This case arises on appeal following a jury verdict in favor of the plaintiff-appel-lee Marija Wolff on her claims of fraudulent suppression and breach of contract against the defendant-appellant Allstate Life Insurance Co. (“Allstate”). The claims involved Allstate’s termination of and refusal to pay on an insurance policy issued on the life of Wolff’s husband. The district court entered judgment in accordance with the jury verdict, and Allstate now appeals. On appeal, Allstate claims that it was entitled to judgment notwithstanding the verdict (“JNOV”) on Wolff’s fraudulent suppression claim, and to a new trial on Wolff’s breach of contract claim. For the reasons that follow, we affirm the district court’s denial of Allstate’s motion for JNOV, but reverse the district court’s entry of judgment and remand the case for a new trial on both the fraudulent suppression and breach of contract claims.
I. STATEMENT OF THE CASE
A. Factual Background
In December 1981, Marija Wolff and her husband, Dr. C. Robert Wolff, purchased a joint mortgage protection life insurance policy (“the 1981 policy”) in the amount of $100,000 from Allstate.
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The 1981 policy
In 1987, the Wolffs obtained a new mortgage in the amount of $180,000. Because of the increased mortgage debt, Dr. Wolff met with Allstate agent Frank Stinson to increase the couple’s life insurance protection. In February 1988, the Wolffs submitted an application to Allstate for a new policy which would provide $100,000 in whole life insurance on each of them. The Wolffs’ application instructed Allstate to terminate the 1981 policy if their application was accepted.
In March 1988, Allstate accepted Dr. Wolff’s application for coverage and issued a $100,000 policy (“the 1988 policy”) on his life. However, Allstate rejected Mrs. Wolff for coverage because of health problems discovered in her required medical examination. Stinson arranged for the Wolffs to amend their application to preserve the 1981 policy so that Mrs. Wolff would not be left without coverage.
On May 9, 1988, Stinson met with the Wolffs in their home to deliver Dr. Wolff’s new policy, to have the Wolffs sign the amended application preserving the 1981 policy coverage, and to determine how the Wolffs wished to respond to Allstate’s denial of Mrs. Wolff’s application for coverage. For most of the meeting, Stinson and Dr. Wolff conferred alone, but Mrs. Wolff was called into the room as the meeting concluded. In the presence of Stinson, Dr. Wolff explained to Mrs. Wolff the steps he felt they should take to obtain the desired amount of coverage. In the course of their conversation, the Wolffs agreed that Mrs. Wolff should exercise her right to convert her coverage under the 1981 policy (with its current face value of $77,000) into whole life insurance. 2 In addition, the Wolffs decided that they would continue Dr. Wolff’s decreasing term coverage under the 1981 policy to supplement his coverage under the 1988 policy. Stinson then provided Mrs. Wolff with the paperwork to authorize the conversion of her coverage under the 1981 policy. 3
On May 15, 1988, Allstate approved the conversion of Mrs. Wolff’s coverage under the 1981 policy into a $77,000 whole life insurance policy. Ten days later, an Allstate underwriter terminated the 1981 policy in its entirety effective May 9, 1988. 4 Although Allstate sent the Wolffs a premium refund check on the 1981 policy, it did not send them any written statement notifying them that the 1981 policy had been canceled. Allstate proceeded to collect its premiums on the remaining policies by bank draft on the Wolffs’ joint bank account. 5
B. Procedural History
On May 4, 1989, Marija Wolff filed a complaint against Allstate in federal district court, invoking the court’s diversity jurisdiction. See 28 U.S.C.A. § 1332 (West Supp.1992). On November 6-7, 1989, the district court conducted a jury trial on Wolffs breach of contract, fraudulent misrepresentation, and fraudulent suppression claims. 6 At the conclusion of trial, the jury returned a verdict in favor of Wolff on the breach of contract and fraudulent suppression claims, but in favor of Allstate on the fraudulent misrepresentation claim. The district court denied Allstate’s post-trial motions for JNOV and for a new trial, and Allstate now appeals.
II. ANALYSIS
On appeal, Allstate challenges the district court’s denial of its motion for JNOV on the fraudulent suppression claim. A motion for JNOV challenges the sufficiency of the evidence and raises a question of law subject to
de novo
review.
See Braswell v. ConAgra, Inc.,
[T]he Court should consider all of the evidence ... with all reasonable inferences most favorable to the party opposed to the motion. If the facts and inferences point so strongly and overwhelmingly in favor of one party that the Court believes that reasonable men could not arrive at a contrary verdict, granting of the motion[] is proper. On the other hand, if there is substantial evidence opposed to the motion, that is, evidence of such quality and weight that reasonable and fair-minded men in the exercise of impartial judgment might reach different conclusions, the motion should be denied....
Boeing Co. v. Shipman,
In addition, Allstate challenges the district court’s denial of its motion for a new trial. In this motion, Allstate asserted that the jury’s verdict, finding both a breach of contract and fraudulent suppression, was factually inconsistent and therefore legally unsupportable under Alabama law. The district court’s denial of Allstate’s motion for a new trial is reviewable for a clear abuse of discretion.
See Hessen v. Jaguar Cars, Inc.,
A. The Fraudulent Suppression Claim
In her final amended complaint, Wolff alleged that Allstate fraudulently suppressed from her its intent to cancel her husband’s coverage under the 1981 policy. The jury found Allstate liable to Wolff for
Fraudulent suppression actions in Alabama are governed by statutory authority:
§ 6-5-102. Suppression of material facts.
Suppression of a material fact which the party is under an obligation to communicate constitutes fraud. The obligation to communicate may arise from the confidential relations of the parties or from the particular circumstances of the case.
Ala.Code § 6-5-102 (1975). The Alabama Supreme Court has identified five essential elements of a fraudulent suppression claim: (1) a duty on the part of the defendant to disclose; (2) the defendant’s suppression of material facts; (3) the defendant’s knowledge of the facts and their materiality; (4) action by the plaintiff in reliance on the suppression; and (5) damages resulting from the reliance action.
See Hardy v. Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Alabama,
1. Allstate’s Duty to Disclose
Under Alabama law, a duty to disclose exists only if there are “confidential relations” or “particular circumstances” which give rise to an obligation to communicate. Ala.Code § 6-5-102 (1975). The duty to speak depends upon “the relation of the parties, the value of the particular fact, the relative knowledge of the parties, and other circumstances.”
RNH, Inc. v. Beatty,
We agree with the district court that Wolff offered sufficient evidence of special circumstances from which a jury could find that Allstate had a duty to disclose its intent to terminate her husband’s coverage under the 1981 policy. Wolff was a joint named insured with her husband under the 1981 policy until she converted her coverage. Wolff produced evidence to show that Allstate knew that she and her husband intended to procure a life insurance package which would mutually' protect each of their interests in paying off their home mortgage in the event that one of them were to die. Allstate agent Stinson was present when Wolff and her husband expressed their understanding that they could convert Mrs. Wolff’s coverage under the 1981 policy while preserving Dr. Wolff’s coverage under the policy. A reasonable jury could find that Stinson, acting for Allstate, knew of Allstate’s intent to terminate the 1981 policy in its entirety if Wolff converted her coverage. A jury could also find that Stinson knew that this information was material to the Wolffs in planning their insurance protection. Under these circumstances, a reasonable jury could find that Allstate had a duty to disclose its intent to cancel Dr. Wolff’s coverage under the 1981 policy, either at the time Wolff decided to exercise her right to convert her coverage or at the time Allstate attempted to cancel the policy.
Allstate advances two reasons why it did not owe any duty to disclose its handling of Dr. Wolff's insurance coverage to Mrs. Wolff: (1) Mrs. Wolff was neither an insured nor a beneficiary
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under the 1981 policy after she exercised her right of conversion; and (2) Allstate dealt with the Wolffs at arms length under circumstances
Wolff's status under the 1981 policy does not itself obviate Allstate’s duty to disclose.
See Gillion v. Alabama Forestry Ass’n,
Likewise, we reject Allstate’s assertion that this case involves an arms length transaction in which no duty to disclose could arise as a matter of law.
See Trio Broadcasters, Inc. v. Ward,
2. Justifiable Reliance
Allstate also argues that it was entitled to judgment as a matter of law on the fraudulent suppression claim because no reasonable jury could have found Wolff’s reliance on Allstate’s silence to be justified. According to Allstate, the 1981 policy by its terms informed the Wolffs that the policy would terminate upon conversion. Therefore, Wolff could not have relied on Allstate’s silence to assume the policy was still in force. In its “Conversion Privilege” section, the 1981 policy provided:
You may buy a new contract on one or each of the joint insureds’ lives at any time while:
1. All due payments have been made; and
2. The amount of the death benefit in force is at least $5,000.
For each new contract you want, you must:
1. Give us a written app; and
2. Make the first payment for the new contract.
Each new contract will start on the date you sign the new app. This date is called ‘new start date’. This contract will stop at the end of the day prior to the new start date.
Allstate Joint Decreasing Term Policy, at 6 (emphasis added).
Reliance is an essential element of a fraudulent suppression action.
See Hardy,
Under Alabama law, written disclosures may defeat a claim of justifiable reliance.
See McConico v. Corley, Moncus, and Bynum, P.C.,
Under the circumstances of this case, we believe that Wolff’s reliance was properly submitted to the jury. Wolff testified that she believed that her conversion would result only in the termination of her coverage under the 1981 policy. The 1981 policy did not clearly disclose that the policy would automatically terminate
in its entirety
upon Wolff’s election to convert her coverage into a whole life policy. Significantly, the conversion privilege provisions provide that joint insureds may
each
elect to convert the policy and that the face amount and insurance plans among joint insureds need not be identical.
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Wolff produced evidence to show that Allstate knew that she and her husband intended to convert her coverage into whole life insurance while preserving Dr. Wolff’s coverage under the policy. Yet Allstate gave the Wolffs no indication that it would not carry out their wishes or that the 1981 policy coverage was not divisible.
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We conclude that Wolff’s belief was not “so patently and obviously false that [she] must have closed [her] eyes to avoid discovery of the truth.”
Hickox v. Stover,
3.Damages Resulting from Wolff’s Reliance
Under Alabama law, a plaintiff asserting a fraudulent suppression claim must establish damages which were proximately caused by the plaintiff’s reliance on the fraudulent suppression.
See Hardy,
We find the evidence more than sufficient to support the jury’s finding of proximate cause. Under Alabama law, the jury is allowed broad discretion in determining whether an asserted injury is traceable to the defendant’s tortious conduct.
See, e.g., Coosa Valley Bank v. Taylor-Holmes Indus. Supply, Inc.,
We also reject Allstate’s argument that Wolff’s proof of damages was so speculative that the case should not have been submitted to the jury. Under Alabama law, the determination of damages is a question of fact for the jury to resolve.
See Griggs v. Finley,
B. The Alleged Inconsistency in the Jury Verdicts
Allstate also claims that a new trial is required in this case because the jury returned an inconsistent verdict by finding Allstate liable for both fraudulent suppression and breach of contract. Specifically, Allstate argues that the breach of contract verdict required the jury to find that the 1981 policy was in full force on the day of Dr. Wolff’s death, while the fraudulent suppression verdict required an inconsistent finding that Allstate terminated the 1981 policy without notifying Mrs. Wolff. The district court denied Allstate’s motion for a new trial, concluding that Alabama courts have found inconsistency in fraud and breach of contract claims only where
Under Alabama law, plaintiffs may present alternative or inconsistent theories of liability to the jury, but juries are not permitted to return factually inconsistent verdicts.
See National Security Fire and Cas. Co. v. Vintson,
The Alabama Supreme Court has recently revisited the issue of inconsistent verdicts in the context of actions alleging both fraud and breach of contract.
See Liberty Nat’l Life Ins. Co. v. Jackson,
To find in favor of Mrs. Jackson on the fraud count, the jury necessarily found that the policy was not in force at that time. However, to find in favor of Mrs. Jackson on the breach of contract count, the jury necessarily had to find that the policy was in force at the time of her husband’s death. These findings are factually inconsistent.
Id. at 1009-10.
Thus,
Jackson
holds that the determinative factor in identifying inconsistent verdicts in fraud and breach of contract cases is whether the finding of fraud necessarily involved a finding that in fact no contract existed.
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If the jury verdict finding fraud necessarily involved a finding that no contract existed, an accompanying verdict finding a breach of contract would inherently contradict the fraud verdict.
See Vintson,
In this case, Wolff’s complaint alleged that Allstate breached its contract with Dr. Wolff when it failed to pay on a valid claim under the 1981 policy. Contrary to Wolff’s assertions,
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the breach of
Wolff’s fraudulent suppression action, in contrast, alleged that Wolff was injured by Allstate’s failure to disclose its intent to cancel the 1981 policy. In reaching its verdict for Wolff on this claim, the jury necessarily found that (1) Allstate had a duty to disclose its intent to terminate the 1981 policy, (2) Allstate suppressed this material fact, (3) Allstate knew that its termination of the policy was material to Wolff, (4) Wolff relied on the suppression, and (5) Wolff suffered injury as a result of her reliance.
See Hardy,
III. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we AFFIRM the district court’s denial of Allstate’s motion for JNOY on Wolff’s fraudulent suppression claim. The district court’s entry of judgment, however, is VACATED as inconsistent under Alabama law and the case is REMANDED for a new trial on the breach of contract and fraudulent suppression claims.
Notes
. The policy provided the Wolffs “mortgage protection” in that the amount of coverage was designed to ensure that the surviving spouse
. The 1981 policy provided that no medical examination would be required in order to convert coverage from term to whole life insurance.
. The course of events described above was contested at trial by Allstate. Stinson, testifying for Allstate, denied that anything was said at the meeting about continuing Dr. Wolff’s coverage under the 1981 policy. According to Stinson’s testimony, Dr. Wolff told Stinson that the 1988 whole life insurance policy would constitute the sole source of his insurance coverage. In denying Allstate’s motion for JNOV, however, the district court correctly determined that under its instructions, the jury must have believed Mrs. Wolff’s version of the meeting in order to have reached its verdict in her favor.
See Tang How v. Edward J. Gerrits, Inc.,
. According to Allstate, the retroactive termination merely reflected the fact that the 1981 policy terminated automatically upon conversion.
. The only notice the Wolffs received of Allstate’s withdrawal of premiums was through the monthly bank statements on the joint account. These statements listed only two withdrawals by Allstate per month, one for $80 and the other
. Wolff brought the breach of contract and misrepresentation claims in her capacity as the representative of her husband’s estate. The fraudulent suppression claim was brought in Marija Wolff’s own capacity. Wolff had also alleged other state law causes of action in her '.omplaint, but the district court granted summary judgment in favor of Allstate on these other claims before trial. Wolff has not appealed the entry of summary judgment against her on these claims.
. Under the 1981 policy, Dr. Wolff listed his estate as the named beneficiary.
. The policy provided:
If you want a new contract on each joint insured:
1. The face amounts do not have to be the same; and
2. The plans chosen do not have to be the same.
. Indeed, Allstate’s assertion that it owed no duty to disclose the termination of Dr. Wolffs coverage under the 1981 policy to Mrs. Wolff because she was not a party to his coverage indicates that even Allstate viewed the 1981 policy as divisible in some sense.
. Allstate also argues that Wolffs claim of damages was speculative because Dr. Wolff would not have consented to any other insurance on his life. This argument is irrelevant to Wolff’s claim. Alabama law expressly allows any spouse to maintain life insurance on the other spouse regardless of the other spouse’s consent to coverage. See Ala.Code § 27-14-6(a)(1) (1975).
. Prior to
Jackson,
there was some authority under Alabama law for the proposition that verdicts finding both fraud and breach of contract would be deemed inconsistent only where the alleged fraud occurred in the inception of the contract.
See Marshall Dubin Food Corp. v. Equitable Life Assur. Society,
. On appeal, Wolff attempts to characterize her breach of contract claim as an action for damages arising from Allstate’s unauthorized termination of the 1981 policy. However, Wolff’s position at trial was that the policy was never terminated, as illustrated in the following exchange between the district court and Wolff’s counsel:
THE COURT: ... Do you concede that they terminated the policy because of the conversion of Mrs. Wolff, conversion of her policy?
MR. WHITTAKER: No, sir. I don’t think they ever terminated this policy.
THE COURT: Which policy?
MR. WHITTAKER: In the 1981 policy. We have said they denied the claim for that reason. But we're not admitting that there’s been any proper cancellation of that policy at all. In fact, the evidence is that the 290 was to cover both policy premiums. So I’m not here admitting that there’s been any cancellation of that 1981 policy whatsoever. That’s what part of the problem is.
. Wolff gained certain evidentiary advantages by targeting Allstate’s failure to pay on the policy as the act of breach. A plaintiff asserting a failure to pay action against a life insurance company need only establish (1) the existence of the policy sued on, (2) the death of the insured, and (3) the giving of notice and proof of death as required by the policy.
See Angus v. Liberty Nat'l Life Ins. Co.,
