Home Fire & Marine Insurance Company v. Julius B. Tisdale, Johnny M. Phillips and Herman F. McMahon

303 F.2d 348, 1962 U.S. App. LEXIS 5147
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedMay 10, 1962
Docket8551_1
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 303 F.2d 348 (Home Fire & Marine Insurance Company v. Julius B. Tisdale, Johnny M. Phillips and Herman F. McMahon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Home Fire & Marine Insurance Company v. Julius B. Tisdale, Johnny M. Phillips and Herman F. McMahon, 303 F.2d 348, 1962 U.S. App. LEXIS 5147 (4th Cir. 1962).

Opinion

ALBERT V. BRYAN, Circuit Judge.

The application of Johnny M. Phillips for an automobile liability policy in South Carolina with the Home Fire & Marine Insurance Company represented that his driver’s license had never been suspended, when in truth, as the insured concedes, it had been. Exoneration from responsibility under the policy was sought on this ground by the insurer in a declaratory judgment action.

The insured answered that the insurer’s agent had been told of the suspension when he took the application, and the company is now estopped to repudiate the contract. The insurer traverses this factual premise. The legal conclusion it likewise denies, pointing to policy stipulations which specifically purport to preclude estoppel through an agent’s knowledge of changes in the policy unendorsed thereon and contradictory to its written terms.

The District Court, directing a verdict for the company, held the policy stipulations to prevail as a matter of law, despite the agent’s foreknowledge of the falsity of the statement. As a diversity case the law of South Carolina controls, and the direction cannot be upheld.

The policy in suit was issued to Johnny M. Phillips by a company agent at Charleston Heights, South Carolina on application of his wife. At the instance of her husband, Barbara Phillips called at the agent’s office on October 10, 1960 seeking a policy on a Ford Ranch Wagon which he was then purchasing from her brother-in-law. The questions on the application form were read to her by the agent and her responses typed on the blank by a clerk or stenographer. Among the questions was this one: “Has any operator had his license suspended or revoked?”. The answer noted was “No”.

This question was preceded by several in the same block: “Has any company cancelled or refused any operator insurance in the past three years ?”; “Has any operator been involved in an accident in the past three years?”; and “Has any operator been cited for a traffic violation except parking in the past three years ?”. To each of these questions a negative answer was entered. Barbara Phillips then signed the application in the name of her husband and paid the premium.

A few days later an investigator for the company called at the Phillips’ home. With the same application in hand he directed to them the inquiries thereon, which, of course, were those made at the agent’s office. After the interview the answers remained as they were initially written. Within a week the policy arrived by mail, with the application as signed for Johnny M. Phillips by his wife attached to it.

A cursory glance satisfied Phillips of his coverage—he did not read the policy in detail. Immediately pertinent here are these conditions in the policy:

“14. Changes. Notice to any agent or knowledge possessed by any agent or by any other person shall not effect a waiver or a change in any part of this policy or estop the company from asserting any right under the terms of this policy; nor shall the terms of this policy be waived’ or changed, except by endorsement issued to form a part of this policy.
“17. Declarations. By acceptance of this policy, the insured named in Item 1 of the declarations agrees that the statements in the declarations are his agreements and representations, that this policy is issued in reliance upon the truth of such representations and that this policy embodies all agreements existing between himself and the company or any of its agents relating to this insurance.”

Driving the insured car on or about December 2, 1960 Phillips was involved in an automobile accident resulting in *350 personal injury to another who then sued him for damages in a State court. The present action was brought by the insurer against Phillips, his vendor of the car and the injured person, for a judgment declaring the policy null and void “from the time of its issuance, [as] having been obtained by fraud”. While other grounds were alleged for annulment of the policy, the District Court at trial and the company on this appeal relied on the falsity of the answer to the question covering the suspension of Phillips’ license.

All the defendants answered denying the alleged invalidity of the policy. Phillips, in addition, counterclaimed for damages against the company for breach of the policy contract and fraud, averring that withdrawal of the policy’s coverage caused him loss of time from work and expenditure of moneys in defense of the personal injury action as well as mental anguish and inconvenience. As we read the record, this counterclaim was in effect dismissed by the Court below when it held the policy invalid.

At trial Barbara Phillips testified that when the matter of the suspension arose, she explained to the agent that her husband’s license had been suspended in 1957. The agent, she continued, told her “if it hadn’t been in the past three years it didn’t matter * * * ”, and directed entry of the answer “No”. She further .said that the same responses were given to the investigator who came to her home, and that he adopted the agent’s construction of the interrogatory—the company was concerned only with the immediate three-year period. The Phillips were thus assured, the suspension occurring more than three years before.

Johnny Phillips—testifying to the latter occasion—stated that he expressly informed the investigator of the suspension. This investigator did not testify, and was never identified. The agent did appear and denied that either Johnny or Barbara Phillips had advised him at any time of the license suspension. He declared that the policy would not have been issued in that knowledge, and further disclosed that since the policy was for a preferred risk, it carried a premium lower than the usual charge.

Rescission of a policy—the gravamen of the insurer’s action—for misstatement of a representation can be obtained by an insurer in South Carolina only upon a showing that the accused statements were: (1) untrue; (2) known to the applicant to be false; (3) material to the risk; (4) relied on by the insurer; and (5) made with intent to defraud and deceive the company. Pilot Life Ins. Co. v. Pulliam Motor Co., 229 F.2d 912, 916 (4 Cir. 1956); see Metropolitan Life Ins. Co. v. Bates, 213 S.C. 269, 49 S.E.2d 201, 205 (1948). If the misstatement was a breach of warranty, the insurer need merely prove it untrue. Nix v. Sovereign Camp, W. O. W., 180 S.C. 153, 187 S.E. 175, 176 (1936). No distinction between representation and warranty is required now, however, since all five of the requisites just enumerated were met: admittedly the answer in respect to the license suspension was untrue; obviously it was material and was relied upon by the insurer; of course the falsity was known to the insured; and, if unexplained, his knowledge conclusively established evil intent. Johnson v. New York Life Ins. Co., 165 S.C. 494, 164 S.E. 175, 177 (1932).

Phillips denies, however, that the answer as noted on the application was ever given. Of course the application was really his, for he authorized his wife to get the policy for him; he accepted it and relies on it.

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Related

Southern General Factors, Inc. v. Parker Concrete Pile Co.
236 F. Supp. 103 (E.D. South Carolina, 1964)
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Bluebook (online)
303 F.2d 348, 1962 U.S. App. LEXIS 5147, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/home-fire-marine-insurance-company-v-julius-b-tisdale-johnny-m-ca4-1962.