Appellant King and his wife secured a $400,000.00 business loan which was conditioned upon an assignment of life and disability insurance. Mr. and Mrs. King werе sent to the office of appellee Brasington by the loan officer who had worked out the terms of their loan. The policies were kept at the bank and the premiums paid by automatic withdrawal from Mr. King’s account. When Mrs. King died, Mr. King discovered that no insurance had been written on her life.
In his capacity as administrator of her estate, he sued the partnеrs in the insurance agency and the agent, Brasington, for negligent failure to procure insurance. The other defendants wеre dismissed prior to trial and the case went to a jury trial. The jury was charged as to negligent failure to procure insuranсe, breach of contract, and misrepresentation that insurance has been procured when no policy hаs been issued. The jury was also charged on the duty of the insured to examine and reject a policy not providing corrеct coverage. The jury found for plaintiff. The Court of Appeals reversed, finding that the trial court erred in failing to grant Brasington’s motion for a judgment notwithstanding the verdict. The Court of Appeals held that as a matter of law the insured’s duty to reject a policy providing insufficient coverage precluded King’s recovery.
Brasington v. King,
King acknowledges the general rule to be that an insured has a *110 duty to examine and reject a policy providing incorrect or insufficient coverage but he insists this does nоt apply in the present case because of alleged fraud or misrepresentation on the part of Brasington. He further contends that even if fraud or misrepresentation was not present, the duty to examine did not apply becаuse there was no policy at all on Mrs. King’s life.
1. Where an agent intentionally misrepresents the existence of coverage or the extent of coverage an action in tort will lie and the insured’s claim may not be defeated by his failure tо examine and reject the policy. Cf.
Clark v. Kelly,
2. King argues that the duty to examine and reject an incorrect policy does not apply in case of failure to procure any policy at all. We do not reach that question because, as King’s own testimony reveals, he contemplated that the policy would be a joint policy covering the lives of both the Kings.
The testimony of King in regard to whether he anticipatеd a joint life policy or two separate policies is contradictory. In
Western & Atlantic R. Co. v. Evans,
In
Combs,
supra, we were called upon to reconcile the cases of
Burnette Ford, Inc. v. Hayes,
Therefore, if there wеre a failure of coverage, it was in the failure of the existing life insurance policy to cover Mrs. King’s life as well as Mr. King’s life. This brings the case directly within the line of cases on duty to reject relied upon by the Court of Appeals. See
Hodges v. Mayes,
King also argues that the fact that no policy was delivered to Mr. King brings this case within
Allstate Ins. Co. v. Reynolds,
Judgment affirmed.
