1. The court is not authorized to take from the jury the right
of weighing the evidence bearing on controverted facts in
issue.
2. The court below properly refused to give an instruction
declaring that a fact was established by unimpeached and
uncontradicted testimony when the record discloses that the
testimony touching such asserted fact was conflicting.
3. This Court can only review so much of the instructions of the
court below as was made the subject of an exception.
4. The omission of the judge to instruct the jury on a
particular aspect of the case, however material, cannot be assigned
for error unless his attention was called to it with a request to
instruct upon it.
MR. JUSTICE DAVIS delivered the opinion of the Court.
The contract of insurance which is the subject of this suit was
effected by Monroe Snyder on his life for the benefit of his wife.
There was a judgment on the verdict in her favor, and the case has
been brought here for review. At the trial, the company presented
several points on which, except the answer to the fourth point, the
rulings of the court were satisfactory. An exception was taken
which presents the only question open for our consideration. The
fourth point on which the request to charge was based is in these
words:
"The written applications bearing date Sept. 18, 1872, July 9,
1872, and Jan. 10, 1873, signed by the insured, form the basis of
the contract of insurance; and the policies were issued to, and
accepted by, the insured, upon the express condition and agreement,
that, if any of the statements or declarations made in the
application should be found in any respect untrue, then the
policies should be respectively null and void; and Monroe Snyder,
the insured, having, in answer to question No. 17 in each of said
policies, which is, 'How long since you were attended by a
physician? for what diseases? give name and residence of such
physician,' answered, 'Not for twenty years,' while the testimony
is unimpeached and uncontradicted, that Monroe Snyder was, in the
month of December, 1867,
Page 93 U. S. 394
attended several times by Dr. Abram Stout, a physician, for a
severe fall upon his head. This answer is untrue, and the policies
are thereby rendered void, and the plaintiffs cannot recover upon
them."
This proposition is not based on the idea that the answer of
Snyder avoided the policy, if a physician attended him for any
cause within a period of twenty years. It was easy to raise that
question, and ask a specific instruction, which it would have been
the duty of the court either to give or refuse. If it had been
refused, the plaintiff in error could have brought the question
here for the opinion of this court.
But the omission of the learned judge to instruct the jury on a
particular aspect of the case, however material, cannot be assigned
for error, unless his attention was called to it with a request to
instruct upon it. Nor is it proper for us to intimate an opinion
upon a question not presented by the record, which might arise in
some other trial between this plaintiff in error and a
policyholder.
In discussing the propriety of the answer, it is desirable to
understand the proposition submitted to the court for its adoption.
It sets out with a statement of the contract, and affirms that
Snyder's answer to the specific interrogatory No. 17, was untrue,
because, by the uncontradicted testimony, he was, in December,
1867, attended by Dr. Abram Stout, a physician, for a severe fall
upon his head. This being so, the legal conclusion is drawn that
the policy is rendered void, and that the holder of it cannot
recover.
It will be observed that the court is not asked to say to the
jury that the attendance of a physician for a slight injury avoided
the policy, nor was this the theory on which the case was tried.
There was no evidence that Snyder was ever attended by a physician
within twenty years, except when Dr. Stout visited him for a fall
on the head. In the different points relating to other parts of the
case, which were answered by the court to the satisfaction of the
plaintiff in error, it was not the fact of the fall, but its
severity, which was treated as being in avoidance of the policy.
The fourth point also proceeds on the same supposition. It asserts
that Snyder was treated for a severe injury, and deduces from the
nature of that injury the legal conclusion, that there can be no
recovery. While it is correct
Page 93 U. S. 395
practice for the judge to instruct in an absolute form on an
admitted state of the case, he is not authorized to take from the
jury the right of weighing the evidence bearing on controverted
facts. Was it undisputed that Snyder had been attended "for a
severe fall on his head"? The court did not think so, for it
instructed in these words:
"If the fall upon the head for which Monroe Snyder was attended
by the physician was a severe one, the answer was untrue, and the
verdict should be for the defendants."
The proposition of law was thus affirmed, but the jury were left
free to say whether the supposed fact on which it rested was
established by the evidence. If the court had instructed in the
terms prayed for, it would have usurped the functions of the jury,
for, to say the least, there was evidence tending to show that the
injury was but trifling. This was the opinion of the physician
after he had observed its effects. He examined Snyder on his
application for insurance and reported that his life was safely
insurable and that he had never had any severe illness or injury.
It is true, he stated that he had forgotten the fall on the head
when the application was made out, but, had the fact occurred to
him at the time, he does not think he would have put the injury
down as a severe one. In view of this and the other evidence, it
was the duty of the court to submit to the jury, "whether Monroe
Snyder had been attended by a physician for a severe fall on the
head." If, on this contested matter, the case had been taken from
them, the plaintiff below would, in our opinion, have had just
cause of complaint.
It is said that the court, in further answer to the fourth
point, committed to the jury the construction of a written
instrument in the following words:
"So if the jury find that the attendance of a physician was for
any disease or injury within the meaning of the question, the
verdict should be for the defendant."
It may be that this instruction, in the state of the evidence,
is justly subject to criticism, but the exception of the plaintiff
in error is confined to the charge and opinion in answer to the
fourth point, and its requirements were fully met when the jury
were told that if the fall upon the head was a severe one, they
should find for the defendant. The additional instruction was given
by the judge
sua sponte. Non constat that he
would not have either modified or withdrawn it on proper request if
its objectionable
Page 93 U. S. 396
features had been pointed out. Be this as it may, we cannot
review it, as there was no exception to it. Apart from this, we do
not see how the plaintiff in error was injured. The charge, so far
from lessening, increased its chances to defeat the action. The
jury had been told to find for it if the only injury in controversy
was a severe one. After this, to charge them to find in the same
way if, in their opinion, the medical attendance was for any
disease or injury covered by the "question," was giving the company
a larger opportunity to obtain a verdict that it had before. It
was, in effect, informing them that they were at liberty to
construe the "question" more favorably to the company than the
court had done. To say the least, it left a better opening for the
company to get a verdict than it had by reason of the answer of the
court to the fourth point.
Judgment affirmed.
NOTE -- A case between the same plaintiff in error and Snyder, a
son of Monroe Snyder, deceased, was heard and determined at the
same date as the preceding case. It involved precisely the same
points, and was disposed of in the same manner.