Plaintiff, State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Company (hereinafter State Farm), appeals as of right from a judgment entered on January 29, 1974 which refused plaintiffs request that an automobile insurance policy which it had issued to defendants Frank and Robert Kurylowicz be cancelled and held void ab initio.
In February or March of 1971 defendant Robert John Kurylowicz made application to State Farm *570 for insurance coverage on an automobile. In filling out the application form, the agent asked Mr. Kurylowicz a number of questions, one of which was whether or not, at any time during the past five years, had the insured or any member of his household had his license to drive suspended or revoked. Although there was a conflict in the testimony, the trial judge found that Robert Kurylowicz had answered "no” to that question, whereupon the agent so indicated in the appropriate box on the application form. On May 10, 1971, Robert Kurylowicz returned to the office, made a deposit of $65 on the insurance and received a verbal binder from the agent. The agent thereupon completed the application form, showing May 10, 1971 as the date of the application and the effective date of the policy of insurance. It was uncontroverted at trial that Robert Kurylowicz’s driver’s license had been suspended from September 14 to October 13, 1970.
On May 20, 1971, Robert Kurylowicz was involved in an automobile accident in which one Michael W. Thorn was killed and five other persons injured. Robert Kurylowicz was involved in a second accident on July 19, 1971. On August 23, 1971, State Farm declared a recission of the policy retroactive to May 10, 1971, alleging as grounds that Robert Kurylowicz had misrepresented material facts in his application concerning previous revocation or suspension of his driver’s license.
A suit was subsequently commenced by the administrator of the estate of Michael W. Thorn against Robert John Kurylowicz, Frank G. Kurylowicz and others. Thereafter, State Farm brought the instant action for declaratory judgment seeking to determine the rights of the various parties under the policy. A trial was held and the circuit *571 judge issued a written opinion in which he held that there was insurance coverage at the time of the accident on May 20, 1971. A motion for rehearing was denied and State Farm thereupon filed this appeal. The sole issue presented is whether the misrepresentation by Robert Kurylowicz in his application for automobile insurance will justify a determination that his automobile insurance policy was void ah initio.
State Farm relies on the case of
Keys v Pace,
"Rather, is the insurer not entitled to give credence to its insured’s honesty until it has actual notice that he is a scoundrel? Moreover, if inquiry is to be demanded, is it enough to stop with the traffic court? Might not the accident suggest physical or psychiatric defects? Should investigations not also be made of the past hospitalizations of the insured? Where will we say this may stop within the existing economic framework? It is doubtful whether one who deliberately sets out to swindle an insurance company can be prevented from doing so by any such requirement, and it is even more doubtful that there is enough of this practice to warrant the placing upon the insurance business a requirement so onerous.”
Keys v Pace has never been overruled, but it is interesting to note that no Michigan appellate court has seen fit to cite this case since it was released in 1959.
In 1966, the Michigan Legislature saw fit to amend the Michigan Insurance Code of 1956 by the enactment of
The Michigan Legislature in 1965 enacted the Motor Vehicle Accident Claims Act, MCLA 257.1101
et seq.;
MSA 9.2801
et seq.,
in order to provide compensation for citizens injured by uninsured tort-feasors who would otherwise have no source of recovery.
Bowser v Jacobs,
Finally, we note that the Legislature has enacted
When these statutes are read in pari materia, the policy of the State of Michigan regarding automobile liability insurance and compensation for accident victims emerges crystal clear. It is the policy of this state that persons who suffer loss due to the tragedy of automobile accidents in this state shall have a source and a means of recovery. Given this policy, it is questionable whether a policy of automobile liability insurance can ever be held void ab initio after injury covered by the policy occurs. Generally, it is held that:
"The liability of the insurer with respect to insurance required by the act becomes absolute whenever injury or damage covered by such policy occurs * * * no statement made by the insured or on his behalf and no violation of the policy provisions may be used to defeat or avoid the policy.” 1 Long, The Law of Liability Insurance, § 3.25 pp 3-83-84. See
Detroit Automobile Inter-Insurance Exchange v Ayvazian,
That issue is not before us in this case, so we need not decide it. We need only decide whether, under the facts of the case at bar, State Farm reasonably relied on the representations of the insured so as to justify a holding that the policy was procured by fraud, thus warranting a judicial determination that the policy was void ab initio. This question has not been decided in Michigan since the Legislature has spelled out the policy of this state in the statutes as discussed supra. We turn, therefore, to a brief discussion of significant cases from other jurisdictions.
In the case of
State Farm Mutual Automobile
*575
Insurance Co v Wall,
92 NJ Super 92;
Under similar facts, the Utah Supreme Court in
State Farm Mutual Insurance Co v Wood,
"An insurer cannot neglect its duty to make a reasonable investigation of insurability or postpone that investigation until after it learns of a probable claim and still retain its right to rescind. To permit an insurer to avoid its duty to make a reasonable investigation within a reasonable time would permit it to retain the
*576
premiums and avoid all risk under the policy.”
Similarly, in the case of
Barrera v State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Co,
71 Cal 2d 659; 79 Cal Rptr 106;
"We conclude that an automobile liability insurer must undertake a reasonable investigation of the insured’s insurability within a reasonable period of time from the acceptance of the application and the issuance cf a policy. This duty directly inures to the benefit of third persons injured by the insured. Such an injured party, who has obtained an unsatisfied judgment against the insured, may properly proceed against the insurer; the insurer cannot then successfully defend upon the ground of its own failure reasonably to investigate the application.” 71 Cal 2d at 663; 79 Cal Rptr at 109;
The court noted that according to testimony in the court below a check on the proposed insured’s driving record could have been made at a cost of $.25. Allowing the insurance carrier to obtain rescission ab initio, the Court reasons, would not only contravene the state policy of providing monetary protection to persons using the highways who suffered injuries through the negligent use of those highways by others, but it would also allow the insurance carrier to accept premiums without incurring any risk. The Court stated:
<< * * % if an automobile liability insurer can perpet
*577
ually postpone the investigation of insurability and concurrently retain its right to rescind until the injured person secures a judgment against the insured and sues the carrier, then the insurer can accept compensation without running any risk whatsoever. Such a rule would permit an automobile liability insurer to continue to pocket premiums and take no steps at all to probe the verity of the application for the issued policy unless and until the financial interest of the insurer so dictated. Furthermore, under such a rule, the carrier would be permitted to deal with the insured as though he were insured, and thus to lead him to believe that he was in fact insured.” 71 Cal 2d at 670; 79 Cal Rptr at 114;
The state of New York also has a policy opposing rescission
ab initio
of automobile liability insurance policies, and has held that as a matter of public policy, an insurance carrier cannot rescind automobile insurance
ab initio. Allstate Insurance Co v Sullam, 76
Misc 2d 87, 103;
We find the reasoning of these cases and the conclusions which they reach to be compelling. In the case at bar, State Farm could have obtained a copy of the insured’s driving record for $2. We hold that, in the light of the intervening legislation and the public policy of the State of Michigan which such legislation implies, Keys v Pace, supra, is inapplicable to the case at bar.
State Farm argues that the statutes cited by the trial judge and by the defendants are inapplicable^ since they relate to cancellations and not rescission
ab initio.
Such a construction would require that we hold, in effect, that although an insurer may not cancel a policy of automobile liability insurance based on fraud subsequent to the pay
*578
ment of a claim under the policy, it may nevertheless treat the policy as void
ab initio
and avoid liability on the policy altogether. We do not think that the Legislature intended such an absurd consequence. We construe statutes with the aim of preventing injustice,
Lakehead Pipe Line Co, Inc v Dehn,
We are not unmindful that this Court held, in the case of
State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Co v Allen,
In the case at bar the trial judge held that the misrepresentation of the insured would not prevent recovery against the insurer by third parties who had been injured by the insured. We agree.
The Michigan Supreme Court has held that the unreasonable delay of a life insurance company in accepting or rejecting an application for insurance, together with a retention of a premium or deposit will amount to an acceptance of the application by implication.
Gorham v Peerless Life Insurance Co,
*579
The trial judge reached the right result.
Affirmed.
