DocketNumber: No. 25,384.
Citation Numbers: 209 N.W. 487, 168 Minn. 19, 1926 Minn. LEXIS 1499
Judges: Hola
Filed Date: 6/18/1926
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
Error is assigned upon the court's overruling the objection of defendant to the reception of any evidence on the grounds that the complaint does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action and that the action was prematurely brought. That a cause of action was stated in the complaint will appear from what follows. No defense that the action was prematurely brought was pleaded, even if it were available when, as here, defendant asks for judgment on the merits in its favor.
Since there was no motion for a new trial, nothing can really be questioned on this appeal except the refusal to direct a verdict for defendant and the denial of judgment non obstante. If either ruling was right the other was also. A directed verdict or judgment non obstante "will not be ordered for error in submitting issues to the jury, or if, from all the facts developed at the trial, it appears probable that plaintiff has a cause of action." Massey S.S. Co. v. Importers Exp. Ins. Co.
The action is for sick benefits under an insurance policy issued by defendant and incidentally to set aside a release or settlement alleged to have been obtained fraudulently and without consideration by defendant. Want of consideration is not so clearly alleged as might be, but as against objection first raised at the trial we deem the complaint sufficient. However, plaintiff's evidence is clear that the amount paid was less than the amount then due, and there was nothing tending to show even an effort to compromise a disputed *Page 21 claim or liability. In that situation defendant should not have judgment notwithstanding the verdict. That plaintiff, after the policy took effect, was stricken with inflammatory rheumatism which entirely disabled him from any work, and that such disability persisted until the trial, are not seriously disputed. So that, unless the settlement is a conclusive bar or an attempted cancelation of the insurance was effective, there is a cause of action.
Defendant contends that plaintiff himself introduced proof of a dispute or the existence of a cause for compromise in the report he and his doctor made of the illness, showing that he had had an attack of inflammatory rheumatism some two years before the application for this insurance was made, and that he then had had a physician's care, both of which facts he did not divulge in the application, although it called for that information. But under the rule above stated defendant is not in a position to ask judgment on that ground, for the record shows that plaintiff offered to show that the application was made out by defendant's agent to whom plaintiff gave truthful answers regarding his former illness, but that such agent had incorrectly inserted them. This offered evidence was excluded. The following authorities indicate that it was admissible: Whitney v. Nat. M. Acc. Assn.
Another sufficient answer to defendant's claim for judgment because of the false answers in the application above alluded to is that at most it raised a jury question, for there was ample room for finding a waiver of the misrepresentation in the fact that defendant accepted a quarterly advance premium about August 10, 1923, when it had full knowledge that the representations in the application were not in accord with the truth.
There is nothing conclusive as to the claimed cancelation. Under the policy defendant could not cancel so as to deprive plaintiff of his continued right to the stipulated benefits for the illness he was suffering from so long as that illness persisted. The policy was not *Page 22 surrendered nor was its surrender requested when a small unearned premium check was sent, which was received and cashed by plaintiff's wife, unbeknown to him.
Unless defendant was entitled to judgment on the pleadings, and it is not perceived how that could be ordered, there should not be judgment notwithstanding the verdict, for, conceding that no fraud or duress was proven in the procurement of the alleged settlement and release, it is clear there was no consideration therefor, and to say the very least want of consideration could in any event be made a jury question.
The judgment is affirmed.
MacK v. Pacific Mutual Life Insurance , 167 Minn. 53 ( 1926 )