Overview
Insurance contracts are based on utmost good faith - both parties must be completely honest. This section covers three critical concepts about truthfulness in insurance: warranties (guaranteed truths), representations (believed truths), and concealment (hidden truths). Understanding these can mean the difference between a paid claim and a voided policy.
Exam Alert!
Know the difference between warranties (absolutely true, can void policy if breached) and representations (believed to be true, can void if materially false). Also understand that intentional concealment or misrepresentation = fraud.
1. Warranties
Definition
A warranty is an absolutely true statement upon which the validity of the insurance policy depends. It's a guarantee - not "I think this is true" but "This IS true, period."
Key Characteristics of Warranties
Must Be Absolutely True
No "to the best of my knowledge" - it's either true or it isn't. Even innocent mistakes can breach a warranty.
Breach Can Void Policy
If a warranty is breached, the insurer may void the policy entirely or refuse to pay claims.
Premium May Be Returned
If the policy is voided due to breach, the insurer may return the premium - but the insured gets no coverage.
Rare in Life/Health
Because warranties are so strict, statements on life/health applications are usually NOT warranties (except fraud cases).
Real-World Scenario: The Security System Warranty
The Setup: ABC Jewelry Store applies for commercial property insurance. The application asks: "Is a central station burglar alarm installed and operational?" The owner checks "Yes" and signs. This becomes a warranty in the policy - the alarm MUST be installed and operational.
What Happens: Six months later, thieves break in and steal $200,000 in jewelry. During the claims investigation, the adjuster discovers the alarm system was disconnected three months ago because the store couldn't afford the monitoring fees.
The Result: The insurer denies the claim and may void the policy. The warranty was breached - the alarm was NOT operational. It doesn't matter that the owner originally had an alarm; the warranty required it to BE operational, not just to HAVE BEEN operational. The store gets no payment.
Real-World Scenario: The Sprinkler System
The Setup: A warehouse owner warrants that the building has a functioning sprinkler system throughout the premises. The insurance rate is lower because sprinklers reduce fire risk.
What Happens: A fire breaks out in a storage area where the sprinkler heads were accidentally painted over during renovations and didn't activate. The fire causes $500,000 in damage.
The Result: Even though the owner didn't know the sprinklers were blocked, the warranty was breached. The system wasn't "functioning" as warranted. The insurer can deny the claim or significantly reduce payment. Warranties require absolute truth, not good intentions.
2. Representations
Definition
Representations are statements believed to be true to the best of one's knowledge, but they are not guaranteed to be true. In insurance, representations are the answers the insured gives to questions on the application.
Remember This!
Representations = Application Answers
The insured's statements on the insurance application are representations.
Key Concepts
Misrepresentation
An untrue statement on the application. Can void the contract if discovered.
Material Misrepresentation
A false statement that, if discovered, would have altered the underwriting decision. This is the key test - would the insurer have issued the policy or charged a different rate if they knew the truth?
Fraud
When material misrepresentations are intentional, they constitute fraud. Fraud can result in policy cancellation, claim denial, and even criminal prosecution.
Warranty vs Representation
| Feature | Warranty | Representation |
|---|---|---|
| Standard of Truth | Absolutely true | Believed to be true |
| If Untrue | Policy may be voided | Voidable only if material |
| Intent Matters? | No - breach is breach | Yes - intentional = fraud |
| Common Use | Commercial policies, specific conditions | All applications |
Real-World Scenario: The Prior Claims Question
The Setup: On his auto insurance application, Dave is asked: "Have you had any accidents or claims in the past 5 years?" Dave had a minor fender-bender 3 years ago but honestly forgot about it. He answers "No."
What Happens: Dave has a significant accident and files a $50,000 claim. During claims investigation, the insurer discovers the prior accident in the CLUE database.
The Result: This is a misrepresentation, but likely NOT material. One minor fender-bender probably wouldn't have changed the underwriting decision significantly. The insurer will likely pay the claim, though they might adjust Dave's rate going forward. Because Dave didn't intentionally lie, it's not fraud.
Real-World Scenario: Material Misrepresentation (Fraud)
The Setup: Sarah applies for homeowners insurance. The application asks if she operates any business from the home. Sarah runs a busy daycare center with 15 children daily but answers "No" because she knows it would increase her premium or make her ineligible.
What Happens: A child at the daycare is injured, and the parents sue Sarah. She files a liability claim.
The Result: The insurer investigates and discovers the daycare. This is a MATERIAL misrepresentation - the insurer never would have issued a standard homeowners policy for a commercial daycare operation. Because Sarah intentionally lied to get coverage, it's FRAUD. The insurer denies the claim, voids the policy, and Sarah faces the lawsuit uninsured. She may also face criminal fraud charges.
3. Concealment
Definition
Concealment is the intentional withholding of information about a material fact that is crucial in making an underwriting decision. It's not just giving wrong information - it's deliberately NOT giving important information.
Intentional
Concealment requires intent. You KNEW the information was important and deliberately withheld it.
Material Fact
The hidden information must be relevant to the underwriting decision - something that would affect whether or how coverage is offered.
May Void Policy
Like material misrepresentation, concealment can result in the policy being voided and claims denied.
Misrepresentation vs Concealment
Misrepresentation
Giving FALSE information
"Have you had any DUIs?" - "No" (when you've had 3)
Concealment
HIDING information entirely
Not mentioning that your house is built over an abandoned mine shaft
Real-World Scenario: The Hidden Hazard
The Setup: Tom is selling his commercial building and the buyer needs property insurance. Tom knows the building has serious foundation cracks that were covered up with drywall and paint. He doesn't mention this to anyone during the sale or insurance application process.
What Happens: Six months later, the foundation fails and the building partially collapses. The new owner files a claim for structural damage.
The Result: During investigation, engineers discover evidence of pre-existing foundation problems. If the insurer can prove the previous owner (or the applicant) knew about and concealed this material fact, the claim can be denied. The policy may be voided for concealment of a material fact that would have affected the underwriting decision.
Real-World Scenario: The Undisclosed Use
The Setup: Mike applies for homeowners insurance on a property he claims is his primary residence. He doesn't mention that he actually rents it out as a short-term vacation rental on Airbnb 300 days a year.
What Happens: A guest is injured falling down the stairs and sues Mike for $500,000. Mike files a liability claim.
The Result: The insurer investigates and discovers the Airbnb activity. Mike didn't lie on any specific question - he concealed the commercial rental use. This is a material fact that would have required a different type of policy (landlord/rental property insurance). The claim is denied for concealment. Mike faces the lawsuit without coverage.
4. The Path to Fraud
Innocent Misrepresentation
Untrue statement made without intent to deceive
May void policy if material, but no criminal liability
Material Misrepresentation
False statement that affects underwriting decision
Can void policy and deny claims
FRAUD
Intentional material misrepresentation OR concealment
Voids policy, denies claims, AND potential criminal prosecution
The Bottom Line
Intentional + Material = FRAUD. Whether you actively lie (misrepresentation) or deliberately withhold (concealment), if you do it on purpose and it would have affected the insurer's decision, you've committed insurance fraud.
Exam Trap Alerts
1. Warranties vs Representations
Warranties must be ABSOLUTELY true; breach voids the policy regardless of intent. Representations are believed to be true; they only void the policy if the misrepresentation is MATERIAL.
2. Application Answers = Representations
Remember: What the insured puts on the application are REPRESENTATIONS, not warranties (except in special circumstances). This is a frequently tested concept.
3. Material = Would It Change the Decision?
A misrepresentation is "material" if the insurer would have made a different underwriting decision with the correct information. Not all misrepresentations are material.
4. Concealment Requires Intent
Concealment is the INTENTIONAL withholding of material information. Forgetting to mention something isn't concealment - deliberately hiding it is.
5. Life/Health Statements Usually NOT Warranties
Because warranties are so strict, statements on life and health insurance applications are typically treated as representations, not warranties (except in fraud cases).
Quick Reference Summary
Warranty
Absolutely true statement
Breach can void policy (even innocent breach)
Rare in life/health applications
Representation
Believed to be true
Application answers are representations
Must be material to void policy
Concealment
Intentional withholding of material fact
May void policy
Intent required
Intentional Material Misrepresentation or Concealment = FRAUD