Aetna Insurance Co. v. Moore, ante, p.
231 U. S. 543,
followed to effect that it was error not to charge the jury that a
statement made by an applicant for life insurance that he had never
been rejected by any company, association, or agent after he had
withdrawn an application on the advice of the medical adviser with
knowledge that the company for whom the examination was made would
reject him, is material and untruthful.
Where the policy itself expressly provides that it cannot be
varied by anyone except an officer of the company issuing it, the
company is
Page 231 U. S. 561
not estopped to contest the policy on the ground of
misrepresentation or concealment in the application because its
agent has knowledge of actual conditions.
The facts, which involve the validity of a verdict and judgment
on a policy of life insurance, are stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE McKENNA delivered the opinion of the Court.
Action upon a policy of insurance for $5,000, issued by
petitioner, herein called the insurance company, upon the life of
John Andrew Salgue. It was consolidated and tried with the case
against the Aetna Company, and resulted in a verdict for the amount
of the policy, upon which judgment was entered. It was affirmed by
the circuit court of appeals, and the case was then brought here.
Though consolidated in the district court with the other case, it
is here upon a separate record and submitted upon a separate
argument. It, however, involves some of the same fundamental
questions.
Salgue, in his application for insurance, declared and warranted
that he was in good health and that all the statements and answers
to the questions put to him were complete and true, and that the
declaration should constitute a part of the contract of insurance
applied for. He further agreed that the policy should not take
effect
Page 231 U. S. 562
until the same should be issued and delivered by the company
while his health was in the same condition as described in the
application.
Certain provisions were made part of the policy, among others,
that
"no agent has power in behalf of the company to make or modify
this or any contract of insurance, extending the time for paying a
premium, to waive any forfeiture, or to bind the company by making
any promise, or making or receiving any presentation or
information."
On the medical examination, he declared as follows: "I hereby
warrant that the answers to these questions are true and correct,
and that they shall form a part of the contract of insurance
applied for." The questions in the application and the answers
thereto were as follows:
"Has any company or association ever declined to grant insurance
on your life, or issue a policy of a different kind, or for a sum
less than that applied for?"
"Answer: 'No.'"
"If 'yes,' give name of company or companies and when."
"(No answer was given to this question.)"
"Is application for insurance on your life pending at this time
in any other company; if so, give the name of the company."
"Answer: 'Yes; Provident Savings Life.'"
"When were you last attended by a physician?"
"Answer: 'Early spring of 1905.'"
"For what complaint?"
"Answer: 'Bilious fever, two days.'"
"Have you ever had any serious illness?"
"Answer: 'No.'"
"Are you in good health?"
"Answer: 'Yes.'"
There was testimony in the case tending to show that these
answers were untrue; that he had chronic acid
Page 231 U. S. 563
gastritis and heart disease, and that other applications for
insurance were pending, and others not granted. And it is urged
that, the answers to the questions above stated being in the
negative, he omitted to answer other questions which were material
to be answered in order to make his statement complete and
truthful; that therefore his omission to answer amounted to a
fraudulent concealment.
Error is assigned on the ruling of the court refusing to direct
a verdict for the insurance company and refusing certain special
instructions.
The policy is conceded to be a Georgia contract, and it is
contended that the warranties contained in the application were all
material to the risk, and that they were all broken (1) because the
evidence showed that the answers to the questions were false,
thereby avoiding the policy; (2) the policy was not delivered to
Salgue while he was in good health, that being a condition
precedent to its taking effect, and (3) the policy was void by
reason of incomplete and untruthful answers. This, it is urged, is
the effect of the Georgia law, which, while it modifies the
imperative character of statements by an applicant for insurance as
warranties, yet provides that any variation from the facts stated
"by which the nature or extent or character of the risk is changed
will void the policy." Code of Georgia, § 2479.
The insurance company, therefore, to sustain its contention that
a verdict should have been directed for it, must establish that the
representations were material to the risk and that they were
untrue. Whether they were untrue is a question of fact, and as the
proposition of law which the insurance company relies upon is
exhibited by the special request, we shall pass to the
consideration of the latter. It presents the question of the
materiality of Salgue's statements to the risk as one of law. The
court submitted it to the jury as a question of fact, and
Page 231 U. S. 564
made as elements of decision Salgue's motive, his good or bad
faith, his mistake or fraud in making the representations. This, we
think, is the sense conveyed by the charge of the court, as we said
in
Aetna Life Ins. Co. v. Moore, just decided,
notwithstanding there are here and there qualifying words and a
distinction made between misrepresentation of facts and the
concealment of them. A few excerpts from the charge will illustrate
this. After defining a warranty, the court said:
"On the other hand, representations are statements made to give
information to the insurer, and otherwise induce it to enter into
the insurance contract, and unless
distinctly material, and
made with fraudulent purpose (italics ours) do not avoid the
policy. . . . Substantial integrity of conduct on the part of both
insurer and insured is the prime object the law seeks to obtain. .
. . The law of Georgia, while requiring that every application for
insurance must be made in the utmost good faith, and that
representations are considered as covenanted to be true, otherwise
the policy will be voided, also provides that a failure to state a
material fact, if not done fraudulently, does not void the policy.
On the other hand, the willful and fraudulent concealment of such a
fact which would enhance the risk of the company will have the
effect to void it. What is here stated to be true of willful
concealment is also true of willful misrepresentation by the
applicant to his agent as to any material inquiry made. It follows
that, under the law of Georgia, a misrepresentation in statement or
a concealment of fact must first be material, or must be willfully
or fraudulently made in order to annul the insurance."
After further explanation, the court said:
"These are the general principles. To make them distinctly
applicable to your duty, you are instructed that you must determine
from all the facts, first, did Salgue make a misrepresentation or
concealment of a fact of
Page 231 U. S. 565
which he had knowledge? If he did not, the defense on this point
must fail. Second, if he did, was such misrepresentation or
concealment so material that it would have influenced one or both
of the defendants not to issue the policy of insurance upon the
respective applications? And, third, in connection with this your
inquiry will be, if such material misrepresentation or concealment
as would have caused the defendants or either of them to withhold
insurance was made, was it by Salgue willfully or fraudulently
done? In the absence of willful or fraudulent misrepresentation or
concealment of a material fact, the policy stands good and the
insurance company must pay what it promised to pay by its policy
when it accepted the premium of the applicant."
This being the charge of the court, wherein did it militate
against the special request, which is as follows:
"The defendant, The Prudential Insurance Company of America,
requests the court to charge as follows:"
"Question 4-B of the application of said John A. Salgue to the
said the Prudential Insurance Company of America is as follows:
"Has any company or association ever declined to grant insurance on
your life, or issued a policy of a different kind, or for a sum
less than that applied for? (Answer
Yes' or `No.')" The answer
to this question is "No.""
"The defendant insists that this answer is false, and says that
the said Salgue, in the month of June, 1905, prior to the time of
making this application, applied to the Penn Mutual Life Insurance
Company for a policy, and was declined. If you believe from the
evidence that the said Salgue made application to Anderson Clark,
the agent for the Penn Mutual Life Insurance Company, for
insurance, and that this application was signed by the said Salgue,
and that this application was handed by the said Anderson Clark, as
agent for the Penn Mutual Insurance Company, to Dr. Little,
examiner for the said
Page 231 U. S. 566
Penn Mutual Company, for examination, and that Dr. Little, as
said examiner, examined the said Salgue, and stated to the said
Salgue that he had heart trouble, and that for this reason he could
not pass him, then I charge you that this would amount to a
declination by the Penn Mutual Life Insurance Company of the
application for insurance made to it by the said Salgue, and if you
believe from the evidence that such application was made and that
such declination was made, then I charge you that the answer of
Salgue to this question was false, and that it was warranted to be
true, and that it was as to a material matter which would tend to
change the nature, extent, and character of the risk assumed, and
that in this event plaintiff could not recover."
It is contended that the instruction was "legal and pertinent"
to the issue, and was not incorporated in the charge of the court.
The court, we have seen, did not incorporate the instruction in its
charge, and that the instruction was legal and pertinent to the
issue between the parties is shown by the opinion in the
Aetna case.
The instruction based on the facts stated was peremptory of the
right of the insurance company to recover. But respondent contends
that the requirement was either void, or that the agent of the
company wrote down and reported the answer, knowing the facts, and
therefore the company is estopped to dispute the correctness of the
answer or its completeness. There was testimony in the case upon
which the contention could be based. But the case was not submitted
to the jury in that view. This phase of the case, as its other
phases, was made to turn upon the good faith of Salgue, not upon
the materiality of the fact or the action of the agent of the
insurance company. The court stated to the jury that the contention
of the insurance company was that the transaction with the Penn
Mutual showed a rejection of Salgue's application
Page 231 U. S. 567
by that company, "to be determined by the court as a matter of
law." With the contention the court said it was unable to agree,
"and leaves the question to the jury, it being a mixed question of
law and fact."
The testimony in regard to the application to the Penn Mutual is
the same as in the
Aetna case. We need not repeat it. It
may be that it cannot be literally said that any company or
association had rejected an application by Salgue. If that had been
the question, and regarding sense, rather than form, it could be
contended that the answer was untruthful. But the question asked
Salgue was broader. He was asked "if any company or association
ever declined to grant insurance" on his life, and the further
question was put: "If so, give the name of the company or
companies," to which he gave no answer. He was also asked, "Is
application for life insurance on your life pending at this time in
any other company; if so, give the name of the company?" To the
latter question he answered, "Yes; Provident Savings Life." At that
time, he had an application pending with the Sun Life Insurance
Company of Canada. The answers were therefore not true, and we
think that they were material to the risk within the meaning of the
Georgia Code.
The Aetna Insurance Company v. Moore, ante,
p.
231 U. S.
544.
It is contended here, as in the
Aetna case, that the
company is estopped by the knowledge of the agent, and the same
cases are cited as were cited there. We answer here, as we answered
there, that the terms of the policy constituted the contract of the
parties and precluded a variation of them by the agent. We may,
however, observe that Salgue did not inform the medical examiner in
this case, as he did in the
Aetna case, that he was told
he had heart disease. In other words, he made no communication to
the examiner which modified in any way the positive character of
his answers to the questions put to him. The testimony is
conflicting as to the information
Page 231 U. S. 568
he gave to the agent of the company, who, the evidence shows,
prepared the application.
We think, therefore, that the court erred in refusing the
special request.
It is also contended, as it was in the
Aetna case, that
the district court erred in consolidating the causes, and it must
be admitted that petitioner here has more ground of complaint of
the ruling than the Aetna Company. We are, however, not required to
pass upon the contention, though, as we said in the other case,
there are grounds for it.
Judgment reversed and cause remanded to the district court
for a new trial.
MR. JUSTICE PITNEY dissents.