---
title: "Relevance of Uberrimae Fidei in Life Insurance in the present day"
date: 2019-05-21
author: "Chandni Arora"
url: https://ksandk.com/insurance/uberrimae-fidei-in-life-insurance/
---

# Relevance of Uberrimae Fidei in Life Insurance in the present day

Posted On - 21 May, 2019 • By - Chandni Arora

*Uberrimae  

Fidei* refers to a Latin phrase meaning “utmost good faith” and is the  

cornerstone of insurance contracts. The doctrine of *uberrimae fidei* is applicable equally on the insurer as well as the  

insured and requires the declaration of all facts material to the insurance  

contract by all the parties to the contract.

### ***Uberrimae Fidei*****in Life Insurance contracts in India:**

Section 45 of the Insurance Act, 1938 pertaining to  

life insurance policies stated that life insurance policies could not be called  

into question by the insurer after a period of two years from the commencement  

of the policy unless the insured at the time of making such misrepresentation  

did so fraudulently suppressing information which he knew to be vital to the  

insurance contract. This clause allowed the insurer to conduct an investigation  

even after the expiry of two years and repudiate the claim if the material  

suppression was found to be deliberate.

However, with the passing of The Insurance Laws  

(Amendment) Act, 2015, the Section 45 has been amended to the extent that a  

policy can be called into question by an insurer only for a period of 3 years  

after the issuance of the policy on any ground including that of fraud. This  

amendment has put a noose around the necks of life insurance companies with the  

effect that all future contracts entered into will be required to be  

investigated at the time of issuance of the policy and not at the time of  

processing of the claim as has been the established practice in the field of  

life insurance.

The amendment in Section 45 also raises a question  

on the relevance of the doctrine of *Uberrimae  

Fidei* in modern insurance contracts as the focus for policyholders will  

shift to suppression of material facts for a period of 3 years rather than  

disclosure at the proposal stage itself to avoid payment of higher premiums and  

for ease of issuance of policies.

### **Judgments  

in the post Insurance Laws (Amendment) Act, 2015 world:**

There has been a spate of judgments favouring the  

Insured post the 2015 amendment in Section 45 side-lining the age old *Uberrimae Fidei* doctrine. Some of the  

landmark judgments are discussed below:

#### **Sulbha  

Prakash Matalgaoker Vs. Life Insurance Corporation of India (Civil Appeal No.  

8245 of 2015)**

The insured in the instant case had suppressed the  

fact that he was suffering from lumbar spondylitis with PID with sciatica at  

the time of filling the Proposal Form. The insured subsequently passed away due  

to ischaemic heart disease and myocardial infection. Since there was  

suppression of pre-existing disease, the insurer repudiated the death claim.

The Hon’ble Supreme Court however, held that that  

since the undisclosed disease had nothing to do with the cause of death, the  

alleged concealment was not of a nature which would disentitle the deceased  

from getting his life insured and hence, the repudiation of the claim was  

unjustified.

#### **Life  

Insurance Corporation of India Vs. Jyotsana Rawal**

The Hon’ble National Commission has reiterated the  

principles laid down in *Sulbha Prasad  

Matalgaonker* discussed above. The insurer had alleged that the insured was  

suffering from tuberculosis prior to filling up of Proposal Form. The insured  

had died due to heart attack, and it was held that since there is no  

co-relation between tuberculosis and heart attack, the order passed by both the  

District Consumer Disputes Redressal Forum and State Consumer Disputes  

Redressal Commission was upheld and the Revision Petition filed by Life  

Insurance Corporation of India was dismissed.

#### **Neelam  

Chopra Vs. Life Insurance Corporation of India (Revision Petition No. 4461 of  

2012)**

The Revision Petition was filed challenging the  

order passed by the State Consumer Disputes Redressal Commission allowing the  

appeal filed by Life Insurance Corporation of India. The insurer had repudiated  

the death claim on the ground that the insured had concealed the fact that he  

was suffering from diabetes and for the last five years and also suffering from  

LL Hansen disease at the time of filling the Proposal Form.

The Hon’ble National Commission, in the instant  

case has observed from the judgment passed by the Hon’ble High Court of Delhi  

in **Hari Om Aggarwal Vs. Oriental  

Insurance Co. Ltd. WP(C) No. 656 of 2007** that insurance claim cannot be  

denied on the ground of common lifestyle diseases such as hypertension,  

diabetes mellitus etc. However, the Hon’ble National Commission has furthered  

the observation of the High Court of Delhi by stating that the insured cannot  

suppress common lifestyle ailments as a matter of right and the claimants may  

suffer the consequences of such suppression in terms of the reduced claims.

This raises several questions such as the  

proportion by which the death claim should be reduced and who will decide in  

what circumstances the death claim is liable to be reduced. A sweeping  

observation such as the above without any statutory legislation or established  

legal principles may result in a plethora of unscrupulous litigants knocking  

the doors of various courts seeking relief for their fraudulent claims.

The Hon’ble National Commission goes on further to  

discuss *Sulbha Matagaonkar* and has  

held, “*it is clear that suppression of  

any information relating to pre-existing disease, if it has not resulted in  

death or has no direct relationship to the cause of death, would not completely  

disentitle the claimant for the claim*”. It was further held that  

suppression of a disease having no relationship to the cause of death such as  

in the instant case when the insured died due to “Cardio Respiratory Arrest”,  

it cannot be treated as material information and cannot be a ground for total  

denial of the claim.

The above-discussed judgments seem to be creating a  

new grey area in insurance contracts which were earlier completely black and  

white. *Uberrimae Fidei* required the  

insured to disclose all information asked for by the insured in a true and  

correct manner irrespective of the same seeming to be material or not at that  

time. The fact of whether the information was material or not was left at the  

discretion of the insurer in order to enable the insurer to decide whether and  

on what terms to issue the policy in question or not. The present trend of  

selective disclosure may discourage complete honesty from the potential insured  

leading to greater number of false claims and distrust in the mind of the insurer.

### **Conclusion****:**

The contract of insurance has since its inception been governed by the principle of *uberrimae fidei*. The concept of slight or discretionary good faith seems to be an upcoming trend in the Indian insurance industry. This raises a question mark on the future of the Indian insurance industry. There is a strong probability that the number of fraudulent policyholders would increase, selectively suppressing material facts, which is already a plague being faced by the insurers. Such a practice would cause inconvenience and suffering to the most genuine of potential policy customers. The insurers will now be required to be more stringent at the underwriting stage itself and the cost of issuance of policies would increase as well leading to higher premiums. This would lead to less affordability which ultimately might even causing a downfall of the insurance industry, simply by creation of an algorithm for supressing just the right amount of material information for exactly the right amount to time in order to defraud the insurers.

### Contributed by –Chandni Arora  
Designation –Senior Associate

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