Court Opinion

ID: 5617583
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-01-11 04:23:38.560346+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:37:17.850206
License: Public Domain

Jenkins, P. J.
The basis of the contract lay in the representation of the applicant and the opinion thus formed and otherwise arrived at by the insurer. The provision in the' contract that no liability is assumed by the company prior to the date of the policy or unless the assured shall be at that time in life and in sound health would seem to be intended to cover such changes and exigencies as might arise after the application and medical examination or certificate of the agent and the time when the policy is issued. In Modern Woodmen of America v. Atkinson, 153 Ky. 527 (155 S. W. 1135), it was held that “A condition in a life insurance policy that it shall not be binding upon the insurer unless on the date of its delivery the insured was in sound health applies only to unsoundness of health arising after the application and medical examination, in which case the insurer must rely alone on the statements in the application to avoid a recovery, and is unavailable as a defense unless it is shown that the insured’s disease developed between his application and the time when the policy was delivered.” In Priest v. Kansas City Life Ins. Co., 116 *3Kan. 421 (227 Pac. 538), tlie Supreme Court of Kansas held as follows: “The effect of a clause that a life insurance policy shall not take effect unless the applicant is in good health at the time of its delivery is to protect the company against a new element of risk through a change in the applicant’s condition arising after the company’s investigation has been made.” In the latter case a quotation from Fairfield v. Union Life Ins. Co., 196 Ill. App. 7, 15, is made as follows: “The record herein shows that a period of time elapsed between the date of the application and the medical examination above referred to, and the delivery of the policies. It is fair to presume that this situation arises in almost every instance where the defendant issues a policy. In that interim the insured may have become seriously ill or suffered a severe injury greatly impairing his health. It is therefore fair to presume that the provision that said policy ‘’shall not take effect until the first premium has actually been paid to and accepted by the company and the policy delivered to and accepted by the insured while in good health,’ was intended to safeguard the defendant against any contingencies that might arise during such interim.” Numerous other citations are given by the Kansas court to sustain this interpretation.
In the instant ease the medical testimony upon which the defendant relies is to the effect that the incipient disease which is alleged to have ultimately occasioned the death must have been in existence for from five to fifteen years prior to the issuance of the policy. Under this interpretation of this provision of the contract, and in the absence of fraud in the procurement of the policy, it would be unnecessary to determine what the rule would be as laid down in the second headnote, since the infirmity did not arise during the interval between the application and the issuance of the policy, and since the representation of the assured as to soundness of his health was not attached to the policy so as to form a part thereof. While we have discussed the question just dealt with in the opinion, and are inclined to agree with the soundness of the rule as here outlined, we do not so decide, but rest our judgment on the rule laid down in the second headnote, following the Smith case. The basis of this decision is that a policy applied for and accepted in good faith can not be avoided by proof that the malady which ultimately occasioned the death must have existed in some *4incipient form prior to the issuance of the policy, but unknowingly and without at that time manifesting any symptoms or effect, or in any way causing reasonable apprehension of any impairment or derangement of the system, even though, by an acceptance of the contract, the assured may have warranted himself to be in sound health. To hold otherwise would involve far-reaching consequences to those who have been led to rely upon the protection of policies which have been applied for, issued, and accepted in good faith. To permit the insurer, upon the death of the insured, to go back of and behind the bona fide contract and set up its invalidity on account of some unknown and unmanifested disease, which from its nature and customary course must have been existent in some incipient form, although its existence was in no way manifest by any symptoms or effect, and despite the fact that the assured was at the time in the actual enjoyment of good health, would be to render doubtful and uncertain the protection afforded by every policy of life insurance, unless, perchance, it might contain other and independent provisions limiting the time of con-testability. For example, in the instant case the medical testimony indicates that the disease must have originated at a period dating from five to fifteen years prior to the contract of insurance. The cause or causes of death are ofttimes as subtle and obscure as any fact which relates to the life of man. It is rarely as simple a proposition as the verdict of a coroner’s inquest. Bather is it true, as some philosopher has said, that all life carries within itself the germ of its own dissolution,—that to live is to begin to die.

Judgment affirmed.

Stephens and Bell, JJ., concur.