Ryan v. World Mutual Life Insurance

41 Conn. 168
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedMarch 15, 1874
StatusPublished
Cited by45 cases

This text of 41 Conn. 168 (Ryan v. World Mutual Life Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ryan v. World Mutual Life Insurance, 41 Conn. 168 (Colo. 1874).

Opinion

Carpenter, J.

This is an action on a policy of life insurance. The policy is expressed to be “in consideration of the representations, declarations and covenants contained in the application therefor, to which reference is here made as a part of this contract, &c.” It is further declared that “ This policy is issued and accepted on the following express conditions and agreements: Eirst. That the statements

and declarations made in the application therefor, and on the faith of which it is issued, are in all respects true, &c.” The application therefore is a part of the policy; and the plaintiff’s agreements therein contained are warranties, and, if not true, she cannot recover, unless there has been a waiver by the defendants, or under the circumstances they are estopped from denying their truth.

In the application are the following questions and answers:

. “ 12. Has the party ever had any of the following diseases ”—(naming a long list of diseases, and among them,) “bronchitis, consumption, spitting of blood, or any serious disease ? ”—“ None of these.”

“ 17. Has the party had during the last seven years any severe sickness or disease ? If so, state the particulars, and the name of the attending physician who was consulted and prescribed.”—“ No.”

“ 25. Has the party employed or consulted any physician? Please answer this yes or no. If yes, give name or names and residence.”—“ No.”

“ 27. Has any previous examination or application been made for assurance on the life proposed?”—“ No.”

“ Has any company declined to issue a policy for the party?”—“No.”

Upon the trial the plaintiff offered to prove, not that the above answers were true, but that different answers were in fact given, both by herself and the insured, and that the [170]*170answers were wrongly written by the local agent of the defendants without the knowledge or consent of the plaintiff or her husband. Aside from the claim that the defendants are responsible for the conduct of their local agent, this is merely an attempt to substitute for a part of the written contract declared on, a different parol contract; for the representations and warranties of the plaintiff contained in the written agreement, oral representations and warranties of an entirely different character. It requires no argument to show that this cannot be done.

But the plaintiff claims that truthful answers having been given to each interrogatory, and the incorrect answers contained in the application being there by the sole act of the agent, the defendants are bound by the answers as written, and are precluded from denying their truth. Whether this is so or not depends upon the extent of the agent’s authority.

It must be admitted that the express authority of the agent was limited to receiving the application, forwarding it to the home office, receiving, countersigning and delivering the policy, and collecting the premiums. The courts in this state have construed the powers of these agents liberally, and extended them somewhat by implication. Thus it has been held that in writing the application, and explaining the interrogatories and the meaning of the terms used, he is to be regarded as the agent of the company. In The Union Mutual Ins. Co. v. Wilkinson, 13 Wallace, 222, it was hold, where an agent by mistake, or acting upon information derived from others which proved to be incorrect, inserted an answer not true in fact, that it was the act of the insurers and not of the insured.

In this case we are asked to go further than any case has yet goñe, and clothe the agent with an authority not given him in fact, and to hold the principal responsible for an act which could not by any possibility have been contemplated as being within the scope of the agency. In most, if not in all, of the cases in which the act of the agent has been regarded as the act of the principal, the act has been the natural and probable result of the relations existing between the parties, [171]*171or so connected with other acts expressly authorized as to afford a reasonable presumption that the principal intended to authorize it. But it cannot be supposed that these defendants intended to clothe this agent with authority to perpetrate a fraud upon themselves. That he deliberately intended to defraud them is manifest. He well knew that' if correct answers were given no policy would issue. Prompted by some motive he sought to obtain a policy by means of false answers. His duty required him not only to write the answers truly as given by the applicant, but also to communicate to his principal any other fact material to the risk which might come to his knowledge from any other source. His conduct, in this case, was a gross violation of duty, in fraud of his principal, and in the interest of the other party. To hold the principal responsible for his acts, and assist in the consummation of the fraud, would be monstrous injustice. "When an agent is apparently acting for his principal, but is really acting for himself, or third persons, and against his principal, there is no agency in respect to that transaction, at least as between the agent himself or the person for whom he is really acting and the principal.

The principal reason urged for holding the defendants liable in this case is the one suggested in the argument, that when one of two innocent persons must suffer by the fraud, negligence or unauthorized act of a third, he who clothed the third with the power to deceive or injure must be the "one.

Our answer is, in the first, place, that this is not exactly a case in which one of two innocent persons must neces. sarily suffer. There is no absolute loss for us to determine on whom it shall fall. If the plaintiff fails to recover she sustains no pecuniary loss, except the premium paid, nor that even if she is innocent and the law is so that she can recover it back on the ground that there was a failure of consideration. It is unlike a case of fire insurance. Nearly all property may be insured at some rate, if not in one office in another. But in this case the plaintiff’s husband was not an insurable subject. His situation was such that one [172]*172company had rejected him, and but for the aid of ■ fraud neither this nor any other company would have accepted him. Had the truth been stated, no policy would have issued, and as she would have had no better success probably with other companies we cannot see that she has been misled to her prejudice except in relation to the premium, which is comparatively a small matter.

In the second place, if the- rule is to be applied to this case it is by no means certain that it will aid the plaintiff. The fraud could not be perpetrated by the agent alone. The aid of the plaintiff or the insured, either as an accomplice or as an instrument, was essential. If she was an accomplice, then she participated in the fraud, and the case falls within the principle of Lewis v. The Phoenix Mutual Life Lns. Co., 39 Conn., 100. If she was an instrument, she was so because of her own negligence, and that is equally a bar to her right to recover. She says that she and her husband signed the application without reading it and without its being read to them. That of itself was inexcusable negligence. The application contained her agreements and representations in an important contract. When she signed it she was bound to know what she signed.

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Bluebook (online)
41 Conn. 168, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ryan-v-world-mutual-life-insurance-conn-1874.