Connell v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co.

Decision Date02 August 1985
Citation482 So.2d 1165
PartiesCharles CONNELL v. STATE FARM MUTUAL AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE COMPANY and Perry Davis. 84-58.
CourtAlabama Supreme Court

John F. Dillon, IV of Dillon, Kelley & Brown and Larry W. Morris of Radney & Morris, Alexander City, for appellant.

Edgar M. Elliott, III and Karon O. Bowdre of Rives & Peterson, Birmingham, for appellees.

ADAMS, Justice.

Charles Connell sued State Farm Automobile Insurance Company and insurance agent Perry Davis for misrepresentation in the course of issuing a policy of insurance to Connell. The trial court granted summary judgment for State Farm and Connell appeals.

The facts of this case are as follows:

Connell met with Davis, who had been a State Farm agent for 19 years, for the purpose of securing a health insurance policy which would pay for a work related injury and make up for the excess beyond workmen's compensation coverage. Connell told Davis what he wanted, and Davis recommended a policy he thought would satisfy Connell. The policy would pay for a disability until age 65, and had an optional 7-, 14-, or 30-day waiting period.

Connell applied for the recommended policy with a 14-day waiting period, and paid the initial premium. Connell understood that State Farm's home office would have to approve the application. State Farm in fact did not approve the application for these reasons: 1) the 14-day waiting period was no longer offered; and 2) as a truckdriver, Connell did not qualify for the policy which would pay benefits in addition to workmen's compensation recovery.

State Farm apparently issues two types of disability income policies. The "guaranteed renewable policy," available to doctors, lawyers, teachers, and office workers, will pay benefits for injuries covered by workmen's compensation, and will pay benefits until age 65. The "optionally renewable policy" is available to truck drivers, factory workers, and others, and will pay benefits for only 5 years and will not pay benefits for injuries covered under workmen's compensation.

Therefore, as a truck driver, Connell did not qualify for the policy recommended to him by Davis and for which he had applied and paid a premium. To rectify this, State Farm made changes on Connell's application in red ink, with red ink stamped the application "amended," and returned it to Connell along with a form entitled "Amendment of Application for Health Insurance" for Connell to sign, and an optionally renewable disability income policy.

Connell signed the amendment form when Davis presented it to him. The form, in pertinent part, states "I Charles Connell, hereby amend my application dated August 16, 1982 as follows: Issue with a Minimum Income Period of 5 years. Issue the Optionally Renewable Disability Income Policy." In his deposition testimony Connell was asked about the circumstances of his signing the amendment:

Q. And tell me what this document is, please, sir.

A. It is a waiver, or change of policy from years from 65 to five years.

Q. Okay. The maximum income period of five years rather than to age 65?

A. Yes, sir.

Q. And Mr. Davis explained that to you when you signed it?

A. Yes, sir.

Q. Why did he tell you it was necessary to change it? Was he the one who explained it to you, Mr. Davis, as opposed to somebody in his office?

A. Yes, sir.

Q. Why did he tell you it was necessary to change it from age 65 to five years?

A. He didn't.

Q. Did you ask him?

A. No, sir.

Q. Did it make any difference to you?

A. For I trusted him.

Q. This is not my question. Did it make a difference to you whether it was paid to 65 or five years?

A. Well, it would have made a difference I reckon in some ways.

Q. Well, he explained it to you, and you went ahead and signed it?

A. He just told me they changed it from 65 to five years, is all he explained to me.

Q. All right, sir. And it says also, "Issue the optionally renewable disability income policy." Is that something that he explained to you also?

A. Sir, he didn't explain anything about it. He just told me that they had changed, that the piece of paper I was signing was for the changes from 65 to five years.

Connell says he did not realize that he had not obtained any of the coverage he wanted until July 1983, when a claim he filed on an injury was denied by State Farm because of the workmen's compensation exclusion. Connell filed this suit against State Farm in October 1983, and summary judgment was entered for the insurer in September 1984.

The issue is whether there is a scintilla of evidence to support the claim that State Farm and Davis, in their manner of amending the original application, defrauded Connell by misrepresenting the coverage he received under his policy.

A contract of insurance is essentially like all other contracts and is governed by general rules of contract. Hartford Fire Insurance Company v. Shapiro, 270 Ala. 149, 117 So.2d 348 (1960). An application for insurance is an offer to enter into an insurance contract, and if the insurer issues a policy materially different from that applied for, the policy is a counter-offer which becomes binding only when accepted by the applicant. Life Insurance Company of Georgia v. Miller, 292 Ala. 525, 296 So.2d 900 (1974).

State Farm relies on these principles by stating that the company could not be guilty of fraud when its action amounted to making a counter-offer to Connell, which he accepted. We find, however, that the circumstances of this particular counter-offer exhibit at least a scintilla of evidence of misrepresentation on State Farm's part.

In Torres v. State Farm Fire & Casualty Company, 438 So.2d 757 (Ala.1983), we said this:

A cause of action for...

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