Gambrill v. United States Health & Accident Insurance
Gambrill v. United States Health & Accident Insurance
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
These two actions were commenced before a magistrate; one for eighty dollars on a health and *237 accident policy, issued by the defendant to the plaintiff, 18th of June, 1906, said amount being fot sick benefit from 10th of December, 1906, to 10th of February, 1907; and the other for ninety and 66-100 dollars on the same policy, for sick benefit from 10th of February, 1907, to 18th of April, 1907.
The application for insurance was made upon certain statements, which the plaintiff warranted to be true, one of which was: “I have not had any medical or surgical treatment during the past five years.”
In the preliminary notice of illness the assured stated that he was taken ill on 10th of December, 1906, and quit work on that day.
To the following questions, propounded in said notice, he made the following answers: “When did physician first attend you? December 10, 1905. Where? Greenville Sanitarium. Flave you had any medical attendance during past five years? None until about twelve months ago.” In the physician’s preliminary report of illness appears the following: “When and where did you first examine claimant? December 10, 1905, at Greenville Sanitarium. Name the disease causing the disability? Cancer; December 10th had operation performed.”
The physician who performed the operation testified: “I did not know in December, 1905, that it was cancer. I thought it only tumors. I did not notify plaintiff that it was cancer until August, 1906. I don’t think anybody had. Plaintiff knew all about the operation in 1905. I told plaintiff it was a dangerous operation.”
The testimony of a witness for the plaintiff was as follows: “I was present when application for the policy introduced in evidence was signed by the plaintiff, at the solicitation of W. W. Haskell, agent of defendant, and that the blanks in said application were not filled in. Haskell told Gambrell to sign that paper, and that if he got sick he would get his money.”
*238 The defendant’s agent testified he did not know that the applicant then, or had in the past, suffered from cancer in any form, nor did he know that an operation had been performed on him for cancer, or for any other cause, at the time he took said application.
The insured died on the 18th of April, 1907.
The magistrate rendered judgment in favor of the plaintiff for the full amount claimed in each case, but on appeal to the Circuit Court the judgments were reversed, whereupon the plaintiff appealed, upon the following exceptions:
(1) “The Court erred in reversing the judgments in said two cases: because the undisputed testimony is that W. W. Haskell, agent of the defendant, told the plaintiff to sign the application for the said policy, and that if plaintiff got sick he would get his money, and the blanks in said application were not filled in.
(2) “The Court erred in not sustaining the judgments in both of said cases, and in not dismissing the appeals in said cases: because the plaintiff, after he signed the blank application for said policy and delivered the same to the defendant, through its agent, W. W. Haskell, was not bound by anything the defendant or any of its agents may have written in said blank application over plaintiff’s signature.
(3) “Even if the blanks had been filled in said application, and read over to the plaintiff, the Court erred in not sustaining said judgments and dismissing said appeals: because W. W. Haskell, the agent of the defendant, told the plaintiff to sign that paper, meaning application, and if he got sick he would get his money, the defendant being liable for the acts or misdeeds of its agent in the course of his employment.
(4) “The Court erred in not affirming the judgments in both said cases and dismissing said appeals, because cancer is one of the diseases covered by said policy.
(5) “Even if cancer is not covered by said policy, the Court erred in not affirming said judgments and dismissing *239 said appeals: because the plaintiff did not know that he had cancer until August, 1906, after the said policy was issued on June 18, 1906.
(6) “The Court erred in not holding that the plaintiff did not obtain said policy under false representation, false statements, nor under any kind of fraudulent conduct and, therefore, the Court should have affirmed the judgments in both said cases.”
The first, second and third exceptions will be considered together.
The fifth and sixth exceptions will be considered together.
The judgments are affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Gambrill v. United States Health and Accident Insurance Co.
- Cited By
- 7 cases
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- Published
- Syllabus
- 1. IsrsuBAifCE — AprucAraoir.—Where the statement that assured has had no medical treatment in five years is printed in an application for insurance and on the back of the policy, and its truth is warranted by applicant, the assured is bound by it, and if untrue avoids the policy, although the application was signed in blank, the blanks not relating to this matter, upon statement by agent that if assured would sign the application and get sick he would get his money. That assured did not know he had cancer at the time does not affect it. 3. Ibid. — That a policy mentions cancer as one of the diseases insured against does not show that the company would insure one already suffering from that disease.