Thе plaintiff has brought this action to cancel and rescind its $20,000 policy of insurance on the life of the defendant, upon the grоund that it had been procured by the defendant’s fraudulent concealment of a fact material to the risk.
The appliсation for the insurance, signed on August 5, 1941, called for an answer to the following question: “ 19. Has any
On September 10, 1941, the defendant applied to the Metrоpolitan Life Insurance Company for another policy on his life, in the amount of $62,790, and was examined for it by its physicians two days later. On September 17, 1941, that company, acting through its medical director, notified the defendant by letter that his medical examination disclosed conditions which were not altogether normal, but which might be temporary, and suggested that if he would furnish it "with the name and address of his personal physician it would forward its findings to him to enable the defendant to benefit by his advice or treatment. Follоwing this suggestion the defendant thereupon not only forwarded the desired information to that company, but had his physician write to it оn the subject. All those transactions with the Metropolitan Life Insurance Company were had before the effective dаte of the policy issued by the plaintiff, but they were never communicated to it by the defendant.
It is a familiar proposition of the law of contracts that, where representations are made for the purpose of inducing another to entеr into a contract, they continue to stand down to the time when negotiations are closed and speak as of the timе when the contract is consummated and the minds of the parties meet. (Goldstein v. New York Life Ins. Co.,
Proof was tendered upon the trial of this action to establish that the disclosure of the rejection or postponement of insurance by the Metropolitan Life Insurance Company would have led the plaintiff to declinе the defendant’s contract. That established the misrepresentation as a material one. (Insurance Law, § 149, subd. 2.) Even without that рroof it is reasonably inferable that rejection or postponement of insurance for physical infirmity by one insurer would have a great influence upon the willingness of another insurer to assume the risk. Such action by the one, coming to the knowledge of the applicant before the contract was finally consummated, imposed a duty upon him to disclose it to the оther, and his intentional failure to do so constituted a fraudulent concealment which will warrant an avoidance of the сontract. (Equitable Life Assur. Soc. v. McElroy,
The facts in this case are distinguishable from those in Armand v. Metropolitan Life Ins. Co. (
Judgment is directed for the plaintiff as prayed for, without costs. Settle decision and judgment.
