placed upon the representations made and, even assuming that the defendant Morris Pomerantz had no bodily or mental
It thus becomes necessary in order to determine the sufficiency of the claim of the plaintiff to rescission, to construe and interpret these representations. I am satisfied from an examination of the evidence adduced at the trial before me that it was not established that the defendant had a bodily or mental disease as the same are defined by the authorities. (Eastern District Piece Dye Works v. Travelers Ins. Co., 234 N. Y. 441.) There the court said in construing the meaning of the representation “ I have never had any bodily or mental infirmity or deformity: ” “ It must be construed as meaning a deformity or an infirmity of a substantial character which apparently in some material degree impairs the physical condition and health of the applicant and increases the chance of that death or sickness against which the insurance company is asked to issue insurance, and which if known would have been liable to deter the insurance company from issuing the policy.” (See, also, Dilleber v. Home Life Ins. Co., 69 N. Y. 256; Cushman v. U. S. Life Ins. Co., 70 id. 72; Schmitt v. Michigan Mutual Life Ins. Co., 101 App. Div. 12; Connecticut Life Ins. Co. v. Union Trust Co., 112 U. S. 250; Smith v. Travelers Ins. Co., 76 Misc. 441.) Accepting this definition as a guide, and applying it to the situation in the instant case, I am unable to find in the record any proof whatsoever that the defendant Morris Pomerantz suffered with a bodily or mental disease. As matter of fact the record is made conspicuous by the absence of any such proof. But says plaintiff, true though this may be, we would have been able to prove that this defendant had a mental or bodily disease or infirmity, had not the privilege of physician and patient been claimed by him and that since the privilege was so urged this court should draw the inference that if the doctors had been permitted to testify the disclosures would have been adverse to said defendant. And as seeming authority for its view, plaintiff directs the attention of the court to the cases of Deutschmann v. Third Ave. R. R. Co. (87 App. Div. 503) and New York Produce Exchange Bank v. Twelfth Ward Bank (162 id. 13). In the former of these cases the plaintiff had put witnesses on the stand to establish her cause, but upon cross-examination testimony had been elicited which when developed and followed up by other testimony showed pretty clearly that plaintiff had been afflicted and treated; in addition, defendant proved by other testimony which was not privileged that plaintiff had so suffered and been treated. Defendant then called a physician by whom it sought to prove the same fact further. As to this proffered
The Produce Exchange case lends no more force. There the privilege claimed was altogether of a different nature than that in this case. Whatever may be the rule in regard to privilege in other cases, in the relationship of patient and doctor, the privilege obtaining has assumed a certain sanctity and courts are reluctant to disturb it, no forceful reason appearing to the contrary. Under the circumstances I am unable to commit myself to the principle, particularly where, as here, there is a total absence of any proof of disease of the defendant, if any, that an unfavorable inference should or could be drawn merely because the privilege was claimed, to which under the statute he had a perfect and complete right. If the doctrine of the plaintiff were carried to its logical conclusion a party claiming privilege would be assured of no measure of protection under the very law authorizing it as this could immediately be destroyed by the possibility of an adverse inference. I find authority for my view in the scholarly treatise on Evidence of Prof. Wigmore, who says: “ When the privilege is claimed by a patient who is also a party, no inference as to the facts suppressed can be drawn.” (4 Wigm. Ev._ [1905] § 2386, p. 3357.) Obviously this learned writer was keen to emphasize the words “ no inference ” as they are italicized by him. To similar effect, see Wentworth v. Lloyd (10 H. L. C. 589, 590). There it was held that there is no presumption of fact to be made against a party who enforces the rule against the disclosure, by his attorney, of knowledge professionally
This precise reasoning may be very appropriately adopted in the case at bar. (See, also, Bolton v. Corporation of Liverpool, 1 Myl. & K. 88, 94, 95.) A well-considered case in point is Penn. R. Co. v. Durkee (147 Fed. 99), which was decided by the Circuit Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit embracing the New York district. There the court had occasion to construe the meaning of sections 834 and 836 of the Code of Civil Procedure which are identical with sections 352 and 354 of the Civil Practice Act. In that case defendant called a physician, a Dr. Peterson, who had treated the plaintiff and sought to prove by him the nature of the trouble for which he had treated her. The question of privilege was raised and sustained. The court below refused to charge that the jury could draw unfavorable inference and this was urged as a ground for reversal upon appeal. The Circuit Court of Appeals holding untenable the position of the appellant said: “ To hold that, because the patient does not waive or abandon the prohibition, inferences adverse to his side of the controversy may be drawn by the jury, would be to fritter away the protection it was intended to afford.” And so here, where plaintiff has failed to show some evidence of the falsity of the representations made in the application even if the cases cited by it were authority for its position, in these circumstances I find that I am not warranted in drawing any unfavorable inference as a result of the defendant’s exercise of the right of privilege unequivocally granted him by statute.
In the first place, if any doubt exists as to the meaning of the language employed it should be resolved against the plaintiff insurance company who drew both the policy and the application. (Dilleber v. Home Life Ins. Co., supra; Bushey & Sons v. American Ins. Co., 237 N. Y. 24.) It appears but reasonable to construe this statement from the standpoint of what was understood by the insured and proceeding from that premise the only logical, and it seems to me, the only proper interpretation to give it is as contended for by the defendant, namely, that he had not been treated nor had he consulted a physician for any mental or bodily disease or infirmity. (See Genung v. Metropolitan Life Ins. Co., 60 App. Div. 424; Valentini v. Metropolitan Life Ins. Co., 106 id. 487; Denaro v. Prudential Ins. Co., 154 id. 840; Smith v. Travelers Ins. Co., 76 Misc. 441.) In the last case the policy contained the following statement: “ I have not been disabled nor have I received medical or surgical attention within the past five years.” Passing upon that the Appellate Term, through Gut, J., said: “ As to warranty ‘ O,’ 'I have not been disabled nor have I received medical or surgical attention within the past five years,’ this warranty must be construed in the light of the purpose for which :t was made, viz., to convey to the assurer full knowledge of all serious disabilities from which the person applying for insurance ras Suffered during the previous five years. Unless it is to be issumed that the business of health insurance is conducted solely or the profit of the insurance companies, without any corresponding jossibility of benefit on the part of the assured, it cannot be supposed
As for the punctuation, a comma has been defined to be a point used to mark the smallest structural divisions of a sentence. (Webster Dict.) It has also been defined as a rhetorical punctuation mark indicating the slightest possible separation in ideas or construction. (Standard Dict.) It would seem, therefore, that it may be employed as much for the purpose of grammatical construction as in respect to the ideas sought to be conveyed. As to the latter, even if this punctuation were improper, it is no more allowable in vitiating the obligation involved, or in destroying the effect of the writing which assures it, than bad grammar. To permit this plaintiff insurance company to punctuate in mitiori sensu of its own words would indeed be something of a real novelty. Punctuation may aid in ascertaining the true reading of a document, but it may still be read and interpreted without such aid. (White v. Smith, 33 Penn. St. 186.) It is by no means an arbitrary standard, which is to control the meaning and construction of a sentence in opposition to the actual meaning of the writing. In a document which contains punctuation marks, the words, and not the punctuation, are the controlling guide in its construction. (Lambert v. People, 76 N. Y. 220.) Punctuation is no part of the English language. It is always subordinate to the text, and is never allowed of itself to control the meaning of such text. The court will take the writing by its four corners, and determine its meaning from its language, and, having ascertained from the arrangement of its words what its meaning is, will construe it accordingly, without regard to the punctuation marks. (Ewing v. Burnet, 11 Pet. [36 U. S.] 41, 54.) The sense of a writing is gathered from its words and their relation to each other, and after that has been done, punctuation may be used more readily to point out the division in the sentences and parts of sentences. But the words control the punctuation marks, and not the punctuation marks the words. (Holmes v. Phenix Ins. Co., 98 Fed. 240.) Punctuation in writings, therefore, may sometimes shed light upon the meaning
I am, therefore, constrained to the conclusion that the representation can be interpreted in no other way than that heretofore expressed, and since plaintiff has failed to prove that the defendant Morris Pomerantz suffered from a bodily or mental disease or infirmity or that he was treated by a physician in that connection, rescission cannot be decreed and judgment must be for the defendants-upon the merits.
Submit findings and decree. .