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case
studies – critical
illness
13/05
Critical illness – misrepresentation – underwriting limits
– proposer outside underwriting limits – whether misrepresentation
justified cancellation of policy.
A salesman called on Mr L, a pub landlord, and recommended that
he should take out critical illness insurance. This would pay
him £10,000 if he were diagnosed with any of the conditions
listed in the policy. The salesman completed the application form
and Mr L signed it. The form stated that Mr L’s height was 6’
1” and his weight, 17 stone.
The policy was issued in November 1999. In December 2000, Mr L
was diagnosed with cancer and he submitted a claim. The insurer’s
enquiries revealed that Mr L had mis-stated his height (he was
actually 5’ 10”). It therefore cancelled his policy on the ground
that he had misrepresented his measurements. It told Mr L that
it would not have insured him if it had known his actual height
as, combined with his weight, it put him outside its underwriting
guidelines.
complaint upheld
Mr L’s mis-statement was innocent and not an unusual mistake for
someone to make. The difference in height was within a 3% margin
and the insurer ought to have made an allowance for such a minor
error. The insurer conceded that if it had known Mr L’s correct
height – and his weight had not exceeded 17 stone – it would
have covered him. The difference between his actual weight and
that stated was also within a 3% margin.
The policy had been sold to Mr L in person. The salesman should
therefore have appreciated that Mr L’s size brought him close
to the insurer’s underwriting limits, and he should have stressed
to Mr L the importance of giving accurate measurements. There
was no reason why Mr L should have been aware of the insurer’s
underwriting limits. It was irrelevant whether Mr L gave the salesman
inaccurate information, or had simply failed to notice that the
salesman had recorded the information incorrectly.
In the circumstances, we concluded that the insurer was not justified
in relying on the misrepresentation to cancel the policy. It accepted
our conclusion that it should pay the £10,000 policy benefit.
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13/06
Critical illness – non-disclosure – whether insurer entitled
to cancel policy because of innocent non-disclosure.
Mrs C applied for life assurance and critical illness insurance
in May 1999. One of the questions she was asked was whether she
had a ‘lump, growth or tumour of any kind’ – she answered ‘No’.
She was also asked whether she had ‘consulted, or been prescribed
treatment by a doctor during the last 5 years’. She answered ‘Yes’
and listed what she and her GP considered relevant information
from her medical records.
In July 2000, Mrs C claimed benefit under her critical illness
policy as she had been diagnosed with a malignant melanoma. The
insurer sought information from her GP and discovered that, in
March 1999, Mrs C had asked her GP to look at a mole that had
been on her left thigh since birth, and was starting to bother
her. The insurer accepted that Mrs C’s failure to tell it about
this incident was innocent, but it cancelled both her policies.
It considered that she should have disclosed this particular GP
‘consultation’ in response to its direct question about ‘growths’
and that by failing to do so, Mrs C had prejudiced its position.
Mrs C disputed this decision. She said her GP had told her the
mole was nothing to worry about and she had not sought further
advice or treatment for it until May 2000. Her GP’s notes confirmed
that the mole was only mentioned casually at the end of a consultation
for an unrelated matter, and that Mrs C was told it was benign
and had no sinister features.
complaint upheld
A brief mention of a minor problem was not a ‘consultation’ and
we did not consider that Mrs C had provided an incorrect answer
to the question about consultations. The GP had not organised
any further investigation of the mole or made any recommendation
about it. It seemed only to have been included in the GP’s notes
in case a problem occurred in future.
As to the question about lumps, growths or tumours, Mrs C had
acted reasonably in answering ‘No’. She had to answer the insurer’s
questions only ‘to the best of her knowledge’ – and – to the best
of her knowledge, she did not have any condition that she needed
to tell the insurer about. Her GP had told her the mole was inconsequential
and since it had been present all her life, and was apparently
not a matter of any concern, she could not have been expected
to mention it.
We did not consider the insurer had sufficient grounds for cancelling
the policies and we said it should reinstate them and assess the
claim. We also awarded Mrs C £400 for distress and inconvenience.
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13/07
Pension – non-disclosure – questions regarding current consumption
of tobacco and alcohol – whether proposer required to disclose
past excesses.
In June 1998, Mr S took out a personal pension which included
death benefit. He answered questions on the proposal regarding
his past health, his weight and his cigarette and alcohol consumption.
In December 1999, Mr S died and his widow applied for the death
benefit. As a result of its enquiries, the insurer concluded that
Mr S had not given truthful answers to its questions. In particular,
it was satisfied that he had failed to disclose episodes of bronchitis
and had not given correct information about his weight, smoking
and drinking habits. Mr S was obese, according to his GP, and
had smoked 30 cigarettes and drunk about a bottle of vodka every
day. He had suffered several episodes of bronchitis between 1970
and 1975.
Mrs S disputed this evidence and asserted that although Mr S had
been a heavy drinker and smoker, he had changed his habits after
the birth of their first child in 1984. She said that his height
and weight had been correctly recorded.
complaint upheld
The insurer was unable to produce the signed proposal and this
omission had undermined its case. There was no evidence that Mr
S had not answered the questions truthfully. Moreover, from a
sample proposal form that we obtained from the insurer, it seemed
that the questions all related to the current health and
consumption of the person wanting to obtain the critical illness
cover, not to their past history or old habits.
So far as could be ascertained from the medical evidence, Mr S
had changed his habits by the time he signed the
proposal. There was no reference to his drinking or smoking after
1988. He did not seem to have consulted or been treated for bronchitis
after 1975.
We decided that the insurer was not justified in concluding that
Mr S had failed to provide correct answers to its questions. The
insurer agreed to pay Mrs S the death benefit of over £30,000.
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