Florendo Vs Philam Plans
Florendo Vs Philam Plans
Florendo Vs Philam Plans
Applicable
Insurance Code: Sections 27, 30
Laws
Case No. G.R. No. 186983
Date: February 12, 2012
Case Name Ma. Lourdes S. Florendo vs. Philam Plans, Inc.
Petitioner Ma. Lourdes S. Florendo
Respondent Philam Plans, Inc., Perla Abcede, Ma. Celeste Abcede
ANTECEDENT FACTS
This case is about an insured’s alleged concealment in his pension plan application of his true state of health and its
effect on the life insurance portion of that plan in case of death.
On October 23, 1997 Manuel Florendo filed an application for comprehensive pension plan with respondent Philam
Plans, Inc. (Philam Plans) after some convincing by respondent Perla Abcede. The plan had a pre-need price of
₱997,050.00, payable in 10 years, and had a maturity value of ₱2,890,000.00 after 20 years. Manuel signed the
application and left to Perla the task of supplying the information needed in the application. Respondent Ma. Celeste
Abcede, Perla’s daughter, signed the application as sales counselor.
Aside from pension benefits, the comprehensive pension plan also provided life insurance coverage to Florendo.
This was covered by a Group Master Policy that Philippine American Life Insurance Company (Philam Life) issued to
Philam Plans. Under the master policy, Philam Life was to automatically provide life insurance coverage, including
accidental death, to all who signed up for Philam Plans’ comprehensive pension plan. If the plan holder died before the
maturity of the plan, his beneficiary was to instead receive the proceeds of the life insurance, equivalent to the pre-need
price. Further, the life insurance was to take care of any unpaid premium until the pension plan matured, entitling the
beneficiary to the maturity value of the pension plan.
On October 30, 1997 Philam Plans issued Pension Plan Agreement PP43005584to Manuel, with petitioner Ma.
Lourdes S. Florendo, his wife, as beneficiary. In time, Manuel paid his quarterly premiums.
Eleven months later or on September 15, 1998, Manuel died of blood poisoning. Subsequently, Lourdes filed a
claim with Philam Plans for the payment of the benefits under her husband’s plan. Because Manuel died before his
pension plan matured and his wife was to get only the benefits of his life insurance, Philam Plans forwarded her claim to
Philam Life.
On May 3, 1999 Philam Plans wrote Lourdes a letter, declining her claim. Philam Life found that Manuel was on
maintenance medicine for his heart and had an implanted pacemaker. Further, he suffered from diabetes mellitus and was
taking insulin. Lourdes renewed her demand for payment under the plan but Philam Plans rejected it, prompting her to
file the present action against the pension plan company before the RTC of Quezon City.
RTC rendered judgment, ordering Philam Plans, Perla and Ma. Celeste, solidarily, to pay Lourdes all the benefits
from her husband’s pension plan, namely: ₱997,050.00, the proceeds of his term insurance, and ₱2,890,000.00 lump sum
pension benefit upon maturity of his plan; ₱100,000.00 as moral damages; and to pay the costs of the suit. The RTC
ruled that Manuel was not guilty of concealing the state of his health from his pension plan application.
CA reversed the RTC decision holding that insurance policies are traditionally contracts uberrimae fidae or contracts
of utmost good faith. As such, it required Manuel to disclose to Philam Plans conditions affecting the risk of which he
was aware or material facts that he knew or ought to know.
ISSUE
1. WON CA erred in finding Manuel guilty of concealing his illness when he kept blank and did not answer questions
in his pension plan application regarding the ailments he suffered from;
2. WON CA erred in holding that Manuel was bound by the failure of respondents Perla and Ma. Celeste to declare the
condition of Manuel’s health in the pension plan application; and
3. WON CA erred in finding that Philam Plans’ approval of Manuel’s pension plan application and acceptance of his
premium payments precluded it from denying Lourdes’ claim.
HELD
Issue Ratio
1. WON CA erred NO.
in finding Manuel
guilty of concealing Philam Plans waived medical examination for Manuel, it had to rely largely on his stating the truth
his illness when he regarding his health in his application. For, after all, he knew more than anyone that he had been
kept blank and did under treatment for heart condition and diabetes for more than five years preceding his submission
not answer of that application. But he kept those crucial facts from Philam Plans.
questions in his
pension plan Besides, when Manuel signed the pension plan application, he adopted as his own the written
application representations and declarations embodied in it. It is clear from these representations that he
regarding the concealed his chronic heart ailment and diabetes from Philam Plans. The pertinent portion of his
ailments he suffered representations and declarations read as follows:
from.
I hereby represent and declare to the best of my knowledge that:
xxxx
(c) I have never been treated for heart condition, high blood pressure, cancer, diabetes,
lung, kidney or stomach disorder or any other physical impairment in the last five years.
(d) I am in good health and physical condition.
If your answer to any of the statements above reveal otherwise, please give details in the space
provided for:
Since Manuel signed the application without filling in the details regarding his continuing
treatments for heart condition and diabetes, the assumption is that he has never been treated for the
said illnesses in the last five years preceding his application. This is implicit from the phrase "If
your answer to any of the statements above (specifically, the statement: I have never been treated
for heart condition or diabetes) reveal otherwise, please give details in the space provided for." But
this is untrue since he had been on "Coumadin," a treatment for venous thrombosis, and insulin, a
drug used in the treatment of diabetes mellitus, at that time.
The responsibility for preparing the application belonged to Manuel. Nothing in it implies that
someone else may provide the information that Philam Plans needed. Manuel cannot sign the
application and disown the responsibility for having it filled up. If he furnished Perla the needed
information and delegated to her the filling up of the application, then she acted on his instruction,
not on Philam Plans’ instruction.
Manuel had been taking medicine for his heart condition and diabetes when he submitted his
pension plan application. These clearly fell within the five-year period. More, even if Perla’s
knowledge of Manuel’s pacemaker may be applied to Philam Plans under the theory of imputed
knowledge, it is not claimed that Perla was aware of his two other afflictions that needed medical
treatments. Pursuant to Section 27 of the Insurance Code, Manuel’s concealment entitles Philam
Plans to rescind its contract of insurance with him.
Since Manuel died on the eleventh month following the issuance of his plan, the one year
incontestability period has not yet set in. Consequently, Philam Plans was not barred from
questioning Lourdes’ entitlement to the benefits of her husband’s pension plan.
DISPOSITIVE PORTION
WHEREFORE, the Court AFFIRMS in its entirety the decision of the Court of Appeals in CA-G.R. CV 87085 dated
December 18, 2007.
SO ORDERED.