Bunn v. MONARCH LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY

478 P.2d 363, 257 Or. 409, 1970 Ore. LEXIS 457
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 16, 1970
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 478 P.2d 363 (Bunn v. MONARCH LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bunn v. MONARCH LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY, 478 P.2d 363, 257 Or. 409, 1970 Ore. LEXIS 457 (Or. 1970).

Opinion

O’CONNELL, C.J.

Plaintiff brought this action to recover on a life insurance policy issued on the life of her deceased husband, Donald Bunn. The case was tried without a jury. Plaintiff appeals from a judgment for defendant insurance company.

Defendant denied liability under the policy on the ground that the insured made material misrepresentations in his application for the policy.

In 1965, Donald Bunn purchased a life insurance policy from defendant. The purchase was made through Lester Lewis, defendant’s local agent. At the tune Bunn made his first application for insurance he also signed three other application forms which were left blank except for the signature. Later when Bunn sought additional insurance Lewis filled in the previously signed blank forms by using the information contained in the first application. The application for the policy in question in the present ease was completed in this way.

In this application the box entitled “marital *411 status” was filled in with the word “married,” and the question, “Does any such person contemplate a change in occupation or residence, or foreign travel?” was answered “No.”

At the time this application was made Bunn was not married, although he was living with plaintiff and had been living with plaintiff as man and wife for fifteen years during which time they had two children.

The evidence shows that at the time Bunn authorized Lewis to submit the application for further insurance, Bunn informed Lewis of his tentative plans to work in Vietnam. However, the new application, having been filled out upon the basis of the original application, indicated that Bunn did not contemplate any foreign travel. While the application was still being processed Bunn informed Lewis that he had definitely decided to go to Vietnam and that he wanted the policy to cover him under -those circumstances. Lewis made no changes in the application. The policy was issued with the unchanged application attached and was delivered to Bunn. Shortly thereafter Bunn married the plaintiff, and left for Vietnam. He died there one year later.

The insurer defended on the basis of the two misrepresentations in the application. The plaintiff contends that the misrepresentation of marital status was not material, and that the insurer is estopped from interposing as a defense the alleged misrepresentation regarding Bunn’s contemplated foreign travel, because Bunn had informed defendant’s agent of the intention to travel to Vietnam. The trial court held that the misrepresentations were false and material.

*412 Plaintiff first contends that there was no substantial evidence to support the finding that the misrepresentation of marital status was material.

The courts are not in agreement in formulating the test or standards for the materiality of false representations made in an application for an insurance policy. It may be broadly stated that a false answer is material if the insurer would not have accepted the application had a truthful answer been given. The burden of proving the materiality and falseness of the answer rests upon the insurer.

In the present case the insured’s representation as to his marital status was concededly false — insured was not married. His false answer would be material only if the insurer would not have accepted insured’s application and would not have issued the policy if the insured had truthfully stated that he was single. The insurer introduced no evidence revealing what it would have done if the insured had inserted in the application the word “single” instead of the word “married.”

An officer of the insurer testified that “If we had known there was a misrepresentation, we would not have issued the policy,” but he explained that this was “because we would have been very cautious and wondered whether there was other information that was misrepresentative of the truth.”

This response did not reveal whether the insurer would or would not have accepted the application if the insured had inserted the word “single”; *413 the response merely revealed that the insurer would not have accepted the application if it knew that the insured was lying in one particular because there would then be a basis for distrusting the insured’s representations as to other particulars. The witness went on to testify, as follows:

“Q And as an Underwriter, what has marital status to do with life insurance risks, mortality, expectancy and so on?
“A Well, there are several factors involved. The first is that persistency may not be as favorable as on a married person, he might not continue his premiums. There may be other parties involved, and therefore, we think that the mortality rating might be higher; on the married person, it seems to be more stable, and he also seems to be more cautious in his attitude and his way of living.
“Q Are you talking about this from the standpoint of a chance a person takes with accidents or the chance he takes with homicide?
“A It could be chances with homicide or any sort of violence at all, plus the moral risk.
“Q What do you mean by ‘the moral risk’?
“A If the person is married, we feel that he is a more stable person and that he is more settled than one who is not.
“Q Are these pretty general observations and evaluations in the life insurance industry in this part of the twentieth century?
“A They are.
“Q Now, would you, for a single man, be giving any insurance for a spouse carrying life insurance, on spouse or illegitimate children?
“A No, we would not.”

We do not regard this testimony as an assertion that defendant would have rejected the applica *414 tion for insurance if the applicant had inserted the word “single” instead of the word “married.” We interpret the testimony to mean only that if the insurer knew that the insured was single and also that he was illicitly living with a woman, the insurer would not have issued the policy or would have issued it only at a higher premium.

We hold that the evidence was not sufficient to establish the materiality of the insured’s representation that he was married.

The representation relating to the insured’s intention to travel to a foreign country was clearly material; the only question is whether the insured is bound by it.

It is plaintiff’s position that Bunn informed the insurer, through its agent Lewis, of Bunn’s intention to travel to a foreign country and that, therefore, there was no misrepresentation by the insured. The application when first made contained a truthful representation as to the insured’s intention with respect to foreign travel.

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Bluebook (online)
478 P.2d 363, 257 Or. 409, 1970 Ore. LEXIS 457, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bunn-v-monarch-life-insurance-company-or-1970.