Penn Mutual Life Insurance v. Oglesby

695 A.2d 1146, 1997 Del. LEXIS 242
CourtSupreme Court of Delaware
DecidedJuly 9, 1997
Docket466, 1996
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 695 A.2d 1146 (Penn Mutual Life Insurance v. Oglesby) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Penn Mutual Life Insurance v. Oglesby, 695 A.2d 1146, 1997 Del. LEXIS 242 (Del. 1997).

Opinion

VEASEY, Chief Justice:

In this certified question proceeding, we answer the substance of questions of Delaware law on insurance coverage posed to us by the certifying court. We hold that an insurer that does not take advantage of a fraudulent misstatement exclusion in a disability insurance contract, where such exclusion is permissible under applicable Delaware statutes, may not avoid coverage on that ground. In addition, we hold that, where the insurance policy contains one provision that would deny coverage, but makes that provision “subject to” others that could be construed to permit coverage, it is the latter provisions that control, any doubt concerning the interpretation of the policy being resolved against the insurer.

Facts

This case comes to the Court in the form of four certified questions from the United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit. The following facts are undisputed and are taken from the Order Certifying Questions of Law. 1

Plaintiff below-appellee John T. Oglesby, II, M.D. is a radiologist who had developed a specialty in vascular and interventional radiology procedures. In 1981, Dr. Oglesby was diagnosed as having cervical degenerative arthritis. In preparation for a hip replacement operation in 1985, a physician examining Dr. Oglesby recorded a history of “occasional parasthesias of the arms and legs. Arm parasthesias related to cervical degenerative, arthritic disease.... ”

On or about November 24,1986, Dr. Ogles-by applied for a disability income insurance policy from Penn Mutual Life Insurance Company (“Penn Mutual”). On the application for insurance that Dr. Oglesby filled out, signed and certified, he did not provide any information regarding his history of cervical degenerative disease in response to a question asking for information regarding any disease or disorder of the bones, including the spine, back or joints. In connection with the application, on November 3,1986 a nurse who was contracted by Penn Mutual performed a paramedical examination. The examination form prepared by the nurse, which Dr. Oglesby certified to be true, accurate and complete, likewise contained no information regarding his history of cervical degenerative arthritis. Dr. Oglesby was aware that the disease, which first developed in 1981, would not have disappeared between 1981 and 1986.

Penn Mutual issued a disability income insurance policy to Dr. Oglesby, effective retroactively to February 1,1987, which provided initial benefits of $5,000 per month in total disability benefits if Dr. Oglesby were to become totally disabled from the substantial and material duties of his regular occupation. The policy provides that, “subject to all provisions of the policy,” it covers a disability resulting from a sickness “which first makes itself known while this policy is in force.” The policy also states: ‘We rely on the statements you make in your application. We will not contest those statements after this policy has been in effect for 2 years during your lifetime. Any length of time you are disabled is excluded in computing this 2 year period.”

The pre-existing conditions section is the sole provision on a separate page attached to the policy amendment rider. That section provides:

Pre-existing Conditions Excluded
We do not cover a disability or other loss resulting from a pre-existing condition if that disability starts or loss is incurred:
• during the first two years from this policy’s Date of Issue, unless the preexisting condition is fully disclosed in the application and not excluded from coverage by name or specific description; and
• after two years from this policy’s Date of Issue and if the pre-existing condition
*1148 is excluded from coverage by name or specific description.
A pre-existing condition is a physical condition or sickness which, during the 5 year period prior to the effective date of this policy, caused you:
• to have received medical advice or treatment; or
• to have had symptoms which would have led an ordinarily prudent person to seek medical advice or treatment.

The disability insurance policy issued to Dr. Oglesby is non-cancelable as defined in 18 Del. C. § 3306(e).

Beginning in March 1990, Dr. Oglesby began having a recurrence of cervical problems, which, after a brief respite, continued in August of 1990. After August 1990, Dr. Ogles-by was diagnosed with a herniated disk, which his treating neurologist testified was the result of the cervical degenerative arthritis which Dr. Oglesby has had since 1981. In October 1990, Dr. Oglesby underwent surgery to alleviate the herniated disk, but the surgery did not mitigate the problem, instead leaving him with a weakened arm and considerable shoulder pain. As a result of these cervical degenerative arthritis problems, Dr. Oglesby has been unable to continue to perform vascular and interventional radiology procedures in his specialty.

The jury in the trial in the United States District Court for the District of Delaware determined that, as of the date of disability in early 1990, Dr. Oglesby’s regular occupation was that of a vascular and interventional radiologist.

Penn Mutual sought, and was granted, partial summary judgment in an action in the District Court to rescind certain annual policy riders increasing the amount of insurance benefits payable to Dr. Oglesby in the event of total disability. Each of these riders incorporated by reference the same two-year incontestability period as provided in the base policy, and each rider’s incontestability period commenced on the rider’s effective date. Thus, with the 1990 onset of Dr. Oglesby’s disability, the timetable of events allowed Penn Mutual successfully to contest the benefit increase riders issued in 1989 through 1992. 2

After a five-day trial, Senior Judge Murray M. Schwartz of the District Court entered judgment for Dr. Oglesby on the remaining issue of coverage under the main policy because the District Court decided that Penn Mutual should not be allowed to avail itself of a defense based on the doctrine of “first manifest.” 3

Penn Mutual appealed to the United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit. The Court of Appeals certified, and this Court accepted, the following four questions of law, finding that the material facts are not in dispute and that the legal questions presented are ones of first instance in Delaware. 4

1. Based on the pre-existing conditions language of this policy, can the insurer deny disability coverage on the grounds that the insured had a pre-existing condition not disclosed on his application if the insured is not disabled until more than two years after issuance of the policy?

2. For purposes of denying coverage under the pre-existing conditions excluded and pre-existing conditions limitations sections of the policy, does the definition of a covered sickness in the policy (a

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Bluebook (online)
695 A.2d 1146, 1997 Del. LEXIS 242, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/penn-mutual-life-insurance-v-oglesby-del-1997.