American Heritage Life Insurance Co. v. Blackmon

7 So. 3d 1028, 2008 Ala. Civ. App. LEXIS 697, 2008 WL 4757147
CourtCourt of Civil Appeals of Alabama
DecidedOctober 31, 2008
Docket2070266
StatusPublished

This text of 7 So. 3d 1028 (American Heritage Life Insurance Co. v. Blackmon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Civil Appeals of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
American Heritage Life Insurance Co. v. Blackmon, 7 So. 3d 1028, 2008 Ala. Civ. App. LEXIS 697, 2008 WL 4757147 (Ala. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

PITTMAN, Judge.

American Heritage Life Insurance Company (“the insurer”) appeals from a judgment of the Bullock Circuit Court awarding John Blackmon and Tchernavia Blackmon the sum of $10,000 on the Blackmons’ breach-of-contract claim against the insurer arising out of the insurer’s refusal to pay an insurance claim submitted by the Blackmons with respect to the death of Mrs. Blackmon’s son, Jeffery Williams (“the decedent”). We reverse and remand with instructions.

The pertinent facts are as follows. In November 2002, representatives of the insurer went to Bullock Correctional Facility to solicit insurance-policy applications from workers there. Mrs. Blackmon, who had been an employee of the Department of Corrections for approximately 15 years and who had completed high school and could read and write, entered into a conversation with one of those representatives concerning the acquisition of a policy of insurance upon the life of Mr. Blackmon, during which a representative advised her that her own children “would be covered” under such a policy. Mrs. Blackmon then elected to complete an application for a policy of insurance that would afford coverage not only for Mr. Blackmon but also for his children and stepchildren.

In an effort to obtain the desired insurance coverage, Mrs. Blackmon, with the assistance of the insurer’s representative, completed a form labeled “Application for Life and Health Insurance” listing Mr. Blackmon as the “Proposed Insured” and herself as the owner and primary beneficiary of the policy. The first page of the application listed the product desired as a “Universal Life” policy with a death bene *1030 fit of $54,487 and bore a marked check-box indicating “Simplified Issue”; the application further showed that a “CTR” life rider (indicating “children’s term rider”) was being sought with a death benefit of $10,000. The form also contained blanks for listing “Dependents Proposed For Coverage,” in which Mrs. Blackmon identified “Tashina G. Archie” and “Macorius Harris,” who were respectively disclosed as being 18 years old and 11 years old.

At the time that Mrs. Blackmon submitted her application, however, Mr. Black-mon and Mrs. Blackmon, taken together, were the parents of four additional children between the two of them. One of Mrs. Blackmon’s children, the decedent, was born to Mrs. Blackmon and Isom Coley in 1979 but lived with Mrs. Blackmon’s mother, Odessa Williams, in Atmore for the bulk of his life. The decedent was omitted from that section of the insurance application as a dependent proposed for coverage. When Mrs. Blackmon was asked about that omission at trial, she testified that, in the process of filling out her children’s names, she received a radio call directing her to report to another location at the facility. Mrs. Blackmon testified that she had then informed the insurer’s representative that she would have to leave and asked what needed to be done about listing other dependents, including the decedent (whom she apparently had identified as being “sick”); at that time, she said, she had been informed that her children would be covered because “the children didn’t have to be listed.” Despite the omission of the names of her and her husband’s four other children, including the decedent, from the application, Mrs. Blackmon admitted that she had, in fact, intended that all six children would be covered under the children’s term rider to the policy issued in response to the application.

The second page of the insurance application contained, among other things, a number of additional questions to be answered by the applicant. The left side of the form contained labels indicating the applicability of each particular numbered interrogatory item to the pertinent policy sought, e.g., “All Life,” “All Life & Health,” “All Accident Plans and Riders,” and “Simplified Issue Disability Income & Sickness Riders.” Question 5, which bore the label “Simplified Issue Life $100,000 Or Below” (i.e., the form of coverage sought by Mrs. Blackmon), contained the following pertinent question:

“Within the last 3 years, has any person to be insured: had a chronic disease (including but not limited to heart disorder, stroke, cancer, diabetes, etc.); been hospitalized; seen a physician (other than for colds, flu or normal pregnancy or a routine physical with no unfavorable results); or been counseled for or excessively used alcohol or any type of drugs?”

Mrs. Blackmon’s application bears a response of “No” to that question.

The application further directed the applicant to “list the required health history in Question 10” if any response to Questions 2 through 9 were in the affirmative. Question 10 requested the “Name” of the pertinent person to whom the positive response in Questions 2 through 9 applied, the “Nature of [the] Illness/Injury or Medical Attention/Reason Last Consulted,” the “Date and/or Duration” of the pertinent condition, and the “Name and Address of [the] Physician or Hospital/Clinic” that afforded treatment as to the condition. The response field for Question 10 was left blank.

The record reflects that in 1991 the decedent was diagnosed with cerebral palsy, a chronic disease. From that year, the decedent was a paraplegic and required *1031 significant assistive care, having ceased responding to communication attempts from family members and nurses. The decedent went blind in 1999, and from that time he required a breathing tube for his survival; also, according to the deposition testimony of Mrs. Blackmon’s mother, the decedent was under the care of a Mobile physician during the period from 1999 to 2002, and the decedent was admitted to a Mobile hospital for approximately 180 days between February 2000 and August 2002, within the three-year window as to which the application sought information as to “any person to be insured” under a simplified-issue life-insurance policy in the amount sought. It is also undisputed that Mrs. Blackmon knew of the decedent’s hospitalizations and medical conditions at the time she applied for the insurance policy.

The bottom portion of the application at issue contains spaces for the signatures of the proposed insured and the owner of the policy sought. Immediately above the signature lines appears the following provision:

“I have read or had read to me the completed application and understand that any misstatement or misrepresentation in the application may result in loss of coverage. I represent that statements and answers given on this application are true, complete, and correctly recorded. ... I also understand that no agent has authority to waive any answer or otherwise modify this application, or to bind this company in any way by making any promise or representation that is not set out in writing on this application.”

Mrs. Blackmon, after having been afforded the opportunity to review the application, signed the application for both herself and Mr. Blackmon, and in response to the application and in reliance upon the answers given, the insurer issued an insurance policy containing a children’s term rider affording coverage for “any ... stepchild ... of the insured” who “is ... named in the application and is less than 25 years of age” subject to a two-year period of con-testability for causes other than nonpayment of premium.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
7 So. 3d 1028, 2008 Ala. Civ. App. LEXIS 697, 2008 WL 4757147, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-heritage-life-insurance-co-v-blackmon-alacivapp-2008.