Griggs v. Evans

43 A.3d 1081, 205 Md. App. 64, 2012 WL 1523973, 2012 Md. App. LEXIS 53
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMay 2, 2012
Docket2596, September Term, 2009
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 43 A.3d 1081 (Griggs v. Evans) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Special Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Griggs v. Evans, 43 A.3d 1081, 205 Md. App. 64, 2012 WL 1523973, 2012 Md. App. LEXIS 53 (Md. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

KRAUSER, C.J.

Helen C. Griggs and her late husband, Victor G. Griggs, refinanced the mortgage on their home with Beneficial Mortgage Company of Maryland. One of the mortgage instruments the Griggses executed, when they met with representatives of Beneficial Mortgage to obtain the refinancing, contained an arbitration rider, providing that disputes “arising from or relating” to their agreement with Beneficial Mortgage, “shall be resolved, upon the election of [either party] by binding arbitration.” At that time, they also signed an application for a credit life insurance policy 1 from Household Life Insurance Company, appellee, covering them both.

Two years after the refinancing, Mr. Griggs died, whereupon Mrs. Griggs requested payment under that policy. When Household Life denied that request, claiming that the policy papers the Griggses had signed contained inaccurate information regarding Mr. Griggs’s health history, Mrs. Griggs, on behalf of herself and her late husband’s estate, brought an action, in the Circuit Court for Baltimore City, against Household Life, alleging breach of contract and intentional infliction of emotional distress.

After considerable discovery, Mrs. Griggs filed successive amended complaints, adding a claim of insurance fraud and, as defendants, the individuals who had participated in the meeting, at which she and her late husband had executed both the refinancing documents and the credit life insurance application, namely: Integrated Real Estate Processing LP (“Inte *70 grated Real Estate”), which was engaged in the business of closing mortgage loans for financing companies, such as Beneficial Mortgage; Luke Evans, Beneficial Mortgage’s office manager; Marc Kurlander, an independent loan closer who worked, under contract, for Integrated Real Estate; and Andreas Teddy Dailey, Jr., an account executive for Beneficial Mortgage; whom, together with Household Life, we shall collectively refer to as “appellees.” All three individual appellees—Kurlander, Evans, and Dailey—participated both in closing the Griggses’ loan and in procuring the Griggses’ application for credit life insurance.

After Evans and Dailey were added to the suit, they, together with Household, filed a motion to dismiss. In that motion, Evans and Dailey—but not Household Life—demanded arbitration, citing the arbitration rider the Griggses had executed as part of their mortgage lending agreement with Beneficial. That demand was coupled with a request that all other proceedings be stayed pending the outcome of arbitration. When the Baltimore City court granted the request of Evans and Dailey for arbitration “on all issues” and stayed all proceedings until arbitration was concluded, Mrs. Griggs noted this appeal.

Because we conclude that the circuit court erred in granting the request for arbitration, we shall vacate that court’s order compelling arbitration and remand for further proceedings.

FACTS

Mr. and Mrs. Griggs owned a home in Randallstown, Maryland, which was financed by notes secured by two deeds of trust. In early January 2006, they received an unsolicited telephone call from appellee Andreas Teddy Dailey, Jr., an account executive for Beneficial Mortgage, offering to refinance their mortgage. The Griggses accepted that offer. After the Griggses’ home was appraised, appellee Dailey told them that their loan had been approved and that he had arranged an appointment at Beneficial’s office in Owings Mills to complete their refinancing. It was, at that time, he claims, *71 that he suggested to the Griggses that they purchase a credit life insurance policy.

As agreed, on January 20, 2006, the Griggses went to Beneficial’s office to execute the loan documents. Present for that occasion were, in addition to the Griggses, appellees Evans, Dailey, and Kurlander. At Beneficial’s office, the Griggses were, in the words of the complaint Mrs. Griggs filed, “presented with a voluminous amount of paperwork to sign and initial.” They did so as to a host of documents, including a note, deed of trust, and arbitration rider (all of which we shall collectively refer to as the “Mortgage Agreement”), as well as an application for credit life insurance. Mrs. Griggs claims that neither she nor her husband were aware that the life insurance application was among the documents they were executing.

Appellee Luke Evans, Beneficial’s office manager, purportedly reviewed the documents after the Griggses had signed and initialed them. When Evans completed that task, the Griggses were handed a package which, according to the complaint, contained copies of all of the documents they had just executed. Mrs. Griggs maintains, however, that the package did not contain a copy of the application for credit life insurance.

Appellee Marc Kurlander, an independent loan closer working, under contract, for Integrated Real Estate, actually filled out the insurance application. In doing so, he asked the Griggses, he claims, each question and recorded their answers on the application.

Among the questions set forth in the application was a series of queries regarding the Griggses’ respective medical histories. Of particular relevance here was this query:

Have you been diagnosed by a member of the medical profession as having (1) high blood pressure, (2) cancer or tumor, (3) AIDS (Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome) or an ARC (AIDS Related Complex), (4) heart disease, (5) stroke, (6) diabetes, (7) drug or alcohol related condition; any disease or disorder of the (8) digestive system, (9) *72 lungs, (10) kidneys, (11) liver, or (12) blood (other than AIDS)?

Directly across the page from this query were two check-boxes, one labeled “1st Applicant” and the other “2nd Applicant.” Each box was checked “No.” But, according to Mrs. Griggs, neither she nor her husband was ever asked any questions about their medical histories during the refinancing process.

. Shortly after the completion of the refinancing, the Griggses became aware of the existence of the insurance policy, as the first loan statement they received included a monthly insurance premium of $162.50. When the Griggses telephoned the office of Beneficial Mortgage to inquire about the charge, they were informed that it was a monthly premium for credit life insurance. The Griggses paid the premium and did so each month thereafter.

On January 12, 2008, Victor Griggs died of lung cancer. After her husband’s death, Helen Griggs filed an insurance claim with Household Life, demanding payment of $150,000, the maximum benefit under the policy. In March 2008, a representative of Household called Mrs. Griggs, asking about Victor’s health prior to his terminal illness. Mrs. Griggs disclosed that Victor had suffered from diabetes and hypertension.

In a letter dated April 14, 2008, Household Life denied Mrs. Griggs’s insurance claim on the ground that Victor Griggs had failed to disclose material facts about his medical history that, if they had been disclosed, would have resulted in a denial of coverage for him. The letter therefore rescinded coverage of Mr. Griggs, “declaring] it void from its inception in accordance with the insurance certificate.” The letter concluded with the statement that Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
43 A.3d 1081, 205 Md. App. 64, 2012 WL 1523973, 2012 Md. App. LEXIS 53, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/griggs-v-evans-mdctspecapp-2012.