Levesque v. Metropolitan Life Insurance

183 A. 870, 88 N.H. 41, 1936 N.H. LEXIS 9
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedMarch 3, 1936
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 183 A. 870 (Levesque v. Metropolitan Life Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Levesque v. Metropolitan Life Insurance, 183 A. 870, 88 N.H. 41, 1936 N.H. LEXIS 9 (N.H. 1936).

Opinion

Woodbury, J.

On the application for reinstatement, underneath the space provided for the questions and their answers referred to above, and over the signature of the insured, appears the following: “I hereby certify that the foregoing statements and answers are correct, and wholly true and have been made by me to induce the Metropolitan Life Insurance Company to reinstate the above policy on my life, which policy lapsed for the non-payment of the premium due .. .; and I agree that if said Company shall grant such reinstatement the same shall be deemed to be based exclusively upon the representations contained in this request and upon the express condition that if the foregoing statements be in any respect untrue said Company shall, for a period of two years from the date of such reinstatement, be under no liability by reason of the attempted reinstatement of the policy, except that the Company shall return to the insured or his personal representative all premiums paid since the date of said reinstatement.”

In spite of the admitted falsity of the answers to the questions con *43 tained in the application for reinstatement and in spite of the admitted genuineness of the insured’s signature thereto, the plaintiffs seek to charge the defendant for the face amount of the policy. They contend that the defendant’s agent was negligent in not discovering the true state of the insured’s health at the time when the application was signed, and that this negligence prevents the defendant from relying upon the provisions of the above certificate as a defence.

In support of their position they produced evidence at the trial to the effect that an agent for the defendant called at the insured’s home during the morning of February 18, 1932, and, finding the insured away, spoke to his wife, the plaintiff Mary. Her version of their conversation is as follows: “ He says ‘ I have some paper for Mr. Levesque to sign.’ He says‘He is well and working?’ I says‘Yes.’ He says ‘What doing?’ I says ‘Pulling over.’ ‘Well,’ he says, ‘when will he be home?’ I says‘Noon time; you come back at noon time.’ So he did come back.” She then went on to testify that when the agent returned at noon he had the application already filled out, that he made no other inquiries concerning the insured’s present health or past medical history, and that the insured, who was illiterate, then signed the application without having it read to him. There is no evidence that the insured was not given an opportunity to have the application read had he so desired or that any fraud of any kind was practiced upon him.

The defendant denies the plaintiffs’version of the circumstances surrounding the execution of the application for reinstatement. It asserts that the questions therein contained were read to the insured by its agent and that the answers were written in by that agent in the presence of the insured and in conformity to the answers which he gave.

The verdict of the jury establishes, for the purposes of this opinion, not only the truth of the plaintiffs' version of the affair, but also that the defendant’s agent was negligent in not asking the questions contained in the application in detail. The issue presented, therefore, is whether or not this negligence estops the defendant from relying upon the false answers as a defence.

In the first place, the insured’s failure to discover the provisions of the application for reinstatement which he signed, there being no evidence of fraud practiced upon him, affords no legal ground for avoiding or nullifying its conditions. Karp v. Insurance Co., 86 N. H. 124. And the fact that the signer was illiterate does not alter the situation. Lauze v. Insurance Co., 74 N. H. 334; Duval v. Insurance Co., 82 N. H. 543, 553.

*44 Since it definitely appears that the truth of the statements of fact contained in that application was made a condition precedent to the reinstatement of the policy, and since the statements therein contained were in fact false, absence of liability would clearly follow unless there are “countervailing considerations of controling force.” Karp v. Insurance Co., supra.

The plaintiffs contend that negligence on the part of the defendant’s agent in not discovering the true state of the insured’s health is a sufficient “countervailing consideration” to support a verdict for them under the rule established in Domocaris v. Insurance Co., 81 N. H. 177, and Bilodeau v. Insurance Co., 84 N. H. 405. Those cases are not in point. In both of them the agent had actual knowledge of the true state of affairs, and falsely and fraudulently misrepresented the situation to both the insured and the insurer. Such is not here the case.

The defendant relies upon the Karp case cited above. In that case the defendant’s agent was negligent, but his negligence was regarded as immaterial because the insured was not aware of her bad health and so no amount of inquiry from her would have disclosed the true situation. Certain language in that case, however, (p. 126) clearly indicates that mere negligence is not a “countervailing consideration of controling force” sufficient to invoke the doctrine of the Domocaris and Bilodeau cases. In fact, it is there expressly said that the rule of those cases “involves a departure from common-law doctrines of agency, and its utility as an instrument for the accomplishment of substantial justice is extremely dubious,” and further, that “we should hesitate to extend that rule so as to cover any new situation.”

For the purpose of the case before us it suffices to say that, in conformity with the above quoted dicta, we will not extend the rule of the Domocaris and Bilodeau cases to this situation where there has been mere negligence. It therefore follows that the defendant is not estopped from setting up the defence of non-compliance with the conditions precedent to the reinstatement of the policy, and since those conditions were not complied with, the defendant is entitled to prevail. For cases reaching this result see McCormack v. Insurance Co., 220 N. Y. 447; Axelroad v. Insurance Co., 267 N. Y. 437; Perkins v. Insurance Co., 69 Fed. (2d) 218.

Furthermore, if there had been no negligence the true facts would have been discovered and there would have been no right to have the policy reinstated. It follows that the negligence of the defendant’s agent is here immaterial.

*45 Two other arguments for the plaintiffs remain to be considered.

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Bluebook (online)
183 A. 870, 88 N.H. 41, 1936 N.H. LEXIS 9, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/levesque-v-metropolitan-life-insurance-nh-1936.