
The duty of utmost good faith (uberrima fides) is a foundational principle in insurance law: applicants and insurers must deal honestly and disclose material facts that would influence underwriting. In Montana, MCA 33-15-403 governs application truthfulness and creates specific risks when applicants omit pre-existing conditions or surgical history.
This article explains how the statute operates, the practical risks of non-disclosure, how Montana courts evaluate intent and materiality, and clear steps applicants and agents should take to reduce exposure.
What the Duty of Utmost Good Faith Means in Practice
At its core, the duty requires truthful, complete disclosure of medical history, symptoms, and prior treatments that are material to the insurer’s risk assessment. Materiality is judged by whether the insurer would have altered its offer, premium, or coverage terms if it had known the fact.
Insurers rely on the application to set premiums and coverage. When information is omitted or misstated, the insurer may rescind a policy, deny claims, or assert fraud—especially within the contestability window.
How Montana MCA 33-15-403 Applies to Application Truthfulness
MCA 33-15-403 is the statutory anchor for application truthfulness in Montana insurance law. The statute allows carriers to act when an application contains false statements or undisclosed material facts, subject to timing and intent considerations.
Key statutory effects:
- Insurer can rescind or deny claims if misrepresentation or concealment is material.
- The two-year incontestability period can bar rescission after the statutory time frame unless fraud is proven; see Montana Two-year Incontestability Clause and Health History Disclosures.
- Burden often shifts to insurers to prove materiality and, in fraud cases, intent; see Proving Intent to Deceive in Montana Insurance Fraud Investigations.
Pre-existing Condition Non-disclosure: Common Scenarios and Risks
Non-disclosure often occurs in deceptively simple ways—unintentional omissions, confusing forms, or intentional concealment. Common high-risk examples include:
- Failure to report prior surgeries or hospitalizations.
- Omitting recent diagnostic tests (MRIs, CTs) that revealed issues.
- Not disclosing occupational injuries or workers’ compensation claims.
- Leaving out mental health or substance use treatment.
Consequences vary from claim denial to rescission or criminal insurance fraud charges if intent is proven. For surgical omissions specifically, see Consequences of Omitting Surgical History on Montana Insurance Applications.
Misrepresentation vs. Concealment — Side-by-Side
Below is a quick comparison to help applicants and agents understand legal distinctions under Montana law.
| Issue | Misrepresentation | Concealment |
|---|---|---|
| Definition | False statement about a fact on the application | Failure to disclose a material fact that the applicant had a duty to reveal |
| Proof Required | Falsehood + materiality; intent may increase penalties | Concealment + materiality; often requires showing knowledge or intent |
| Typical Insurer Remedy | Rescind policy, deny claims | Rescind policy, deny claims, possible fraud prosecution |
| Montana Notes | Courts examine whether misstatement affected underwriting | See detailed comparisons: Comparing Misrepresentation vs Concealment Under Montana MCA 33-15-403 |
Legal Consequences and Burden of Proof
Montana law distinguishes honest mistakes from intentional deception. To rescind a policy or pursue fraud charges, carriers generally must show:
- The omitted or misstated fact was material.
- The applicant knew the fact and had a duty to disclose it.
- In fraud cases, the insurer must prove intent to deceive; see Proving Intent to Deceive in Montana Insurance Fraud Investigations.
If an insurer acts after the two-year contestability period, the statutory protections often favor the insured unless clear, deliberate fraud is established. Read more at Montana Two-year Incontestability Clause and Health History Disclosures.
Agents, Forms, and Applicant Responsibility
Even where an agent or producer makes an error on a medical disclosure form, the applicant bears primary responsibility for accuracy. Montana courts may consider agent mistakes, but insurers will still expect reasonable diligence from applicants.
If an agent filled out information incorrectly, consider these steps:
- Request a corrected application and written confirmation from the agent.
- Keep copies of all submissions and communications.
- Understand how Montana treats agent errors: How Montana Law Treats Agent Errors in Medical Disclosure Forms.
Impact on Rural Health Access and Vulnerable Populations
Disclosure rules can disproportionately affect rural Montanans and those with intermittent access to healthcare. Limited medical records or fragmented care increases the risk of inadvertent non-disclosure.
Policy effects include:
- Higher rates of rescission or claim disputes in areas with sparse record-keeping.
- Potential chilling effect on seeking care if individuals fear future application issues.
For a focused discussion, see Impact of Montana Application Truthfulness Laws on Rural Health Access.
Occupational Injuries and Short-term Plan Considerations
Workers with past on-the-job injuries must carefully disclose prior claims and treatments. Non-disclosure can trigger denials of related care or claims.
- Employers and workers should document injury history and communicate it accurately on applications.
- Short-term and limited-duration plans have unique underwriting and validity concerns under MCA 33-15-403; learn more at How Montana MCA 33-15-403 Affects Short-term Health Plan Validity.
- For occupational specifics, reference Disclosure Risks for Montana Workers With Past Occupational Injuries.
Steps After a Denial: Appealing and Remedies
If you receive a denial or rescission notice, act quickly. Montana law provides procedural and judicial remedies that can overturn improper insurer actions.
Steps to consider:
- Request a written explanation and complete claim/application file from the insurer.
- Collect supporting medical records showing the timing and nature of treatments.
- Consider administrative appeals or litigation; practical guidance is available at Appealing a Denial Based on Non-disclosure in the Montana Court System.
Best Practices to Reduce Non-disclosure Risk
Preventive measures protect both applicants and insurers and reduce disputes.
- Be exhaustive: List surgeries, tests, and treatments—even if remote or seemingly irrelevant.
- Keep records: Save medical records, appointment summaries, and prior insurance applications.
- Ask for help: If a form is unclear, ask the agent or insurer for clarification and get answers in writing.
- Review agent entries: Verify any agent-completed fields before signing the application.
- Update promptly: Inform your insurer of material changes during the contestability period.
For an example of risks tied to surgical omissions and how to address them, see Consequences of Omitting Surgical History on Montana Insurance Applications.
Conclusion
MCA 33-15-403 reinforces the duty of utmost good faith in Montana insurance applications and creates real risks for non-disclosure of pre-existing conditions. The legal focus is materiality and, in fraud cases, intent to deceive. Applicants and agents should exercise thorough disclosure, retain records, and respond quickly to insurer inquiries or adverse actions.
If you face a denial or rescission, gather complete medical records, document communications, and consult counsel or an advocate experienced in Montana insurance law. Early, organized action improves the chance of a favorable outcome.