State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance v. Butler

125 S.E.2d 823, 203 Va. 575, 1962 Va. LEXIS 188
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJune 11, 1962
DocketRecord 5415
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 125 S.E.2d 823 (State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance v. Butler) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance v. Butler, 125 S.E.2d 823, 203 Va. 575, 1962 Va. LEXIS 188 (Va. 1962).

Opinion

Eggleston, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Albert R. Butler, administrator of the estates of Martha Bowers Moseley and Martha L. Cole, deceased, filed a motion for judgment *576 against State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Company to recover the sum of $3,250, with interest and costs, alleged to be due on an automobile indemnity insurance policy. The motion alleged that on January 27, 1959, the Insurance Company had issued its policy to Harvey F. and Willie Belle Ritchie covering the liability of the operator of a certain automobile for the period of one year from January 15, 1959; that on May 27, while the policy was in force and effect, Martha Bowers Moseley and Martha L. Cole were killed by reason of the negligence of Harvey F. Ritchie in the operation of the automobile covered in the policy; that on March 18, 1960, Butler, as administrator of Martha Bowers Moseley, recovered a judgment in the sum of $2,500 with interest and costs against Ritchie, and similarly, as administrator of Martha L. Cole, recovered a judgment in the sum of $750 with interest and costs against Ritchie, for the wrongful deaths of the respective decedents. Hence, it was alleged, the administrator was entitled to recover of the Insurance Company the amounts of such judgments with interest and costs.

The Insurance Company filed grounds of defense, with a bill of particulars, denying its liability on the ground that the policy had been procured through false and fraudulent representations of facts material to the risk assumed, thereby rendered it void ab initio.

By consent of the parties the issues were heard by the trial court without a jury and at the conclusion of all of the evidence it struck the defendant’s pleadings and evidence and entered judgment in favor of the plaintiff administrator for the amounts claimed. We granted the defendant Insurance Company a writ of error.

The evidence is undisputed. On January 15, 1959, Harvey F. Ritchie and Willie Belle Ritchie, his wife, went to the office of Thomas C. Moore, an agent for the Insurance Company at Petersburg, and stated that they were interested in procuring automobile liability insurance on a Ford automobile owned by them. In accordance with the rules and regulations of his company, Moore propounded to the Ritchies certain inquiries detailed in a printed application concerning their driving records. They were asked to give the “dates of accidents” in which either had been previously involved. To this inquiry the applicants replied, “None.” Another question propounded was, “Has license to drive or registration been suspended, revoked or refused for the applicant or any member of his household within the past five years?” to which the applicants replied, “No.” The answers to these and other questions were transcribed on the application by Moore. *577 Since the regulations of the company did not require it, the application was not signed by the applicants.

Based on this and other information received from the Ritchies and detailed in the application, Moore determined them to be desirable risks, received from them a partial payment of the premium, and forthwith issued a “binder receipt” making the insurance coverage effective immediately.

The application was forwarded by the local agent to the underwriting department at Charlottesville, which, based upon the application, issued to the Ritchies the policy in question. It was countersigned January 27, 1959, but in accordance with the binder receipt was made effective from the date of the application, January 15.

About the first of June, 1959, the Insurance Company was notified that Harvey F. Ritchie had been involved in a serious automobile collision in which Martha Bowers Moseley and Martha L. Cole had been killed. Upon receipt of this information the claim department proceeded with the usual investigation, in the course of which it discovered for the first time that several of the answers to the questions in the application upon which the policy was based were untrue. It discovered, and it was shown at the trial of this case, that according to the records of the Division of Motor Vehicles, and contrary to their statements to the company’s agent, Harvey F. Ritchie had been involved in automobile collisions on July 5, 1951, and June 5, 1952, and Willie Belle Ritchie on September 30, 1956, and February 14, 1957. These records, introduced at the trial, also showed that contrary to her statement to the company’s agent, Willie Belle Ritchie had been convicted of “speeding” on April 8 and June 20, 1958, respectively, and that on account of the latter conviction her operator’s license was revoked, effective on that date.

As a result of this information and because of these misrepresentations the Insurance Company wrote the Ritchies that the policy was rescinded as of January 15, 1959, the date on which the risk had been first assumed.

When Butler, the administrator of the estates of the two decedents, instituted actions for their wrongful deaths against Ritchie, the Insurance Company denied liability on the policy and refused to defend these actions on the ground that the policy had been procured through fraud and was therefore void.

At the trial of the present action on the policy the falsity of the answers to which we have referred was shown without contradiction. Moore, the local agent of the company, testified that had these ques *578 tions propounded in the application been answered truthfully he would not have accepted the application and would not have issued the binder receipt covering the risk. Indeed, he. said, the rules and regulations of his company precluded his doing so.

Frank A. O’Neill, the underwriting superintendent of the company’s Charlottesville office which accepted the application and issued the policy, testified that the underwriting department determines from the application whether or not a particular risk is desirable. He said that the answers detailed in the Ritchies application showed that they were a “preferred risk.” Furthermore, he said, had the true facts been disclosed, had the company known of the accidents and conviction records of the applicants, or either of them, or that Mrs. Ritchie’s operator’s license had been revoked, it would not have accepted the risk and issued the policy.

Code, § 38.1-336 (1953 Replacement Volume), reads as follows:

“When answers or statements of applicant not to bar recovery on policy. — All statements, declarations and descriptions in any application for a policy of insurance or for the reinstatement thereof shall be deemed representations and not warranties, and no statement in such application or in any affidavit made before or after loss under the policy shall bar a recovery upon a policy of insurance, or be construed as a warranty, anything in the policy to the contrary notwithstanding, unless it be clearly proved that such answers or statement was material to the risk when assumed and was untrue.”

In applying this statute we have repeatedly said that misrepresentations of facts material to the risk assumed in an application for insurance render the contract void. Scott v. State Farm Mut. Automobile Ins. Co., 202 Va. 579, 582, 118 S. E. 2d 519, 522;

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
125 S.E.2d 823, 203 Va. 575, 1962 Va. LEXIS 188, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-farm-mutual-automobile-insurance-v-butler-va-1962.