MEMORANDUM
Plaintiffs North American Specialty Insurance Company (“North American”) and National Marine Underwriters (“NMU”) have brought a declaratory judgment action against defendants Warren Kim Savage and Joanna Maxine Carillo relatéd to a marine insurance policy issued to Mr. Savage. Cross-motions for summary judgment have been filed. For the reasons stated below, plaintiffs’ motion for summary judgment will be granted, and defendant Carillo’s motion for summary judgment will be denied.
BACKGROUND
Mr. Savage contacted NMU in early July 1992 in order to secure marine insurance. (Logan Aff. ¶ 3, Pis.’ Mot. Summ. J. Ex. D.) A declaration page was presented to Mr. Savage that required him to disclose whether his driver’s license had ever been suspended or revoked; whether he had ever been convicted of a felony, of driving while intoxicated, or of driving under the influence of alcohol; and to state the particulars of any losses or moving traffic violations in the past three years. (Flagship Policy Decl. Page, Pis.’ Mot. Summ. J. Ex. A.) Mr. Savage answered “no” to the question whether his license had ever been revoked or suspended, and whether he had ever been convicted of a felony or an alcohol-related driving offense. He also did not claim that he had experienced any losses in the last three years. (Id.) He did disclose two speeding tickets in 1990 and 1991, and a reckless driving violation. (Id.) Enclosed in a red outlined box, just above the signature line, was the following statement: “The information above is the basis for this'policy. I/we understand that if any of the statements are not true, then there will be no coverage under this policy.” (Id.) The declaration page was signed by Mr. Savage on August 2,1992. (Id.)
Plaintiffs issued a marine insurance policy to Mr. Savage effective July 30, 1992. On August 22, 1992 Ms. Carillo suffered injuries resulting from a boating accident that occurred while she was a passenger on a boat owned by Mr. Savage, insured by North American, and underwritten by NMU.
Mr. Savage’s driving record, pulled as part of the investigation following the accident, indicates that he was convicted on June 22, 1992 of failure to submit to a blood/ breath alcohol test in March 1992 which resulted in a six month suspension of his license. He also had his license suspended in 1987-1988. 1 (Savage Driver Record Service Report, Pis.’ Mot. Summ. J. Ex. C.) In addition, he had been involved in an accident in June 1991 that resulted in personal injury. (Id.)
Plaintiffs sent several letters to Mr. Savage. The first letter, reserving all of plaintiffs’ rights and defenses under the contract, was sent by certified mail on September 28, 1992 and was not claimed. (Pis.’ Reply Ex. C.) The second letter was sent October 27, 1992 and enclosed a copy of the first letter. (Pis.’ Reply Ex. D.) The third letter, dated November 13, 1992, informed Mr. Savage that, because he failed to reveal two prior driver’s license suspensions, his insurance policy was void ab initio. (See Pis.’ Mot. Summ. J. Ex. G.)
Ms. Carillo filed suit to recover for her injuries. North American and NMU have brought this declaratory judgment action against both Ms. Carillo and Mr. Savage in order to determine whether the policy could
ANALYSIS
North American and NMU have moved for summary judgment alleging that the marine insurance policy in this case can be voided ab initio because they issued the policy in reliance on a material misrepresentation Mr. Savage made in his application., Ms. Carillo opposes the plaintiffs’ motion and has moved for summary judgment. She argues that plaintiffs should not be permitted to avoid their responsibilities under the contract for several reasons:(l) Mr. Savage’s driving record was not material to the marine insurance contract; (2) the right of a marine insurer to void a contract ab initio where innocent third-parties are injured is against public policy; (3) estoppel principles apply; and (4) plaintiffs failed to exercise good faith in accordance with the doctrine of “Uberrimae Fidei” applicable to marine insurance.
1. Material Misrepresentation
Generally, insurance policies may be voided
ab initio
when an insurer issued a policy in reliance on a material misrepresentation in the application.
See Fitzgerald v. Franklin Life Ins. Co.,
North American claims that Mr. Savage’s failure to disclose that his license had been suspended two times in the past constituted a material misrepresentation warranting avoidance of the policy.
3
During the
Mr. Savage’s response amounts to a misrepresentation because his driving record indicates that his license was suspended on at least two prior occasions. On August 4,1988 his license was suspended for ninety days for driving under revocation or suspension 4 ; on June 22, 1992 he was convicted of failing to submit to a blood/breath alcohol test, and his license was suspended for six months. (See Savage Driver Record Service Report, PL’s Mot. Summ. J. Ex. C.) From the record it appears that Mr. Savage did not have a valid driver’s license when he sought and obtained marine insurance from plaintiffs.
Failure to reveal a suspended driver’s license, or a history of moving violations, has been considered a material misrepresentation in the context of applications for automobile insurance.
See Southern General Ins. Co. v. O’Keefe,
Plaintiffs assert that they relied on Mr. Savage’s representations on the declaration page in issuing the policy and that if Mr. Savage had disclosed his suspension he would have been denied coverage pursuant to the policy. (See Logan Aff. ¶ 11, Pis.’ Mot. Summ. J. Ex. D.) The court finds that the withholding of this information affected plaintiffs’ decision to insure Mr. Savage; specifically, a policy was issued that otherwise would have been declined. Accordingly, the court concludes as a matter of law that there was a material misrepresentation on the application.
II. Right of a Marine Insurer to Invalidate a Policy Ab Initio
North American and NMU claim that in the event of a material misrepresentation on an application for marine insurance the insurer has the right to void the contract
ab initio. See Fitzgerald,
The right of an insurer to void a contract ab initio for a material misrepresentation in an application existed at common law for a variety of insurance contracts.
See id.
at 679,
In
Van Horn,
the Maryland Court of Appeals held that an insurer’s common law right to void
ab initio
and deny coverage to an innocent third-party under an automobile insurance contract, because of an applicant’s material misrepresentation in procurement of the policy, had been abrogated by Maryland’s statutory scheme for compulsory automobile insurance.
Van Horn,
In reviewing the compulsory auto insurance statutes, the court noted that the legislature had repealed the Maryland Automobile Insurance Plan for Assigned Risks, which expressly provided for rescission when material misrepresentations were made in procuring the policy, and intentionally had not included comparable language in the new statutes preserving the insurer’s right to rescission.
Id.,
While many of the concerns associated with third party recovery for automobile accidents are also present in the context of marine accidents, the Van Horn decision is grounded in interpretation of a particular statutory scheme. 7 It cannot be read as establishing a general policy regarding injured third-party victims, laudable as such a policy might be. 8 In the absence of similar statutory enactments mandating continuous and compulsory coverage for marine insurance, I cannot find that the Van Horn decision precludes voiding ab initio the marine insurance policy in this case.
III. Estoppel.
The Maryland Court of Appeals has held that “unless the party against whom the doctrine has been invoked has been guilty of some unconscientious, inequitable, or fraudulent act of commission or omission, upon which another has relied and been misled to his injury, the doctrine [of estoppel] will not be applied.”
Bayshore Indus., Inc. v. Ziats,
As a general rule, an innocent third party stands in the same position as the insured when seeking to enforce the provisions of an insurance policy.
See West,
Generally, insurers do not have a duty to investigate insurance applicants and are entitled to believe what an applicant claims to be true.
9
Clemons v. American Cas. Co.,
I cannot find that the information provided in the application was of such a character as to put North American and NMU on notice.
See West,
Ms. Carillo also relies on Mr. Savage’s failure to provide a specific date for the reckless driving violation; she argues that the plaintiffs should have followed their own established procedure of asking for a copy of an applicant’s driving record when the date of the offense is unknown. (See Goodehild Dep. at 18, Def.’s Mot. Summ. J. Ex. H.) By doing so, she asserts, they would have discovered the suspensions, not issued the policy, and thereby the accident would not have happened. 10 First, the court is not convinced that the internal policy was violated, because the question that elicited the reckless driving violation response specifically referred to violations within the last three years. Second, while a strict application of the internal policy may have, in a “but for” sense, resulted in avoiding the accident, Ms. Carillo has not shown that any of Mr. Savage’s answers gave rise to a legal duty to investigate. Accordingly, estoppel is not justified.
Ms. Carillo further argues that North American’s and NMU’s notice to Mr. Savage that the policy was
void ab initio
was not sent within a reasonable time. Upon learning of a material misrepresentation on an application an insurer “must take action to avoid the policy within a reasonable time....”
Fountain & Herrington v. Mutual Life Ins. Co. of New York,
In the context of an insurer disclaiming coverage because of late notice, the Court of Special Appeals has noted that “[a]lleging only ‘possible, theoretical, conjectural, or hypothetical prejudice’ is not enough. The prejudice cannot be surmised or presumed from the mere fact of delay.”
Hartford Accident and Indem. Co.,
IV. Doctrine of Uberrimae Fidei.
Literally translated the phrase “uberrimae fidei” means “of the utmost good faith.”
See In the Matter of Liquidation of Union Indem. Ins. Co.,
In discussing the doctrine of uberrimae fidei, the Supreme Court noted that “a failure by the insured to disclose conditions affecting the risk, of which he is aware, makes the contract voidable at the insurer’s option.”
Stipcich,
According to Ms. Carillo, North American and NMU did not exercise the utmost good faith because they failed to investigate Mr. Savage and make a timely notification of rescission of the insurance contract. The company waited a month after the accident, six weeks after the policy was issued, to acquire a copy of Mr. Savage’s driving record, and, upon learning of the misrepresentations, waited nearly two months to notify Mr. Savage that the policy was void ab initio. This delay is not indicative of bad faith. “[Although good faith requires that the company act promptly upon disproving the falsity of a representation, it is entitled to a reasonable time within which to investigate the matter to determine what course to pursue.”
Fountain & Herrington,
The result in this case is truly unfortunate for Ms. Carillo. Without statutory revision, however, Maryland law does not provide for
Notes
. The pleadings suggest that a private investigator pulled Mr. Savage’s driving record on September 14, 1992. It is not clear, however, when North American or NMU became aware of the contents of the record.
. Ms. Carillo argues that material misrepresentations "must be reasonably related to the insurer’s economic and business purposes” and that the “insurer must demonstrate objectively the probability of a direct and substantial adverse effect upon losses or expenses.... ” (Def.’s Mot. Summ. J. at 2-3.) This is a statutory standard which insurers must satisfy when they seek "to cancel or refuse to underwrite or renew a particular insurance risk” pursuant to § 234A. See Md. Code Ann., Ins. § 234A(a);
Miller v. Insurance Commissioner,
. North American’s letter of rescission to Mr. Savage dated November 13, 1992 cited Mr. Savage’s failure to reveal previous license suspensions as the grounds for voiding the policy. (See Pis.’ Mot. Summ. J. Ex. G.) Although there may have been other material misrepresentations in the application, the court will focus on the license suspensions.
. Mr. Savage's driving record indicates that the August 4, 1988 suspension of his license was for "driving under revocation/suspension” in Fairfax County suggesting that his license was suspended at another time in the past. (See Savage Driver Record Service Report, Pl.’s Mot. Summ. J. Ex. C.) He also was convicted of the same "driving under revocation/suspension” offense on March 14, 1988 in Prince William County, but the record does not indicate if his license was suspended or revoked as a result.
. The fact that a driver's license may be suspended for a variety of reasons, some less significant than others, does not affect the conclusion that a license suspension can be considered reasonably related to the risks involved in marine insurance. In any event, there is no genuine issue of material fact regarding its materiality in this case, because Mr. Savage's license- was suspended for failure to submit to a blood/breath alcohol test.
. Following the Van Horn decision, the Maryland Court of Special Appeals allowed a comprehensive general liability insurance policy to be voided ab initio.
See Hartford Accident and Indent. Co. v. Sherwood Brands, Inc.,
. The
Van Horn
court relied on other cases that limited their analysis to automobile insurance and stressed their reliance upon legislative intent.
See Van Horn,
.The fact that the
Van Horn
court enforced the insurer's liability to the policy limit of $100,-000.00, as opposed to the statutorily mandated $20,000.00 per person and $40,000.00 per occurrence, does not establish a strong public policy extending to marine insurance. Rather the court relied on the fact that the policy limit had been agreed to by both parties, a premium payment had been made on the basis of $100,000.00 coverage, and other jurisdictions considering the issue had enforced full coverage limits.
Van Horn,
. Ms. Carillo claims that the investigation should have been conducted during the time the application was submitted and before the policy was issued, during what is commonly known as the binder period. Assuming that a binder number was issued in this case, Ms. Carillo has not presented any Maryland case law suggesting that an insurer must conduct an investigation during the binder period. In
Flester v. Ohio Casualty Ins. Co.,
the Court of Appeals explained that a binder is "intended to give temporary protection pending the investigation of the risk of insurer,
or until the issuance of a
formal policy...."
. Ms. Carillo's theory is that "[pjerhaps, if Savage was timely notified of said rescission, he would have not taken his boat on the journey which led to [her] serious injuries.” (Pl.’s Opp'n at 7.)
. Ms. Carillo also has failed to show that a waiver can be implied from the actions of the plaintiffs in this case, considering the short period of time involved and the plaintiffs’ letters reserving their rights.
. Prior to the statutory enactments for mandatory automobile coverage and the
Van Horn
decision, avoidance of the contract for material misrepresentation was possible even in the event of serious automobile accidents involving bodily injury and death of an innocent third-party.
See Southern Gen. Ins.,
