Monumental Life Insurance v. Hayes-Jenkins

403 F.3d 304
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedMarch 9, 2005
DocketNo. 03-40930
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 403 F.3d 304 (Monumental Life Insurance v. Hayes-Jenkins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Monumental Life Insurance v. Hayes-Jenkins, 403 F.3d 304 (5th Cir. 2005).

Opinions

WIENER, Circuit Judge:

Appellant Sondra Hayes-Jenkins (“Sondra”) appeals the district court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of appellees Monumental Life Insurance Company (“MLIC”) and NovaStar Mortgage (“No-vaStar”). In MLIC’s declaratory judgment action, the court held that Sondra was not entitled to benefits under MLIC’s policy of mortgage life insurance and dismissed with prejudice her Texas state law claims for breach of contract and negligence and for violations of the Texas Deceptive Trade Practices Act and the Texas Insurance Code. The district court also granted summary judgment to NovaStar, dismissing Sondra’s third party claims against it. We affirm in part and reverse and remand in part.

I. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

This dispute was precipitated by MLIC’s denial of Sondra’s demand that the proceeds of a mortgage life insurance policy issued by MLIC in connection with a home mortgage loan from NovaStar to Sondra and her now-deceased husband, Alvin Jenkins (collectively “the Jenkinses”), be applied to liquidate the remaining balance on that loan. MLIC refused thus to disburse the policy proceeds because the Jenkinses had failed to pay the first premium due on the policy prior to (1) its retroactively specified effective date (April 1, 2001) and (2) the date of Alvin’s death (April 4, 2001). As far as they go, the discrete facts underlying this case are undisputed.

A. The Mortgage Loan

The Jenkinses purchased a home in Frisco, Texas in November 2000. NovaS-tar, a residential mortgage lender, provided the purchase-money loan secured by a deed of trust that was a first mortgage lien on the property.1 At the loan closing, the Jenkinses executed a mortgage note, a Deed of Trust (“mortgage”), and an Impound Authorization Agreement and First Payment Notification (“escrow agreement”). The escrow agreement authorized NovaStar to collect and escrow funds from the Jenkinses “to pay for taxes, insurance premiums, assessments, or other items relating to the property on [their] behalf.”2 Consistent with the escrow agreement, NovaStar sent invoices to the Jenkinses in the amount of $2,808.70 each on or about the tenth day of each calendar month. In addition to the basic amount required to amortize principal and interest on the loan, the $2,808.70 included the estimated amount needed to cover property taxes and flood and fire insurance premiums on the encumbered property.

B. The Mortgage Insurance Agreement

At all times pertinent to this case, No-vaStar was party to a Mortgage Insur-[308]*308anee Agreement with MLIC. This agreement obligated NovaStar to distribute “descriptive brochures and other promotional materials relating to [MLIC’s] insurance coverages” to its borrowers. As consideration, NovaStar received a percentage of the premiums collected on any insurance written by MLIC for No-vaStar’s borrowers. The agreement also required NovaStar to facilitate the collection of premiums by including the amount of the premium in the insured borrower’s monthly invoice. All MLIC brochures and promotional materials required to be distributed under the Mortgage Insurance Agreement by NovaStar to its borrowers were subject to NovaStar’s prior written approval.

In January 2001, acting in accordance with its Mortgage Insurance Agreement with MLIC, NovaStar mailed the Jenkins-es an unsolicited MLIC application (“the application”) for Mortgage Life and Disability Insurance underwritten by MLIC. The MLIC application was mailed to the Jenkinses by a cover letter written on NovaStar’s letterhead and was accompanied by a MLIC brochure describing the MLIC policy.

C.Cover Letter

In the cover letter, NovaStar informed the Jenkinses that the mortgage life insurance policy would pay off their entire mortgage balance “up to $300,000” in the event of the death of either of them. The cover letter also promised the Jenkinses a thirty-day “risk free” period, commencing on the date they received their Certificate of Insurance/policy, during which period they would be allowed to examine the policy without cost or obligation:

This insurance is yours to try risk free. We’re confident that you’ll agree that [the insurance] provides essential protection. Examine the Certificate of Insurance for 30 days at no cost or obligation. If you decide you don’t want the coverage, for any reason, just return the Certificate to Monumental Life Insurance Company and you’ll [future tense] owe nothing.
D. Brochure

The accompanying MLIC brochure touted the advantages of the thirty-day “risk free” period, stating in bold print:

Examine at No Risk for 30 Days. When your certificate/policy arrives, look it over. If you don’t agree that this is sensible and affordable mortgage protection, simply return it within 30 days of receiving it ... and you won’t [future tense] owe a cent. No questions asked. In the meantime, you’ll [future tense] be fully covered while you make your decision.

In addition to explaining the thirty-day examination period, MLIC’s brochure emphasized that the Jenkinses would not be required to mail a separate check for their premium payments to either MLIC or No-vaStar. The brochure promised the applicants that “[t]here are no checks to write” and that their “insurance premium [would be] conveniently added to [their] monthly mortgage payments.”

E. Application

The application reiterated these same assurances and added that, should the Jen-kinses decide to return the policy within the thirty-day examination period, their “account will be credited in full,” presumably referring to their NovaStar account as they had none with MLIC. The application further guaranteed the Jenkinses that they would be “fully covered” by the insurance policy during the thirty-day period while they examined the policy.

[309]*309F. The Jenkinses’Response

Sondra and Alvin promptly completed the application and mailed it, as directed, to MLIC, where it was received on January 17, 2001. Relying on the MLIC brochure’s assurances that no separate check would be required and that their premiums would be added to and included in their monthly invoices from NovaStar, as well as the assurances that they would “owe nothing” if they returned the certificate/policy during the 30-day examination period (during which they would nonetheless be covered), the Jenkinses neither enclosed a check for their first insurance premium when they mailed their application to MLIC nor unilaterally added the amount of this first premium to their payments of any of NovaStar’s subsequent monthly invoices. As they had done each month since taking out their loan, the Jen-kinses mailed their check in payment of NovaStar’s March 10, 2001 on March 25, 2001, in the standard invoiced amount of $2,808.70.

G. Notice of Approval

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403 F.3d 304, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/monumental-life-insurance-v-hayes-jenkins-ca5-2005.