Grady Eugene Dutton v. Tennessee Farmers Mutual Insurance Company , 577 S.W.3d 222 ( 2018 )


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  •                                                                                       06/25/2018
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
    AT KNOXVILLE
    March 13, 2018 Session
    GRADY EUGENE DUTTON v. TENNESSEE FARMERS MUTUAL
    INSURANCE COMPANY
    Appeal from the Circuit Court for Hawkins County
    No. CC16CV277      Alex E. Pearson, Judge
    No. E2017-01322-COA-R9-CV
    We granted the Rule 9 application for an interlocutory appeal filed by Tennessee Farmers
    Mutual Insurance Company (“TN Farmers”) to consider whether material
    misrepresentations made on an application for a policy of insurance may become not
    material by virtue of later changes made to the policy. We find and hold that the
    misrepresentations made on the policy application increased the risk of loss and voided
    the policy or prevented its attaching pursuant to Tenn. Code Ann. § 56-7-103 and that
    subsequent changes to a void policy did not render the misrepresentations not material.
    We, therefore, reverse the June 22, 2017 order of the Circuit Court for Hawkins County
    (“the Trial Court”) denying TN Farmers’ motion for summary judgment and remand this
    case to the Trial Court for entry of an order granting summary judgment to TN Farmers.
    Tenn. R. App. P. 9 Interlocutory Appeal; Judgment of the Circuit Court Reversed
    Case Remanded
    D. MICHAEL SWINEY, C.J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which FRANK G.
    CLEMENT, P.J.M.S. and THOMAS R. FRIERSON, II, J., joined.
    Thomas L. Kilday, Greeneville, Tennessee, for the appellant, Tennessee Farmers Mutual
    Insurance Company.
    Floyd W. Rhea, Sneedville, Tennessee, for the appellee, Grady Eugene Dutton.
    OPINION
    Background
    Grady Eugene Dutton (“Plaintiff”) sued TN Farmers with regard to a property
    insurance policy (“the Insurance Policy”) insuring a house (“the House”) located at 187
    Little Pumpkin Valley Road in Edison, Tennessee (“the Property”). The House was
    destroyed by fire on May 28, 2016, and TN Farmers refused to pay the claim after it
    discovered that Plaintiff and his ex-wife Sheila Brock (“Brock”) had made
    misrepresentations when answering questions on the application for the Insurance Policy.
    Plaintiff, who was 73 years old at the time of the fire, has been married multiple
    times. He met Brock in 1994, and they were married in December of 1995 and divorced
    in 2002. Brock had drug problems, and on one occasion in 1998 Plaintiff placed Brock in
    drug rehabilitation for 30 days. After they divorced, Plaintiff and Brock reconciled and
    began living together again for a time. They later had another falling out, and Plaintiff
    moved to Missouri where he remarried, and then later divorced, his first wife. After that
    divorce, Plaintiff returned to Tennessee and reconciled with Brock.
    On April 29, 2008, Brock was arrested on multiple drug charges, some of which
    were felony charges. Specifically, Brock was arrested on charges of felony possession of
    drug paraphernalia, possession of Schedule II drugs (cocaine) for resale, and possession
    of Schedule III and Schedule IV drugs. Plaintiff was living in Missouri at that time, but
    Brock told him about her arrests when they spoke on the telephone. Plaintiff returned to
    Tennessee around Christmas of 2008, and he and Brock began living together again.
    The Property was acquired by deed dated March 10, 2009 with Brock listed as the
    sole grantee. Plaintiff testified that he does not know why the deed does not list him as a
    grantee as he and Brock purchased the Property together. A deed of trust dated
    approximately one month after the purchase of the Property listed both Brock’s name and
    Plaintiff’s name. Plaintiff testified that he and Brock purchased the Property for
    $130,000 and that the mortgage was for $55,000. He testified that he and Brock both
    contributed their own monies toward the remainder of the purchase price, and that he and
    Brock moved on to the Property as soon as they purchased it. On April 21, 2009,
    Plaintiff and Brock met with a TN Farmers’ agent and executed an application to insure
    the Property.
    On the application, Plaintiff and Brock answered ‘no’ to questions about whether
    they had ever been charged with, convicted of, or pled guilty to a felony and whether they
    had ever been charged with, convicted of, or pled guilty to arson, fraud, theft, or drug
    related crime. On the page containing these questions and answers and Plaintiff’s and
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    Brock’s signatures, the application also states: “I(We) understand that any
    misrepresentations or failure to answer questions truthfully, correctly and completely will
    void this insurance.” Furthermore, the application for the Insurance Policy states that the
    applicants had a previous total fire loss of $10,000 in December of 2006. When
    questioned during deposition, Plaintiff could not remember this fire loss, but could
    remember being insured by TN Farmers and living with Brock in Sneedville, Tennessee
    at that time.
    Additionally, the Insurance Policy contains the following language:
    ACTS WHICH AUTOMATICALLY VOID THE POLICY
    Concealment or Fraud
    The policy shall be automatically void as to all insureds if any
    insured, whether before or after a loss or occurrence:
    1. conceals or misrepresents any material fact or circumstance relating to
    this policy or loss;
    Brock negotiated a plea and was convicted in August of 2009 of charges including
    felony drug charges. Plaintiff testified that he could not recall if he and Brock were
    living together at the time that she was convicted. He stated: “she’s had quite a history,
    and it’s so hard for me to remember everything that she - - she was involved in
    shoplifting and stuff like that as well.”
    A Quit Claim Deed dated June 23, 2010 states that Brock was incarcerated in the
    Tennessee Department of Corrections and that Plaintiff held her Power of Attorney.
    Plaintiff executed this deed on Brock’s behalf using a Power of Attorney. The deed
    conveyed to Plaintiff a life estate in the Property with a remainder interest to Catherine
    Dawn Sexton (“Sexton”), Brock’s daughter. Plaintiff is not Sexton’s father, but he
    claims to have a “[v]ery good. . . . Very close” relationship with Sexton. Plaintiff
    testified that this deed was prepared and executed because Brock was in jail and a credit
    card company had a judgment lien against her. Plaintiff testified that he settled the debt
    with the credit card company and had the judgment lien released. Plaintiff recorded the
    deed, but never recorded the Power of Attorney. He produced a copy of the Power of
    Attorney as an exhibit to his deposition. The Power of Attorney is signed by Brock and
    witnessed and notarized, but a space for Plaintiff’s signature on this document is blank.
    Another Quit Claim Deed dated September 9, 2014 deeded the Property from
    Sexton to Plaintiff. Plaintiff testified that this deed was executed because he gave Brock
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    property on Marie’s Lane in exchange for her interest in the Property. He further stated
    that he actually gave the property on Marie’s Lane to Sexton, but it was for Brock. He
    then further explained that the transaction was even more complicated because Plaintiff
    traded property he owned at Big Springs Road to another man for the property at Marie’s
    Lane by Plaintiff giving the Big Springs Road property to the man’s son and having the
    man give the Marie’s Lane property to Sexton. Plaintiff testified all of this was to
    “release [Brock] from any and all ownerships of [the Property], her and Catherine
    [Sexton] both.”
    On January 7, 2014, Plaintiff requested that TN Farmers take Brock off of the
    Insurance Policy because he “was breaking relationships with her, and we were doing this
    deed swap thing and everything at the time.” Plaintiff requested that Sexton be added as
    an insured at that time. Plaintiff testified that Sexton’s interest in the Insurance Policy
    was deleted in September of 2014.
    Another Quit Claim Deed dated May 14, 2015 deeded the Property from Plaintiff
    to Jeanette Mikel Johnson (“Johnson”), Plaintiff’s daughter. Plaintiff testified he
    executed this deed for tax purposes. He stated: “It was nothing special. It was just that
    she has my Power of Attorney and everything. Whenever I die, she has my soul, and I
    thought it would be simpler to transfer the properties over to her for tax purposes, but
    then after a little consideration, I thought it might be best to bring it back to my name.”
    Plaintiff testified that Johnson lives in Missouri and has not been back to this area
    since he deeded the Property to her. So Plaintiff mailed Johnson a deed, which is dated
    November 15, 2015 and purports to deed the Property back to Plaintiff. Johnson signed
    the deed and mailed it back to Plaintiff. Johnson’s signature on the deed, however, was
    not notarized, and Plaintiff never recorded this deed. Plaintiff seemed to think the deed
    had to be notarized before it was recorded, and he testified that he was waiting for
    Johnson to come to Tennessee so they could have the deed notarized. Plaintiff gave a
    copy of the November 15, 2015 deed to the investigators when they were conducting the
    fire investigation on the Property.
    The House was destroyed by fire on May 28, 2016. Plaintiff was asked who he
    believed had an interest in the Property at the time of the fire, and he stated: “I owned the
    house and property. According to this being registered, Janette [sic] Mikel would have
    been the owner of the property. . . . Sheila Brock is not a party to this.”
    At the time of the fire, Plaintiff and his 38 year old girlfriend were living in the
    House, but were on vacation in Missouri for Plaintiff’s daughter’s wedding. Plaintiff
    testified that he has lived in the House continuously from the time Brock purchased the
    Property in April of 2009 through the time of the fire. Plaintiff’s current girlfriend
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    moved in a few months before the fire. Brock had last lived in the House in 2014.
    Plaintiff stated that Brock moved out because “the drug situation, it was unbearable, and I
    couldn’t take it anymore.”
    Plaintiff testified that while he and his girlfriend were in Missouri, Brock was
    driving Plaintiff’s truck, which he had loaned to her. On the weekend of the fire, Brock,
    who knew the combination to the gate lock on the Property, returned Plaintiff’s truck to
    the Property with Plaintiff’s permission. Plaintiff testified that he and Brock spoke on the
    telephone, and she requested permission to go into the House to take a shower. Plaintiff
    denied Brock permission to enter the House. Brock then entered the House through an
    unlocked window and got some water jugs from the House. Plaintiff testified that Brock
    later told him she had done this.
    Plaintiff denied having anything to do with the fire. When asked if it had occurred
    to him that Brock had something to do with the fire, he stated: “Oh, absolutely. . . . I
    don’t know that she would, but like you said, it’s possible that she could have, but I don’t
    know, and we don’t have no reason why she would. So I don’t know.” He was asked if
    he thought Brock started the fire, and he stated: “I don’t know. I honestly don’t know. I
    can’t point a finger at something I don’t know, and I don’t think you could either.”
    Plaintiff testified that a baseboard heater in the bathroom may have started the fire
    because he thought the thermostat “might have been defective or something . . . .”
    Plaintiff currently is living on the Property in his RV. He also has a single-wide
    trailer on the Property, but is not staying there. The last person to use the single-wide
    trailer was Plaintiff’s cousin, who recently got out of jail. The cousin was in jail for
    trying to shoot Brock. Plaintiff testified that no one is staying in the single-wide trailer at
    this time.
    TN Farmers filed a motion for summary judgment alleging that the material
    misrepresentations made by Plaintiff and Brock on the Insurance Policy application
    increased the risk of loss causing the policy to be void. In response to the motion for
    summary judgment, Plaintiff filed his own affidavit, but failed to respond to TN Farmers’
    statement of undisputed material facts. After a hearing, the Trial Court entered its order
    denying TN Farmers’ motion for summary judgment after finding and holding, inter alia:
    The misrepresentations made on their application by Grady Dutton
    and Sheila Brock regarding Sheila Brock’s criminal record are not material
    misrepresentations pursuant to the requirements of T.C.A. 56-7-103
    because the defendant insurer, for purposes of its present Motion, has not
    asserted that the misrepresentations were made with the intent to deceive
    and the misrepresented facts did not increase the risk of loss to the
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    defendant insurer because the insurance contract was renewed several times
    during the seven-year period from the date of application until the fire,
    during which time Sheila Brock was deleted from coverage and Sheila
    Brock’s daughter, Catherine Sexton, was first added, then deleted from the
    coverage, thereby changing the contract.
    The Trial Court then granted TN Farmers permission to file for interlocutory appeal. We
    granted the Rule 9 application by order entered September 5, 2017.
    Discussion
    We granted this Rule 9 application to consider the sole issue, as stated by the Trial
    Court:
    [W]hether an insurance application misrepresentation may become not
    material, i.e., not increase the risk of loss to the insurer pursuant to the
    provisions of T.C.A. 56-7-103, after the passage of time from the
    application misrepresentation until the date of loss by reason of successive
    renewals of the policy and other intervening changes in the policy coverage
    by reason of persons being deleted and added as insureds.
    As pertinent to this appeal, Tenn. Code Ann. § 56-7-103 provides:
    56-7-103. Misrepresentation or warranty will not void policy –
    Exceptions.
    No written or oral misrepresentation or warranty made in the
    negotiations of a contract or policy of insurance, or in the application for
    contract or policy of insurance, by the insured or in the insured’s behalf,
    shall be deemed material or defeat or void the policy or prevent its
    attaching, unless the misrepresentation or warranty is made with actual
    intent to deceive, or unless the matter represented increases the risk of loss.
    Tenn. Code Ann. § 56-7-103 (2016).
    In Freeze v. Tennessee Farmers Mut. Ins. Co. this Court discussed the material
    misrepresentations made on insurance policy applications and explained how pursuant to
    Tenn. Code Ann. § 56-7-103 such misrepresentations may render the policy void. Freeze
    v. Tennessee Farmers Mutual Ins. Co., 
    527 S.W.3d 227
    (Tenn. Ct. App. 2017). As we
    noted in Freeze: “[D]etermining whether a particular misrepresentation increases an
    insurance company’s risk of loss is a question of law for the court.” Freeze, 
    527 S.W.3d 6
    at 232 (quoting Smith v. Tennessee Farmers Life Reassurance Co., 
    210 S.W.3d 584
    , 589
    (Tenn. Ct. App. 2006)).
    It is well settled in Tennessee that regardless of what caused the loss, “[i]f the
    policy is obtained through fraud or misrepresentation which materially ‘increases the risk
    of loss,’ it is voidable from its inception.” Day v. Mut. of Omaha Ins. Co., 
    534 S.W.2d 859
    , 864 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1975); see also, e.g., Volunteer State Life Ins. Co. v.
    Richardson, 
    244 S.W. 44
    , 49 (Tenn. 1922) (holding that insurance company was entitled
    to have policy canceled due to misrepresentations and stating: “Of course, the matter
    represented in the Dibrell Case did not enter into the death of the insured as a
    contributing cause, either directly or indirectly but it was, nevertheless, material and
    increased the risk of loss within the meaning of our statute, for the reason that it was
    information which would naturally and reasonably have influenced the judgment of the
    insurer with respect to the application. The principle is just as applicable to the situation
    presented here as in that case . . . .”); Montgomery v. Reserve Life Ins., 585 S.W.2d. 620,
    622 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1979) (stating: “No recovery will be allowed on a policy issued in
    reliance on a misrepresentation in the application which increased the risk of loss. . . . It
    matters not what caused the death of the insured.”).
    In Day, this Court further elucidated:
    It is not material to the validity of coverage whether the disability
    suffered by the insured was related to the misrepresentations. Regardless of
    what may cause the death or disability of the insured after the issuance of a
    voidable policy, it has no bearing on whether or not the policy is
    enforceable. If the policy is obtained through fraud or misrepresentation
    which materially “increases the risk of loss,” it is voidable from its
    inception.
    In the case of Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen v. Daniels, 
    18 Tenn. App. 264
    , 
    75 S.W.2d 1019
    , the insured died from an illness other
    than the one he failed to disclose in his application for insurance. In
    passing upon the issue, the court said:
    “The fact that the applicant did not die of the ailment
    he had had, and suppressed, is not controlling, as the
    defendant in error insists is the case. For, if the attacks
    ‘evidenced a material impairment of the applicant’s
    constitution’ (Harris v. Insurance 
    Co., supra
    ) then the
    warranties were material warranties, and the contract was
    avoided at its inception.”
    7
    Also, in the case of Mutual Life Ins. Co. v. Dibrell, 
    137 Tenn. 528
    ,
    536, 
    194 S.W. 581
    , 583, the court, in addressing itself to this question, said:
    “It cannot be that the matter misrepresented should
    necessarily relate to the hazard of loss by the death of the
    insured. Such a construction might prevent the company’s
    rescinding the contract because of a misrepresentation that
    actually induced the contract, in an action begun promptly
    after the making of the application and the issuance of the
    policy. What will not avail to ‘void the policy,’ under the
    statute, it seems equally will not ‘prevent its attaching,’ as a
    contract. We cannot adopt the harsh and radical construction
    that the Legislature meant to deprive the insurer of the right to
    rescind the policy contract for inducing fraud.”
    
    Day, 534 S.W.2d at 864
    .
    In the case now before us the Trial Court found that Plaintiff and Brock made
    misrepresentations on the application for the Insurance Policy. There is no question that
    these misrepresentations were material when made. See Freeze, 
    527 S.W.3d 227
    (holding that similar misrepresentations were material and rendered the policy at issue
    void). In his brief on appeal, Plaintiff concedes that he “does not rebut the trial court’s
    finding that a misrepresentation was made, and that drug use would affect the insurer’s
    decision to extend coverage.”
    Plaintiff argues, however, that the later changes made to the Insurance Policy by
    successive renewals and the deletions and additions of insured persons render the
    misrepresentations made by Plaintiff and Brock not material as they no longer would
    increase the risk of loss. Specifically, Plaintiff asserts that Brock has been removed from
    the Policy and no longer has an ownership interest in the Property and that TN Farmers
    recorded these changes and accepted them through multiple renewals of the Insurance
    Policy. Plaintiff asserts that the “deletions, transfers” and the fact that Brock no longer
    lives on the Property create a “distance” between Brock and the Property, and therefore,
    the misrepresentations no longer have a bearing on risk.
    We find Plaintiff’s arguments unavailing. There is no question that Plaintiff and
    Brock made misrepresentations on the Insurance Policy application and that those
    misrepresentations were material and would increase the risk of loss. As such, the
    Insurance Policy was defeated, voided, or prevented from attaching at its inception
    pursuant both to the plain, clear, and unambiguous language of Tenn. Code Ann. § 56-7-
    8
    103 and the Insurance Policy itself. Given the fact that the Insurance Policy was void
    from its inception, the attempted changes to the Insurance Policy by virtue of renewals
    and changes to the named insureds that Plaintiff relies upon in this case were of no effect.
    With regard to renewals of insurance policies, this Court has stated:
    When an insurance policy renewal is made, unless otherwise
    provided and called to the attention of the insured, the terms of the original
    policy become a part of the renewal contract of insurance. See 13A
    Appleman, Insurance Law and Practice, § 7648; 17 Couch on Insurance
    2nd, §§ 64:40, 68:61. When renewing an insurance policy, the insurer must
    call attention to any changes in the terms and, if it fails to do so, such
    change is no part of the contract. Where the parties to a contract of
    insurance agree to a renewal, it is presumed that the same terms, conditions,
    premiums and subject matter obtain in the new contract as in the old. 13A
    Appleman, supra, § 7648. “An accurate definition of renewal cannot be
    made until it is first determined whether the renewal takes effect as an
    extension or continuation of the original policy or whether it represents the
    formation of a new although identical contract of insurance.” 17 Couch on
    Insurance 2nd, § 68:2 at 659. Whether a renewal insurance policy is a new
    and independent contract or whether it is an extension or continuation of
    the original contract depends primarily upon the intention of the parties as
    ascertained from the instrument itself. Lewis v. Western Assur. Co., 
    175 Tenn. 37
    , 
    130 S.W.2d 982
    (1939); 17 Couch, supra, § 68:39.
    Brewer v. Vanguard Ins. Co., 
    614 S.W.2d 360
    , 363 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1980).
    The record on appeal reveals that the renewals of the Insurance Policy were
    intended to extend or continue the term of the Insurance Policy, not to form a whole new
    and independent contractual agreement.1 Given this, the renewals in the case now before
    us were dependent upon the original Insurance Policy, which, as discussed above, was
    void from its inception due to the material misrepresentations which increased the risk of
    loss made by Plaintiff and Brock on the application for the Insurance Policy.
    1
    It is not the role of this Court “to make a different contract than that executed by the parties.” Posner v.
    Posner, No. 02A01-9710-CV-00249, 
    1997 WL 796216
    , at *2–3 (Tenn. Ct. App. Dec. 30, 1997), no appl.
    perm. appeal filed. See also, e.g., Central Drug Store v. Adams, 
    184 Tenn. 541
    , 
    201 S.W.2d 682
    (1947).
    “In the absence of fraud or mistake, a contract must be interpreted and enforced as written even though it
    contains terms which may be thought to be harsh or unjust.” Tenpenny v. Tenpenny, No. 01A01-9406-
    CV-00296, 
    1995 WL 70571
    , at *6 (Tenn. Ct. App. Feb. 22, 1995), appl. perm. appeal denied July 3,
    1995.
    9
    Additionally, in its brief on appeal, TN Farmers points us to cases from Georgia
    and Illinois wherein appellate courts in those states rejected arguments similar to the ones
    made by Plaintiff in this case and found that renewals to insurance policies made prior to
    the insurer’s discovery of misrepresentations did not cure the misrepresentations or
    destroy the insurer’s right to defeat or avoid the policy. Lively v. Southern Heritage Ins.
    Co., 
    568 S.E.2d 98
    , 102 (Ga. App. 2002) (stating: “The Livelys also assert that Southern
    Heritage’s renewal of the insurance policy corrected the misrepresentations contained in
    the application. We find no merit in this argument.” [In part, because] “[t]he parties
    apparently continued to rely upon the application submitted [initially] for the renewal.”);
    American Country Ins. Co. v. Mahoney, 
    560 N.E.2d 1035
    , 1043 (Ill. App. 1990) (stating:
    “Finally, we reject Mahoney’s argument that American’s decision to renew her insurance
    policy, well before it learned of her misrepresentations, eliminated any right to defeat or
    avoid the policy. Mahoney has not cited authority, and our own research had disclosed
    no authority, that supports this novel claim. And the text of [the Illinois statute] imposes
    no time limitation on the right, which it grants the insurer, to defeat or avoid a policy; that
    is, [the Illiniois statute] does not prohibit an insurer from seeking to defeat or avoid a
    policy . . . after it decides to renew a policy, in ignorance of the insured’s material
    misrepresentations. Mahoney’s application itself clearly provided that American would
    rely upon the misrepresentations therein when considering whether to renew her
    policy.”).
    We find the reasoning employed in Liveley and Mahoney to be persuasive. We
    note that as was the case with the Illinois statute in Mahoney, our statute, Tenn. Code
    Ann. § 56-7-103, also contains no time limitation within which an insurer who is ignorant
    of an insured’s misrepresentations must take steps to avoid or defeat the policy. The
    decision whether to include such a time limitation in the statute was a policy decision
    made by our General Assembly.
    Given all of the above, we hold that the material misrepresentations made by
    Plaintiff and Brock on the Insurance Policy application rendered the Insurance Policy
    void or prevented its attaching from its inception and that the subsequent renewals and
    attempted additions and deletions of named insureds did not operate to render the
    misrepresentations not material. We, therefore, reverse the Trial Court’s June 22, 2017
    order denying TN Farmer’s motion for summary judgment and remand this case to the
    Trial Court for entry of an order granting summary judgment to TN Farmers.
    Conclusion
    The judgment of the Trial Court denying summary judgment to TN Farmers is
    reversed, and this cause is remanded to the Trial Court for entry of an order granting
    10
    summary judgment to TN Farmers and for collection of the costs below. The costs on
    appeal are assessed against the appellee, Grady Eugene Dutton.
    _________________________________
    D. MICHAEL SWINEY, CHIEF JUDGE
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