Opinion
44854 Record No. 820833
October 11, 1985
Present: All the Justices
An award of insurance proceeds based on an oral credit accident and health insurance contract or binder is reversed because the oral contract was statutorily unenforceable and the oral binder is deemed to have been limited by a standard exclusion for disability arising from pre-existing conditions.
Insurance — Contracts — Oral Contracts — Exclusions — Writing Requirement (Code Sec. 38.1482.6) — Temporary Binders — Credit Insurance
On July 17, 1980, plaintiff obtained bank financing to purchase a truck. At the truck salesman's suggestion, he also purchased accident and health insurance to insure repayment of his loan in the event he became disabled. Plaintiff never received a copy of the insurance policy, but became disabled after making two payments on the truck.
Plaintiff had undergone arteriosclerosis surgery the previous year and had complained of related problems just days before his truck purchase. On July 16, 1980, his physician had composed a letter indicating the likelihood that plaintiff's arteriosclerosis would continue to worsen. The insurance company refused plaintiffs claim on the grounds that it was not liable for disability arising from this pre-existing condition. The trial court entered judgment on the jury's verdict for plaintiff, and the insurance company appeals.
1. Absent special agreement, an oral binder, or contract for temporary insurance pending the issuance of a written policy, contains the same provisions usually used to effect the intended insurance.
2. Parties to a temporary insurance contract who do not specifically agree on all essential terms are presumed to have agreed to the terms, conditions, and limitations of usual policies covering similar risks.
3. A credit accident or sickness insurance policy must define its coverage, including amounts and terms, and must list any exceptions, limitations, or restrictions. Code Sec. 38.1-482.6.
4. While the parties to insurance contracts and temporary insurance binders should expressly agree on all essential contractual elements, some elements may be supplied by inference under certain circumstances.
5. Absent evidence that the parties to an accident and health insurance policy agreed to negate the standard exclusion for disabilities caused by a pre-existing condition, they are presumed to have agreed to that standard provision.
6. The general rule that oral insurance contracts are enforceable if the essential elements are proven does not apply to oral contracts for credit insurance. Code Sec. 38.1-482.6(a), (b).
7. Code Sec. 38.1-482.6(e) provides that oral insurance contracts that are never reduced to writing are unenforceable, but does not apply to oral binders or contracts of temporary credit insurance pending the issuance of a written policy.
Appeal from a judgment from the Circuit Court of the City of Richmond. Hon. Frank A. S. Wright, judge presiding.
Reversed and final judgment.
Thomas Wolf (Mezzulo, McCandlish Framme, P.C., on briefs), for appellant.
Barry W. Norwood for appellee.
Sherman L. Compton brought this action against First Protection Life Insurance Company (the Company) to recover monthly payments aggregating $914.90 under an alleged oral contract of credit accident and health insurance. A jury returned a verdict for Compton in the amount sued for; the trial court entered judgment on the verdict. On appeal, the dispositive question is whether Compton's advanced arteriosclerosis, known to him when he contracted to purchase the insurance, precluded him as a matter of law from recovering for disability resulting from arteriosclerosis. Holding that Compton could not recover for disability arising from his pre-existing condition, we will reverse the judgment of the trial court and enter final judgment in favor of the Company.
On July 17, 1980, Compton purchased a pickup truck from Southside Dodge, Inc., financing the purchase through a bank. According to Compton, William Church, the car salesman, suggested that he purchase accident and health insurance as a part of the transaction. Compton testified that when he asked Church "what was it all about," Church said, "well, if you get sick or have an accident, they make your payment after a period of seven days." Compton, who had a fifth-grade education, said that he could not read or write but that his wife took care of these functions for him. She corroborated her husband's testimony about the conversation with Church. Compton purchased the insurance. After making two installment payments on the truck, Compton submitted a claim to the Company based upon disability arising from sickness, the first symptoms of which he claimed he noticed on October 3, 1980.
There was evidence that Aubrey Lawrence, III, the general manager of Southside Dodge, handled all insurance matters for the firm. He testified that after he told Compton he could choose payment with no insurance, payment with life insurance, or payment with accident and health insurance, Compton said he wanted to buy accident and health insurance. Lawrence prepared the papers, including a certificate of insurance, but turned over the papers to Church to close the transaction. Lawrence identified the form of insurance certificate he prepared for Compton. Church, who said he had nothing to do with writing insurance, could not positively state that he had delivered the certificate to Compton. Compton denied ever having received it but acknowledged that he thought the bank had a copy of the policy and he would receive his copy later.
Dr. Thomas M. Daniel testified that he operated on Compton, then 33, in December of 1979 for arteriosclerosis, hardening of the arteries, which had affected his left leg. Compton came to Dr. Daniel's office on July 11, 1980, describing "abnormal sensations" in his right foot. He complained that both legs were cramping when he worked. In Dr. Daniel's opinion, Compton still suffered from arteriosclerosis and probably had the disease in both legs. At Compton's request, Dr. Daniel wrote a letter dated July 16, 1980, "To Whom It May Concern," stating that Compton had "advanced atherosclerosis," which would probably get worse "in the coming years." Compton took this letter to Carolyn C. Shea, workers' compensation supervisor for another insurance company, who was handling the 1979 claim for Compton. Shea testified that Compton told her he felt he had permanent disability in his legs.
Atherosclerosis is a stage of arteriosclerosis. Webster's Third New International Dictionary 137 (1981).
Compton did not deny that he had a disease when he bought the insurance but said his doctor told him he "could work ten to twenty years, and did not have problem." Compton's claim, submitted to the Company, contained a statement from his physician, Dr. T. R. Butterworth, that his condition resulted from an accident that occurred on October 31, 1979. The Company denied the claim because the certificate of insurance provided coverage only for "(a) injuries sustained during the Term or (b) sickness contracted and commencing more than fourteen days after the effective date . . . ." In reply to the Company's denial of his claim, Compton sent a letter written in his name by his wife stating that the 1979 condition had been corrected. He maintained in the letter that the problem on which his present claim was based had arisen within the preceding 10 to 12 weeks, after his purchase of the insurance.
The Company contends that Compton's evidence shows the parties entered an insurance agreement binding the Company until a written policy could be issued; it argues that the usual contract provision in such policies excluding disabilities resulting from pre-existing conditions absolves it from liability in this case. Compton contends the parties were bound by an oral contract based on Church's statement, which he contends obligated the Company to make his payments whether his disability related to a pre-existing condition or one arising after the contract was entered. In his testimony, however, Compton admitted that he knew Church's statement did not constitute the entire contract, that he believed the bank received a copy of the written policy, and that he anticipated receiving a copy himself.
[1-2] An oral binder or contract for temporary insurance pending issuance of a written policy consists, in the absence of special agreement, of the usual provisions of contracts employed to effect like insurance. 2 G. Couch, Cyclopedia of Insurance Law Sec. 14.26 (2d rev. ed. 1984); 43 Am.Jur.2d Insurance Sec. 222 (1982); see De Cesare v. Metropolitan Life Ins. Co., 278 Mass. 401, 406, 180 N.E. 154, 156 (1932); Harmon v. American Interinsurance Exchange Co., 39 Mich. App. 145, 148, 197 N.W.2d 307, 309-10 (1972); Robinson v. State Farm Mutual Automobile Ins. Co., 188 Neb. 470, 472, 197 N.W.2d 396, 397 (1972); Mayo v. American Fire Casualty Company, 282 N.C. 346, 354, 192 S.E.2d 828, 833 (1972); cf. Code Sec. 38.1-332. Where the parties to a temporary contract for insurance do not specially agree upon all the essential terms, they are presumed to have contemplated the terms, conditions, and limitations of the usual policies covering similar risks. 2 G. Couch, supra, Sections 14:16, 14:26; 43 Am.Jur.2d Insurance, supra, Sections 167, 222; see Turner v. Worth Insurance Company, 106 Ariz. 132, 133, 472 P.2d 1, 2(1970); Parlier Fruit Co. v. Fireman's Fund Insurance Co., 151 Cal.App.2d 6, 21, 311 P.2d 62, 71 (1957).
Section 38.1-332, a general provision which allows the use of oral binders for temporary insurance, was not applicable to this and other contracts for credit accident and sickness insurance prior to the 1982 amendment of Sec. 38.1-482.1. See Acts 1982, c. 223. Application of this principle was apparently contemplated by the unamended statute, however, which fixed a time limit for delivery of the policy, certificate, or statement following the effective date of the insurance. See Sec. 38.1-482.6(e) (Repl. Vol. 1981).
[3-4] By statute, a policy, certificate, or statement of credit accident or sickness insurance must state, among other things, "a description of the coverage including the amount and term thereof, and any exceptions, limitations, or restrictions." Code Sec. 38.1-482.6(b); cf. Code Sec. 38.1-333. Although the parties normally must expressly agree on each essential element of an insurance contract, some of these elements may be supplied by inference in certain circumstances, including cases involving temporary insurance binders. See Dickerson v. Conklin, 218 Va. 59, 67 n. 1, 235 S.E.2d 450, 455 n.1 (1977).
Section 38.1-333, also not applicable to credit accident and sickness insurance prior to the 1982 amendment of Sec. 38.1-482.1, sets forth six elements which must be specified by insurance contracts in general: the names of the parties, the subject of the contract, the risks covered, the effective date and duration of the coverage, the premium, and the conditions pertaining to the insurance.
Compton asserts that he and Church expressly agreed that the Company would make his payments after seven days if he became disabled. The jury verdict necessarily was based on a finding of such an agreement. Church's statement, however, was merely a descriptive summary of the nature of the insurance available to Compton, given in response to Compton's general inquiry, rather than a precise, definitive contract term which omitted reference to any exclusions. If Compton experienced disability from disease or injury arising after the effective date of the policy, the Company, as Church explained, would pay. The parties did not discuss exclusions, and there was no indication that Church intended to negate the standard policy exclusions. Although Compton may have assumed that the coverage contained no exclusions, there is no evidence that the Company contemplated compensation in the case of a disability caused by a pre-existing condition. There was no meeting of the minds as to the extent of the coverage. Therefore, the parties are presumed to have agreed to the customary provision in accident and health insurance policies which excludes coverage for disability arising from a pre-existing condition. Thus, if the contract were a temporary contract for issuance of insurance, the Company is not obligated to make the payments sought by Compton.
Compton, however, in spite of his testimony to the contrary, argues that the parties entered an oral insurance contract complete in itself. While oral insurance contracts are generally enforceable if the essential elements are adequately proven, see Yates v. Whitten Valley Corp., 226 Va. 436, 438, 309 S.E.2d 330, 331 (1983), this rule does not apply to an oral contract for credit insurance. The statute governing credit accident and sickness insurance requires that all credit insurance be evidenced by a written policy, certificate, or statement and sets forth the required provisions of such instruments. Code Sec. 38.1-482.6(a), (b). If, as Compton alleges, the oral agreement were the complete contract, it fails to comply with these requirements and is unenforceable. In view of Compton's testimony, however, we hold that he was relying upon a temporary contract.
The statute provides that the policy, certificate, or statement may be delivered to the insured debtor after the time the insurance is effected. Code Sec. 38.1-482.6(e). It is therefore apparent that the General Assembly intended to proscribe only oral contracts of insurance never commemorated by a writing, not oral binders or contracts of temporary credit insurance pending issuance of a written policy. Thus, the Company's theory that the agreement was a temporary binder pending issuance of the policy does not contravene the statute. The contract will be enforced, with the exclusionary provisions of the Company's usual credit insurance policies presumed to be a condition of the oral binder agreement.
The 5-day period formerly allowed for delivery of the policy was extended to 10 days by the 1982 amendments. Acts 1982, c. 223.
In view of our holding, we need not address the other assignments of error. We will reverse the judgment of the trial court and enter final judgment in favor of the Company.
Reversed and final judgment.