50 How. Pr. 367 | The Superior Court of New York City | 1875
— The main question to be considered is whether the statements contained in the application on which the policy was issued were absolute warranties or mere representations. I think it is clear that both parties intended that the policy and the application as proposed should constitute tlie contract between them. The language in the conditions of the policy expressly states that the policy is issued upon the faith of the declaration and statements of the assured, and if found in any respects untrue, the policy shall be null and void. In the application it is also expressly declared, at the foot of the answers and questions signed by the applicant, acknowledged and agreed to by him, that the above statements shall form the basis of the contract of assurance; and that any untrue or fraudulent answers, any suppression of facts, &c., will render the policy null and void, and forfeit all payments made thereon. According to well established, rules, the policy and the application must be construed as embracing a single instrument or contract. The statements by the assured, contained in the policy, by being written thereon in reply to the interrogatories, by reference to the proposal, become warranties, and must be substantially true, or the policy will be void (1 Phillips on Ins., sec. 892 ; Angel on Ins., sec. 141; Anderson agt. Fitzgerald, 4 House of Lords Cases, 484; Foot agt. Ætna Life Ins. Co., reported in vol. 4 No. 4, Insurance Law Journal, p. 260, April, 1875, Earl, commissioner). The parties to insurance contracts have the right to make their own bargains, and if they make the representations and statements material by inserting them, they alone are the j udges of their materiality; nor does it matter whether the party made the untrue statements innocently,
The case of Jeffries, admr., agt. Life Insurance Company, supreme court of the United States, October term, 1874, contains clauses in the policy and application almost identical with the case before me. Mr. justice Hunt in that case says: ■“ The proposition at the foundation of this point is this : that statements and declarations made in the policy shall be true. This stipulation is not expressed to be made as to important or material statements only, or to those supposed to be material, but as to all statements. The statements need not come up to the degree of warranties. * * * A faithful performance of the agreement is made an express condition to .the existence of a liability on the part of the company.”
Where false answers are made to inquiries which do not relate to the risk, the policy is not necessarily avoided, unless the mind of the company is influenced by them. But that is' not the case where it is expressly covenanted, as a condition of liability, that the statements and declarations made in the application are true, and where the truth of such statements forms the basis of the contract.
Under this view of the contract it will only be necessary to
There must be judgment for the defendant, The Equitable Life Insurance Society of the United States.