Sinclair v. Phoenix Mut. Life Ins.
Sinclair v. Phoenix Mut. Life Ins.
Opinion of the Court
This suit is brought to recover on a policy of insurance on the life of the plaintiff’s intestate. A jury is waived by a stipulation on file. The policy contains this provision: “* * * If any of the declarations or statements made in the application for this policy, upon the faith of which this policy is issued, shall be found in any respect untrue, * * * this
It is urged as a defense that the answers to all the above specified questions are untrue, and were known to be so when the application was signed. These answers are declarations and representations, and the burden of proof is on the defendant to establish this defense. The testimony fails to satisfy me that the answers are untrue in fact. The defendant insists that question No. 22 is not confined to hereditary diseases. Such, in my opinion, is not its true construction. The last clause qualifies and controls the rest. The undoubted object of that question was to procure information as to whether insanity, scrofulous and pulmonary diseases, had developed in an hereditary form among the relatives of the applicant. Gridley v. Northwestern Mut. Life Ins. Co. [Case No. 5,808]. This question, then, having reference to hereditary diseases, it must be proved not only that the father and sister of the deceased died of one of the specified diseases, but that it was hereditary. The evidence of the attending and other physicians shows that the disease which caused the death of the father and sister, though generally, is not in all cases, hereditary. To prove that the assured knew of the cause of the death of his father and sister, the defendant relies upon his presence at home when they died, and that other members of the family knew it. This is strong moral evidence, undoubtedly, but it is mere conjecture, and cannot overcome the statement that he did not know in the application.
The material allegations of the complaint being admitted or proved, and the defend
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.