Russo v. Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance

192 Misc. 2d 349, 746 N.Y.S.2d 380, 2002 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1021
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 5, 2002
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 192 Misc. 2d 349 (Russo v. Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Russo v. Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance, 192 Misc. 2d 349, 746 N.Y.S.2d 380, 2002 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1021 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2002).

Opinion

[350]*350OPINION OF THE COURT

Walter J. Relihan, Jr., J.

The plaintiff moves again for class certification in this “vanishing premium” case. Plaintiffs earlier motion (Nov. 1998) was denied on the assumption, in part, that section 349 of the General Business Law simply restated the common law of fraudulent inducement which requires not only reliance upon a false or misleading representation, but also that the reliance was reasonable under the circumstances (Russo v Massachusetts Mut. Ins. Co., 178 Misc 2d 772). However, in December 1999 the Court of Appeals made plain that section 349 created a new and expanded consumer cause of action which does not require the plaintiff to prove the reasonableness of her reliance, but only that defendant engaged in an act or practice that is deceptive in a material way and that the act or practice has caused an injury to plaintiff (Gaidon v Guardian Life Ins. Co. of Am., 94 NY2d 330 [now popularly known as Gaidon I]).

Meantime, the Appellate Division affirmed Russo on statute of limitations grounds (274 AD2d 878). Then, in May 2001, the Court of Appeals revisited Gaidon to hold that the statute of limitations, in a section 349 case, begins to run not when the policy was issued, as the Appellate Division had held in Russo, but only when the insured is billed for an additional premium beyond the date (i.e., the “N” date in policy parlance) which the insurer had represented would end the insured’s obligation to pay further premiums (Gaidon v Guardian Life Ins. Co. of Am., 96 NY2d 201 [hereafter Gaidon II]). Hence, the Russo claim is timely and was remanded to this court for further proceedings.

It is still necessary to show that the representation was deceptive in the sense that it would be “likely to mislead a reasonable consumer acting reasonably under the circumstances” (Gaidon I, supra at 344; Oswego Laborers’ Local 214 Pension Fund v Marine Midland Bank, 85 NY2d 20, 26). The close but distinct relationship between reasonable reliance upon the representation by the plaintiff, as required at common law, and the causation required by the General Business Law claim, is explicated in Stutman v Chemical Bank (95 NY2d 24).

Gaidon I held that disclaimers found in policy illustrations used to explain the limited pay or vanishing premium concept are not determinative of claims brought under section 349, since the statute deals with deceptive business practices, not [351]*351merely deceptive contracts. Moreover, the court held that the disclaimers used by the insurer in that case, while sufficient to defeat a fraud cause of action, did not include an explanation of (at 345) “the true, unrevealed relationship between dividend/ interest rates and the vanishing dates as represented.” That is, the disclaimers “revealed the possibility of a dividend/interest rate decline, but did not reveal its practical implications to the policyholder. Although they did not guarantee that interest rates would remain constant, they failed to reveal that the illustrated vanishing dates were wholly unrealistic” (Gaidon I, supra at 350). Partial disclosures, where other undisclosed facts would materially alter the expectations implicit in such disclosures, are sufficient to constitute an actionable misrepresentation under the General Business Law.

The argument that defendant knowingly overstated interest rates, and knew that revenues would not be adequate to dispense with the need for premiums beyond the “N-Pay” date, goes to the ultimate merits of the Russo claim, as well as the class claims. The issue on this motion for class certification, however, is not whether one or more of the defendant’s illustrations were deceptive, or whether defendant knew or should have known of the illusory nature of the representations, but whether the Russo candidacy for class representative meets and satisfies the requirements of article 9 of the Civil Practice Law and Rules. Section 901 (a) (2) requires that issues of fact or law, common to the members of the class, must predominate over issues affecting only individual members. Section 901 (a) (3) requires that the claim of the class representative must be typical of those to be asserted by other class members. If Russo’s transaction was not typical of those consummated by other members of the class and, consequently, does not involve questions of fact common to the claims of the class members she seeks to represent, the purposes of class action litigation will not be served.

Plaintiff has established that a question of fact is present as to whether defendant knowingly assumed unrealistically high investment returns in order to market “N-Pay” policies on the representation that, after a fixed number of premiums are paid, the necessity to pay further premiums would vanish. However, it is not the gestation and hatching of a deceptive plan or practice by the home office that triggers a violation of section 349, but the making of a representation to a consumer which is deceptive in a material way and likely to mislead an objectively reasonable consumer (Goshen v Mutual Life Ins. Co. of N.Y., 98 [352]*352NY2d 314). Accordingly, the encounter between defendant’s sales agent and plaintiff, as a buyer of the N-Pay policy, is the essential focus of her General Business Law claim.

The plaintiff is a college graduate and has been a support services supervisor at Rogers & Wells and a vice-president of a recruiting firm. She is not unacquainted with contracts and other business dealings. When leaving her job with the law firm, plaintiff met with a sales representative of defendant with a view to converting her Rogers & Wells group life policy to an individual whole life policy. The meeting between Russo and defendant’s agent, Susan Weiner, occurred on May 2, 1989. Weiner showed Russo some illustrations of the N-Pay policy concept which disclosed that dividend rates were not guaranteed and that premiums, in addition to those illustrated, could become necessary. Russo asserts that Weiner made no mention of declining interest rates or the likely effect of such trends. Weiner, when deposed, had no recollection of the conversation but claimed that she would routinely advise clients that future dividends were not guaranteed and that the number of premium payments could change.

The plaintiff’s own deposition testimony demonstrates that she relied substantially upon the oral presentation of Weiner regarding the terms and conditions of the policy in relation to her wants and needs and not the written illustrations. Russo testified (deposition, at 68): “All I can say is that I took what Ms. Weiner told me at face value and never really thought about dividends or interest rates or whatever.” Referring to the written policy illustrations, she stated: “I didn’t really pay too much attention to footnotes and this language.” Elsewhere Russo testified that she could not recall reading the language of the illustration presented to her by Weiner (deposition, at 38) or, alternatively, that she may have “browsed through it” but that she didn’t “analyze it” (deposition, at 32, 36-38).

Plaintiff argues, nevertheless, that Weiner’s oral presentation was based upon home office illustrations and other written materials which uniformly omitted any cautionary revelations about the decline in interest rates, which began sometime in late 1985 or 1986 and continued thereafter, rendering earlier assumptions increasingly doubtful.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
192 Misc. 2d 349, 746 N.Y.S.2d 380, 2002 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1021, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/russo-v-massachusetts-mutual-life-insurance-nysupct-2002.