Insurance Law Case

I came across a side case while studying for Insurance that was too noteworthy to ignore.  The case is Mutual of Omaha Ins. Co v. Russell (1968).  Here, the insured tried to buy a life insurance policy in an “airport machine” (I’m guessing vending machine).  The insured wanted to buy a “T-20″ policy from the machine but didn’t have enough change.  He went to the insurer’s booth and was “unwittingly” sold a “T-18″ policy.  The T-18 was shorter in time span but offered more benefits.  The insured died in a plane crash after the T-18 expired but before the T-20 would have.  The court upheld the T-18 and thus no benefits were paid.

The holding makes since, but factually this case is amazing.  This guy actually bought insurance for himself in case he died in a plane crash, which still had to be very unlikely even in 1968.  It turns out his prudency guarding against a super long shot was the correct intuition, but because he didn’t have enough change it was all for nothing.  An anamoly stacked on an aberration against this guy.

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