Opinion
No. 74-442
Decided July 9, 1975.
Insurance — Life — Application form requiring medical examination and medical history — Application complete in part executed and premium paid — Agent without authority to waive provisions of application.
Where an insurance company's application for insurance form contains provisions which expressly state that no agent is authorized to waive or change any of the conditions or provisions of any application or receipt, and there is no proof that the agent otherwise has such authority, a company agent soliciting insurance sales may not bind the company to a contract upon terms other than those expressed in the company's application and receipt forms.
APPEAL from the Court of Appeals for Cuyahoga County.
Charlotte L. Gregg, plaintiff-appellee, filed an action in the Court of Common Pleas of Cuyahoga County against John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance Company, defendant-appellant, to recover, as beneficiary, $30,000 under a "contract for life insurance" entered into between her husband and defendant company.
On December 6, 1967, plaintiff's husband made application for the insurance by executing an application form and by paying a premium of $58.41 in advance.
The application contained the following provisions:
"A. The foregoing statements and answers are complete, true and correctly recorded, and with all Parts B of this application shall form the basis for and be a part of any contract of insurance.
"B. If an advance payment is made with this Part A, and if the total amount of all insurance now in force plus the amount applied for in this and all other applications now pending on the life of the proposed insured in this company, does not exceed either $250,000 life insurance or $100,000 accidental death benefit, the contract of insurance shall take effect as provided in and subject to the terms and conditions of Conditional Receipt Form 156-CR-67 bearing the same date and number as this Part A. If the contract of insurance does not take effect as provided in such Conditional Receipt it shall take effect as of the date of issue of the policy but only upon delivery to and receipt by the applicant of the policy and payment of the premium thereon, and only if at the time of such delivery and payment each person proposed for insurance in Parts A and B of this application, including the proposed insured, is living and has not consulted, been examined, or been treated by a physician or practitioner since the latest Part B pertaining to such person was completed.
"C. No agent or medical examiner is authorized to make or discharge contracts or waive or change any of the conditions or provisions of any application, policy or receipt, or to accept risks or pass upon insurability. Notice to or knowledge of any agent or medical examiner, whenever given, is not notice to or knowledge of the company."
A conditional receipt (Form 156-CR-67) was given plaintiff's husband. It reads, in part:
"Notice: Applicability of this Conditional Receipt is governed by Agreement B of Application "Conditional Receipt for advance payment with application for new insurance"Received from insured the sum of $58.41 paid with application to the John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance Company bearing the same date and number as this receipt. If this sum is at least one month's proportionate part of the premium according to the company's published rates for the policy and premium interval selected in the application, and if the company at its home office shall determine that each person proposed for insurance, including the proposed insured, was, on the date of completion of the latest of all required Parts A and B and medical examinations pertaining to each such person, acceptable under the company's rules for the premium class, amount and plan of insurance, and additional benefits, if any, applied for, the contract applied for shall take effect retroactively as of the date of the latest of all required parts of the application and medical examinations, or of such other date as may be requested in the application and accepted by the company, notwithstanding any change in acceptability due to any disease contracted or injury sustained after the date of completion of all required parts of the application and medical examinations.
"* * *
"The application shall be deemed to have been declined if it has not been approved by the company within 60 days hereafter and the amount paid shall be returned upon surrender of this receipt. Any check tendered is received subject to collection only.
"John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance Company
"By Robert H. Zirker, Jr. Agent
"Name of proposed insured Robert Lee Gregg Date 12-6-1967."
Part B of the application, consisting of medical history information, was not filled in by the insurance company agent, but was signed by both the agent and plaintiff's husband. On December 7, 1967, the day after the insurance application was completed, plaintiff's husband was killed in a motor vehicle accident.
At the trial, evidence was introduced to the effect that one of the two insurance agents who were present indicated that coverage under the insurance would commence immediately upon payment of the advance premium and that a recent physical examination plaintiff's husband had undergone could be used for purposes of the required medical examination. This evidence was contested by testimony of the company's agents.
The trial court rendered judgment for the plaintiff and, upon appeal, the Court of Appeals affirmed.
The cause is now before this court pursuant to the allowance of a motion to certify the record.
Mr. Warren P. Geiger, for appellee.
Messrs. Burgess, Fullmer, Parker Steck, Mr. C. Richard Andrews and Mr. Jeffrey D. Fincun, for appellant.
Appellant company propounds four propositions of law, contending therein that its agents could not waive the required medical examination nor the completion of the medical history portion of the application; that the testimony concerning the statements made by the agents as to coverage was inadmissible to prove existence of the contract; that no contract could become effective until completion of the medical examination; and that no contract could have arisen because the applicant's occupation as truck driver precluded the company from issuing a policy at the premium applied for.
At the outset, it should be observed that the subject of the instant appeal is not an insurance contract, but an application for insurance.
"In the law of insurance, an application * * * is a request for a contract of insurance to be issued to the applicant by an insurer. * * * Acceptance of the offer by the insurer is required for the completion of a contract of insurance." 1 Couch on Insurance 2d 308, Section 7:1.
The terms of the application and conditional receipt reproduced in the statement of facts indicate that the applicant's offer would be accepted and the insurance would become effective "on the date of completion of the latest of all required Parts A and B and medical examinations * * * acceptable under the company's rules for the premium class, amount and plan of insurance * * * applied for * * *."
Those provisions of the application and conditional receipt, in effect, are contractual conditions precedent to the acceptance by the company of the offer to purchase the insurance. The record shows that Part A was completed, Part B was signed but not filled in, and no medical examination was completed. Consequently, for appellee to prevail it would be necessary to find that the conditions contained in the application and conditional receipt could be and were waived by appellant's agents. Both the trial court and the Court of Appeals so found, basing their conclusions upon Gettins v. United States Life Ins. Co. (C.A. 6, 1955), 221 F.2d 782.
The facts in Gettins closely parallel those in the instant case. A premium was paid, the applicant was told by the agent that the policy was effective immediately, the effectiveness of the insurance was predicated upon completion of a physical examination, and the applicant died before such examination was completed.
In Gettins, the following comments concerning Ohio law appear, at page 783:
"The question here, however, seems far from well-settled by the Supreme Court of Ohio. `There is no doubt that confusion exists in the reported cases of this state respecting the authority of insurance agents to waive conditions in life and fire insurance policies.' John Hancock Mutual Life Ins. Co. v. Luzio, [1931], 123 Ohio St. 616, 621, 176 N.E. 446, 449. The Luzio case does make clear that both by custom and the law of Ohio soliciting agents of life insurance companies have substantially less authority than do agents of fire insurance companies to alter or waive the conditions of the insurance contract.
"What is here in issue, however, is not the actual authority of the agent, but whether the insurer may be bound by the unauthorized act of its agent upon which the decedent in good faith relied. The confusion on that subject is well-illustrated by a comparison of the Luzio case with Shields v. Supreme Council of Royal Arcanum, 123 Ohio St. 31, 173 N.E. 731, decided by the same court six months previously. In Luzio it was held that the insurance company was not bound by an attempted waiver by its soliciting agent of a condition providing that the policy should not take effect unless the insured were in sound health at the date of the policy. In Shields it was held that the insurer waived its right to forfeiture of the policy because of default in the payment of a premium, by reason of the conduct of its `local collector' acting `within the apparent scope of his authority.'"
The United States Court of Appeals then followed an Ohio Court of Appeals case, Peponis v. John Hancock Mutual Life Ins. Co. (1942), 37 Ohio Law Abs. 386, wherein, on similar facts, the insurance company was held liable and a motion to certify the record was overruled.
Here, as in the Luzio case. "[t]here was no proof that * * * [agent] had any other authority — none to waive material conditions in the policy he sold." ( 123 Ohio St. 616, 628.)
In the application, the agent's authority is specifically limited by the language stating that company agents are not authorized to "* * * waive or change any of the conditions or provisions of any application, policy or receipt * * *." Terminology similar to this was given effect by the Supreme Court of Virginia in Elliott v. Interstate Life Accident Co. (1970), 211 Va. 240, 176 S.E.2d 314.
In answer to the argument that the agent's representation to the applicant that the insurance "was in force" should bind the defendant-company, the court, in Elliott, said, at page 245:
"To adopt this position would require us to ignore the plain and unambiguous language of the application in which Hamner's limited authority was brought to Mr. Elliott's attention. The clear effect of this language was to put Mr. Elliott on notice that no coverage was effected until such time as `. . . in the opinion of the authorized officers of the company at its home office in Chattanooga, Tennessee, the persons proposed for insurance under the rules and practices on the plan of insurance, for the amount of insurance, and at the premium rate set forth in the application.'
"Even accepting, as we must, plaintiff's testimony that Hamner told her that the coverage was in effect because the premium had been paid, the clear and undisputed evidence shows that Hamner had no authority to bind defendant. Mr. Elliott and Hamner were both aware of this lack of authority."
This court is of the opinion that the language of the application, limiting the authority of the agent, effectively prohibited the agents from binding the appellant to an insurance contract upon terms other than those expressed in the application and receipt.
The judgment of the Court of Appeals is reversed and final judgment is rendered for appellant.
Judgment reversed.
HERBERT, CORRIGAN, STERN and P. BROWN, JJ., concur.
CELEBREZZE and W. BROWN, JJ., dissent.