Cook v. Life Investors Insurane Co. of America

126 F. App'x 722
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedMarch 30, 2005
Docket04-5161
StatusUnpublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 126 F. App'x 722 (Cook v. Life Investors Insurane Co. of America) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cook v. Life Investors Insurane Co. of America, 126 F. App'x 722 (6th Cir. 2005).

Opinion

NELSON, Circuit Judge.

The central issue presented here is whether, under Kentucky law, the defendant insurance company could rescind the plaintiffs insurance policy on the ground that there was a material misrepresentation in the plaintiffs signed application. The district court held that rescission was permissible as a matter of law, and on that basis it entered summary judgment for the company on the plaintiffs claims for recovery under the policy.

We conclude that the ease presents genuine issues of material fact that make summary judgment inappropriate. On the existing record, we believe, a reasonable jury could find that the company’s agent entered a false statement on the plaintiffs application without her knowledge and that the plaintiff signed the application in good faith. Were a jury to so find, Kentucky law would compel a judgment in the *723 plaintiff’s favor. We shall therefore reverse the summary judgment.

I

The plaintiff, Virgie Cook, bought a truck from an automobile dealership in June of 2000. The dealership’s finance and insurance manager, George Bailey, offered Ms. Cook an opportunity to purchase credit life and credit disability insurance from the defendant, Life Investors Insurance Company of America. Ms. Cook decided to purchase the insurance.

Mr. Bailey presented Ms. Cook with an application that included four questions to be read and answered by the applicant. Two of the questions related to pre-existing medical conditions, one related to the applicant’s employment, and one requested additional detail about the responses to the previous questions. Question 2 is most pertinent to this appeal. It asked:

“Have you within the past 12 months been diagnosed or treated by a physician for having any of the following conditions or diseases!;] Back or Neck Disorder, Nervous or Mental Disorder, Chronic Fatigue Syndrome, or Fibromyalgia?”

This question was to be answered by marking either a box labeled “YES” or a box labeled “NO.” It is the “NO” box that was marked on Ms. Cook’s application.

There is evidence suggesting that it might have been Mr. Bailey, rather than Ms. Cook, who marked the “NO” box next to Question 2. In August of 2001 Mr. Bailey reported to Life Investors that Ms. Cook had answered the questions on the application but that he could not remember who had marked her answers on the form. (In later testimony about his usual practice, Mr. Bailey said that he sometimes had the customer read the questions and mark the answers and he sometimes read the questions to the customer and marked the answers himself.) Ms. Cook testified unequivocally that it was Mr. Bailey who filled out the application.

Below the question-and-answer section of the application is a section for the applicant’s signature. The following declaration appears immediately above the signature line:

“I/we represent the information and answers to all questions contained herein are true, to the best of my knowledge and belief. I/we agree that they may be relied upon by the insurance company as the basis for issuing the insurance in connection with my/our loan. I/we acknowledge receipt of a copy of this form.”

Ms. Cook claims to have signed the application without reading it, and there is no evidence to the contrary.

In July of 2001 Ms. Cook filed a disability claim with Life Investors. She stated that problems with her head, neck, and feet had rendered her permanently disabled in June of that year. Life Investors investigated the claim and learned that Ms. Cook had been treated for neck and back pain since before February of 2000. The company asked Mr. Bailey to confirm that Ms. Cook had answered the questions on the insurance application, and, as we have said, he did so in August of 2001. Concluding that Ms. Cook had answered Question 2 falsely, Life Investors rescinded the disability coverage and refunded the premium.

Ms. Cook sued Life Investors in a Kentucky court, and the company removed the action to federal district court. Upon consideration of cross-motions for summary judgment, the district court granted Life Investors’ motion as to all claims. The foundation of the court’s ruling was its determination that Ms. Cook had falsely verified the information on the insurance *724 application by signing the form. The false verification entitled Life Investors to rescind the policy, the court held, because the company would not have issued the policy had it known the truth about Ms. Cook’s medical history.

After an unsuccessful motion for reconsideration, Ms. Cook filed a timely appeal.

II

As a general rule, Kentucky law allows the rescission of an insurance policy if the application for insurance contains a fraudulent or material misrepresentation. See Ky.Rev.Stat. § 304.14-110; Pennsylvania Life Insurance Co. v. McReynolds, 440 S.W.2d 275, 279 (Ky.1969); Kentucky Central Life Insurance Co. v. Combs, 432 S.W.2d 415, 417 (Ky.1968). We agree with the district court that Ms. Cook’s insurance application contained a material misrepresentation.

First, given Ms. Cook’s history of neck and back pain, we think that the “no” answer to Question 2 of her insurance application must be deemed a misrepresentation. We are not persuaded by Ms. Cook’s argument that the word “disorder,” as used in Question 2, is ambiguous. A condition requiring at least 10 doctor visits over a two-year period — as did the pain in Ms. Cook’s back and neck — plainly falls within the ordinary meaning of “disorder,” in our view. See Webster’s Third New International Dictionary at 652 (defining “disorder” as “an abnormal physical or mental condition” and listing “sickness, ailment, [and] malady” as synonyms).

Second, the misrepresentation was plainly material. “The rule is that a false answer is material if the insurer, acting reasonably and naturally in accordance with the usual practice of ... insurance companies under similar circumstances, would not have accepted the application if the substantial truth had been stated therein.” Mills v. Reserve Life Insurance Co., 335 S.W.2d 955, 958 (Ky.1960). Life Investors submitted uncontroverted proof that any application containing a “yes” answer to Question 2 would be rejected out of hand.

But the presence of a material misrepresentation in Ms. Cook’s application for insurance does not necessarily compel a judgment in favor of Investors Life. Kentucky’s highest court held over 80 years ago that an insurance company may not rescind a policy on the basis of false answers placed in an application by the company’s agent, rather than by the applicant, if the applicant signed the application in good faith. See Standard Auto Insurance Association v. Russell, 199 Ky. 470, 251 S.W. 628, 629 (Ky.1923); Aetna Life Insurance Co. v. McCullagh, 185 Ky.

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126 F. App'x 722, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cook-v-life-investors-insurane-co-of-america-ca6-2005.