53 A.D.2d 86 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1976
Lead Opinion
The amended complaint of Justine Schaefer Tannenbaum, the widow of Dr. Louis E. Schaefer, alleges three causes of action. The first cause of action is against defendant Provident Mutual Life Insurance Company of Philadelphia (hereinafter "Provident”) and is brought by plaintiff as beneficiary of an insurance policy on the life of Dr. Schaefer issued by Provident in the amount of $200,000 because of Provident’s refusal to pay, on the death of Dr. Schaefer. The second cause of action against Provident and defendant Marvin S. Sterling (hereinafter "Sterling”), in essence pleads estoppel against defendants based on acts characterized in the pleading as sounding in fraud, but which upon close scrutiny reveal themselves in certain instances as sounding in negligence, that is, a failure to act with care in respect of a duty owing to the decedent, Dr. Schaefer. Although alleged against both defendants, this second cause has as its ultimate goal the
Study of the record discloses the following pertinent facts:
In 1967, Dr. Schaefer, then 46 years of age, the husband of plaintiff and father of their two children, owned four policies issued by the Guardian Life Insurance Company (hereinafter "Guardian”), insuring his life, in the total face amount of $200,000 and naming the plaintiff as beneficiary. These policies had been obtained for Dr. Schaefer by defendant Sterling, then an agent in the employ of Guardian, between 1960 and 1964. In 1967, these policies were incontestable. In addition to the Guardian policies, Dr. Schaefer listed as extant life insurance policies on his life on his application for insurance in Provident dated July 24, 1967, the following: New York Life Insurance Company—$55,000, Bankers Life Insurance Company—$10,000, and a G.I. policy—$10,000. Thus, the total insurance in effect as of the date of his application to Provident was $275,000. The insurance thus maintained by Dr. Schaefer appears to have been in furtherance of his intent and plan to provide plaintiff in the event of his death with an annual income of $14,000 to enable her to maintain the two children and herself. In his letter to Dr. Schaefer, dated March 11, 1963, Sterling acknowledged this plan, observing: "I have run computations on providing income of $14,000 a year for Justine which works out as follows: 1. Utilizing only insurance a total face amount of $307,000 is required or 2. If we assume a 5% return on invested funds—there must be a*89 fund of $280,000 available, the difference in amounts being due to the guaranteed nature of the insurance income. In either event you are a little short of the goal.” There is no evidence of any change at any time thereafter on Dr. Schaefer’s part with respect to this plan or intent.1
Of interest is the fact that Sterling, who was the insurance agent involved in the vast majority of the relevant transactions whereby Dr. Schaefer obtained or attempted to obtain insurance, characterized himself as a mere "order taker” at trial, disclaiming in one fashion or another the traditional role of insurance salesman with its aspects of counsel, advice and guidance. Indeed, Sterling attempted at trial to portray the deceased Dr. Schaefer as an insurance expert. Sterling admitted that he possessed B.A. and M.B.A. degrees, that he taught life insurance agents for Guardian during his employment by said company, and for Provident thereafter. Of even stronger import is the fact that Sterling was a Chartered Life Underwriter (hereinafter "CLU”) and a registered New York Insurance Consultant.
In 1966, Sterling left Guardian’s employ for that of Berkshire Life Insurance Company. Coincidentally, Dr. Schaefer apparently expressed an interest in obtaining a $200,000 policy from this company (Sterling again disclaiming that he solicited this interest). However, before any action was taken to effectuate the issuance of such policy, Sterling’s employment ended. In 1967, Sterling was employed full time by Provident. Coincidentally, Dr. Schaefer applied to Provident for a policy of insurance on his life in the face amount of $260,000. He executed an application for such insurance on July 24, 1967. The application consisted of Parts I and II as supplemented by a statement on back of a portion of the application. This statement, entitled "Supplementary Statement By Proposed Insured Or Applicant”, contained two questions followed by boxes indicating a "Yes” or "No” answer. To the questions as to whether the insurance applied for was intended to replace insurance in Provident or to replace insurance in any other company, the "No” boxes were indi*90 cated. There followed the signature of Dr. Schaefer. Immediately below on this supplemental form followed a series of questions to be completed and signed by the insurance agent relating to, inter alia, the agent’s relationship with the proposed insured, the latter’s estimated worth and annual income and the amount and mode of payment of the initial premium. Sterling set forth therein that he was personally acquainted with Dr. Schaefer for 13 years and estimated his worth at $350,000, with earned income of $60,000 and other income of $2,000. The information requested as to the initial premium set forth that it was yearly and in the amount of $7,338. On Part II of the application requesting, inter alia, pertinent medical history and details, Dr. Shaefer failed to note that on April 17, 1967, he was admitted to Lenox Hill Hospital. The admitting diagnosis was acute paranoid psychosis. Provident’s Medical Guide indicates that where a "paranoid reaction” is suffered by an applicant within a two-year period, the application should be declined.
Assuming issuance by Provident of the policy originally applied for, Dr. Schaefer would then have insurance in the face amount of $525,000 (as contrasted with the amount of insurance Sterling advised in 1963 as necessary to fulfill the plan) upon which he would be paying in premiums and loan interest, approximately $14,500 annually. In accord with customary insurance practices, Provident requested a credit investigation report from Retail Credit Company. This independent investigative company forwarded to Provident a copy of a report from its files dated July 31, 1967 made for Continental Assurance with respect to Dr. Schaefer. The copy was received by Provident’s underwriting department on August 28, 1967. Retail Credit Company advised Provident by a stamped notation affixed to the report that it was a copy as set forth above and that if . further investigation was required at this time "please let us know.” No request for further investigation was made by Provident. The Retail Credit Company’s confidential "Special Life Report” set forth Dr. Schaefer’s net worth at $150,000 with an annual salary or earned income of $50,000. A fairly detailed insurance history was also set forth. Further, the report indicated that Dr. Schaefer in response to questioning declared that his gross income of $50,000 a year resulted in net income in the $35,000 a year range and that the insurance he was applying for in the amount of $250,000 "is to replace already existing insurance
The answer of Provident sets forth an affirmative defense of rescission of the policy because of material misrepresentation contained in the application for insurance and a further defense that the policy is null and void because of the alleged suicide of Dr. Schaefer during the period of contestability. The policy provides in pertinent part that if the insured commits suicide within two years after the issue date, the amount payable is limited to premiums paid and that the policy will be incontestable after it has been in force during the insured’s lifetime for two years after the issue date. At the close of trial, Provident withdrew the defense of suicide and this issue was not submitted to the jury. A jury verdict was rendered in favor of plaintiff against Provident on the first cause of action and on the third cause of action against both Provident and Sterling. On the second cause of action, the court granted judgment to the plaintiff against both defendants and dismissed defendants’ motions to set aside the judgment and the verdict.
At trial, testimony in the form of excerpts from the examination before trial of Provident’s medical director at the time
Robert P. Ryan, manager of the title and service department of Guardian testified in pertinent part as follows: a CLU is required to take many college courses in areas such as estate planning and finance and is regarded in the insurance field as a professional, an expert and a very knowledgeable individual. Provident never contacted Guardian to advise that the former was considering the issuance of insurance which would replace existing Guardian policies. In recognizing that incontestability is a factor which must be considered on the question of whether to replace insurance, he observed that it is the policy of Guardian where an applicant applies for a policy to replace one in another company, to notify the other company of such application. The purpose of notification between companies where replacement is involved is, according to this witness, to hold the business in the company where it originated, to give the agent an opportunity to conserve his own interest and to make certain that the policyholder has all of the facts before him before he makes a decision to surrender the policy he already has. He noted that the Retail Credit Company is an independent investigatory organization that simply gets a fee for services rendered, whether or not a policy is sold. Guardian’s interest in retaining the business
Relevant to the comparisons between the Guardian policies and the proposed Provident policy prepared and furnished by Sterling for Dr. Schaefer’s consideration, it is clear on this record that such analyses contained so much error that an inference of fraud or negligence was permissible. For example, the premiums due on the Guardian policies were overestimated, while the premium due on the Provident policy was underestimated; the cash value of the Guardian policies were underestimated and dividends were improperly estimated.
Beyond cavil the life insurance biisiness is highly competitive. A life insurance salesman, deriving his income from commissions earned on sales of life insurance, is motivated in this respect by self-interest. His purpose, thus viewed, is to sell life insurance. Both Robert P. Ryan, the manager of the title and service department of Guardian, and Bernard Fiber, an expert witness testifying for plaintiff, agreed that the first
Proper underwriting under the circumstances herein would have alerted Provident to the possibility that replacement insurance was involved. As aptly noted by plaintiff’s expert: "Whenever an individual knows or has reason to believe that a policy being applied for in his company may replace existing insurance, he is required, and every insurance company in the State of New York, requires that the company which has received the application, must apprise the company whose
Provident endeavors to find solace in the fact that the credit report it received was originally made for Continental Assurance Company. On this issue, Mr. Eiber stated: "It doesn’t matter for which company an independent credit agency makes a report. The credit companies that are independent and are making reports for many insurance companies in the city, in the state, perhaps throughout the nation, make a report based on the information that they obtain, and they give this information to their subscribers. If an insurance company asks for a report on an individual and the credit company looks in their files and find that they have completed a report within a reasonable period of time, a week, a month, three months, they can send that report to the company requesting credit information, and say to the company, 'Look, we made this report a week, two, a month ago, and if you want any additional information, please let us know and we will be glad to give it to you.’ But, the quality of the report is exactly the same.” To reiterate, the application herein is dated July 24, 1967; on July 31, 1967, the applicant was interviewed by an investigator from the Retail Credit Company and is reported as saying that the insurance applied for (which is in the same face amount as originally requested in the Provident application) is intended to replace existing insurance and to obatin a lower premium cost; on August 28, 1967, Provident received that report pursuant to its request, which report indicated that the investigation was made for Continental Assurance Company and advises that a further inquiry will be made if Provident so desires. Under these circumstances, it is clear that the home office underwriter, upon proper observance of the duty owed to the applicant by a simple comparison of the application with the report, would have had reason not only to believe that there may be replacement insurance involved, which, in turn, would trigger a duty
Provident seeks to escape liability on its policy because of a material misrepresentation made by the deceased in the application therefor, to wit, that the deceased failed to disclose any history of mental illness or his hospitalization on account thereof. With respect to the statement made by the deceased that insofar as he knew and believed, he was in good health, the actual falsity of such statement is without legal consequence if the statement is made in good faith. Provident asked for an opinion and, in the absence of bad faith, may not quarrel with the opinion given (Sommer v Guardian Life Ins. Co., 281 NY 508). However, even an innocent misrepresentation as to specific diseases or ailments if material is sufficient to allow the insurer to avoid the contract of insurance or defeat recovery thereunder (Eastern Dist. Piece Dye Works v Travelers Ins. Co., 234 NY 441, 449-450; 30 NY Jur, Insurance, §§ 947, 949). Subdivision 2 of section 149 of the Insurance Law provides that "[n]o misrepresentation shall avoid any contract of insurance or defeat recovery thereunder un
The next area of inquiry is whether Provident is estopped from urging such misrepresentation in avoidance of the insurance contract. Regulation 39 of the Insurance Department, effective November 1, 1959 (11 NYCRR 48.0 [d])
"(d) * * * Some agents or brokers specialize in the sale of [high early cash value minimum deposit policies] * * * The immediate attraction to the prospect is a relatively small initial cash outlay in relation to the amount of insurance * * * The incentive to the agent is a high commission in relation to the initial cash outlay by the policyholder.
"(e) For some time minimum deposit plan policies have been of concern to the Insurance Department, not only because of disparities between these and other policies of similar insurance * * * but also because of persistent complaints regarding the sale of such policies and the replacement of existing policies as a result of incomplete or misleading sales illustrations and comparisons * * *
"(1) It is common knowledge in the life insurance business that existing regular policies are being replaced by new high cash value minimum deposit policies. The replacement of existing insurance by new policies is generally not in the best interest of either insured or insurer because of—among other things—the duplication of such acquisition expenses as medical examination, agent’s commissions, and writing the policy. It is contended that such replacement is at a higher level of activity than in many years. Where replacement has been effected, as it has in many instances, by withholding from the insured information essential to a proper decision, such prac*100 tice is considered to be an unfair trade practice and detrimental to the public interest” (emphasis supplied).
To protect the insured and the public interest, subdivision 5 of regulation 39 in effect at the relevant time herein (11 NYCRR 48.5 subsequently repealed eff Oct. 1, 1971), entitled "Safeguards against replacement of existing insurance” provides: "In connection with all applications for life insurance policies, the company shall have in its hies over the signature of the applicant a statement as to whether or not such policies are to replace existing insurance. Where an affirmative answer is given, it is considered in the public interest that an opportunity to present the facts to the insured be given to the insurer which issued the existing insurance so that the insured may have the benefit of all information from both companies as a basis for making a decision in his best interests. It is the responsibility of the company as well as the agent in such cases to make absolutely certain that there is no incomplete comparison or other violation of sections 127 and 211 of the Insurance Law” (emphasis supplied).
The negligent manner with which Provident considered and approved the application of Dr. Schaefer in that the home office underwriter knew or should have known that replacement insurance was involved, had as one of its consequences, the failure on Provident’s part to give Guardian an opportunity to present the facts to its insured, Dr. Schaefer, with the further result that the insured was deprived of "the benefit of all information from both companies as a basis for making a decision in his best interests.” Consequently, a reasonable basis is presented by this record to conclude that Dr. Schaefer’s decision to replace the incontestable Guardian policies with the Provident which is contestable was based on a lack of vital relevant information attributable to the actions and inactions of Provident and its agent, Sterling. Patently, the Insurance Department in its concern with unfair trade practices and the possible detriment posed to insureds and the public interest by replacement insurance, put the insurance industry on notice that where replacement insurance might be involved, misleading or incomplete comparisons were to be safeguarded against, communication between all concerned parties and diligent supervision were to be observed and the insured was to be protected by being supplied with all pertinent relevant information necessary to an informed decision. Indeed, it was and still is required that "all companies li
Correspondence from Sterling to Dr. Schaefer preceding the Provident application evidences an intent to replace insurance.
Second, given the expertise, knowledge and professional standing of Sterling, an agent in the employ of Provident and given the expertise, knowledge and position occupied by the home office underwriter, Hays, and given the public concern evinced by regulation 39 and information supplied to Hays by the Retail Credit Report, it may be concluded that they had a duty to speak, that is, to communicate in some manner to Dr. Schaefer the true state of affairs. In this scene estoppel by silence is also present and reasonably inferred from this record. "An estoppel arises from silence * * * where there is a duty to speak, and where the party upon whom the duty rests has an opportunity to speak and knowing the circumstances which require him to speak, keeps silent * * * [A]n estoppel may be predicated upon the silence of a person who knew, or ought to have known under the circumstances, that it operated to deceive another to the injury of the latter. In such a case, silence in effect is a fraud” (21 NY Jur, supra, § 33).
We now consider another aspect of plaintiff’s case. Provident had physically incorporated the "Supplementary Statement by Proposed Insured and Applicant” into the application. The application, as aforesaid, contained Parts I and II. The "Supplementary Statement” appeared on the reverse side of Part I on the original application. Part I of the application states above the subscription: "It is hereby declared and agreed that: (1) this application which consists of Part I and Part II and any amendments or supplements to them will form the basis for and be a part of any policy issued in accordance herewith” (emphasis supplied). Parenthetically, it is noted that what Provident voluntarily did in 1967, by making the supplement statement signed by the applicant part of the application, is now embraced within a duty imposed upon insurers by the State Insurance Department (11 NYCRR 51.5). Effective October 1, 1971, an insurer must "[r]equire with or as a part of each application for life insurance a statement signed by the applicant as to whether such insurance will replace existing life insurance * * * a complete list of all the applicant’s existing life insurance * * * a statement signed by the agent as to whether, to the best of his knowledge, replacement is involved in the transactions”. (11 NYCRR 51.5 [a] [2], [3], [4]; emphasis supplied.) There was no requirement in 1967 that such statement be required with or as a part of the application, only that the insurance in connection with the application have in its files such state
Subdivision 1 of section 142 of the Insurance Law provides in pertinent part: "Every policy of life * * * insurance * * * delivered or issued for delivery in this state shall contain the entire contract between the parties, and nothing shall be incorporated therein by reference to any * * * application, or other writings, unless a copy thereof is endorsed upon or attached to the policy or contract when issued. No application for the issuance of any such policy or contract shall be admissible in evidence unless a true copy of such application was attached to such policy when issued” (emphasis supplied). It has been aptly noted by the Court of Appeals that "[flor many years now the Insurance Law has required that copies of applications for life insurance be attached to and returned with the policy if the insurer, during the limited period of contestability, is to be entitled to use application misstatements, even fraudulent ones, in defending against any claim
Viewing the third cause of action in light of the fact that plaintiff’s motion to conform the pleadings to the proof was granted at the trial’s conclusion and giving every fair intendment to the allegations of such cause, it must be concluded that the awarding to plaintiff of judgment against defendant Provident on the insurance contract itself under the first and second causes of action necessitates reversal of the judgment in plaintiff’s favor against both Provident and Sterling under the third cause. Whether said cause sounds in fraud or in negligence, there are no damages sustained by plaintiff due to her recovery upon the insurance policy. It is, therefore, unnecessary to consider and resolve the legal issues raised in connection with the third cause as to whether plaintiff may maintain an action for fraud practiced upon the insured, that is, whether she could be found to have relied upon the alleged fraud, and whether the alleged harm suffered by plaintiff flowed with the requisite causation to cast defendants in liability under a negligence concept.
Accordingly, the judgment of the Supreme Court, Bronx County (Trimarco, J. and a jury), entered May 7, 1974, in favor of plaintiff in the sum of $200,000 against defendants should be modified, on the law, to the extent of setting aside the jury verdict against defendants on the third cause of action and dismissing said cause of action and as so modified, the judgment should be affirmed with costs and disbursements to plaintiff against Provident Mutual Life Insurance Company of Philadelphia. Defendant Sterling’s appeal from the order entered on or about September 27, 1974 (Trimarco, J.), should be dismissed as moot.
. Subsequent to March 11, 1963 and prior to 1967, Dr. Schaefer realized his goal of $307,000 in the face amount of life insurance by the obtaining of additional Guardian policies in the amount of $50,000 and $100,000. However, the surrender of a New York Life Insurance policy and the lapse of the $100,000 Guardian policy, coupled with the loss of a group policy in 1965, resulted in the total face value of life insurance in 1967 of $275,000.
. It appears that for the years 1960 through 1967, Dr. Schaeffer’s annual net
. Plaintiff’s expert (Eiber) testified that in making a comparison it is improper to arbitrarily take one age of several policies, but that the policies should be compared on the age of the insured when issued.
. Note that the Insurance Department’s numbering of its regulations differs from that employed by the Official Compilation Codes Rules and Regulations of the State of New York.
. Letter of May 26, 1967 makes reference to "the new plan” * * * "the change”; letter of June 5, 1967 refers to probability of "alter[ing] your entire insurance portfolio”; letter of June 27, 1967 states "your total insurance should be in a company ~____
Dissenting Opinion
The deceased, Dr. Louis E. Schaefer, an internist, had purchsed $200,000 worth of life insurance from Marvin S. Sterling, between the years 1960-1964. Sterling then induced Schaefer to purchase $200,000 worth of life insurance from the defendant Provident Mutual Life Insurance Company, the company for which he was then acting as agent, and Schaefer canceled his older policies. The new
The plaintiff, Justine Schaefer Tannenbaum, was the wife of the deceased and the named beneficiary under the Provident policies. Provident refused to honor the policy.
The amended complaint alleged three causes of action. The first is against Provident only and seeks recovery by plaintiff as a beneficiary under the policy. The second cause of action seeks equitable relief estopping Provident from disclaiming liability on the grounds of Schaefer’s misrepresentations, since he was fraudulently induced to take the policies by Sterling as an agent of Provident. The third cause of action, against both Provident and Sterling, alleges fraud and deceit in that Sterling induced the change of policies by making invalid cost comparisons.
Provident’s defense in refusing to honor the policy was based upon the suicide of Schaefer within two years of issuance of the policy and upon material misrepresentations which he made as to his medical history in his insurance policy application. Sterling urged that the complaint did not state a cause of action against him and, in any event, his liability is limited to commissions received.
The jury returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiff against the defendants on the first and third causes of action, and the court found in favor of the plaintiff on the second cause of action, which requested equitable relief.
At trial, it was conceded that Schaefer made misstatements as to his mental condition. He omitted in his application the fact that the had been under psychiatric care for a paranoid reaction and under treatment for diabetes mellitus. The medical guide used by Provident to determine if it would accept certain applicants as insureds indicated that applicants who had a "paranoid reaction” within two years of the application would be denied insurance coverage.
It is unnecessary to analyze whether or not Sterling as agent of Provident fraudulently induced Schaefer to surrender his old policies in favor of the new ones since, even were this to be true, the judgment in favor of the plaintiff should nonetheless be reversed and the complaint dismissed.
While it is true that occasionally the issue of materiality of a misrepresentation or even its very existence may be for the triers of the facts (Giuliani v Metropolitan Life Ins. Co., 269 App Div 376), the undisputed misrepresentations here made must be found to be material misrepresentations as a matter of law, since it was clear that, had the medical history been revealed, the application would have been rejected (Leamy v Berkshire Life Ins. Co., 39 NY2d 271; Vander Veer v Continental Cas. Co., 34 NY2d 50).
In the case at bar, no claim is made that Schaefer’s misrepresentation was induced by fraud and, in any event, no showing was made that plaintiff as beneficiary relied on the* fraud allegedly perpetrated on Schaefer. The material misrepresentation by Schaefer operated as an efficient supervening cause and therefore damages cannot flow from any fraud allegedly perpetrated by Sterling or Provident.
Accordingly, the judgment of the Supreme Court, Bronx County, entered May 7, 1974, in favor of the plaintiff after a jury trial, should be reversed on the law and the complaint dismissed. The appeal from the order dated September 27, 1974, denying the motion of the defendant Sterling to set aside the verdict, should be dismissed as academic.
Kupferman, J., concurs with Lupiano, J.; Capozzoli, J., concurs in result only; Stevens, P. J., and Lane, J., dissent in an opinion by Lane, J., as to appeal from judgment entered May 7, 1974.
Judgment, Supreme Court, Bronx County, entered on May 7, 1974, modified, on the law, to the extent of setting aside the jury verdict against defendants on the third cause of action
Appeal from order, Supreme Court, Bronx County, entered on September 27, 1974, unanimously dismissed as moot.