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Insular Life countered that Felipe did not disclose the ailments (viz.

, Type 2 Diabetes
G.R. No. 195176. April 18, 2016.* Mellitus, Diabetes Nephropathy and Alcoholic Liver Cirrhosis with Ascites) that he already had
prior to his application for reinstatement of his insurance policy; and that it would not have
THE INSULAR LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY, LTD., petitioner, vs. PAZ Y. KHU, FELIPE Y. KHU, reinstated the insurance policy had Felipe disclosed the material information on his adverse
JR., and FREDERICK Y. KHU, respondents. health condition. It contended that when Felipe died, the policy was still contestable... whether
Felipe's reinstated life insurance policy is already incontestable at the time of his death.
Insurance Law; Insurance Policy; It is settled that the reinstatement of an insurance
policy should be reckoned from the date when the same was approved by the insurer.— Ruling:
In Lalican v. The Insular Life Assurance Company, Limited, 597 SCRA 159 (2009), which
coincidentally also involves the herein petitioner, it was there held that the reinstatement of this Court adopts the interpretation favorable to the insured in determining the date
the insured’s policy is to be reckoned from the date when the application was processed and when the reinstatement was approved.
approved by the insurer. There, we stressed that: To reinstate a policy means to restore the
We deny the Petition.
same to premium-paying status after it has been permitted to lapse. x x x x x x x In the instant
case, Eulogio’s death rendered impossible full compliance with the conditions for Based on the foregoing, we find that the CA did not commit any error in holding that the
reinstatement of Policy No. 9011992. True, Eulogio, before his death, managed to file his subject insurance policy be considered as reinstated on June 22, 1999. This finding must be
Application for Reinstatement and deposit the amount for payment of his overdue premiums upheld not only because it accords with the evidence, but also because this is favorable to the
and interests thereon with Malaluan; but Policy No. 9011992 could only be considered insured who was not responsible for causing the ambiguity or obscurity in the insurance
reinstated after the Application for Reinstatement had been processed and approved by contract.
Insular Life during Eulogio’s lifetime and good health. Thus, it is settled that the reinstatement
of an insurance policy should be reckoned from the date when the same was approved by the WHEREFORE, the Petition is DENIED. The assailed June 24, 2010 Decision and December
insurer. 13, 2010 Resolution of the Court of Appeals in CA-GR. CV No. 81730 are AFFIRMED.

Facts:

On March 6, 1997, Felipe N. Khu, Sr. (Felipe) applied for a life insurance policy with G.R. No. 175666. July 29, 2013.*
Insular Life under the latter's Diamond Jubilee Insurance Plan. Felipe accomplished the MANILA BANKERS LIFE INSURANCE CORPORATION, petitioner, vs. CRESENCIA P. ABAN,
required medical questionnaire wherein he did not declare any illness or adverse medical respondent.
condition. Insular Life thereafter issued him Policy Number A000015683 with a face value of
PI million. This took effect on June 22, 1997. Insurance Law; Fraud; Fraudulent intent on the part of the insured must be established
to entitle the insurer to rescind the contract.―Allegations of fraud, which are predicated on
On June 23, 1999, Felipe's policy lapsed due to non-payment of the premium covering respondent’s alleged posing as Sotero and forgery of her signature in the insurance application,
the period from June 22, 1999 to June 23, 2000 are at once belied by the trial and appellate courts’ finding that Sotero herself took out the
insurance for herself. “[F]raudulent intent on the part of the insured must be established to
On September 7, 1999, Felipe applied for the reinstatement of his policy and paid entitle the insurer to rescind the contract.” In the absence of proof of such fraudulent intent,
P25,020.00 as premium no right to rescind arises.
On October 12, 1999, Insular Life advised Felipe that his application for reinstatement
Same; Incontestability Clause; An insurer is given two years — from the effectivity of a
may only be considered if he agreed to certain conditions such as payment of additional
life insurance contract and while the insured is alive — to discover or prove that the policy is
premium and the cancellation of the riders pertaining to premium waiver and accidental death
void ab initio or is rescindible by reason of the fraudulent concealment or misrepresentation of
benefits. Felipe agreed to these conditions[8] and on December 27, 1999 paid the agreed
the insured or his agent.―Section 48 serves a noble purpose, as it regulates the actions of both
additional premium of P3,054.50
the insurer and the insured. Under the provision, an insurer is given two years – from the
On September 22, 2001, Felipe died effectivity of a life insurance contract and while the insured is alive — to discover or prove that
the policy is void ab initio or is rescindible by reason of the fraudulent concealment or
On October 5, 2001, Paz Y. Khu, Felipe Y. Khu, Jr. .and Frederick Y. Khu (collectively, misrepresentation of the insured or his agent. After the two-year period lapses, or when the
Felipe's beneficiaries or respondents) filed with Insular Life a claim for benefit under the insured dies within the period, the insurer must make good on the policy, even though the
reinstated policy. This claim was denied. policy was obtained by fraud, concealment, or misrepresentation. This is not to say that
insurance fraud must be rewarded, but that insurers who recklessly and indiscriminately solicit
Issues: and obtain business must be penalized, for such recklessness and lack of discrimination
ultimately work to the detriment of bona fide takers of insurance and the public in general.
Same; Insurance Business; Insurers cannot be allowed to collect premiums on insurance Held: Yes. The “incontestability clause” is a provision in law that after a policy of life
policies, use these amounts collected and invest the same through the years, generating profits insurance made payable on the death of the insured shall have been in force during the lifetime
and returns therefrom for their own benefit, and thereafter conveniently deny insurance claims of the insured for a period of two (2) years from the date of its issue or of its last reinstatement,
by questioning the authority or integrity of their own agents or the insurance policies they the insurer cannot prove that the policy is void ab initio or is rescindible by reason of fraudulent
issued to their premium-paying clients.―If insurers cannot vouch for the integrity and honesty concealment or misrepresentation of the insured or his agent.
of their insurance agents/salesmen and the insurance policies they issue, then they should
cease doing business. If they could not properly screen their agents or salesmen before taking
them in to market their products, or if they do not thoroughly investigate the insurance
The purpose of the law is to give protection to the insured or his beneficiary by limiting
contracts they enter into with their clients, then they have only themselves to blame.
the rescinding of the contract of insurance on the ground of fraudulent concealment or
Otherwise said, insurers cannot be allowed to collect premiums on insurance policies, use
misrepresentation to a period of only two (2) years from the issuance of the policy or its last
these amounts collected and invest the same through the years, generating profits and returns
reinstatement.
therefrom for their own benefit, and thereafter conveniently deny insurance claims by
questioning the authority or integrity of their own agents or the insurance policies they issued
to their premium-paying clients. This is exactly one of the schemes which Section 48 aims to The insurer is deemed to have the necessary facilities to discover such fraudulent
prevent. concealment or misrepresentation within a period of two (2) years. It is not fair for the insurer
to collect the premiums as long as the insured is still alive, only to raise the issue of fraudulent
Same; Same; Contract of Adhesion; An insurance contract is a contract of adhesion which
concealment or misrepresentation when the insured dies in order to defeat the right of the
must be construed liberally in favor of the insured and strictly against the insurer in order to
beneficiary to recover under the policy.
safeguard the former’s interest.―Insurers may not be allowed to delay the payment of claims
by filing frivolous cases in court, hoping that the inevitable may be put off for years — or even
decades — by the pendency of these unnecessary court cases. In the meantime, they benefit
from collecting the interest and/or returns on both the premiums previously paid by the Section 48 serves a noble purpose, as it regulates the actions of both the insurer and the
insured and the insurance proceeds which should otherwise go to their beneficiaries. The insured. Under the provision, an insurer is given two years – from the effectivity of a life
business of insurance is a highly regulated commercial activity in the country, and is imbued insurance contract and while the insured is alive – to discover or prove that the policy is void
with public interest. “[A]n insurance contract is a contract of adhesion which must be ab initio or is rescindible by reason of the fraudulent concealment or misrepresentation of the
construed liberally in favor of the insured and strictly against the insurer in order to safeguard insured or his agent. After the two-year period lapses, or when the insured dies within the
the [former’s] interest.” period, the insurer must make good on the policy, even though the policy was obtained by
fraud, concealment, or misrepresentation. This is not to say that insurance fraud must be
Facts: On July 3, 1993, Delia Sotero (Sotero) took out a life insurance policy from Manila rewarded, but that insurers who recklessly and indiscriminately solicit and obtain business
Bankers Life Insurance Corporation (Bankers Life), designating respondent Cresencia P. Aban must be penalized, for such recklessness and lack of discrimination ultimately work to the
(Aban), her niece, as her beneficiary. Petitioner issued Insurance Policy No. 747411 (the policy), detriment of bona fide takers of insurance and the public in general.
with a face value of P 100,000.00, in Sotero’s favor on August 30, 1993, after the requisite
medical examination and payment of the insurance premium. On April 10, 1996, when the
insurance policy had been in force for more than two years and seven months, Sotero died.
Respondent filed a claim for the insurance proceeds on July 9, 1996. Petitioner conducted an No. L-16163. February 28, 1963.
investigation into the claim, and came out with the following findings: 1. Sotero did not IGNACIO SATURNINO, in his own behalf and as the JUDICIAL GUARDIAN OF CARLOS
personally apply for insurance coverage, as she was illiterate; 2. Sotero was sickly since 1990; SATURNINO, minor, plaintiffs-appellants, vs. THE PHILIPPINE AMERICAN LIFE
3. Sotero did not have the financial capability to pay the insurance premiums on Insurance INSURANCE COMPANY, defendant-appellee.
Policy No. 747411; 4. Sotero did not sign the July 3, 1993 application for insurance; and 5.
Respondent was the one who filed the insurance application, and x x x designated herself as Insurance; Non-medical insurance; Medical history material to insurability of
the beneficiary. For the above reasons, petitioner denied respondent’s claim on April 16, 1997 applicant.—In non-medical insurance, the waiver of medical examination renders even more
and refunded the premiums paid on the policy. material the information required of the applicant concerning previous condition of health and
diseases suffered, for such information necessarily constitutes an important factor which the
Issue: Whether or not Manila Bankers is barred from denying the insurance claims insurer takes into consideration in deciding whether to issue the policy or not.
based on fraud or concealment.
Same; Same; Concealment of previous operation.—The concealment of the fact of the
operation itself is fraudulent, as there could not have been any mistake about it, no matter
what the ailment.
Same; Same; Concealment, whether intentional or unintentional; Ground for information required of the applicant concerning previous condition of health and diseases
rescission.—In this jurisdiction, a concealment, whether intentional or unintentional, entitles suffered, for such information necessarily constitutes an important factor which the insurer
the insurer to rescind the contract of insurance, concealment being defined as “negligence to takes into consideration in deciding whether to issue the policy or not.
communicate that which a party knows and ought to communicate” (Sections 24 and 26, Act
No. 2427). Appellants also contend that there was no fraudulent concealment of the truth
inasmuch as the insured herself did not know, since her doctor never told her, that the disease
for which she had been operated on was cancer. In the first place, concealment of the fact of
Facts: the operation itself was fraudulent, as there could not have been any mistake about it, no
matter what the ailment.
> 2 months prior to the insurance of the policy, Saturnino was operated on for cancer,
involving complete removal of the right breast, including the pectoral muscles and the glands, Secondly, in order to avoid a policy, it is not necessary to show actual fraud on the part
found in the right armpit. of the insured. In this jurisdiction, concealment, whether intentional or unintentional entitled
the insurer to rescind the contract of insurance, concealment being defined as “negligence to
> Notwithstanding the fact of her operation, Saturnino did not make a disclosure communicate that which a party knows and ought to communicate.” The basis of the rule
thereof in her application for insurance. vitiating the contract in cases of concealment is that it misleads or deceives the insurer into
accepting the risk, or accepting it at a rate of premium agreed upon. The insurer, relying upon
> She stated therein that she did not have, nor had she ever had, among others listed
the belief that the insured will disclose every material fact within his actual or presumed
in the application, cancer or other tumors; that she had not consulted any physician,
knowledge, is misled into a belief that the circumstances withheld does not exist, and he is
undergone any operation or suffered any injury within the preceding 5 years.
thereby induced to estimate the risk upon a false basis that it does not exist.
> She also stated that she had never been treated for, nor did she ever have any illness
or disease peculiar to her sex, particularly of the breast, ovaries, uterus and menstrual
disorders.

> The application also recited that the declarations of Saturnino constituted a further
basis for the issuance of the policy.

Issue:

Whether or not the insured made such false representation of material facts as to avoid
the policy.

Held:

YES.

There can be no dispute that the information given by her in the application for
insurance was false, namely, that she never had cancer or tumors or consulted any physician
or undergone any operation within the preceding period of 5 years.

The question to determine is: Are the facts then falsely represented material? The
Insurance Law provides that “materiality is to be determined not by the event, but solely by
the probable and reasonable influence of the facts upon the party to whom the
communication is due, in forming his estimate of the proposed contract, or making his
inquiries.

The contention of appellants is that the facts subject of the representation were not
material in view of the non-medical nature of the insurance applied for, which does away with
the usual requirement of medical examination before the policy is issued. The contention is
without merit. If anything, the waiver of medical examination renders even more material the

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