Opinions of the United
2005 Decisions States Court of Appeals
for the Third Circuit
11-17-2005
Wyckoff v. Metro Life Ins Co
Precedential or Non-Precedential: Non-Precedential
Docket No. 04-4098
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NOT PRECEDENTIAL
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT
___________
No. 04-4098, 04-4099
___________
ROBERT G. WYCKOFF,
Appellant at No. 04-4098
v.
METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY;
KENNETH F. KACZMAREK
__________
MAHENDRA M. GAJARAWALA
v.
USHA M. GAJARAWALA, husband and wife;
METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY;
DAVID ELMER
Mahendra Gajarawala,
Appellant at No. 04-4099
___________
On Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Western District of Pennsylvania
(D.C. Civil No. 00-cv-2248, and 00-cv-02522)
District Judge: The Honorable Donnetta W. Ambrose
___________
Submitted Under Third Circuit LAR 34.1(a)
October 18, 2005
Before: SMITH, STAPLETON, and NYGAARD, Circuit Judges.
(Filed November 17, 2005)
___________
OPINION OF THE COURT
___________
NYGAARD, Circuit Judge.
Appellants Robert G. Wyckoff and Mahendra Gajarawala appeal the
District Court’s grant of Appellee Metropolitan Life Insurance’s (“Met Life”) motions for
summary judgment on claims arising from the purchase of life insurance policies. We
have jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291 and, guided by our opinions in Dilworth v.
Metropolitan Life Insurance Co., 418 F.3d 345 (3d Cir. 2005) and Tran v. Metropolitan
Life Insurance Co., 408 F.3d 130 (3d Cir. 2005), we will reverse.
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I.
Since we write only for the parties, we sketch just the factual core. In both
cases, Met Life sold “Accelerated Payment Plan” life insurance policies to appellants.1
Colloquially known as “vanishing premium” insurance policies, Met Life represented that
these policies could be purchased by making out-of-pocket premium payments for a fixed
number of years.2 Reinforcing this representation, Met Life utilized illustrations that
appeared to indicate that the policy only required a specific and fixed period of premium
payments. Upon these representations, both appellants understood their payments to be
fixed at a definite number of years, after which point they would not be required to
continue paying their premiums.
However, although appellants were under the impression that their premium
payments would end after a certain time, no such guarantee was ever made. The
illustrations used by Met Life contained a clause which disclosed that the results
1. Each appellant purchased two policies and in all material respects the policies
were identical.
2. These policies were set up as follows: Met Life would invest the annual premium
payments and, assuming those investments did well, the dividend/interest made on the
premium investments (the principal) would essentially “pay” the premium payments due
after some specified number of years. Thus, Met Life would tell its potential customers
that out-of-pocket payments would stop after a certain number of years. Of course, the
entire operation required that investment rates and returns stay at or improve from the
current rate. Any drop and the specific year cut-off would no longer suffice. The fixed
number of years varied depending on the rate of return on the premium investment.
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projected in the illustration were not guaranteed and were merely “illustrative.” 3
Moreover, the policies themselves stated on the cover page “Premiums payable for a
stated period.” Then, on page two, the policies contained clauses which indicated:
“YEARS PAYABLE” followed by a number of years ranging from 32 to 72, depending
on the individual policy. After receiving their policies, appellants neither read nor
reviewed them.
II.
Both appellants filed a complaint against Met Life alleging claims of, inter
alia, Negligence, Common Law Fraud and Deceit, and Violations of the Unfair Trade
Practices and Consumer Protection Law (“UTPCPL”).
After completion of discovery, Met Life filed Motions for Summary
Judgment on the basis that appellants’ claims were time-barred by the statute of
limitations. The District Court agreed and, in two separate opinions, dismissed
appellants’ claims. In so doing, it based its conclusion on the fact that appellants failed to
undertake even a cursory review of their policies, thereby preventing them from taking
3. The clause contained in the illustration states:
The Cash outlay illustrated shows the results if the current dividend scale
continues without change, Dividends are not guaranteed and may increase or
decrease in the future. If the future dividends decrease it is possible that the cash
value of additional insurance may not be sufficient in some future years to pay
the full current premium and some cash outlay may be required ...Illustrative
figures are not guarantees or estimates for the future.
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advantage of Pennsylvania’s discovery rule. Appellants have timely appealed this
decision.
III.
A. Negligence and Common Law Fraud Claims
At the outset, appellants concede that if the Pennsylvania discovery rule is
inapplicable, the statute of limitations will act to bar their claims.4 They claim, however,
that nothing in the insurance policies or the illustrations, as a matter of law,
unambiguously contradicts the representations made by Met Life about the nature of the
policy and that, as a consequence, the discovery rule should apply to toll the statute of
limitations.
In Dilworth we recognized that under certain circumstances,
Pennsylvania’s discovery rule will toll the statute of limitations for the period of time a
policyholder is reasonably unaware that an injury has been sustained. Dilworth, 418 F.3d
at 351. In order to benefit from the discovery rule, a policyholder must show that despite
exercising reasonable diligence he could not have known a cause of action had accrued.
See id. In certain circumstances, the exercise of reasonable diligence may, as a matter of
law, require a cursory review of an insurance policy and/or of illustrations about the
policy. See id. This review would be required, for instance, if it would reveal
4. The Pennsylvania statute of limitations for negligence and common law fraud
claims is two years.
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unambiguously that the policyholder had been misled or injured by earlier representations
made by an insurer’s agent. However, if a cursory review would not absolutely
controvert the representations made by an agent or the reasonable impressions of the
policyholder, it cannot be said, as a matter of law, that the policyholder would have
discovered the underlying injuries.
We held in Dilworth that if a policyholder believes, based on
representations made by an insurer’s agent, that he owns a “vanishing premium” life
insurance policy, the actual provisions of the policy do not unambiguously contradict that
belief by stating a different length of premium payment. Id. at 351-52. The crux of the
issue “is not whether the premiums are payable...but from what source the premiums
should be derived.” Id. at 352 (quoting Asad v. Hartford Life Ins. Co., 116 F.Supp.2d 960,
965 (N.D.Ill.2000)). Thus while the actual policy in Dilworth indicated that 86 years of
payments would be required, even had Dilworth been aware of this provision, it would
not have been inconsistent with the agent’s representation that after ten years of payments
the remaining payments would come from accrued dividends and interest payments. Id.
at 351. In addition, we have held that the statement “the results are not guaranteed,”
contained either within the policy or in illustrations, is not directly inconsistent with or
contradictory to a policyholder’s belief in the vanishing premium nature of the policy.
See Tran, 408 F.3d at 138.
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Here, the policyholders’ contentions and experiences are almost identical to
those of the policyholders in Dilworth. Moreover, the District Court here found that the
cause of action accrued when the policyholders received their life insurance policies
because they each failed to undertake a cursory examination of the actual policies. The
District Court bases this conclusion on the assumption that the actual policy clearly
contradicts the representations of the agents (“th[e] policy did not conform to the
promises allegedly made by the sales agent concerning premiums being payable for a
limited time.”). Like the policy in Dilworth, however, a cursory examination would have
revealed nothing inconsistent with, or contrary to, the “vanishing premium” scheme set
out by the Met Life agent. Simply because the policy indicates a longer time-period for
premium payments, or that the claimed time-periods are not guarantees, it does not render
it inconsistent with the policyholders’ beliefs that they would not have to pay premiums
after a certain time period. Furthermore, the policy’s illustration containing similar
language concerning the lack of guarantees is insufficient as a matter of law to create an
unambiguous or ineluctable contradictory conclusion had the policyholders read the
policy.
The District Court, therefore, erred by holding that the language of the
actual policy deprives, as a matter of law, the policyholders from the benefit of the
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discovery rule.5 Since a cursory review would not absolutely controvert the
representations made by an agent or the impressions of the policyholder, it therefore
cannot be said that as a matter of law plaintiffs would have discovered their underlying
injuries at the time they received their policies.
B. UTPCPL Claims
The District Court and Met Life also contend that appellants’ UTPCPL
claims are barred by the statute of limitations, for much the same reason. The District
Court reasoned that the appellants failed to exercise reasonable diligence in reviewing
their policies and therefore could not be considered to have reasonably relied on Met
Life’s representations about the nature of the policy.
In Tran we dealt with similar UTPCPL claims to those in the instant cases
and we find its reasoning controlling. There, we held that a policyholder’s reliance on
agent representations about the nature of the policy, even where the plain language of the
policy is contradictory, creates a genuine issue of fact as to whether the reliance was
justified. Tran, 408 F.3d at 130. Moreover, in Tran we concluded that an insured’s
failure to read the policy does not, as a matter of law, preclude a fraud claim because
5. We note that at the time of the District Court’s opinion, we had not decided either
Tran or Dilworth.
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Pennsylvania does not impose a duty to read insurance policies where fraud is alleged.
Id. at 139 n.11.6
Acting without the benefit of our decision in Tran, the District Court here
held that the policyholders’ failure to read the policy constituted, as a matter of law,
grounds for dismissal of the UTPCPL fraud claim because the plain language
contradicted the alleged misrepresentations and the appellants failed to read their
policies.7 In Tran, we recognized that this presumption would allow insurers to defeat the
reasonable expectations of policyholders by representing one thing and then doing
another. We therefore held that it is not, as a matter of law, unreasonable for
policyholders to rely on representations made by insurance agents rather than on the
actual provisions of the policy.
In the instant cases, the policyholders all relied on alleged
misrepresentations made by a Met Life agent concerning a vanishing premium life
insurance policy. The District Court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of Met Life is
premised on the appellants’ failure to read the actual policy. It therefore failed to
consider that the alleged misrepresentations by a Met Life agent about the nature of the
6. It is important to note that even if Pennsylvania were to impose such a duty, the
language contained in this type of vanishing premium policy would not suffice, as a
matter of law, to defeat appellants’ claims that they reasonably relied on the alleged
misrepresentations.
7. As we have indicated above, the District Court’s conclusion that the plain
language of these policies contradicts the alleged representations, in light of Dilworth, is
erroneous.
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insurance policy creates a genuine issue of fact concerning the reasonableness of the
plaintiff’s expectations of the nature of the policy. Thus, at least with respect to
vanishing premium policies, where a policyholder alleges reliance on representations
made by an insurer or insurer’s agent, summary judgment is an inappropriate mechanism
if it is based on the policyholder’s failure to read the actual policy. As we stated in
Dilworth, we recognize that at trial a policyholder may be unable to prove that his
reasonable expectations differed from the provisions of the policy, but, at minimum, that
policyholder is entitled to try.
Accordingly, we will reverse and remand to the District Court for further
proceedings consistent with this opinion.
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