Appellant, as beneficiary, brought this suit to recover the proceeds of a $20,000 *184policy of insurance issued by the appellee, defendant below, on the life1 of Jacob M. Dampf, appellant’s' former business partner now deceased. Dampf applied for the insurance on June 19, 1947; on September 11, 1947, less than three months later, he died of coronary thrombosis. The company refused payment, claiming that the answers to questions in the- application for the insurance were false, that they were material to the risk, and that had the true facts been revealed the policy would not have been issued.
In the court below, at the close of the evidence, the judge, on motion, directed- a verdict for the defendant. From the judgment entered thereon, plaintiff prosecuted this appeal. In this court, he relies on eleven specifications of - error, but in our view of the case only two are important to our decision. They give rise to two questions:
(1) Did the trial court err in ordering the personal physician of the insured to testify over objection that his testimony would derive from privileged communications ?
(2) Did the trial court err in-directing a verdict for the defendant at the close of the trial?
At the trial, when the defendant placed on the witness stand Dampf’s physician, Dr. E. K. Hirsch, plaintiff objected on the ground that a privileged status had existed , between the physician and the deceased patient which precluded testimony by Dr. Hirsch as to the deceased’s physical condition. The court overruled this objection and ordered the witness to testify.
The only statute in Louisiana providing that communications by patients to their physicians are privileged is article 476 of the Louisiana -Code of Criminal Law and Procedure.1 ' It states: “No physician is permitted, whether during or after the termination of his. employment as such, unless with his patient’s express consent, to disclose any communication made to him as such physician by or on behalf of his patient, or the result of any investigation made into the patient’s physical or mental condition, or any opinion based upon such investigation, or any information that he may have gotten by reason of his being such physician; provided, that the provisions of this article shall not apply to any physician, who, under the appointment of the court, and not by a selection of the patient, has made investigation into the patient’s physical or mental condition; provided, further, that any physician may be cross-examined upon the correctness of any certificate issued by him.”
Under article 478 of the Louisiana Code of Criminal Law and Procedure, the privilege of excluding a physician’s testimony is a purely personal right: it can be set up only by a person in whose favor the right exists. A privilege such as this is statutory and did not exist under the common law. Wigmore on Evidence, § 2380 et seq. Statutes changing common-law rules are generally subject to strict interpretation and may not be extended beyond the express purpose and scope of the statute. The only privilege embodied in the Civil Code of Louisiana, applicable to civil actions, has to do with communications from a client to his attorney. Article ’2283. No privilege appears in that Code with respect to communications to physicians. It is. not the function of courts, nor, indeed, is it in any way within the province of the judiciary, where local law is administered under two codes, a criminal and a civil, to transpose the provisions of the one to the other or to interchange the statutory principles they enunciate in the absence of express authority. We are inclined, therefore, to the view that the privilege in question is restricted to criminal proceedings. However, should it transpire that we are mistaken in this view, it is *185clearly beyond doubt that the privilege may not be exercised by the plaintiff in this case. He failed to establish himself in the stead of the person in whose favor the right existed, if it be found to be applicable to a civil action. We, therefore, conclude that the trial court did not err in overruling the objection and ordering the physician to testify.
There remains the question of whether the trial court erred in directing the verdict for the defendant. It is elementary that the direction of a verdict in a case such as this is an exercise of the trial judge’s discretion after weighing all the evidence and testing its quality, substance, and credibility. In the face of the evidence here, it would be straining at a gnat and swallowing a camel to admit a vestige of doubt in the conclusion that it would have been error to leave the matter to the jury. Dampf’s answers, in the application for the policy, to questions relating to his health, revealed that he represented that he had no disease of the kidneys, that he had never been told that he had sugar in his urine, that he had never had diabetes, and that he had not consulted with or been treated by any physician within the previous- five years.2 It is uncontradicted that the insured was told by his physician that he had sugar in his urine and that he had diabetes; that he was treated therefor over a period of weeks within a very short time before making his application for insurance. The evidence, therefore, leaves no room for doubt that he not only made false answers but that he knew the answers to be false.3 Since 'this testimony was uncontradicted, the question before us is whether Dampf’s false answers, in the light of the provisions of the policy and the law of Louisiana, will, as a matter of law, avoid the policy.
The policy provides: “This Policy and the application therefor, a copy of which *186is attached hereto as a part hereof, constitutes the entire contract between °the parties, and all statements made by the Insured shall, in the absence of fraud, be deemed representations and not warranties, and no statement shall avoid this Policy or be used in defense of a claim hereunder unless it is contained in the application therefor and a copy of such application is attached to this Policy when issued.”
Act No. 227 of 1916 provides that every policy of insurance issued by any life insurance corporation doing business in the State shall contain the entire contract between the parties and that nothing shall be incorporated therein by reference to any constitution, by-laws, rules, applications, or other writings, unless the same are endorsed upon or attached to the policy when it is issued; and that all statements purporting to be made by the insured shall in the absence of fraud be deemed representations and not warranties. Interpreting this act, the Supreme Court of Louisiana has held: (1) that questions in an application as to diseases or consultations, addressed to-an applicant for life insurance, are to be understood to refer to substantial or appreciable disorders, not to indispositions of a temporary character. Carroll v. Mutual Life Ins. Co., 168 La. 953, 123 So. 638; Cunningham v. Penn. Mutual Life Ins. Co., 152 La. 1023, 95 So. 110; Goff v. Mutual Life Ins. Co., 131 La. 98, 59 So. 28; Cole v. Mutual Life Ins. Co., 129 La. 704, 56 So. 645, Ann.Cas.1913B, 748; (2) that the defendant has the burden of proving fraud: Valesi v. Mutual Life Ins. Co., 151 La. 405, 91 So. 818; Mutual Life Ins. Co. v. Rachal, 184 La. 430, 166 So. 129; (3) that it is only when he sustains this burden that the statements become warranties, the falseness of which will avoid the policy, regardless of their materiality: Goff v. Mutual Life Ins. Co., supra; and (4) that in the absence of fraud, all statements are representations, and, in order to avoid the policy, the misrepresentations must be material to the risk. Goff v. Mutual Life Ins. Co., supra; Cunningham v. Penn. Mutual Life Ins. Co., supra; Valesi v. Mutual Life Ins. Co., supra; Mutual Life Ins. Co. v. Rachal, supra; and Carroll v. Mutual Life Ins. Co., supra. Whether false answers knowingly made are fraudulent, as a matter of law, we need not now decide. It is sufficient, if admitting the good faith of the insured, the evidence establishes misrepresentation of a material fact of such import that had the truth been revealed the policy would not have been issued. Assuming that the insured was not guilty of fraud but was acting in good faith, the decisive question is whether the representations were material to the risk. We think, as a matter of law, they were. It cannot reasonably be supposed that the insurance company would have issued the policy if it had been informed of Dr. Hirsch’s examinations, the tests he made, his diagnosis, and the treatment he prescribed and Dampf followed. Where all the testimony relating to. a question of fact excludes every reasonable inference but one, the issue becomes one of law for determination by. the Court. Lee v. All States Life Ins. Co., 49 Ga.App. 718, 176 S.E. 811, 813. The insured was shown to be a man of affairs, with fairly large business interests, and must have known that the purpose behind questions concerning his health and habits was to enable the defendant to determine whether it would issue the policy. The statement of the court in First Trust Co. of St. Paul v. Kansas City Life Ins. Co., 8 Cir., 79 F.2d 48, at page 54, is apposite: " * * * He could not have regarded a diabetic ailment as so trivial that an insurer would not want to know about it. The only possible rational explanation of his conduct is that he willfully made the false statements for the purposes of concealing the facts and of deceiving the insurer so that he might procure a policy which, if this truth were' known, might be refused. In this situation of fact the only question is one of law and that is easy of solution. The law is that where the insured, in his application, intentionally makes a false statment about a material matter, the policy may be avoided. * * * ” See also Lee v. New York Life Ins. Co., 144 La. 445, 80 So. 652, and Jefferson Standard Life Ins. Co. v. Stevenson, 5 Cir., 70 F.2d 72.
The argument that the misrepresentation was immaterial because the insured died from coronary thrombosis and not from diabetes, we think begs the ques*187tion. The real issue has to do with the circumstances under which the defendant assumed the risk, whether it would have assumed the risk it did assume had the truth with respect to Dampf’s health been made known to it. The cause of insured’s death is not important, because the insurer would have had the right to cancel the policy if insured were still living.
The trial court did not err in instructing the verdict.
The judgment appealed from is Affirmed.