Julien and Norma Pinette (the “Pinettes”) brought this diversity action against Assurance Company of America (“Assurance”) seeking payment under a homeowners insurance policy after their house was completely destroyed by fire. Plaintiffs appeal from an order of the United States District Court for the District of Connecticut (Alfred V. Covel-lo, Judge) granting summary judgment on the defendant’s counterclaim for rescission of the policy due to plaintiffs’ material misrepresentation in the insurance application as to their prior loss history. On appeal, plaintiffs contend that they did not make a misrepresentation since the insurance agent filled in the information regarding loss history and Julien Pinette signed the application without reading it; that any misrepresentation they may have made was not material as a matter of law; and, finally, that because any misrepresentation was made not to defendant but to defendant’s parent corporation, it cannot be used by defendant to avoid the contract.
For the reasons that follow, we affirm the judgment of the district court.
BACKGROUND
In early August, 1990, plaintiff Julien Pi-nette contacted Stephen Cooper, an insurance agent with North American Underwriters of Bloomfield, Connecticut, to obtain fire
On August 10, 1990, Pinette and Cooper met in Cooper’s office and discussed the policy further. Cooper then presented Pinette with a completed application and asked him to sign it. In the space marked “Company/Plan,” Cooper had written “Maryland Casualty/Pref,” referring to a policy with preferred rates offered by the Maryland Casualty Company (“Maryland Casualty”). Pinette signed the application and gave Cooper a check made out to Maryland Casualty for the first year’s premium.
The application filled out by Cooper and signed by Pinette contained two incorrect responses. In the section labelled “loss history” the word “none” was written. In fact, the home that the Pinettes were seeking to insure had been rebuilt after it had been destroyed by fire in May of 1988. In response to question 9, which asked if “[a]ny insurance [had been] declined, cancelled, or non-renewed” in the last three years, the box below the answer “no” was marked. In July of 1990, however, a previous insurance policy of the Pinettes had been cancelled on the ground that their loss history prevented them from meeting that company’s underwriting standards.
Shortly thereafter, Pinette received a copy of the policy, which covered the period from August 25, 1990 through August 25, 1991. The policy was issued by the defendant Assurance, a wholly owned subsidiary of Maryland Casualty.
On December 27, 1990, the Pinettes’ home was again completely destroyed by fire. A few days later, Maryland Casualty advanced the Pinettes $20,000 for emergency living expenses. It denied further coverage for the fire, however, on the ground that the two incorrect answers on the Pinettes’ application constituted material misrepresentations that rendered the contract voidable.
Plaintiffs initially sued Maryland Casualty in Connecticut Superior Court on October 29, 1991. Maryland Casualty later removed the case to the United States District Court for the District of Connecticut and substituted its subsidiary, Assurance, as the proper defendant. In its answer, Assurance counterclaimed for rescission based on plaintiffs’ material misrepresentations. Thereafter both sides moved for summary judgment. On April 13,1994, the district court denied plaintiffs’ motion for summary judgment and granted summary judgment in favor of defendant. Plaintiffs appealed.
DISCUSSION
Under Connecticut law, an insurance policy may be voided by the insurer if the applicant made “[m]aterial representations ..., relied on by the company, which were untrue and known by the assured to be untrue when made.”
State Bank & Trust Co. v. Connecticut Gen. Life Ins. Co.,
Plaintiffs raise three principal arguments on appeal: first, that because the insurance agent put the incorrect information in the application without plaintiffs’ knowledge, plaintiffs did not make a “knowing” misrepresentation; second, that any misrepresentations made were not material; and finally, that Assurance cannot obtain rescission for a material misrepresentation made to its parent, Maryland Casualty. If any of these arguments raises a genuine issue of material fact, summary judgment for defendant should not have been granted.
See
Fed. R.Civ.P. 56(e);
Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc.,
I. “Knowing Misrepresentation”
For a material misrepresentation to render a contract voidable under Connecticut law, the misrepresenting party must know that he is making a false statement. “Innocent” misrepresentations — those made because of ignorance, mistake, or negligence—
When Connecticut courts speak of “innocent” misrepresentations, they generally have in mind the situation in which the applicant does not know that the information he is providing is false.
See, e.g., Middlesex Mut.,
Under Connecticut law, however, a person may not claim that a misrepresentation is “innocent” solely because the person failed to read the application before signing it. “The law requires that the insured shall not only, in good faith, answer all the interrogatories correctly, but shall use reasonable diligence to see that the answers are correctly written.”
Ryan v. World Mut. Life Ins. Co.,
This rule was followed in
Kelly v. John Hancock Mutual Life Ins. Co.,
There is an exception to this rule in Connecticut if the insurance agent induces the applicant to sign the application without reading it.
See Lewis v. John Hancock Mut. Life Ins. Co.,
The record in this case is bare of any allegations of active inducement on the part of Cooper. In fact, plaintiffs admit that Ju-lien Pinette’s failure to review the application was due to his own “carelessness.” Under these circumstances, the district court correctly held that plaintiffs made a knowing misrepresentation as to their loss history.
II. Materiality
Plaintiffs next contend that the district court erred in finding their misrepresentations material because Assurance has not shown that it would have denied them coverage had it known of their prior loss history. We disagree.
Under Connecticut law, a misrepresentation is material “when, in the judgment of reasonably careful and intelligent persons, it would so increase the degree or character of the risk of the insurance as to substantially influence its issuance, or substantially affect the rate of premium.”
Davis Scofield Co. v. Agricultural Ins. Co.,
Common sense tells us that an applicant’s prior loss history is material to a reasonable insurance company’s decision whether to insure that applicant or determination of the premium. Connecticut courts have evaluated similar misrepresentations and found them material as a matter of Connecticut law.
See, e.g., Lazar,
Assurance also submitted ample evidence that loss history plays a critical role in its own decision whether to provide insurance. The guidelines for its preferred policy state that an applicant that has suffered any loss within the previous three years (aside from one “Act of Nature” loss) should be denied coverage. In addition, Maryland Casualty’s Underwriting Manager submitted an affidavit stating that Assurance would have turned the plaintiffs down had they known of the earlier fire loss. This uneontradicted evidence farther confirms our conclusion that the district court’s finding of materiality was not erroneous.
III. To Whom the Misrepresentation Was Made
The Pinette’s final argument on appeal is that Assurance may not rescind the contract on the basis of material misrepresentations made to Maryland Casualty. We agree with the district court that this contention lacks merit.
The cases cited by plaintiffs do not hold, as they claim, that a wholly owned subsidiary that carries an insurance policy on behalf of its parent may not object to an applicant’s material misrepresentations made to the parent. Rather, the cases simply stand for the proposition that an applicant is not responsible for misstatements unless and until he adopts or endorses the particular application containing them.
See Bristol v. Commercial Union Life Ins. Co.,
The Pinettes’ application was signed by Julien Pinette and then, without alteration,
CONCLUSION
Because plaintiffs have failed to demonstrate a genuine issue of material fact sufficient to defeat defendant’s counterclaim for rescission based on material misrepresentation, the judgment of the district court is affirmed.
