OPINION
Maria C. Soto, appellant, brought suit against the Southern Life & Health Insurance Company, appellee, to collect $4,000.00 in benefits as the beneficiary of a life insurance policy which appellee issued to her now deceased husband, Jesus G. Soto. Appellee denied liability based on misrepresentations made on the application for insurance regarding Mr. Soto’s condition of health and plead the affirmative defense of misrepresentation and fraud. A jury subsequently found that Mr. Soto had represented in the application for life insurance that (1) he was in good health and free *754 from all disease; (2) he had not been under observation or treatment in a clinic or hospital between May 23, 1980 and May 23, 1985; (3) he had not been attended by a physician between May 23, 1982 and May 23, 1985; and (4) he had no physical defect or infirmity in the form of lung disease. The jury further found that both Mr. Soto and appellant knew these representations were false and that they were intended to induce or deceive appellee into issuing Mr. Soto a life insurance policy. The jury also found that these representations were material to the risk and that appellee would not have issued the life insurance policy had it known the true state of Mr. Soto’s health. Based on these findings, the trial court ordered that appellant take nothing by her suit. We affirm the judgment of the trial court.
Appellant does not challenge the sufficiency of the evidence to support the jury’s findings, so no recitation of the supporting evidence is necessary.
By her first point of error, appellant contends the trial court erred in denying her motion for a directed verdict. Appellant asserts that appellee failed to plead and prove that the insured made the alleged false misrepresentations in the application for life insurance willfully and with the intent to deceive and defraud appellee.
The overruling of a motion for a directed verdict will be reviewed on appeal
only
if it was recited in a formal order or in the judgment.
Vista Chevrolet, Inc. v. Lewis,
By her second point of error, appellant contends the trial court erred in refusing to submit her requested jury issue. This issue inquired whether Enrique Nava, appel-lee’s agent, wrongfully misrepresented to appellee the answers provided by appellant in her husband’s application for life insurance. Appellant states that she testified at trial that she provided Mr. Nava the information for the application, that she informed him of Mr. Soto’s hospitalization, illness, and physician name, but that she did not read the application before she signed it. Appellant argues that Mr. Nava failed to write the correct information on the application.
A trial court may only refuse to submit a special issue when there is no evidence to support its submission.
Brown v. Goldstein,
In this case, the controlling issue was whether Jesus G. Soto, by way of
*755
appellant,
1
intentionally misrepresented the condition of health answers in Mr. Soto’s application for life insurance. An affirmative finding on this issue could support a basis for judgment and preclude any recovery under the life insurance contract. Appellant’s requested issue, on the other hand, merely seeks to negate or disprove appellee's affirmative defense and would not, by itself, support a basis for judgment. In fact, appellant’s requested issue was an inferential rebuttal issue because it presented a contrary or inconsistent theory from the affirmative defense being asserted by appellee. Tex.R.Civ.P. 277 expressly provides that inferential rebuttal issues should not be submitted to the jury.
Select Insurance Co. v. Boucher,
By her fourth point of error, appellant contends the trial court erred in submitting special issue number seven to the jury because appellee failed to plead or prove a willful intent to deceive. This issue inquired whether appellant, at the time she assisted Jesus G. Soto in filling out the application, was aware of any of the following: (1) that Jesus G. Soto was not in good health and free from all disease; (2) that Jesus G. Soto had, within May 23,1980 and May 23, 1985, been under observation or treatment in a clinic or hospital; (3) that Jesus G. Soto had been attended by a physician between May 23, 1982 and May 23, 1985; and (4) that Jesus G. Soto did have a physical defect or infirmity in the form of lung disease.
Appellee complains that appellant failed to preserve error on this point because appellant only made a general objection on the grounds stated above and failed to tender a question in proper form. The record reflects, however, that appellant was not objecting to any particular defect in the special issue, but rather to its submission altogether. We hold, therefore, that appellant has preserved error.
All controlling issues raised by the pleadings and any evidence must be submitted to the jury. In this case, appellee’s pleadings clearly alleged the affirmative defense of misrepresentation and fraud. Fraud has been construed under the Insurance Code to mean a misrepresentation made willfully and with intent to deceive the insurer.
American Central Life Insurance Co. v. Alexander,
Likewise, there is some evidence to show that appellant, and not Mr. Soto, actually gave Mr. Nava the information for the application, that appellant signed Mr. Soto’s name to the application, and that she did not read the application before signing it. Appellant further admitted that the answers to the “good health” questions on the application and which were the subject to this special issue were incorrect. Lastly, there is some evidence to show that she was aware of Mr. Soto’s true health condition and the circumstances surrounding it and that she therefore willfully intended to deceive appellee into issuing Mr. Soto a life insurance policy.
We conclude that there were sufficient pleadings and proof to submit special issue number seven. We overrule appellant’s fourth point of error.
By her third point of error, appellant contends the trial court erred by instructing the jury in the court’s charge that “a ‘misrepresentation’ may consist either of words or other conduct which, under the *756 circumstances, amount to an assertion not in accordance with the facts. A statement may constitute a misrepresentation whether it is innocently or intentionally made. Thus, a person who makes representations innocently believing them to be true when they are, in fact, false, is charged in law with misrepresentation regardless of his knowledge of the falsity or his intention to deceive.” By her fifth point of error, appellant contends that the trial court erred by submitting special issue number eight. This issue asked the jury whether Mr. Soto was negligent in misrepresenting the answers to the good health questions in the application for life insurance. Specifically, appellant complains that these submissions permitted a finding favorable to appellee without requiring knowledge of the falsity of the declarations or the willful intention to deceive or defraud appellee.
To avoid a policy of insurance because of misrepresentations, the burden is on the insurer to plead and prove: (1) the making of a representation by the insured; (2) the falsity of the representation; (3) reliance thereon by the insurer; (4) the intent to deceive on the part of the insured in making same; and (5) the materiality of the representation.
Mayes v. Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Co.,
Although several decisions have previously cited the rule to include answers which the insured knew or
should have known
were untrue, the Texas Supreme Court in
Allen
expressly held that the “should have known” language was not proper because it contemplates negligence and would be so understood by the jury.
Allen,
However, after carefully reviewing the entire record, we hold that the trial court’s error was not reasonably calculated to cause nor probably did cause the rendition of an improper verdict. Tex.R.App.P. 81(b)(1);
see also Haney,
The judgment of the trial court is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The record reveals that appellant was the one who actually gave Mr. Nava the information for Mr. Soto’s application and that appellant signed Mr. Soto’s name onto the application. It was disputed whether Mr. Soto was present at the time.
