Nos. 90-3151, 90-3156.United States Court of Appeals, Fourth Circuit.Argued June 4, 1991.
Decided February 7, 1992. As Amended March 5, 1992.
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J. Joseph Shepherd, argued (Parker E. Cherry, on brief), Purcell, Cherry, Kerns Abady, Richmond, Va., for appellant.
William Tyler Shands, argued (Albert M. Orgain, IV and Robert B. Delano, Jr., on brief), Sands, Anderson, Marks Miller, P.C., Richmond, Va., for appellee.
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia.
Before RUSSELL, PHILLIPS, and SPROUSE, Circuit Judges.
[1] OPINION
PER CURIAM:
I.
[3] Anthony J. Howell, Nyonteh’s ex-husband, was hospitalized from February 8 to 11, 1986, at the Duke University Medical Center where he was diagnosed as suffering from chronic granulocytic leukemia. During that time he was told that, barring a successful bone marrow transplant, he had only a short time to live.
II.
[7] Nyonteh challenges several of the factual findings made by the district court. Specifically, she claims that she did not instruct Vaughan on how to fill out the reinstatement application. She also claims that she had no knowledge of Howell’s illness and that no evidence introduced at trial proved she had such knowledge.
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is not this Court’s role, however, to reweigh the evidence. Vaughan’s testimony is sufficient to support the district court’s findings; accordingly, we conclude that they were not clearly erroneous.
[9] Nyonteh’s assertion that there was no direct evidence proving her knowledge of Howell’s condition is correct. Evidence at trial showed, however, that: (1) Nyonteh had had little contact with Howell over the six years prior to the insurance application; (2) Nyonteh and Howell applied for the life insurance policy only four months after he had been diagnosed as suffering from leukemia; (3) Nyonteh falsely stated that she was Howell’s sister in the answers she gave to Vaughan for the June 14, 1986, application; and (4) Nyonteh, not Howell, initiated the purchase of the policy and paid all premiums. Under these circumstances, the inference that Nyonteh knew of Howell’s fatal condition was reasonable. III.
[10] Nyonteh contends that the district court erred in finding the policy’s incontestability clause inapplicable as a result of the policy being void due to misrepresentations in the insurance application. Because the district court’s conclusion presents a question of law, we will review it de novo. Pierce v. Underwood, 487 U.S. 552, 558, 108 S.Ct. 2541, 2546, 101 L.Ed.2d 490 (1988).
(1965) (citing to predecessor code section 38.1-336). The concealment of a terminal illness leading to imminent death is material to the risk assumed by an insurance carrier; thus, the district court’s conclusion that Nyonteh and Howell had fraudulently misrepresented the state of Howell’s health in both the insurance application and the application for reinstatement was clearly correct. The principle issue in this case, therefore, is not whether Peoples had grounds to challenge the insurance policy’s validity, but whether it was barred from doing so by the policy’s (or the reinstatement application’s) incontestability clause. [12] In Harrison v. Provident Relief Ass’n, 141 Va. 659, 126 S.E. 696, 700 (1925), the Supreme Court of Virginia held that an insurer must contest a contract’s validity for false or fraudulent statements within the period prescribed in the policy Accord Darden v. North Am. Benefit Ass’n, 170 Va. 479, 197 S.E. 413, 415 (1938); see also Va. Code Ann. § 38.2-3107 (Michie 1990) (incontestability period limited to two years). Thus, an incontestability clause forecloses untimely challenges based on material misrepresentations in insurance applications. This result is consistent with holdings in other jurisdictions. See
1A John A. Appleman Jean Appleman, Insurance Law and Practice
§ 332 (rev. vol. 1981); 18 George J. Couch et al., Cyclopedia of Insurance Law § 72:71 (2d ed. rev. vol. 1983); and cases cited therein. [13] The district court held, and Peoples contends, that the incontestability clause was inapplicable because the insurance policy was void. An incontestability clause normally presupposes a valid contract; a determination that the contract was void thus renders the clause inapplicable. 1A Appleman, supra, § 337; 18 Couch, supra, § 72:92. In State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Co. v. Butler, 203 Va. 575, 125 S.E.2d 823, 825
(1962), the Supreme Court of Virginia, applying the predecessor to section 38.2-309, held that “misrepresentations of facts material to the risk assumed in an application for insurance render the contract void.” (emphasis added). Under Butler,
thus, material misrepresentations appear to result in a void contract, a circumstance that normally would make the policy’s incontestability clause inapplicable.
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This result conflicts directly with the holding in Harrison.
[14] The reason for distinguishing between void and voidable contracts is that different legal consequences flow from that characterization. Restatement (Second) of Contracts § 7 cmt. a (1979). The contestability of an insurance policy is a prime example. If the policy, and hence the incontestability clause contained therein, is void, then it should be contestable notwithstanding the incontestability clause. Under Harrison,the incontestability clause remains enforceable; thus, such policies are treated as voidable, not void. This result is consistent with Virginia law outside the insurance field. See Pretlow v. Pretlow, 177 Va. 524, 14 S.E.2d 381, 387 (1941) (fraud which induces contract formation renders a contract voidable); West End Real-Estate Co. v. Claiborne, 97 Va. 734, 34 S.E. 900, 906 (1900) (same); compare Restatement (Second) of Contracts § 164 (fraud resulting in voidable contract) with id.
§ 163 (fraud resulting in void contract). Moreover, a review o Butler and related Virginia precedent reveals that the void/voidable distinction was not material to those cases. Accordingly, we construe Butler consistent with the result reached in Harrison and hold that Nyonteh’s policy was voidable. [15] We conclude that the incontestability clause was applicable to Peoples’ defense of fraud. We turn next to its cross-appeal contention that a new incontestability period began to run upon reinstatement of the policy.
IV.
[16] The district court did not address whether the reinstatement application resulted in a new limitations period on contestability. Nevertheless, this Court may affirm on alternative grounds raised by the parties in the district court Dennison v. County of Frederick, 921 F.2d 50, 53 (4th Cir. 1990), cert. denied, ___ U.S. ___, 111 S.Ct. 2828, 115 L.Ed.2d 998 (1991). The reinstatement application was in fact raised in the district court as a ground for barring Nyonteh’s recovery; thus the issue may properly be addressed on appeal.
[18] Va. Code Ann. § 38.2-3109 (Michie 1990). The incontestability period of the original policy was two years. The reinstatement application was filled out in October 1988, and this case was filed on February 1, 1990, well within the two-year limitations period. As discussed above, Nyonteh’s reinstatement application included false statements that were material to the risks assumed by Peoples. It follows that the reinstatement of the insurance policy is invalid. [19] To avoid the consequences of these misrepresentations, Nyonteh employs a three-pronged attack, urging that: (1) no reinstatement contract was ever formed because Peoples’ acceptance was invalid; (2) any contract formed is unenforceable against her because she failed to sign the application; and (3) the misrepresentations cannot be used to challenge the policy’s validity because the reinstatement application was not “written” as required by section 38.2-3109 due to her failure to sign it. She further urges that, although the reinstatement contract is neither valid nor enforceable, the original policy is both because Peoples waived any right to void the policy for lapse when it accepted premiums from her following receipt of the reinstatement application. See Home Beneficial Ass’n v. Field, 162 Va. 63, 173 S.E. 370, 373 (1934). [20] Nyonteh’s attack on the validity of Peoples’ acceptance rests on Peoples’ failure to sign, date, and indicate acceptance on the back of the reinstatement application.A life insurance policy reinstated after July 1, 1986 … shall be contestable on account of fraud or misrepresentation of any material fact pertaining to the reinstatement contained in a written application for reinstatement, or in any written statement supplemental to the application for reinstatement, only for the same period after reinstatement as the policy provides for contestability after original issue.
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This argument fails because neither the application nor the parol evidence introduced at trial indicated that this section of the application needed to be filled out in order for Peoples to accept. The section is marked “For Home Office Use Only”; the only reasonable interpretation is that the section related to Peoples’ internal procedures and had no bearing on the existence of contractual relations between the parties.
[21] Nyonteh’s challenge based on her not having signed the application fails because section 38.2-3109 does not introduce a general requirement that all reinstatement applications be in writing; rather, it limits charges of misrepresentation to those based on written statements. Her contention that the misrepresentations in the application cannot be used to challenge the reinstated policy also fails. Regardless of the effect of Nyonteh’s statements, Howell’s clearly meet the Code’s requirements. Section 38.2-3109 limits challenges based on material misrepresentations to those based on written statements, but it does not limit written statements to those made by the applicant. Section 38.2-309 does focus on statements made by the applicant. The purpose of that section, however, is not to limit whose statements may be used to challenge a policy; rather, the section modifies the common law fraud standard applied in determining whether a statement bars recovery to a material misrepresentation standard. See Chitwood v. Prudential Ins. Co. of Am., 206 Va. 314, 143 S.E.2d 915, 919 (1965). [22] The Supreme Court of Virginia held in Burruss v. National Life Ass’n, 96 Va. 543, 32 S.E. 49, 50 (1899), that fraudulent statements by the insured void an insurance policy, even if the owner/beneficiary of the policy is ignorant of the fraud Burruss has been criticized for allowing a third party to affect the rights of an otherwise innocent contracting party. 12 Appleman, supra, § 7306.5, at 440 n. 13. Nevertheless, the weight of legal authority recognizes that under at least some circumstances a third party’s misrepresentation will make a contract voidable. For example, section 164(2) of the second Restatement of Contracts provides that:[23] See also 12 Samuel Williston Walter H.E. Jaeger, A Treatise on the Law of Contracts § 1518, at 584 (3d ed. 1970); cf. Gilley v. Union Life Ins. Co., 194 Va. 966, 76 S.E.2d 165, 170If a party’s manifestation of assent is induced by either a fraudulent or a material misrepresentation by one who is not a party to the transaction upon which the recipient is justified in relying, the contract is voidable by the recipient, unless the other party to the transaction in good faith and without reason to know of the misrepresentation either gives value or relies materially on the transaction.
(1953) (insurance applicant cannot be held liable for fraudulent answers inserted by the agent of the insurer where the applicant had no actual or constructive knowledge of the fraud). Nyonteh did not act in good faith; on the contrary, she participated in the fraud. Thus, under both Burruss and the narrower view of the second Restatement, Howell’s misrepresentations are a ground to void the policy.
V.
[24] We conclude that the reinstatement application created a new period of incontestability that had not run at the time of Howell’s death and of the filing of this suit. We further conclude that Howell’s misrepresentations in the application rendered the policy voidable, and thus we agree with the result reached by the district court. We do not address Peoples’ contention that the district court erred in finding that Nyonteh had an insurable interest in Howell’s life.
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