Katherine M. Nyonteh v. Peoples Security Life Insurance Company, Katherine M. Nyonteh v. Peoples Security Life Insurance Company

958 F.2d 42
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedMarch 5, 1992
Docket90-3151, 90-3156
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 958 F.2d 42 (Katherine M. Nyonteh v. Peoples Security Life Insurance Company, Katherine M. Nyonteh v. Peoples Security Life Insurance Company) 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
Katherine M. Nyonteh v. Peoples Security Life Insurance Company, Katherine M. Nyonteh v. Peoples Security Life Insurance Company, 958 F.2d 42 (4th Cir. 1992).

Opinion

OPINION

PER CURIAM:

Appellant Katherine M. Nyonteh appeals from the district court’s judgment following a bench trial. She contends that the district court erred in finding an insurance policy’s incontestability clause inapplicable as a result of the policy being void due to fraudulent statements made in the insurance application. Appellee Peoples Life Insurance Company (Peoples) cross-appeals, contending that, even if it cannot contest the validity of the policy under the terms of the policy itself, it can do so under the terms of a reinstatement application. We agree with both contentions and, accordingly, affirm.

I.

Anthony J. Howell, Nyonteh’s ex-husband, was hospitalized from February 8 to 11, 1986, at the Duke University Medical Center where he was diagnosed as suffering from chronic granulocytic leukemia. During that time he was told that, barring a successful bone marrow transplant, he had only a short time to live.

On June 14, 1986, Nyonteh and Howell applied to Peoples for insurance on Howell’s life. In answering the health questions on the insurance application, both of them fraudulently concealed Howell’s terminal leukemic condition. Nyonteh did not sign the application, although insurance agent Joseph P. Vaughan filled it out at her direction. As a result, the policy was issued in Howell’s name. Ownership of the policy was subsequently, transferred to Ny-onteh on August 15, 1986. The policy was converted from a term to an endowment policy in July 1987.

Because Nyonteh was late in paying her insurance premiums, the policy lapsed in the summer of 1988. In October 1988, she applied for reinstatement. Vaughan filled out the application at her direction and received a check for payment due. Nyon-teh did not sign the application for reinstatement, as this was not required under Peddles’ procedures. Vaughan mailed the application to Howell with a note requesting him to read it for accuracy, sign it, and return it. Howell did so. In the application, both Nyonteh and Howell again concealed Howell’s condition.

Following Howell’s death, Nyonteh filed a claim for benefits under the policy. No benefits were paid, and she brought this action seeking recovery as the policy beneficiary. Following a bench trial upon stipulated records and documents, the district court held that Nyonteh had an insurable interest in Howell’s life, but that the policy was void and unenforceable due to material misrepresentations in the application for insurance. Nyonteh and Peoples both appealed.

II.

Nyonteh challenges several of the factual findings made by the district court. Specifically, she claims that she did not instruct Vaughan on how to fill out the reinstatement application. She also claims that she had no knowledge of Howell’s illness and that no evidence introduced at trial proved she had such knowledge.

Findings of fact are not disturbed on appeal unless they were clearly erroneous. Friend v. Leidinger, 588 F.2d 61, 64 (4th Cir.1978). In his deposition, Vaughan indicated that he had filled out the reinstatement application by asking Nyonteh the questions on the form and filling in her answers. This is the sole evidence supporting the district court’s conclusion that the reinstatement application was filled out at Nyonteh’s direction. Nyonteh points to the lack of documentary evidence on this point and to her own denials in urging that the district court’s conclusion was in error. It *44 is not this Court’s role, however, to reweigh the evidence. Vaughan’s testimony is sufficient to support the district court’s findings; accordingly, we conclude that they were not clearly erroneous.

Nyonteh’s assertion that there was no direct evidence proving her knowledge of Howell’s condition is correct. Evidence at trial showed, however, that: (1) Nyonteh had had little contact with Howell over the six years prior to the insurance application; (2) Nyonteh and Howell applied for the life insurance policy only four months after he had been diagnosed as suffering from leukemia; (3) Nyonteh falsely stated that she was Howell’s sister in the answers she gave to Vaughan for the June 14, 1986, application; and (4) Nyonteh, not Howell, initiated the purchase of the policy and paid all premiums. Under these circumstances, the inference that Nyonteh knew of Howell’s fatal condition was reasonable.

III.

Nyonteh contends that the district court erred in finding the policy’s incontestability clause inapplicable as a result of the policy being void due to misrepresentations in the insurance application. Because the district court’s conclusion presents a question of law, we will review it de novo. Pierce v. Underwood, 487 U.S. 552, 558, 108 S.Ct. 2541, 2546, 101 L.Ed.2d 490 (1988).

The circumstances under which a misrepresentation in an application for insurance bars recovery are set forth in section 38.2-309 of the Code of Virginia, which provides that “[n]o statement in an application or in any affidavit made before or after loss under [an insurance] policy shall bar a recovery upon a policy of insurance unless it is clearly proved that such answer or statement was material to the risk when assumed and was untrue.” Va.Code Ann. § 38.2-309 (Michie 1990); Chitwood v. Prudential Ins. Co. of Am., 206 Va. 314, 143 S.E.2d 915, 917-18 (1965) (citing to predecessor code section 38.1-336). The concealment of a terminal illness leading to imminent death is material to the risk assumed by an insurance carrier; thus, the district court’s conclusion that Nyonteh and Howell had fraudulently misrepresented the state of Howell’s health in both the insurance application and the application for reinstatement was clearly correct. The principle issue in this case, therefore, is not whether Peoples had grounds to challenge the insurance policy’s validity, but whether it was barred from doing so by the policy’s (or the reinstatement application’s) incontestability clause.

In Harrison v. Provident Relief Ass’n, 141 Va. 659, 126 S.E. 696, 700 (1925), the Supreme Court of Virginia held that an insurer must contest a contract’s validity for false or fraudulent statements within the period prescribed in the policy. Accord Darden v. North Am. Benefit Ass’n, 170 Va. 479, 197 S.E. 413, 415 (1938); see also Va.Code Ann. § 38.2-3107 (Michie 1990) (incontestability period limited to two years). Thus, an incontestability clause forecloses untimely challenges based on material misrepresentations in insurance applications. This result is consistent with holdings in other jurisdictions. See 1A John A. Apple-man & Jean Appleman, Insurance Law and Practice § 332 (rev. vol. 1981); 18 George J. Couch et al., Cyclopedia of Insurance Law § 72:71 (2d ed. rev. vol. 1983); and cases cited therein.

The district court held, and Peoples contends, that the incontestability clause was inapplicable because the insurance policy was void. An incontestability clause normally presupposes a valid contract; a determination that the contract was void thus renders the clause inapplicable. 1A Appleman,

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Bluebook (online)
958 F.2d 42, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/katherine-m-nyonteh-v-peoples-security-life-insurance-company-katherine-ca4-1992.