By statute of the State in which a contract of life insurance
was made and where the insured died, the policy, with application
annexed, constituted the entire contract of the parties, and a
false statement in the application, that the applicant had not
received medical advice within a specified time preceding the
application, must be taken as a material misrepresentation avoiding
the policy even though, in the making of the application, a
truthful answer on the subject was orally given the company's
agent, but not recorded by him.
Held:
1. The right of the Insurance Company to escape liability under
the policy because of the falsity of the written representation,
without regard to oral statements made by the insured to the
Company's examiner at the time when the application was made, was a
substantive right conferred by the statute. P.
299 U. S.
182.
2. Recognition of this right in an action on the policy in
another State would not give the statute extra-territorial effect,
but would merely be a recognition that the parties, by their
contract, had subjected themselves to the statutory conditions.
Id.
3. Refusal by the courts of another State to recognize the right
thus arising under the statute was a failure to give full faith and
credit to a "public act" of the State in which the contract was
made and the cause of action accrued. Const., Art. IV, § 1. P.
299 U. S. 183.
4. Such refusal could not be justified as a matter appertaining
to the local remedy. P.
299 U. S.
182.
5. Where a contract of life insurance is made wholly in and
subject to the laws of one State, the law of another State cannot
determine the substantive rights created by the contract.
Id.
182 Ga. 213, 185 S.E. 268, reversed.
Certiorari to review a judgment sustaining a recovery on a
policy of life insurance. The decision of the intermediate
Page 299 U. S. 179
state court is reported in 50 Ga.App. 713; 179 S.E. 239.
MR. JUSTICE BRANDEIS delivered the opinion of the Court.
In May, 1932, the John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance Company, a
Massachusetts corporation, insured the life of Harmon H. Yates,
agreeing to pay upon his death $2,000 to his wife. The policy was
applied for, issued, and delivered in New York, where he and his
wife resided, and they remained there until his death of cancer in
the following month. Then his widow removed to Georgia, and
brought, in a court of that state, this suit on the policy. The
case was tried before a jury.
The Company contended that, since the contract was made in New
York, the existence of liability thereon is governed by the
statutes of that state. It denied liability upon the ground that
answers in the application to the questions whether the applicant
was then in good health, so far as he knew, whether he had ever
been treated for cancer or indigestion, and whether he had had
medical advice for any other disease or disorder during the period
of five years prior to making the application were false, and that
these were material misrepresentations.
The Company proved, and it was undisputed, that the applicant
had received medical treatment five times within the month
preceding the application. It proved also that, under the law of
New York, the mistatement made is a material misrepresentation
which avoids the
Page 299 U. S. 180
policy, introducing § 58 of the New York Insurance Law,
[
Footnote 1] which, as
construed and applied in
Travelers' Insurance Co. v.
Pomerantz, 246 N.Y. 63, 158 N.E. 21 and
Minsker v. John
Hancock Mutual Life Insurance Co., 254 N.Y. 333, 173 N.E. 4,
provides that the entire contract between the parties must be
embodied in the policy, to which a copy of the application must be
physically attached; that, when the insured receives a policy, it
is his duty to read it or have it read; that, if an application
incorporated therein does not contain correct answers to questions
asked, it is his duty to have the answers corrected; that, in case
a false answer to a material question is not so corrected, the
applicant cannot recover even if able to prove that he gave to the
Examiner the true answer; that the agent of the Company is without
power to waive this requirement of the policy, and that the false
statement in the application that the applicant had not received
medical advice constitutes a material misrepresentation which
avoids the policy. It was not denied that such is the law of New
York.
The trial court overruled the Company's contention; permitted
the plaintiff to testify, in effect, that true answers had been
given orally by the applicant to the Company's agent, and that the
agent had said that the answers as recorded in the application were
correct; submitted to the jury the determination of the question
whether the false statement in the application was a material
misrepresentation; and, among other things, charged that
"if a policy is issued with knowledge by the agent of a fact or
condition which, by the terms of the contract, would render it
void, the insurer will be held to have waived the existence of such
fact or condition, and the policy will not be voided thereby."
The jury rendered a verdict for the plaintiff; judgment was
entered
Page 299 U. S. 181
thereon in the sum of $2,000; that judgment was affirmed by the
Court of Appeals of Georgia (50 Ga.App. 713, 179 S.E. 239), and
again by the Supreme Court of that state, two judges dissenting
(182 Ga. 213, 185 S.E. 268). We granted certiorari because of the
claim that the state courts had refused to give to the public acts
of New York full faith and credit as required by § 1 of article 4
of the Federal Constitution.
The reason assigned by the Supreme Court of Georgia for its
decision appears to be this: under the law of that state, as
elsewhere, the validity, form, and effect of contracts are to be
determined generally by the law of the place where made, but the
character and extent of the remedies and the mode of procedure by
the law of the forum. Under its law, false answers to questions in
an application furnish ground for avoiding a policy if the matters
involved are material to the risk; but whether the statements are
material is a matter of fact to be decided by the jury. And if the
agent of the insurance company incorrectly records answers after
the applicant has truthfully replied to the questions, the agent's
actual knowledge of the facts will be imputed to the insurer, and
the question for the jury then is as to the materiality of the
misstatements on the face of the application, viewed in the light
of the knowledge imputed to the insurer. [
Footnote 2] The manner in which this question of
materiality shall be determined, and the effect of the disclosure
made orally by the applicant to the agent, are matters affecting
the remedy only, and not the validity, form, or effect of the
contract. Hence, the full faith and credit clause of the Federal
Constitution does not compel the application by
Page 299 U. S. 182
Georgia of the New York statute in this case. Such is the
argument.
The reasoning of the Georgia court, and the conclusion reached
by it, are not sound. No question of remedy is presented. The
Company sets up as a defense a substantive right conferred by a
statute of New York. The contract of insurance was made, and the
death of the insured occurred, in that state. In respect to the
accrual of the right asserted under the contract, or liability
denied, there was no occurrence, nothing done, to which the law of
Georgia could apply.
Compare Home Insurance Co. v. Dick,
281 U. S. 397,
281 U. S. 408.
To sustain the defense involves merely recognition by the courts of
Georgia that the parties have, by their contract made in New York,
subjected themselves to certain conditions prescribed by its
statute. Such recognition does not give to the New York statute
extraterritorial effect. The statute of New York prescribes or
limits the things which will be effective to create binding
contracts of insurance or terms in them. As construed by the
highest court of the state, the statute makes the policy, with the
application annexed, the entire contract between the parties. And
it declares that a false answer in the application to the precise
question here involved is a material misrepresentation which avoids
the policy, and that the fact that a truthful answer was orally
given to the agent but not recorded is without legal significance.
In so declaring, the statute enacts a rule of substantive law
[
Footnote 3] which became a
term of the contract as much so as the amount of the premium to be
paid or the time for its payment. The declaration by the statute as
construed and applied by the highest court of New York that the
false answer here involved is a material misrepresentation which
avoids the policy determines the substantive rights of the parties
as fully as if a provision
Page 299 U. S. 183
to that effect had been embodied in writing in the policy. To
refuse to give that defense effect would irremediably subject the
Company to liability.
Compare Bradford Electric Light Co., Inc.
v. Clapper, 286 U. S. 145,
286 U.S. 160. Because the
statute is a "public act," faith and credit must be given to its
provisions as fully as if the materiality of this specific
misrepresentation in the application, and the consequent
nonexistence of liability, had been declared by a judgment of a New
York court.
Bradford Electric Light Co., Inc. v. Clapper,
supra, at page
286 U. S.
155.
Reversed.
MR. JUSTICE STONE took no part in the consideration or decision
of this case.
[
Footnote 1]
Laws of New York 1906, c. 326, § 16. Cahill's Consolidated Laws
of New York (1930), c. 30, § 58.
[
Footnote 2]
Compare Johnson v. Aetna Insurance Co., 123 Ga. 404, 51
S.E. 339;
Supreme Lodge Knights of Pythias v. Few, 138 Ga.
778, 76 S.E. 91; 142 Ga. 240, 82 S.E. 627;
Metropolitan Life
Insurance Co. v. Hale, 177 Ga. 632, 170 S.E. 875;
National
Accident & Health Insurance Co. v. Davis, 179 Ga. 595, 176
S.E. 387.
[
Footnote 3]
Compare Aetna Life Insurance Co. v. Dunken,
266 U. S. 389,
266 U. S. 393;
Modern Woodmen of America v. Mixer, 267 U.
S. 544.