VanKoevering v. Manufacturers Life Insurance Company

234 F. Supp. 786, 1964 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 6878
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Michigan
DecidedOctober 27, 1964
DocketCiv. A. 4635
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 234 F. Supp. 786 (VanKoevering v. Manufacturers Life Insurance Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Michigan primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
VanKoevering v. Manufacturers Life Insurance Company, 234 F. Supp. 786, 1964 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 6878 (W.D. Mich. 1964).

Opinion

FOX, District Judge.

On April 12, 1963, plaintiff and his wife met with Chester Kiekentveld, a registered agent of defendant company, to take out a policy of life insurance on *788 Mrs. Lila VanKoevering. Plaintiff himself was uninsurable, and the VanKoeverings had decided upon life insurance for Mrs. VanKoevering as the most satisfactory method of establishing an estate plan. Agent Kiekentveld was aware of this intention of the VanKoeverings; in fact, he had attended a meeting with a member of the trust department of a local bank which the VanKoeverings had arranged to determine what estate arrangement would be most workable. Mr. Kiekentveld included the information that the purpose of the insurance was for an estate plan on the back of the application for insurance which he forwarded to the home office of the defendant company.

The VanKoeverings were given a so-called conditional receipt or binder, but from that day forward no indication was received from defendant as to whether or not it had accepted or rejected Lila VanKoevering as an insurable risk, until after the death of Mrs. VanKoevering. The doctor authorized by defendant to conduct the medical examination classed her as an “average or better” insurance risk.

On May 15, 1963, the defendant wired the Grand Rapids Office that there would be an additional premium. On May 16, agent Kiekentveld telephoned the VanKoevering residence to advise of this fact. There is conflicting testimony as to the content of that conversation, but that most favorable to the defendant indicated that Mrs. VanKoevering said to tell her when the policy came in. 1

On May 18, 1963, Policy No. 1,723,761, dated May 16, 1963, was received in the Grand Rapids office. Agent Kiekentveld called the VanKoeverings to learn when he might come over with the policy and learned instead that Mrs. VanKoevering had died on the previous day, May 17. He then mailed the policy back to the Home Office. On May 31, 1963, plaintiff phoned the Grand Rapids Office to ask about the policy and was informed that it had not been accepted by the Home Office.

Plaintiff brought suit based on four different theories: first, that the time passage between the time of application and notice that the policy had been refused was an unreasonable delay and constituted implied acceptance of the offer to buy life insurance; second, that defendant owed plaintiff a duty to take prompt action on the application and give him prompt notice, which duty was breached, with a resulting loss of $20,-000; third, that Lila VanKoevering at the time of the phone call from Agent Kiekentveld of May 16, 1963, was either authorized to act as an agent for plaintiff, or that she was acting as a partner in a joint venture, and in either capacity, did accept the offer proposed to her at that time; and fourth, that the dealings of April 12, 1963, between the VanKoeverings and Kiekentveld constituted an offer to purchase insurance on the life of Lila VanKoevering at her then age and medical condition.

At an earlier stage in the proceedings, plaintiff dropped a count alleging that Mrs. VanKoevering was a “standard risk,” and that defendant’s determination that she was not was arbitrary and unwarranted.

On all counts, defendant contends that the written instruments were clear and unambiguous, and controlled all the issues in the case, and the court was, therefore, in error in admitting any testimony to detract from the clear and unambiguous language of those writings. The court did not so find.

As to the admission of evidence concerning the prior relationship of Kiekentveld and the VanKoeverings, and the matters discussed in the course of their conversation on the evening that the policy was applied for, this court saw glaring ambiguities which unquestion *789 ably called for parol evidence to dispel the uncertainty which surrounded the entire transaction.

“It is undoubtedly the law that evidence is competent to show the relations of parties and attending circumstances as an aid in interpreting, or construing, a written instrument which is uncertain and ambiguous.” In re Landwehr’s Estate, 286 Mich. 698, 282 N.W. 873, 875 (1938).

Defendant contends that the language ■of the binder which follows precludes any further explanation of the contract between the parties:

“(A) * * *
2. If on the date the application is signed, or the date of the last of any medical reports or tests required by the company, whichever is the later, the life insured in the opinion of the company’s authorized officers at its Head Office was insurable as a standard risk, under the Company’s rules, for the amount, the plan and any additional benefits, each as specified in the application; * * * Then, but only after all these conditions are met, the insurance under the terms of the policy applied for will become effective from the later date specified in (A) 2 * * *
“(C) Unless all the conditions under (A) are met, no insurance will become effective under this receipt and the payment acknowledged by this receipt will be returned.” (Emphasis supplied.)

For the purposes of answering this argument, reference must be made to the language in (A) 2, “ * * * under the terms of the policy applied for * * * ” Thus, defendant’s position here is based upon the presumption that the policy which was issued was pursuant to the application of which the receipt was a part; for the condition precedent to an effective policy is clearly stated to relate to “the policy applied for.”

Defendant, therefore, must consider the application either as an application, in which case it is incorporated into the policy which did issue and creates ambiguities; or it can say it was not an application, in which case the policy as issued is ambiguous, and calls for additional evidence to explain what the parties’ understanding was.

Provision 1 of that policy states that the policy and the attached application constitute the entire contract between the parties. Yet, again an ambiguity appears, for the application contains two stated premiums, and there must be an explanation of this fact by trying to discover what insurance was actually applied for.

In other words, for the condition precedent which defendant relies upon to operate, the policy applied for must be delivered. The application shows that the policy applied for had an annual premium of $1,247.80. Yet the policy which was issued called for an annual premium of $1,483.80. This is a variance which cannot be explained without resort to extrinsic evidence.

Thus, if this is the policy applied for, it is ambiguous; if it is not, the condition is inapplicable and we must find out what led up to the issuance of the policy.

There is also an undeniable ambiguity surrounding the dates here. The policy itself is dated May 16, 1963, two days prior to the insured’s death.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
234 F. Supp. 786, 1964 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 6878, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vankoevering-v-manufacturers-life-insurance-company-miwd-1964.