1. An applicant for life insurance who, after signing the
application and before delivery of the policy, discovers a change
in his physical condition seriously affecting his health and
rendering statements in his application which are material to the
risk no longer true is under a duty to inform the insurer fully,
and his failure to do so will constitute a defense to an action on
the policy. So
held where the ailment so discovered was
the cause of the death of the insured. P.
277 U. S.
316.
2. This duty does not rest upon the stipulations of the parties,
but is one imposed by law as the result of their relationship and
because of the peculiar character of the insurance contract as a
contract
uberrimae dei. Pp.
277 U. S.
316-318.
3. A state statute providing that
"any person who shall solicit and procure an application for
life insurance shall, in all matters relating to such application
for insurance and the policy issued in consequence thereof, be
regarded as the agent of the company issuing the policy, and not
the agent of the insured,"
and avoiding all provisions in the application or policy to the
contrary, controls policies issued after its enactment and empowers
the agent to receive from the applicant, on behalf of the company,
a disclosure of a change in the applicant's health occurring after
the making of the application and affecting the validity of the
insurance if not disclosed. P.
277 U. S.
320.
4. Under such a statute, a clause printed in a life insurance
application, embodied in the policy, denying the authority of the
soliciting and forwarding agent to vary the terms of the contract,
waive conditions, or receive information sought by questions in the
application other than that embodied in it --
held
inapplicable to receipt of information from the applicant as to a
change in his health after the making and forwarding of the
application and before delivery of the policy. P.
277 U. S.
321.
Page 277 U. S. 312
5. A provision in a life insuance application that any knowledge
on the part of any agent as to any fact pertaining to the applicant
shall not be considered as having been brougt to the knowledge of
the company unless stated in the application should not be
construed as applying to knowledge affecting the risk which insured
acquired and communicated to the company's agent after the
application was signed and delivered to the agent and sent to the
company's home office in another state. P.
277 U. S.
321.
6. Narrow and unreasonable interpretations of clauses in an
insurance policy are not favored. When open with equal reason to
two constructions, the one most favorable to the insured will be
adopted. P.
277 U. S.
322.
7. A defense set up in all answer, but not considered in the
court below nor pressed n this one, and which depends on testimony
ambiguous in character or excluded upon the trial, will not be
passed upon by this Court.
Id.
Reversed.
Review of a judgment of the district court for the insurance
company in a suit on a life insurance policy. The case went to the
circuit court of appeals and was ordered up here in its entirety
after that court had certified certain questions concerning it.
Page 277 U. S. 314
MR. JUSTICE STONE delivered the opinion of the Court.
The plaintiff brought this action in the Circuit Court for
Clatsop County, Oregon, as beneficiary of a policy by which the
defendant had insured the life of her husband, Anton Stipcich. The
case was removed for diversity of citizenship to the United States
District Court for Oregon. The company defended principally on the
ground that
Page 277 U. S. 315
Stipcich, after applying for the insurance and before the
delivery of the policy and payment of the first premium, had
suffered a recurrence of a duodenal ulcer which later caused his
death, and that he failed to reveal this information to the
company.
It was shown on the trial by uncontradicted evidence that, after
his application, Stipcich consulted two physicians, and that they
told him that an operation for the removal of the ulcer was
necessary. Plaintiff then made tender of evidence to the effect
that Stipcich had communicated this information to Coblentz, the
defendant's agent who had solicited the policy, and that the visit
to the second doctor was made at Coblentz' request to confirm the
diagnosis of the first.
The proffered evidence was excluded, and, at the close of the
whole case, and over plaintiff's objection, the court directed a
verdict for the defendant, stating that it did so because Stipcich
was under a duty to inform the defendant of his knowledge of the
serious ailment of which he had learned after making application
for insurance, and that he had failed in that duty since his
communication of the facts to Coblentz did not amount to notice of
them to the insurance company. The case was taken on writ of error
to the Circuit Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit. That court
certified to this certain questions of law presented by the case.
Judicial Code, § 239. Without answering, we ordered the entire
record to be sent up, and the case is here as though on writ of
error.
An insurer may, of course, assume the risk of such changes in
the insured's health as may occur between the date of application
and the date of the issuance of a policy. Where the parties
contract exclusively on the basis of conditions as they existed at
the date of the application, the failure of the insured to divulge
any later known changes in health may well not affect the policy.
Mutual Ben. Life Insurance Co. v. Higginbotham,
95 U. S. 380.
See New York
Page 277 U. S. 316
Life Insurance Co. v. Moats, 207 F. 481;
Grier v.
Insurance Co., 132 N.C. 542.
Compare Gardner v. North
state Mutual Life Insurance Co., 163 N.C. 367. But there is no
contention here that the parties contracted exclusively on the
basis of conditions at the time of the application. Here, both by
the terms of the application and familiar rules governing the
formation of contracts no contract came into existence until the
delivery of the policy, and, at that time, the insured had learned
of conditions gravely affecting his health, unknown at the time of
making his application.
Insurance policies are traditionally contracts
uberrimae
fidei, and a failure by the insured to disclose conditions
affecting the risk, of which he is aware, makes the contract
voidable at the insurer's option.
Carter v. Boehm, 3
Burrows, 1905;
Livingston v. Maryland
Insurance Co., 6 Cranch 274;
McLanahan
v. Universal Insurance Co., 1 Pet. 170;
Phoenix
Life Insurance Co. v. Raddin, 120 U.
S. 183,
120 U. S. 189;
Hardman v. Firemen's Insurance Co., 20 F. 594.
Concededly, the modern practice of requiring the applicant for
life insurance to answer questions prepared by the insurer has
relaxed this rule to some extent, since information not asked for
is presumably deemed immaterial.
Penn Mutual Life Insurance Co.
v. Mechanics' Savings Bank & Trust Co., 72 F. 413,
435-441.
See Clark v. Manufacturers'
Insurance Co., 8 How. 235,
49 U. S.
248-249.
Compare Phoenix Life Insurance Co. v.
Raddin, 120 U. S. 183,
120 U. S.
190.
But the reason for the rule still obtains, and with added force
as to changes materially affecting the risk which come to the
knowledge of the insured after the application and before delivery
of the policy. For even the most unsophisticated person must know
that, in answering the questionnaire and submitting it to the
insurer, he is furnishing the data on the basis of which the
company
Page 277 U. S. 317
will decide whether, by issuing a policy, it wishes to insure
him. If, while the company deliberates, he discovers facts which
make portions of his application no longer true, the most
elementary spirit of fair dealing would seem to require him to make
a full disclosure. [
Footnote 1]
If he fails to do so, the company may, despite its acceptance of
the application, decline to issue a policy,
Canning v.
Farquhar, 16 Q.B.D. 727;
McKenzie v. Northwestern Mutual
Life Insurance Co., 26 Ga.App. 225; or, if a policy has been
issued, it has a valid defense to a suit upon it,
Equitable
Life Assurance Society v. McElroy, 83 F. 631, 636, 637.
Compare Traill v. Baring, 4 De G., J. & S. 318;
Allis-Chalmers Co. v. Fidelity & Deposit Co. of
Page 277 U. S. 318
Maryland, 114 L.T. 433.
Compare Piedmont &
Arlington Life Insurance Co. v. Ewing, 92 U. S.
377.
This generally recognized rule, in the absence of authoritative
local decision, we take to be the law of Oregon. Its application
here is not affected by Oregon Laws, § 6426(1)(c), which
provides that the policy shall set forth the entire contract
between the parties. The defendant, in insisting that Stipcich was
under an obligation to disclose his discovery to it, is not
attempting to add another term to the contract. The obligation was
not one stipulated for by the parties, but is one imposed by law as
a result of the relationship assumed by them and because of the
peculiar character of the insurance contract. The necessity for
complying with it is not dispensed with by the failure of the
insurer to stipulate in the policy for such disclosure.
The evidence proffered and rejected tended to show that the
insured, in good faith, made the required disclosure to Coblentz,
who, for some purposes, admittedly represented the defendant. If he
represented it for this purpose, the evidence should have been
received. Coblentz was the licensed agent of respondent under
Oregon Laws, § 6425, which provides that every life insurance
company doing business in the state
"shall give written notice to the insurance commissioner of the
name and residence of, and obtain from him a license for every
person appointed by it to act as its agent within this state, which
license shall state, in substance, that the company is authorized
to do business in this state and that the person named therein is
constituted an agent of the company for the transaction of business
in this state. . . ."
The insured knew no other agent of defendant, and dealt with
Coblentz alone. So far as appears, no other person or agency was
designated under the statute or held out by the defendant as
representing it in connection with
Page 277 U. S. 319
Stipcich's application for insurance or the delivery of the
policy or as the appropriate person or agency to receive
information concerning either of them. The insured delivered the
application to Coblentz, and later paid to him the first premium,
receiving in return the policy and a receipt executed by Coblentz
in defendant's name. In communicating to him the information as to
his changed condition of health, Stipcich acted only in what must
have appeared to him the most natural and obvious way to supplement
the information already given in his written application.
Defendant relies on the established rule, here expressed, in
part at least, in the printed clause of the application,
incorporated in the policy and printed in the margin, [
Footnote 2] that the authority of a
soliciting agent to receive the application and transmit it to the
company and to deliver the policy when issued, does not include
power to vary the terms of the contract, to waive conditions, or to
receive information sought by questions in the application other
than that embodied in it. But Coblentz, when the insured
communicated the information to him, did not purport to vary any
term or waive any condition of the proposed insurance contract; he
did not acquiesce in a variation of the application, nor in
connection with the preparation of the written application did he
receive any information not written into it. The insured merely
communicated information, supplementing the application, to the
designated agent of the company for the transaction of business in
the state, as the most natural and appropriate channel of
communication to the company.
Page 277 U. S. 320
In insisting that it was entitled to information of the
insured's change of health after the application, but that such
information could not be effectively communicated to its agent to
receive the application and transact business with insured
preliminary to the acceptance of the risk, defendant is not aided
by the stipulations of the policy, and any doubts as to the agent's
implied authority to receive it must be resolved in the light of
the Oregon statutes. Oregon Laws, § 6435, reads as
follows:
"Any person who shall solicit and procure an application for
life insurance shall, in all matters relating to such application
for insurance and the policy issued in consequence thereof, be
regarded as the agent of the company issuing the policy, and not
the agent of the insured, and all provisions in the application and
policy to the contrary are void and of no effect whatever."
Provisions of this character are controlling when inconsistent
with the terms of a policy issued after their enactment.
National Union Fire Insurance Co. v. Wanberg, 260 U. S.
71;
Continental Life Insurance Co. v.
Chamberlain, 132 U. S. 304;
Whitfield v. Aetna Life Insurance Co., 205 U.
S. 489. Here, the statute does more than provide that
the soliciting agent in matters relating to the application and
policy does not represent the insured. In connection with those
matters, it makes him the agent of the company, a phrase which
would be meaningless unless the statute, when applied to the facts
of the case, indicated in what respects he represented the company.
Here, the statute in terms defines the scope of his agency to the
extent that he is stated to represent the company "in all matters
relating to such application for insurance and the policy issued in
consequence" of it. We need not inquire what are the outer limits
of that authority, but we think this language plainly makes him the
representative of the company in connection with all those matters
which, in the usual
Page 277 U. S. 321
course of effecting insurance, are incidental to the application
and the delivery of the policy.
Within the requirements of the statute, the company may provide
by stipulations in the application or other appropriate notice for
a suitable method of giving the information, by writing, in a
supplemental application or otherwise, or may stipulate, as is not
unusual, that the insurance shall not attach on delivery of the
policy unless the insured is in good health. To say that, under
this statute, the company's agent to solicit and receive the
application and deliver the policy is not its agent also to receive
disclosures which supplement the application and which vitally
affect the validity of the insurance if not disclosed is to
disregard its language and ignore the obvious purpose of such
legislation to require the company to provide some agency within
the state with which the insured may safely deal in matters
relating to his application.
See Continental Life Insurance Co.
v. Chamberlain, supra.
Much reliance is placed by respondent on
Mutual Life
Insurance Co. v. Hilton-Green, 241 U.
S. 613, where a somewhat similar statute was involved.
But there, answers known by the insured and the agent to be false
were written into the signed application by the agent. Such
fraudulent representations, known and participated in by the
insured, obviously could not have estopped the company, but there
is nothing in the present case to suggest that the insured was a
party to or intended any concealment from the company.
The defendant also argues that it is not affected by the
disclosures to the agent because the application provided:
"That any statement made to or by, or any knowledge on the part
of, any agent, medical examiner, or any other person as to any
facts pertaining to the applicant shall not be considered as having
been made to or brought to the
Page 277 U. S. 322
knowledge of the company unless stated in either part A or B of
this application."
But when Stipcich learned of his condition and told Coblentz
about it, neither of them had possession of the application. That
had been filled out and sent to the home office of respondent in
New York, and disclosure "in either part A or B of this
application" of a fact which did not occur until after the
application was completed was obviously impossible. It is said that
compliance with this provision, even though impossible, was a
condition precedent to the securing of insurance. But narrow and
unreasonable interpretations of clauses in an insurance policy are
not favored. They are prepared by the insurer, and if, with equal
reason, open to two constructions, that most favorable to the
insured will be adopted.
Mutual Insurance Co. v. Hurni
Co., 263 U. S. 167,
263 U. S. 174;
Thompson v. Phenix Insurance Co., 136 U.
S. 287;
American Surety Co. v. Pauly,
170 U. S. 133,
170 U. S. 144.
The clause must therefore be taken to apply to information given or
available when the application was prepared, and as inapplicable to
knowledge affecting the risk which insured acquired and
communicated after the application was signed and delivered to the
company's agent.
The only questions certified by the circuit court of appeals,
and the only questions pressed upon us here, involve the
correctness of the rulings of the trial court to which we have
alluded. But the respondent's answer sets up that certain answers
given in the written application as to the insured's recovery from
his earlier illness, its recurrence, and with respect to
consultation of physicians, were false and known by him to be false
when he signed the application. It is now suggested that Stipcich,
in his application, made a positive misrepresentation regarding a
visit to a physician the day before he applied for insurance. If
that were clearly established we would consider it necessary
Page 277 U. S. 323
to affirm the judgment below although we think the rulings on
which it was based erroneous. But the particular questions and
portions of the record relied on, in the light of the medical
testimony, are not free from ambiguity. The point is not elaborated
in the briefs of either party, and was not pressed upon us on the
argument. At no time in the entire course of the litigation does
the effect of the answers appear to have received any consideration
independently of the supposed failure to make sufficient disclosure
to the company of knowledge acquired by the insured after the
application. Nor, in the absence of the testimony as to the
disclosure made to Coblentz, are we able to say what its bearing
may be on the alleged misstatements in the application. Under such
circumstances, we must decline to pass upon this defense.
Compare Southeastern Express Co. v. Robertson,
264 U. S. 541;
Ewing v.
Howard, 7 Wall. 499,
74 U. S. 503.
The truthfulness of the answers and their effect will be open for
consideration on the new trial.
Reversed.
[
Footnote 1]
The rule that changes in conditions material to the risk which
occur between the opening of negotiations for insurance and the
issuance of a policy must be divulged became first established in
early British marine insurance.
Grieve v. Young (Ct. of
Session, 1782); Millar, Elements of the Law Relating to Insurances,
p. 65;
Fitzherbert v. Mather, 1 T. R. 12. Its adoption
here followed as cases presenting the question arose.
McLanahan v. Universal
Insurance Co., 1 Pet. 170;
Watson v.
Delafield, 2 Caines (N.Y.) 224; 1 Johns. (N.Y.) 150; 2 Johns.
(N.Y.) 526;
Andrews v. Marine Insurance Co., 9 Johns.
(N.Y.) 32;
Green v. Merchants' Insurance Co., 10 Pick.
(Mass.) 402;
Neptune Insurance Co. v. Robinson, 11 Gill
& J. (Md.) 256;
Snow v. Mercantile Mutual Insurance
Co., 61 N.Y. 160. When written applications began to be used
by life insurance companies, the rule was invoked as to occurrences
after an application had been submitted.
Whitley v. Piedmont
& Arlington Life Insurance Co., 71 N.C. 480;
Thompson
v. Travelers' Insurance Co., 13 N.D. 444, 453;
Cable v.
United States Life Insurance Co., 111 F. 19;
Equitable
Life Assurance Society v. McElroy, 83 F. 631;
but see
Merriman v. Grand Lodge Degree of Honor, 77 Neb. 544;
Ames
v. New York Life Insurance Co., 154 Minn. 111. The result is
often explained by saying that a statement in the application is a
"continuing representation," or "is made as of the time of the
delivery of the policy."
In re Arbitration between Marshall and
Scottish Employers' Liability & General Insurance Co.,
Ltd., 85 L.T. 757;
Canning v. Farquhar, supra; Blumer v.
Phoenix Insurance Co., 45 Wis. 622;
Equitable Life
Assurance Society v. McElroy, supra; Cable v. United States Life
Insurance Society, supra.
[
Footnote 2]
"2. That no agent, medical examiner, or any other person except
the officers at the home office of the company, have power on
behalf of the company (a) to make, modify or discharge any contract
of insurance; (b) to bind the company by making any promises
respecting any benefits under any policy issued hereunder."