Phoenix Indemnity Co. v. Smith

179 A. 50, 168 Md. 649, 1935 Md. LEXIS 191
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMay 22, 1935
Docket[No. 22, April Term, 1935.]
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 179 A. 50 (Phoenix Indemnity Co. v. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Phoenix Indemnity Co. v. Smith, 179 A. 50, 168 Md. 649, 1935 Md. LEXIS 191 (Md. 1935).

Opinion

Urner, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The judgment questioned by this appeal was entered on the verdict of a jury in favor of the plaintiff in his suit on an accident insurance policy. Liability was disclaimed by the insurance company on the ground of alleged false statements in the application upon which the policy was issued. The application and policy were both dated April 3rd, 1933. The following questions and answers quoted from the application involve the representations which are said to have been false: Q. Are you a member of firm or employee? (State name of firm and business engaged in.) A. Employee—Arundel Corporation Engineering Contractors. Q. What is your occupation? A. Cost accountant. Q. Do your average weekly earnings exceed the aggregate single weekly indemnity payable under this Policy and all other similar policies carried by you? A. Yes. Q. Have you ever made application for life, accident or sickness insurance upon which you have not been notified of the action thereon? A. No.

The plaintiff testified that he signed the application after answering the questions in it as read to him by the insurance company’s agent, Mr. Gardner, who solicited the business, delivered the policy, and collected the premium. As reflecting upon the truthfulness and sufficiency *651 of the plaintiff’s representations we quote from his testimony as follows:

Q. What with regard to your employment did you tell Mr. Gardner? A. I told him I was in the employ of the Arundel Corporation in field cost accounting, and that my work had to do with large projects where it was necessary to set up a field organization for cost accounting purposes, and that it was not very often that one large project ran right into another one, and, consequently, I would not be surprised if there would be an interval between one job and another when I would not be employed. I went over all that in detail. Mr. Gardner said I was much in the same position as a school teacher or someone else along that line who would not be constantly on a payroll, or a railroad employee who was on furlough; furthermore, he said it was not important anyway * * * Q. What did you tell Mr. Gardner with respect to the last time you were on the payroll of the Arundel Corporation? A. I told Mr. Gardner that I had left the Safe Harbor job of the Arundel Corporation in June of the preceding year; that I was expecting to be called by the Arundel Corporation on a project here in Baltimore involving tunnel construction; that I was constantly expecting such a call, which had not yet come, but any day might have meant the beginning of this work and a call back to another assignment for me. Q. What did you tell him your earnings were? In reply the plaintiff said they “ranged from $35.00 to $45.00 a week at different intervals.”

On cross-examination the plaintiff testified that when he signed the application for the policy of the Phoenix Indemnity Company, upon which this suit is based, he had not applied for a policy from any other company, but that later on the same day he made application for a policy to the Massachusetts Protective Association because the agent for the former company had expressed a doubt as to whether it would be willing to issue the proposed policy in view of the fact, duly mentioned in *652 the application to it, that about six months previously the plaintiff had suffered a fracture of the pelvis. The agent was uncertain whether the plaintiff would be regarded by the company as having sufficiently recovered from that injury to be acceptable for accident insurance.

Upon the evidence in the record we approve of the refusal of the trial court to direct a verdict for the defendant upon the ground of the asserted misrepresentations. There can be no question as to the accuracy of the plaintiff’s description of his occupation as that of a cost accountant. It appears to have been his special and only vocation, and he was not required to disregard it, for the purposes of his application, merely because he was temporarily out of work. The answer to the question in reference to other applications for accident insurance was also correct, there being in fact no other such application by the plaintiff then pending. The statements as to his being an employee of the Arundel Corporation, and as to his average weekly earnings being in excess of the single weekly indemnity applied for, were not strictly correct if the questions thus answered were intended to inquire as to the applicant’s effective employmeht and current earnings at that particular time. But in view of the testimony, it would hardly be just to characterize as false the plaintiff’s statement as to his average weekly earnings and his reference to the Arundel Corporation as his employer. There is no dispute as to his having served exclusively since 1930 as an employee of that corporation, and that he was awaiting its call for work on another project, and it is also undisputed that the amount of his average weekly earnings, when so employed, was truthfully stated. But any possible deficiencies in the written answers were supplied by the full and explicit information given by the plaintiff to the defendant’s agent. The testimony to that effect is uncontradicted. In Dulany v. Fidelity & Casualty Co., 106 Md. 17, 34, 66 A. 614, 616, this court said: “If the actual facts were explained by the assured to the agent of the company *653 through whom the policy was delivered to him and the premium collected, and that agent undertook to determine whether the facts were material to the risk and wrote or instructed the appellant to write the answer appearing on the application, the company would be estopped to set up those facts to defeat an action to recover on the policy.” It was said in the opinion in Great Eastern Casualty Co. v. Schwartz, 143 Md. 452, 457, 122 A. 647, 649: “When facts, as to the materiality of which there may be a legitimate question, are stated by the applicant to the authorized agent of the insurance company, and are disregarded in the application because of his decision that they are not material, the company is estopped to rely upon such facts to defeat a recovery.”

In the present case there could be a legitimate question as to the materiality of the supplemental facts reported to the agent by the plaintiff, and there is no sufficient basis for a conclusion that in preparing the application they conspired to mislead the insurance company, or that the plaintiff acquiesced in an effort by the agent thus to defraud his principal. The circumstances of this case, therefore, do not bring it within the rule applied in the cases cited by the appellee, in which the insurer was defrauded by false statements in the application as to manifestly material facts. Commercial Casualty Ins. Co. v. Schmidt, 166 Md. 562, 171 A. 725; Stiegler v. Eureka Life Ins. Co., 146 Md. 629, 127 A. 397; Forwood v. Prudential Ins. Co., 117 Md. 254, 83 A. 169; Metropolitan Life Ins. Co. v. Jennings, 130 Md. 622, 101 A. 608; Globe Reserve Mut. Life Ins. Co. v. Duffy, 76 Md. 293, 25 A. 227.

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Bluebook (online)
179 A. 50, 168 Md. 649, 1935 Md. LEXIS 191, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/phoenix-indemnity-co-v-smith-md-1935.