Harrison v. Connecticut Mutual Life Insurance

771 F. Supp. 1053, 1991 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12509, 1991 WL 193512
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. California
DecidedSeptember 5, 1991
DocketC-91-1378 EFL
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 771 F. Supp. 1053 (Harrison v. Connecticut Mutual Life Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harrison v. Connecticut Mutual Life Insurance, 771 F. Supp. 1053, 1991 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12509, 1991 WL 193512 (N.D. Cal. 1991).

Opinion

ORDER

LYNCH, District Judge.

I. SUMMARY

This case raises the issue of whether an insurance policy may be effectively rescinded if the insurer takes the requisite steps under Cal.Civ.Code section 1691, governing the requirements for effecting rescission of a contract, where the insurance policy contains an “incontestability clause.” However, because the parties failed to stipulate whether the contested rescission took place during the contestability period or after its expiration, and it is not clear whether that fact is disputed, the Court may only decide certain of the issues.

II. BACKGROUND

The parties do not dispute that on October 14, 1988, Connecticut Mutual Life Insurance Company (“Connecticut Mutual”), the defendant, issued a disability policy to Robert Harrison, the plaintiff. The policy contains a provision, colloquially known as an “incontestability clause,” that provides, in pertinent part:

Contesting Your Policy. We [Connecticut Mutual] may not contest this policy after it has been in force for 2 years during your lifetime. This excludes any period of disability related to a misrepresentation in your application.

If no time was excluded for “any period of disability related to a misrepresentation,” the policy would have become incontestable on October 14, 1990.

The parties also do not dispute that plaintiff became totally disabled with Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome on September 1, 1990. Plaintiff asserts that he filed a claim for disability benefits under the policy on or about November 8, 1990, but defendant claims that it was not received by the insurer until early December of 1990. On March 14,1991, defendant sent a letter of rescission and tendered a check for all premiums paid to the plaintiff.

Plaintiff filed the instant lawsuit on April 5, 1991. Defendant has filed an answer and affirmative defenses, one of the latter *1055 being “rescission.” The main issue argued by the parties at summary judgment was whether defendant’s letter of rescission and tender of premiums constituted a legally-effective rescission of the disability policy-

ill. DISCUSSION

Plaintiff seeks summary adjudication of a cause of action for breach of contract due to defendant’s alleged failure to pay disability benefits under the contract after plaintiff’s benefit claims were filed. Plaintiff’s basis is that “the insurance policy at issue is and has been incontestable as a. matter of law.” (Emphasis added.) Plaintiff’s argument that the policy is incontestable appears to have three bases: (1) the disputed rescission of March, 1991 was not a “contest” within the meaning of the incontestability clause, and therefore was ineffective; (2) California Insurance Code section 650 precludes defendant from attempting to rescind now that plaintiff has commenced an action on the insurance policy; and (3) while defendant plead rescission as a defense to the action, it did not plead fraud or misrepresentation, and thus defendant is barred from pleading any of those defenses and cannot defeat the breach of contract claims.

One threshold issue which was submerged beneath the issue of rescission was whether the contestability period expired in October 1990, before the attempted rescission, or whether it was tolled by a disability related to misrepresentations in the application, in September 1990, and therefore has not yet expired.

It would appear clear that if the attempted rescission took place after the expiration of the contestability period, it was ineffective. “The word ‘incontestable,’ as used in policies providing that they shall become incontestable, means indisputable, and amounts to a guaranty that no objection shall be taken to defeat the policy____” Couch, Couch on Insurance 2d (Rev. ed., 1983) § 72:1. Once a policy becomes incontestable, an insurer cannot contest the validity of a policy even by bringing suit in a court of law. It is the Court’s view that, a fortiori, the insurer would be barred from unilateral rescission of the insurance contract pursuant to California Civil Code section 1691.

Alternatively, it seems clear that if the attempted rescission occurred prior to the expiration of the contestability period, i.e., if the contestability period has not expired because plaintiff’s disability as of September 1,1990 relates to misrepresentation in the application, then the attempted rescission of the policy was effective pursuant to the pertinent case law and Cal.Civ. Code section 1691. Even assuming a letter of rescission and tender of premiums is not a “contest” under California law, it may nevertheless rescind and void the policy under California statutory law.

Several decisions, from the State of California and the Northern District of California, support the proposition that the incontestability provision does not operate in derogation of an insurer’s right to rescind. In Meyer v. Johnson, the California Court of Appeals stated, ‘‘In the absence of clear and unambiguous rescission, it has been held that when a policy contains an incontestable clause, the insurer must take legal action to cancel such a policy within the prescribed period in order to effect a rescission or cancellation.” Meyer v. Johnson, 7 Cal.App.2d 604, 615, 46 P.2d 822 (1935). This statement suggests that the view of the California courts is that an incontestability clause requires one to take legal action to cancel a policy unless one clearly, unambiguously rescinds. In order to determine whether one has clearly rescinded, one must determine if the requirements of section 1691, which govern how to effect rescission, have been met: (1) prompt notice of rescission; and (2) restoration of value received, or offer thereof.

Similarly, in Ashley v. American Mutual Liability Insurance Co., 167 F.Supp. 125 (N.D.Cal.1958), a decision from the Northern District of California interpreting California law, the court stated:

[A] failure to disclose conditions materially affecting the risk of which the insured is aware makes the contract voida *1056 ble at the option of the insurer. Where there is either concealment or false representation of a material fact, a proper remedy of the insurer is rescission which is accomplished by the return of premiums paid and the giving of notice to the insured. If a policy is thus void or voidable, there can be no recovery thereunder ... since defendant [insurance company] has complied with the requirements of notice and tender of premiums paid.

Id. at 128. Likewise, Mt. Hawley Ins. v. Federal Sav. & Loan Ins. Corp., 695 F.Supp. 469 (C.D.Cal.1987), the most recent federal district court case interpreting California law with relevance to this issue, stated:

Defendants argue that [the insurer] cannot now rescind the policy because it did not give the insureds timely notice.....

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Bluebook (online)
771 F. Supp. 1053, 1991 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12509, 1991 WL 193512, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harrison-v-connecticut-mutual-life-insurance-cand-1991.