
    Montgomery Mutual Insurance Company v. Jeffrey Riddle, et al.
    Record No. 021271
    October 31, 2003
    Present: All the Justices
    
      
      Stephen A. Horvath (Trichilo, Bancroft, McGavin, Horvath & Judkins, on briefs), for appellant.
    
      John H. Carstens (Myron Teluk; Jordan, Coyne & Savits, on briefs), for appellees.
   JUSTICE LEMONS

delivered the opinion of the Court.

In this appeal, we consider whether Code § 38.2-309 requires proof of actual reliance by an insurance company on material misrepresentations made in an application for insurance before a policy of insurance can be declared void.

I. Facts and Proceedings

Jeffrey S. Riddle (“Riddle”) was a subcontractor with Pennington Construction. Pennington Construction required him to obtain general liability insurance and workers’ compensation insurance. Riddle contacted Chesapeake Bay Insurance Agency, Inc. (“Chesapeake”) to obtain insurance. Chesapeake sought the assistance of Southern Maryland Insurance, Inc. (“Southern Maryland”) in obtaining a policy for Riddle.

Southern Maryland was owned and operated by Ken Wyvill. Wyvill was a limited agent of Montgomery Mutual Insurance Company (“Montgomery Mutual”). At trial, Wyvill testified that he had authority to bind Montgomery Mutual to extend insurance coverage to applicants although he was contradicted by another employee of Montgomery Mutual. When Wyvill received a request from Chesapeake to obtain an insurance policy for Riddle, he arranged for Riddle to apply to Rockwood Insurance (“Rockwood”). Riddle completed a Rockwood application which Wyvill reviewed and submitted to Rockwood. After Rockwood rejected Riddle’s application, Wyvill suggested to Chesapeake that Riddle submit an application to Montgomery Mutual.

Chesapeake responded by requesting that Wyvill proceed with obtaining a policy for Riddle from Montgomery Mutual. Chesapeake asked that the policy with Montgomery Mutual be bound effective April 20, 2000. Riddle completed Montgomery Mutual’s application form and submitted payment for the insurance premium. Wyvill sent the application to Montgomery Mutual with a notation that insurance coverage was “bound” effective “4/20/00.”

When asked whether he reviewed the two applications with the intent to bind coverage, Wyvill testified that he neither acted nor intended to bind coverage for Riddle at any time and that he “was just reviewing them to make sure all the boxes were checked that were supposed to be checked and the information that was supposed to be in there was in there.” According to Wyvill, he merely checked Riddle’s applications for completeness and proper format.

On April 29, 2000, an employee of Riddle was electrocuted on the job. On May 2, 2000, Riddle submitted a claim to Montgomery Mutual through Wyvill. Montgomery Mutual received Riddle’s application for insurance the following day. On May 4, 2000, the employee died and, six days later, Montgomery Mutual denied insurance coverage.

Montgomery Mutual filed an action for declaratory judgment to determine coverage. The trial court found that Wyvill, through his apparent authority as an agent of Montgomery Mutual, orally bound coverage to Riddle beginning April 20th and that Wyvill had not “relied on” alleged misrepresentations found in Riddle’s application in making the decision to bind coverage. On appeal, Montgomery Mutual argues that the trial court erred in holding that it must prove that it or its agent relied on the alleged material misrepresentations made by Riddle in order to void the policy. Alternatively, it argues that, even if a showing of reliance is necessary, the trial court’s finding that Wyvill did not rely on the veracity of Riddle’s application was erroneous. Montgomery Mutual does not appeal the holding of the trial court that the policy was bound by the apparent authority of Wyvill.

II. Analysis

Code § 38.2-309 provides:

All statements, declarations and descriptions in any application for an insurance policy or for the reinstatement of an insurance policy shall be deemed representations and not warranties. No statement in an application or in any affidavit made before or after loss under the policy shall bar a recovery upon a policy of insurance unless it is clearly proved that such answer or statement was material to the risk when assumed and was untrue.

We had occasion to interpret this statute in Commercial Underwriters Insurance Co. v. Hunt & Calderone, P.C., 261 Va. 38, 42 540 S.E.2d 491, 493 (2001) (citations omitted), when we held that:

We have construed Code § 38.2-309 and its predecessors to require an insurance company contesting a claim on the basis of an insured’s alleged misrepresentation to show, by clear proof, two facts: (1) that the statement on the application was untrue; and (2) that the insurance company’s reliance on the false statement was material to the company’s decision to undertake the risk and issue the policy. To prove the falsity is not sufficient; the company must prove clearly that truthful answers would have reasonably influenced the company’s decision to issue the policy.

Montgomery Mutual maintains that our statements about reliance are dicta because they were unnecessary to the resolution of the case and, further, that we were wrong in our interpretation of the statute. While Montgomery Mutual may be right about whether reliance was an issue in Commercial Underwriters, we reaffirm the correctness of our interpretation of the statute’s requirements.

As a threshold matter, we recognize the intimate conceptual relationship between reliance and materiality. It is clear that the General Assembly only wanted matters “material to the risk” to be at issue in the voiding of a policy of insurance. “Material” is defined as “[o]f such a nature that knowledge of the item would affect a person’s decision-making process.” Black’s Law Dictionary 991 (7th ed. 1999). Obviously, if there is no reliance upon a statement or omission, it could not have affected the decision-making process; consequently, it could not be material. Accordingly, we reiterate that when an insurance carrier seeks to void a policy for alleged material omissions or misrepresentations pursuant to Code § 38.2-309, the insurer must show, by clear proof, two facts: (1) that the statement or omission on the application was untrue; and (2) that the insurance company’s reliance on the false statement or omission was material to the company’s decision to undertake the risk and issue the policy. To prove the falsity is not sufficient; the insurer must prove clearly that truthful answers would have reasonably influenced the company’s decision to issue the policy.

The trial court held that Wyvill had the apparent authority to bind the policy in question and Montgomery Mutual is bound by that holding because no error was assigned to it. At trial, Wyvill testified on behalf of Montgomery Mutual that he did not intend to bind the policy and made it quite clear that he did not review the applications for substance. Instead, he reviewed the applications to assure that the applications were complete and in proper form.

Montgomery Mutual is now circumscribed by the posture of the case on appeal. It seeks to examine the substance of the answers to questions on the applications. But the trial court held that the policy was bound through the apparent authority of Wyvill, who reviewed the applications for their form and not their substance. Therefore, Montgomery Mutual has not proved the necessary reliance to prevail in its attempt to void the policy. Upon review of the record we cannot say that the trial court was plainly wrong or without evidence to support its judgment that Wyvill did not rely on the statements or omissions in the policy applications.

Accordingly, we will affirm the judgment of the trial court.

Affirmed.  