Unger v. Metropolitan Life Insurance

242 N.E.2d 907, 103 Ill. App. 2d 150, 1968 Ill. App. LEXIS 1409
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 10, 1968
DocketGen. 68-20
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 242 N.E.2d 907 (Unger v. Metropolitan Life Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Unger v. Metropolitan Life Insurance, 242 N.E.2d 907, 103 Ill. App. 2d 150, 1968 Ill. App. LEXIS 1409 (Ill. Ct. App. 1968).

Opinion

CULBERTSON, J.

Plaintiff, Barbara Jean Unger, brought suit in the Circuit Court of Whiteside County to recover benefits of $1,096.55 (representing doctor and hospital bills for a hysterectomy), under a group health and hospitalization policy issued by the defendant, Metropolitan Life Insurance Company. After a bench trial, the court found that plaintiff could not recover because of material misrepresentation in the application for insurance and entered judgment for defendant. The plaintiff has appealed, contending that the finding of a material representation is against the manifest weight of the evidence; that defendant failed to establish the materiality of the alleged misrepresentation by competent evidence; and that the trial court erred in allowing an unqualified person to give opinion testimony on subjects in the field of medical science.

Stating only those facts brought into focus by the scope of plaintiff’s argument, it may be said that we are principally concerned here with two questions in the application for insurance coverage, which was dated September 28, 1966. They are, respectively and serially, questions 6 and 7 of Part C which inquired:

“6. Have you (or any other . . . family member) received treatment, attention or advice from any physician or other practitioner for, or been told by any other physician or practitioner that you (or said family member) had:
it
“(e) Epilepsy, paralysis, dizziness or any mental or nervous disorder?
“7. During the past 5 years, have you (or any other family member) had any diseases, ailments, or injuries not revealed elsewhere on this application for which there was treatment, examination or advice by or under the direction of a physician or other practitioner, or at a clinic, hospital, dispensary or sanitorium.” (If the answer to this question was “Yes,” a subsequent space was provided for explanation.)

Undisputed evidence shows that the plaintiff, a registered nurse, visited a psychiatrist in 1961, 1962 and 1964, who diagnosed that she was suffering from a “psychoneurosis anxiety state.” No mention of these visits was made in plaintiff’s answer to question 7, and a negative answer was given to the inquiry of question 6 about treatment for “mental or nervous” disorders. Further, the record shows that plaintiff, as the result of an accident occurring December 4, 1965, had been treated by her doctor for a “severe” cervical sprain, or whiplash injury on February 18 and May 25, 1966, and that she had also been treated for cervicitis on September 21, 1966, which was but seven days before the application was signed. No mention of the treatment for either ailment was given in response to question 7. Plaintiff, with some corroboration from her husband, testified that she had mentioned these ailments to the insurance agent when the latter had read question 7, but that he had failed to make note of them in the answers he was recording. The agent, on the other hand, testified he had not been told about either ailment.

During the course of the trial plaintiff introduced the testimony of her employer, Dr. L. T. Ballard, whose medical specialty, if any, is not revealed in the excerpts of record before us, and that of Dr. M. D. Burnstine, a general practitioner with a subspecialty in neurology, who had been plaintiff’s family physician for many years and who had performed the hysterectomy which provoked the present litigation. Both men testified, in substance, that they did not consider a psychoneurosis anxiety state to be a mental or nervous disorder, and that they had never known plaintiff to suffer from a mental or nervous disorder. For the defendant, which had the burden of proving that misrepresentations in the application were material to the acceptance of the risk, it was established by the testimony of Henry Bradley, its senior life underwriter, and by excerpts from a company manual, that the company would decline to insure where it appears that an applicant has suffered an episode of anxiety state neurosis within three years prior to an application. In explaining the company’s attitude, the witness stated that claim experience had shown that such physical conditions as gastro-iniestinal disorder, duodenal ulcers, heart palpitations and high blood pressure were often secondary to a psychoneurosis anxiety state. Additionally, proof was made from the manual that where an applicant has sustained a severe whiplash injury, a rider must be attached to the policy excluding coverage for diseases in, or injuries to, the cervical spine.

It is well established in this jurisdiction that an insurance policy may be avoided where, in the application for insurance, a misrepresentation is accomplished by withholding information material to the risk. (Campbell v. Prudential Ins. Co. of America, 15 Ill2d 308, 155 NE2d 9.) Whether the matters withheld, or misrepresented, are material is determined by the question of whether reasonably intelligent and careful men would have regarded the facts withheld “as substantially increasing the chances of the event insured against, so as to cause a rejection of the application or different conditions.” (Weinstein v. Metropolitan Life Ins. Co., 389 Ill 571, 577, 60 NE2d 207.) And as Campbell and Weinstein, supra, both indicate, the misrepresentation, whether it. be accomplished by stating facts or withholding facts, need not be made with intent to deceive if it materially affects the risk (see also: Ill Rev Stats 1965, c 23, pars 766 and 971a), nor need the misrepresentation be one with regard to a matter upon which a claim is later predicated.

Because the defendant introduced no proof to contradict the testimony of plaintiff’s medical witnesses that a psychoneurosis anxiety state is not a “mental or nervous” disorder, she asserts that she was not guilty of giving a false answer when question 6 was answered in the negative, and that the court’s finding of a misrepresentation is therefore against the manifest weight of the evidence. This contention, however, is an over-simplification of the application, the record and the issue. As we view it, the question to be answered is whether the interrogatories in the application form were sufficiently specific to require plaintiff to disclose information concerning her psychiatric treatment. And while it cannot be said this record clearly establishes that a psychoneurosis anxiety state is a mental or nervous disorder, so as to require disclosure under question 6, it is more than clear in our opinion that the visits to the psychiatrist should have been disclosed in response to question 7. The latter question, in plain, simple and unambiguous terms, asked, among other things, if the applicant had within 5 years, any disease, ailments, or injuries not revealed elsewhere in the application for which treatment, examination or advice was received from a physician or other practitioner. By withholding the information of psychiatric treatment, plaintiff prevented the insurer from appraising the risk on the basis of the facts as they existed.

Furthermore, plaintiff’s argument appears to overlook that even without considering the matters concerning her psychiatric problem and treatment, the record presents a basis for holding that a material misrepresentation occurred when she withheld information concerning her cervical sprain.

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Bluebook (online)
242 N.E.2d 907, 103 Ill. App. 2d 150, 1968 Ill. App. LEXIS 1409, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/unger-v-metropolitan-life-insurance-illappct-1968.