Ginter v. Northwestern Mutual Life Ins. Co.
United States District Court for the Eastern District of Kentucky
576 F. Supp. 627 (1984)
- Written by Sean Carroll, JD
Facts
Ginter’s husband took out a life insurance policy with Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Company (Northwestern) (defendant). The husband died, and Northwestern denied the claim of the beneficiary, Ginter (plaintiff), on the ground that the husband had not stated on his policy application that he was being treated for depression. Ginter sued Northwestern to recover on the policy. Ginter filed a pretrial motion seeking to introduce the testimony of witnesses who would testify that the husband had a good character and would not falsify an insurance application. Northwestern argued that the witnesses’ planned character-evidence testimony should be excluded under Federal Rule of Evidence 404(a).
Rule of Law
Issue
Holding and Reasoning (Bertelsman, J.)
What to do next…
Here's why 806,000 law students have relied on our case briefs:
- Written by law professors and practitioners, not other law students. 46,300 briefs, keyed to 988 casebooks. Top-notch customer support.
- The right amount of information, includes the facts, issues, rule of law, holding and reasoning, and any concurrences and dissents.
- Access in your classes, works on your mobile and tablet. Massive library of related video lessons and high quality multiple-choice questions.
- Easy to use, uniform format for every case brief. Written in plain English, not in legalese. Our briefs summarize and simplify; they don’t just repeat the court’s language.