123 A. 220 | N.H. | 1923
The exceptions to the denial of the defendant's motions for a nonsuit and a directed verdict, and to the charge, present the same question. The evidence fully warranted the finding of the jury that the plaintiff and the assured correctly stated *179 the true facts to the agent, and that he wrote false answers in the application and falsely interpreted to the medical examiner. The question, therefore, for consideration is whether the defendant under such circumstances is liable.
Section 1, chapter 109, of the Laws of 1907 provides that "Any person who shall solicit an application for insurance upon the life of another shall, in any controversy between the assured, or his beneficiary, and the company issuing any policy upon such application, be regarded as the agent of the company and not the agent of the assured." It is clear that when the agent was engaged in writing in the application false answers, and was falsely interpreting to the medical examiner, he was the agent of the defendant. In performing these acts which were within the scope of his employment, he was the representative of the company. His act was its act, and his knowledge was its knowledge. The policy was written by the defendant with full knowledge of the physical condition of the assured, and it is a valid contract untouched by any fraud of the plaintiff or the assured, upon which the defendant is liable. To hold that the plaintiff cannot collect this policy of insurance, which was obtained through no dishonesty on his part or that of the assured, but was written by reason of the fraudulent conduct of the defendant's own agent, would fall far short of meeting the demands of justice. It was the fault of the company that this dishonest man was made its agent with authority to solicit insurance of the plaintiff and the assured, and the defendant and not the plaintiff, who has done no wrong, must suffer on account of his fraudulent conduct. "There being no fraud imputed to the plaintiff, the defendants were chargeable with their agent's knowledge of the situation and were bound by his acts. The policies issued through his instrumentality were valid and subsisting contracts as against the company and in favor of the assured, who innocently relied upon the agent's representations." Delouche v. Insurance Co.,
The defendant cites New York Life Ins. Co. v. Fletcher,
In a later case in the same court, Continental Life Ins. Co. v. Chamberlain,
The policy contains a provision that "all statements made by the Insured shall, in the absence of fraud, be deemed representations and not warranties." It has been held that life insurance policies containing such a provision "are contestable only for willful misrepresentation." American Bankers' Ins. Co. v. Hopkins,
Chief Justice Shaw in Daniels v. Insurance Company, 12. Cush. 416, defines the difference between a warranty and a representation. "If any statement of fact, however unimportant it may have been regarded by both parties to the contract, is a warranty, and it happens to be untrue, it avoids the policy; if it be construed a representation, and is untrue, it does not avoid the contract if not wilful, or if not material." This case is cited and relied upon in Clark v. Insurance Co.,
Suravitz v. Insurance Co., 244 Pa. St. 582, is an action on a life insurance policy containing a provision that all statements of the assured are to be deemed representations and not warranties. The contention in that case was that the agent wrote down the answers of the assured in the application incorrectly. The court in the opinion said: "What purpose had the contracting parties in mind when they wrote into their covenant that such statements would be deemed representations only? Was this a mere subterfuge, a change in terms without a change in meaning, or was the change intended to serve a more definite purpose by affording relief to those applicants who in good faith answered the interrogatories asked them by the agent of the insurance company who negligently, intentionally or fraudulently wrote down the answers incorrectly? In our opinion the change in the covenant from a warranty to a representation was intended to broaden the scope of inquiry in such cases so as to give relief to parties who in good faith take out policies of insurance, from the harshness, and in many instances the injustice, of the old rule applicable to warranties. If this be the correct view, and it is certainly the just and equitable one, we can see no reason for limiting the inquiry to the single question of the materiality of the answer. Whether true answers were made and *182 whether the answers as made were correctly written down by the agent of the insurance company, and the good faith of the party making the answers to the best of his knowledge and belief, are questions which go to the very essence of the insurance risk, and parties should not be denied the right to have such matters determined before a proper tribunal unless they have covenanted otherwise."
The following statement of the court in this case has special application to the present case: "The deceased was a Hungarian with a very imperfect knowledge of the English language. At the time of making her answers she spoke through an interpreter and there is no evidence that she either did or could read the policy or the application. In such a case a greater burden rests upon the insurer to deal fairly with the insured. This is especially true as to the acts of the agent in soliciting the insurance and writing down the answers."
In order to invalidate a life insurance policy containing a provision that all statements made by the assured shall, in the absence of fraud, be deemed representations and not warranties, upon the ground of misrepresentations on the part of the assured, it must appear that the representations made by the assured were false and fraudulent as well as material to the risk. The evidence warrants the conclusion that no false or fraudulent statements were made by the plaintiff or the assured to obtain the insurance, and therefore the defendant is liable.
Exceptions overruled.
All concurred. *183