Mohammed Huda v. Integon National Insurance Co

341 F. App'x 149
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedAugust 12, 2009
Docket08-2193
StatusUnpublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 341 F. App'x 149 (Mohammed Huda v. Integon National Insurance Co) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mohammed Huda v. Integon National Insurance Co, 341 F. App'x 149 (6th Cir. 2009).

Opinion

OPINION

WHITE, Circuit Judge.

In this insurance coverage dispute over which the district court exercised diversity jurisdiction, plaintiff Mohammed Huda, Sr. (Huda) appeals the court’s grant of summary judgment to defendant Integon National Insurance Company (Integon). We AFFIRM.

I. BACKGROUND

On June 22, 2007, Huda, through agent Kaplani Insurance Agency, Inc., signed an *151 application for no-fault automobile insurance with defendant Integon. The first two pages of the application contain general information about the applicant, the underwriter, the vehicle, and the insurance coverage. Specifically, the second page has a section entitled “Driver and Household Member Information,” which instructs the applicant to “List all persons of eligible driving age or permit age.” (Record on Appeal (ROA) at 338.) The section contains Huda’s name only.

On the third page of the application, a section entitled “Undisclosed Driver and Rejection of Coverages” (the “Undisclosed Driver” section) states:

WARNING! READ THIS ENDORSEMENT CAREFULLY

The undersigned agrees that ALL persons of eligible driving age or permit age who live with me, as well as reside in my household, are listed in this application.
The undersigned further agrees that this endorsement will serve as a rejection of all Coverages, which are not required by Michigan law, while any vehicle covered under this policy is being driven, operated, maintained, manipulated, serviced, or used in any manner by an unlisted driver who resides in the named insured’s household.
I understand that I have a continuing duty to notify the Company in writing of any changes of members of my household of eligible driving age or permit age.
The undersigned agrees that this policy may be rescinded and declared void if this application contains any false information or if any information that would alter the Company’s exposure is omitted or misrepresented.
Acknowledged by:

Named Insured’s Signature Date

(ROA at 339.) Huda never signed or dated the “Undisclosed Driver” section. He did, however, sign the “Collision Insurance Authorization” section on the same page. (Id. at 339.) He also signed the “Named Driver Exclusion Notice and Authorization” and the “Applicant’s Certification” on the following pages. (Id. at 34CM1.) Notably, the “Applicant’s Certification” begins:

I certify all answers to all questions in this application are true and correct and I understand, recognize and agree said answers are given and made for the purpose of inducing the Company to issue me a policy for which I have applied. I further certify that ALL persons of eligible driving age or permit age who live with me, as well as reside in my household, are shown above. I certify my principal residence and place of vehicle garaging is correctly shown above and is in the state for which I am applying for insurance at least ten (10) months each year. I understand the Company may declare this policy null and void if said answers on this application are false, misleading, or materially affect the risk the Company assumes by issuing the policy. In addition, I understand I have a continuing duty to notify the Company of any changes of: address, location of vehicles, members of my household of eligible driving age or permit age, operators of any vehicles listed on the policy, or use of any vehicle listed on the policy. I understand the Company may declare this policy null and void if I do not comply with my continuing duty of advising the Company of any change as noted above.

(Id. at 341.)

Huda states in an affidavit: “I was only provided with the signature pages of this Application and specifically, I was never provided with page two of the aforemen *152 tioned Michigan Personal Auto Insurance Application which asked to list all persons of eligible driving age or permit age.” (Id. at 348.) He also alleges that he was “never asked if there were other eligible drivers” in his household. He does not, however, claim that he ever informed anyone at Kaplani that he had a son or a wife.

At the same time that he applied for the Integon policy, Huda provided documentation of prior coverage in the form of a Farm Bureau Insurance certificate of no-fault auto insurance and a Farm Bureau homeowners insurance policy. The certificate of no-fault insurance listed only Huda as a named insured. In contrast, the homeowners policy listed Huda and his wife Kishwar Huda as insured persons living at the same mailing address. 1 (ROA at 343.)

Huda’s application led Integon to issue a no-fault auto policy that listed Huda as the “Named Insured.” (ROA at 181.) The “Misrepresentation and Fraud” section of the policy states,

A. The statements made by you in the application are deemed to be representations. If any representation contained in the application is false, misleading or materially affects the acceptance or rating of this risk by us, by: direct misrepresentation; omission; concealment of facts or incorrect statements; the coverage provided under this policy will be null and void.

(Id. at 196.) 2

One month later, on July 22, 2007, an uninsured vehicle hit the vehicle that was the subject of Integoris policy while Huda’s seventeen-year-old son, Mohammed Huda, Jr., (Huda, Jr.) was driving and Huda was a passenger. The accident caused Huda to suffer serious injuries, in1 eluding the loss of his right eye, multiple rib fractures, and injuries to the musculo-skeletal system that required hospitalization, medical care, and treatment.

When Huda made a claim for no-fault personal insurance protection (PIP) benefits under the policy, Integon denied the claim and declared the policy void ab initio because Huda had not listed Huda, Jr. as a household resident on the policy application. Huda then filed this action for no-fault PIP benefits under Michigan’s No-Fault Act, M.C.L. 500.3101 et seq., in Wayne County Circuit Court. On October 12, 2007, Integon removed the action to federal district court claiming diversity jurisdiction. 3 The district court later permitted the Detroit Medical Center (DMC) to intervene.

On cross-motions for summary judgment, the district court granted Integon summary judgment and dismissed with prejudice Huda’s complaint and DMC’s intervening complaint based on Integoris arguments.

Huda timely appealed. This court granted DMC’s motion to adopt Huda’s appellate brief.

II. ANALYSIS

This court has jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291 and Federal Rule of Appel *153 late Procedure 4(a)(1)(A).

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Bluebook (online)
341 F. App'x 149, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mohammed-huda-v-integon-national-insurance-co-ca6-2009.