Plаintiff appeals as of right the trial court’s order granting summary disposition in favor of defendant, Fidelity & Guaranty Life Insurance Company. 1 We affirm.
In April 2002, plaintiff and her decedent husband aрplied for a life insurance policy with defendant. Although the decedent had a significant cigarette-smoking habit, the applicatiоn reflects that he had not used tobacco within the previous five years. After defendant accepted their application, it issued a policy 2 and collected their premiums. In May 2002, the decedent was killed in an automobile accident. Shortly after the deсedent died, plaintiff received the policy and filed a claim for death benefits. When defendant reviewed the clinical notes from the decedent’s doctor visits and the toxicology report from the decedent’s autopsy, it discovered that the decedent had been a smoker and denied the claim. Defendant also refunded the premiums and rescinded the life insurance contract because it found that plaintiff and the decedent had made a material misrepresentation — that the decedent did not use tobacco — on the life insurance application.
Plaintiff argues that the trial court erred in granting defendant summary disposition because there is аn issue of fact regarding whether plaintiff or the decedent made a material misrepresentation on the insurance application. We review de novo a trial court’s decision on a motion for summary disposition.
Rose v Nat’l Auction Group, Inc,
MCL 500.2218 provides that an insurer may rescind an insurance рolicy if it discovers that an insured made a material misrepresentation on the application for insurance and that the misreрresentation affected either the acceptance of the risk or the hazard assumed by the insurer.
3
Plaintiff asserts that the agent is the one who actually completed the application and that neither she nor the decedent read the application before signing. Plaintiffs argument is misplaced. Whether it was plaintiff,
the decedent, or the agent who misrepresented the decedent’s tobacco use on the application is not material because plaintiff and the decedent signed the authorization, stating that they had read the questions and answers in the application and that the information provided was complete, true, and correctly recorded. It is well established that failure to read an agreement is not a valid defense to enforcement of a contract.
Snyder v Wolverine Mut Motor Ins Co,
Plaintiff also argues that defendant should not be permitted to rescind the contract because its agent had knowledge of the decedent’s smoking habit and that this knowledge should be imputed to defendant. Although there is evidence that there were ashtrays in the decedent’s home and the home smelled of cigarette smoke, plaintiff has not presented any evidence to suggest that the agent actually saw the decedent smoke or had knowledge
Affirmed.
Notes
Because defendant Aaron T. Binder, doing business as American Classic Agency, is not a party to this appeal, the term “defendant” refers only to Fidelity & Guaranty Life Insurance Company.
Plaintiff asserted that, although she and the decedent had applied for a $244,000 policy, defendant issued a $50,000 policy. In her complaint, plaintiff claimed that the agеnt and defendant unilaterally changed the amount on the application, thereby reducing the amount of the policy. However, in this аppeal, plaintiff does not raise an issue regarding this alleged reduction in the policy amount.
We note that acceptance of the risk and hazard assumed are terms with different meanings.
In re Certified Question (Wickersham v John Hancock Mut Life Ins Co),
Plaintiff relies on
Smith v Globe Life Ins Co,
