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Redmond v. Industrial Benefit Association

Court of Appeals of the State of New York
Oct 6, 1896
150 N.Y. 167 (N.Y. 1896)

Summary

In Redmond v. Industrial Benefit Association (150 N.Y. 167) the true rule was announced, although the statement was not necessary to the decision.

Summary of this case from Rudolph v. John Hancock M.L. Ins. Co.

Opinion

Argued June 1, 1896

Decided October 6, 1896

William F. Beutler for appellant. Franklin M. Danaher for respondent.



The plaintiff is the beneficiary under a policy of insurance issued by the defendant on the life of his mother, Catherine Redmond. The defendant seeks to avoid liability on the ground that the deceased made false representations in the application for insurance as to her age and physical condition.

It appears that just prior to making her application for this policy Mrs. Redmond had been insured in the Flour City Life Association and had lost her insurance by the failure of that corporation.

The plaintiff was solicited by the agent of the defendant to have his mother's insurance transferred to the defendant; plaintiff said it was immaterial whether a new policy was taken or not, and that he desired the defendant's physician to make an examination of his mother, as he "wished everything straight."

The agent filled out the application in presence of plaintiff, writing the answers to the various questions in the absence of Mrs. Redmond; the plaintiff, in reply to a question, stated to the agent that his mother had no disease he knew of except rheumatism; plaintiff took the application, obtained his mother's signature and returned it to defendant. Dr. Babcock, the defendant's physician, subsequently furnished a certificate to the effect that he had known Mrs. Redmond for three years, and recommended her as a first-class risk. The by-laws of the defendant require, upon the decease of a member, that the proofs of death shall contain, among other things, a statement under oath of the attending physician made upon a blank furnished by the company.

The application and policy were dated October, 1891, and Mrs. Redmond died in April, 1892. Proofs of death were duly furnished, and among them was the sworn statement of Dr. Boyd, the attending physician of Mrs. Redmond, wherein he stated that in January, 1891, he treated her for renal calculi.

The defendant contends that this is a binding admission on the part of the plaintiff that the insured was suffering from a disease of the urinary organs in January, 1891, and is conclusive proof as to the falsity of the representation contained in the application for insurance made the following October to the effect that for five years prior thereto Mrs. Redmond had no disease of the urinary organs. The defendant offered to prove the same fact at the trial by Dr. Boyd, but the evidence was properly excluded as incompetent under section 834 of the Code.

The manner in which the learned trial judge submitted this case to the jury renders it unnecessary to consider many of the points discussed on the argument. The defendant's counsel has little reason to complain of the charge to the jury, as in most respects it is very favorable to the defendant. The trial judge refused to charge, on plaintiff's request, that defendant was estopped by the certificate of its own doctor made at the time of the application; he also refused to charge without qualification that the proof of renal calculi, in January, 1891, was not proof of disease of the urinary organs in October, 1891, but stated it was proof upon the subject, but not conclusive.

This was proper in view of Dr. Boyd's answer, in his sworn statement, to the question asking him to state the disease of which the insured died, that it was "disease of the lungs, of liver, of kidneys, or nephritis, and enlargement of liver; also had pneumonia." It was fairly submitted to the jury whether in view of all the evidence, including Dr. Babcock's certificate, there was a false representation as to the physical condition of the insured.

It is unnecessary to decide whether Dr. Boyd's sworn statement in the proofs of death was binding as an admission of the plaintiff. It would seem that the attending physician of the insured did not represent the plaintiff, and the furnishing of his sworn statement was in no sense the voluntary act or admission of the plaintiff, but was made a condition precedent to his recovery on the policy by the contract of insurance.

The defendant, however, was given the full benefit of the sworn statement of Dr. Boyd, subject to the qualification that it was not conclusive evidence. There was no error in this ruling of which the defendant can legally complain.

The other question of fact litigated before the jury was whether the insured made false representation as to her age in the application upon which the policy was issued. On this point there was a sharp conflict of evidence, which was properly submitted to the jury.

The judge charged substantially that all of the answers of the insured contained in her application were warranties, and if any of them was false plaintiff could not recover.

We are of opinion that the two defenses interposed by the defendant were fairly submitted to the jury and the verdict is conclusive.

The remaining questions in the case are whether the plaintiff was entitled to a money judgment, and whether the evidence to sustain the amount of the verdict was competent and sufficient?

The defendant is not an assessment company, but the insured pay a regular bi-monthly premium.

The aggregate of these premiums paid in each two months constitute what is termed a pool, there being six pools formed in each year.

Catherine Redmond was constituted a member of class "B" of the defendant, and her death occurring within the first year, entitled her beneficiary to eight shares in the pool out of which the policy was payable, the maximum value of the shares being two thousand dollars.

The by-laws provide as follows: "All claims shall be paid with the pool of the months in which the proof of death maturing the same is approved by the association. In case the payment of any claim is contested by the association and a judgment is rendered in favor of the claimant, said claim shall be placed in and paid pro rata with the claims of the pool then forming."

The contention on behalf of the defendant is that the by-laws contemplate that only approved claims shall go into a pool, and that when a claim is rejected, the courts appealed to and a judgment rendered, the judgment must direct the claim to be placed in and paid pro rata with the claims of the pool then forming, in pursuance of the by-law just quoted.

We are unable to assent to this construction of the by-laws.

In the case at bar, had the defendant duly approved the plaintiff's claim, it would have been paid out of the March and April, 1892, bi-monthly pool created by the April premium No. 5, which was collected to pay the losses of these two months. The plaintiff having been compelled to resort to the courts, is, in the event he succeeds, entitled to a money judgment for the sum that he would have realized had his claim been approved and paid out of the proper pool raised for that purpose.

The provision of the by-law, that a judgment in favor of a claimant shall be placed in and paid pro rata with the claims of the pool then forming, is merely a mode of raising the money when a final judgment is rendered against the defendant. The rights of a successful plaintiff are not affected by this provision, as the amount of his final recovery was determined by the premiums and liabilities of the pool out of which his claim became payable as fixed by the death of the insured.

The other question is whether the plaintiff sustained the burden of proof under which he rested and gave evidence sufficient to support the verdict of the jury.

This court held, in the case of O'Brien v. Home Benefit Society ( 117 N.Y. 319), that where an assessment had not been made, and it was impossible for the plaintiff to show precisely what amount would have been produced, he was bound to give such evidence as the nature of the case permitted bearing upon the question of damages and legitimately tending to prove their amount.

In the case at bar the plaintiff produced the defendant's official statutory reports, on file in the office of the superintendent of insurance, and proved that the amount collected for the pool raised to pay the death losses of Catherine Redmond and others was $16,047.75; that only eighty per cent. of this, or $12,838.20, could be used under the by-laws to pay death claims, and that plaintiff's eight shares coming in, and sharing pro rata with the other claims, amounted to $777.68.

The court charged the jury that, if they found for the plaintiff, he was entitled to recover $777.68 and interest from the commencement of the action. The evidence is amply sufficient to sustain the verdict.

The judgment appealed from should be affirmed, with costs.

All concur.

Judgment affirmed.


Summaries of

Redmond v. Industrial Benefit Association

Court of Appeals of the State of New York
Oct 6, 1896
150 N.Y. 167 (N.Y. 1896)

In Redmond v. Industrial Benefit Association (150 N.Y. 167) the true rule was announced, although the statement was not necessary to the decision.

Summary of this case from Rudolph v. John Hancock M.L. Ins. Co.
Case details for

Redmond v. Industrial Benefit Association

Case Details

Full title:PATRICK REDMOND, Respondent, v . INDUSTRIAL BENEFIT ASSOCIATION, Appellant

Court:Court of Appeals of the State of New York

Date published: Oct 6, 1896

Citations

150 N.Y. 167 (N.Y. 1896)
44 N.E. 769

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