Weathers v. Metropolitan Life Insurance

14 So. 3d 688, 2009 Miss. LEXIS 305, 2009 WL 1886867
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 2, 2009
Docket2007-CT-01180-SCT
StatusPublished
Cited by56 cases

This text of 14 So. 3d 688 (Weathers v. Metropolitan Life Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Weathers v. Metropolitan Life Insurance, 14 So. 3d 688, 2009 Miss. LEXIS 305, 2009 WL 1886867 (Mich. 2009).

Opinion

ON WRIT OF CERTIORARI

LAMAR, Justice,

for the Court.

¶ 1. Daniel Ray Weathers petitioned this Court for writ of certiorari after the Court of Appeals affirmed the Lowndes County Circuit Court’s dismissal of his claims as time-barred. Finding error, we reverse and remand so that Weathers may proceed in the trial court on his claims.

FACTS AND TRIAL COURT PROCEEDINGS

¶ 2. In April 1993, Weathers and James McKie, an insurance agent for Metropolitan Life Insurance Company (“MetLife”), discussed Weathers’s interest in purchasing a life insurance policy. McKie pitched the idea that Weathers could purchase a policy that included “vanishing” premiums. 1 McKie orally represented to Weathers that he would have to pay premiums for only ten years, 2 and after that time, the policy would become self-sustaining through dividends. At his deposition, McKie provided the following, relevant testimony:

Q: Did — did [Weathers] buy this [policy] under the representation from you that the premiums shown here, if he paid these ... for ten years, that he would have to pay no more premiums ever?
[objection to form]
McKie: Right.
Q: Were there any — was there any equivocation about that or if s or but’s about that?
McKie: No.
[objection to form]
Q: Had MetLife ever asked you or directed you to tell them that there might be circumstances where that would not happen?
McKie: No.

McKie supported his oral statements with various illustrations that showed out-of-pocket premium payments stopping after ten years. 3

¶3. On October 21, 1993, Weathers signed and submitted an application to purchase a L-98 (“Life Paid-up at Age 98”) life insurance policy from McKie. McKie delivered the policy to Weathers on *690 or about February 1, 1994. The policy contained a premium schedule that specified: “PREMIUMS ARE DUE ON DATE OF POLICY AND EVERY 1 MONTH(S) AFTER THAT DATE[.]” The premium schedule also provided that Weathers was to pay $531.17 monthly for fifty-nine years. The policy further provided that “[t]he benefits of your policy depend on the payment of premiums when due. Premiums are payable, while the insured is alive, on or before their due dates as shown in the premium schedule on page 3.”

¶ 4. As for dividends, the policy provided:

Every year we determine an amount to be paid to our policyholders as dividends. We will determine the share, if any, for this policy and credit it as a dividend at the end of the policy year. We do not expect that any dividend on this policy will be paid until 2 years from its date.

You may choose to use dividends in any one of these ways:

1. Paid-Up Additions — To buy more insurance on the insured’s life.
2. Dividend Acmmulations — To be left with us to earn interest at the rate we set from time to time.
3. Premium Payment — To be applied toward the payment of premiums. Any excess will be used to buy Paid-Up Additions.
4. Cash — To be paid to you by check.

¶ 5. Relevant to Weathers’s claims, the policy expressly provided that no sales representative “may (a) make or change any contract of insurance; or (b) change or waive any of the terms of this policy.”

¶ 6. Weathers testified at his deposition that he did not read the policy when McKie delivered it, but he noticed the plan was entitled, “Life Paid-up at Age 98.” Weathers asked McKie if the title meant that he would have to pay out-of-pocket premiums beyond ten years. McKie reassured Weathers that he would have to pay out-of-pocket premiums for only ten years. Thereafter, McKie and Weathers did not discuss the policy until 1999, when Weathers received notice of a class-action suit involving MetLife’s sale of vanishing-premium policies. Upon receipt of the notice, Weathers called McKie. McKie informed Weathers that the policy might not perform as expected and advised Weathers to contact MetLife’s home office. 4

¶ 7. Weathers alleges that he first discovered that he would have to pay out-of-pocket premiums beyond ten years when he received the class-action notice in 1999. Weathers opted-out of the class-action suit and filed his complaint against MetLife on December 20, 2001, alleging breach of contract, fraud/misrepresentation, fraudulent inducement, and negligent training/supervision.

¶ 8. Following discovery, MetLife filed a motion for summary judgment, arguing that Weathers’s claims were time-barred under Section 15-1-49 of the Mississippi Code. MetLife argued that Weathers’s claims accrued in 1994 when he received the policy, as it expressly provided that premiums were to be paid for fifty-nine years. Conversely, Weathers denied that his claims were time-barred and argued the statute of limitations was tolled under Section 15-1-67 of the Mississippi Code.

¶ 9. The trial court entered an order granting MetLife’s motion for summary judgment. The trial court found Weathers’s claims were time-barred under Section 15-1-49 as Weathers failed to put forth evidence of fraudulent concealment which would have tolled the statute of *691 limitations under Section 15-1-67. Miss. Code Ann. §§ 15-1-49, 15-1-67 (Rev. 2003). The trial court further found that Weathers had a duty to read the insurance policy, which the court found contradicted McKie’s oral representations. Weathers timely appealed the order granting summary judgment.

PROCEEDINGS BEFORE THE COURT OF APPEALS

¶ 10. The Court of Appeals found that the statute of limitations began to run in 1994 upon completion of the sale of the insurance policy. Weathers v. Metro. Life Ins. Co., 14 So.3d 732, 734, 2008 Miss.App. LEXIS 426, *5 (Miss.Ct.App. July 22, 2008). The Court of Appeals reasoned that, absent tolling under Section 15-1-67, Weathers’s claims were time-barred. Id. at 734-35, 2008 Miss.App. LEXIS 426, *6-*7. The Court of Appeals found that Weathers had failed to exercise due diligence to discover the fraud, since Weathers was “put on notice” of the misrepresentations when he inquired as to the meaning of “Life Paid-up at 98.” Id. at 735, 2008 Miss.App. LEXIS 426, *8-9. The appellate court held that “Weathers unreasonably relied upon McKie’s reassurance and failed to exercise due diligence to address his concerns. Therefore, the statute of limitations was not tolled, and Weathers’s claim was time-barred when he filed suit against MetLife in 2001.” Id. at 736, 2008 Miss.App. LEXIS 426, *9.

¶ 11.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
14 So. 3d 688, 2009 Miss. LEXIS 305, 2009 WL 1886867, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weathers-v-metropolitan-life-insurance-miss-2009.