64 N.Y.S. 183 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1900
This action is brought to recover upon a policy of life insurance issued by the defendant upon the life of George Hayes. The answer, among other things, avers a breach of warranty in the representations and answers in the application made by the said Hayes, upon which the defendant acted and relied in issuing its policy of insurance, and which formed a part of the contract between the defendant and the insured. The specific things wherein it is
The proofs of death which were filed with the company were made by the physician who attended the insured in Ms last illness, and therein is contained the statement that the deceased died of chronic Bright’s disease, and contributing thereto as a secondary cause was uraemia pulmonary oedema. It was further stated by the physician that he attended the insured for acute kidney disease on the 1st day of December, 1897, and that the duration of the attack was two and a half months. The policy bore date September 2, 1898. So that if such statements as are contained in the proofs of death were true as matter of fact, then it would follow that there was breach of warranty of the statements that the insured had not, prior to the application, had kidney disease, and that he had not been attended by a physician witMn two years prior to the date of the application. The proofs of death were competent evidence to establish the breach of warranty. They were made evidence by express stipulation in the application, and are recognized as competent evidence in support of the claim that the representations and warranties were false. (Kipp v. Metropolitan Life Ins. Co., 41 App. Div. 298.)
It is qrnte true that the defense interposed in this action was an affirmative defense, the burden of establishing which rested upon the defendant. (Dougherty v. Metropolitan Life Ins. Co., 3 App. Div. 313.) The proofs of death, while evidence in favor of the defendant upon such questions, are not conclusive, and may be shown to be either false in fact or mistakenly made; and if there be proof in the case contradictory of the statements contained in the proofs of death it would undoubtedly raise a conflict of proof upon which the court would be authorized to find the fact different from that stated in the proofs of death. In the present case, however, the physician who attended the plaintiff in his last illness was called
This conclusion leads to a reversal of the judgment. There were, however, upon the trial several questions relating to the order of proof, and also rulings upon questions of evidence, on which it is perhaps proper that we should express our views as a guide upon another trial.
Under the pleadings in this case the plaintiff was not bound in the first instance to do more than prove her policy, and the ruling in that respect was proper. (Dougherty v. Metropolitan Life Ins. Co., supra.) So far as applications were made by the insured to other companies to procure insurance, such applications were not admissible in evidence as constituting admissions against the insured, unless it was first shown by competent testimony that the answers which purported to have been given by the insured were in fact made by him. Upon such proof being made the applications might be received as part of such statements, and in order to certainly evidence the same. The proof in this case did not answer this requirement, and consequently the applications were properly rejected. We think the same rule must also obtain as to proofs of death filed with other insurance companies. They could not be evidence against the insured in favor of this defendant. Primary testimony as to
The judgment should be reversed and a new trial ordered.
All concurred.
Judgment of the Municipal Court reversed and a new trial ordered, costs to abide the event.