ORDER
Plaintiff Allstate Insurance Company (Allstate) seeks a declaration that it has no duty to defend or indemnify Ronald W. Falkosky, Mary F. Falkosky, or Scott Fal-kosky (the Falkosky family) in connection with a personal injury action previously instituted in state court by Martha G. Best, individually, and on behalf of her minor son, Burrell G. Best. 28 U.S.C. §§ 2201, 2202. Jurisdiction is premised upon 28 U.S.C. § 1332(a). The matter is currently before the court upon cross-motions for summary judgment. Rule 56, Fed.R.Civ. Proc.
The personal injury action previously instituted in state court against the Falkosky family arises out of an incident that occurred on or about February 15, 1986. That suit was instituted on May 2, 1989, whereas the present declaratory judgment action was filed on August 9, 1989. Apparently, Burrell Best was severely injured while riding a Honda CR-80 motorbike on a vacant lot approximately two blocks from the residential premises owned and occupied by the Falkosky family. It is undisputed that the Honda CR-80 at issue con *1265 stitutes a motorized land vehicle designed principally for recreational use off public roads (motorbike), and that this vehicle was owned by the Falkosky family at the time of the incident. On the date of this occurrence, the Falkosky family was insured under a Deluxe Homeowners Policy (policy) issued by Allstate.
Allstate contends that it has no duty to defend the Falkosky family in the underlying state court action because the policy allegedly excludes coverage for injuries caused by use of a motorbike where it is owned by an insured person and is being used away from the insured premises. Defendants contend Allstate has not demonstrated that the bodily injuries suffered by Burrell Best arose out of an excepted risk under the terms of the policy. Specifically, the defendants maintain that Allstate cannot avoid its duty to defend because the underlying state court complaint alleges negligence occurring on the insured premises (negligent maintenance and negligent failure to warn). As such, the defendants argue that negligence in “maintenance” is a separate coverage term not limited by the language excluding coverage for “use” of a motorbike away from the insured premises. Alternatively, defendants submit that Allstate must defend the Falkosky family in the underlying state court action because it has not demonstrated the existence of a causal connection between the alleged exclusion and the loss at issue in the pending state court action.
The present declaratory judgment action brought under 28 U.S.C. §§ 2201 and 2202 raises several important considerations of South Carolina insurance law and policy. First, does an insurer have an obligation to defend its insured under a homeowner’s insurance policy for bodily injuries arising out of the use of the excepted instrumentality away from the insured premises where the underlying complaint alleges that negligent conduct occurring on the insured premises proximately caused the accident, notwithstanding the presence of a clear and unambiguous exclusion for bodily injuries arising out of the use of the instrumentality away from the premises? Second, if a duty to defend fails to arise from the terms and conditions of the contract of insurance itself, does the insurer nevertheless have an obligation to defend where no causal connection exists between the excluded risk and the loss? 1 Thus, a declaration on the question of whether Allstate is obligated to defend the Falkosky family in the previously instituted personal injury lawsuit would require this court to speculate on important, unsettled questions of State substantive law.
The policy generally provides coverage for each person who sustains bodily injury off the insured premises where such injury “is caused by the activities of an insured person_” Policy, p. 25 (emphasis in original). Section II of the policy, however, entitled “Family Liability and Guest Medical Protection,” contains identical exclusionary language under Coverage X, Family Liability Protection, and Coverage Y, Guest Medical Protection. These provisions provide in pertinent part:
LOSSES WE DO NOT COVER:
5. We do not cover bodily infury arising out of the ownership, maintenance, use, occupancy, renting, loaning, entrusting, loading or unloading of any motorized land vehicle or trailer. However, this exclusion does not apply to:
*1266 b) any motorized land vehicle designed principally for recreational use off public roads, unless that vehicle is owned by an insured person and is being used away from an insured premises;
Policy, pp. 23, 25 (emphasis in original).
Under South Carolina law the construction and interpretation of an insurance policy should be determined as a matter of law by the court.
Hann v. Carolina Casualty Ins. Co.,
Reference to the insurance policy itself is essential to determine whether a duty to defend arises in a particular case. In making this determination, exclusions in an insurance policy are “construed most strongly against the insurer.”
Boggs v. Aetna Casualty and Surety Co.,
The parameters of coverage envisioned by this precise exclusion in a homeowner’s policy were addressed in
Allstate Ins. Co. v. Goldwater,
Although the language of paragraph 5 may initially appear confusing, we do not find it to be ambiguous; it clearly excludes coverage for an accident involving a motorized land vehicle designed for recreational use off public roads, owned by an insured, that occurred away from the residence premises.
Id.
Where, as here, plaintiffs in the underlying suit have attempted to bypass this contractual limitation through allegations that negligence occurred on the premises (whether negligent entrustment, maintenance, etc.) which allegedly causes bodily injury away from the insured premises, courts have split on the issue of whether similar exclusions preclude coverage for the loss.
Compare Bankert v. Threshermen’s Mutual Ins. Co.,
The plain meaning of the contested provision appears to provide coverage for bodily injury or property damage arising out of motorized land vehicles such as a motorbike unless the vehicle is owned by an insured person and is being used away from the insured premises. Consequently, coverage would apparently be denied where, as here, the instrumentality is owned by the insured and is being used away from the insured premises at the time of the occurrence which gives rise to the loss. Defendants’ argument that the exclusion only precludes coverage for loss resulting from “use” of the instrumentality away from the premises, as opposed to negligent “maintenance” occurring on the premises, does not appear persuasive in light of the express language of the provision itself. Specifically, after excluding coverage for “bodily injury arising out of the ownership, maintenance, use, occupancy, renting, loaning, entrusting, loading or unloading of any motorized land vehicle,” the provision states that “this exclusion does not apply ...” to seven specified exceptions to the exclusion, namely (a) through (g) (including the exception at issue in the present case, (b)). Obviously, the term “this,” inserted immediately after a complete listing of the excluded risks (i.e., ownership, maintenance, etc.), modifies the entire list of excluded risks. Significantly, the disjunctive term “or” is used within the list of excluded risks and, in any event, use of the term “this” signifies an intention to refer to the entire exclusionary clause it modifies.
But even were this court to conclude that the allegations of the underlying state court complaint fail to bring the loss within policy provisions, and thus serve to relieve Allstate of any contractual duty to defend the Falkosky family, South Carolina courts have never determined whether an insurer, to deny coverage, must also demonstrate a “causal connection” between the excluded risk and a loss arising from a risk not ordinarily borne by that type of coverage. In a line of cases beginning with
Reynolds v. Life & Casualty Co. of Tennessee,
The State Supreme Court has apparently never addressed this precise question. However, the court recently reaffirmed the causal connection requirement in
South Carolina Ins. Guaranty Assoc. v. Broach,
[WJhen the parties made the contract of insurance, they were not inserting a mere arbitrary provision, but that it was the purpose of the insurance company to relieve itself of liability from accidents caused by the excluded provision.
Adherence to
Broach
would possibly require this court to ignore the clear and unambiguous meaning of the provision at issue and afford coverage for a risk which was apparently expressly excepted under the policy. Perhaps even more significant, unrestricted application of the causal connection requirement would render most exclusions inoperative unless the insurer could demonstrate some causal relation between the excluded risk and the loss. Thus, application of the doctrine could cause absurd results where, as here, it is used to create coverage which is not ordinarily afforded by a homeowner’s policy.
See, e.g., Aetna Casualty and Surety Co.,
Allstate does not seek a coercive remedy in the present case. Rather, it seeks a declaration that it has no obligation to defend the Falkosky family in the underlying state court suit. Nevertheless, even where an independent jurisdictional basis has been demonstrated, federal courts retain discretion to refuse to hear and determine a declaratory judgment action.
Brillhart v. Excess Ins. Co. of America,
In addition to the tardiness of the present declaratory judgment action, however, it is obvious that determination of the unsettled and important questions of State substantive law already discussed should proceed in the pending state court action, especially where, as here, there exists no federal interest whatsoever in their ultimate resolution.
Ohio Casualty Co. v. Jackson County Bank,
Where an action against its insured is already pending in state court, an insurer may utilize federal declaratory relief to determine whether it has an obligation to defend only under exceptional circumstances.
See Quarles, supra.
Indeed, a pending state action against the insured provides an adequate forum in which to resolve the issue of whether an insurer is obligated to defend the insured under the terms of a homeowner’s policy, and has been used, standing alone, as an appropriate basis to refuse to hear and determine a federal declaratory action.
State Farm Fire and Casualty v. Oliver,
Based on the foregoing reasoning and cited authorities, the court is constrained to exercise its discretion to refuse to hear and determine the present declaratory judgment action.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Notes
. Of course, the premium charged for an insurance policy is a function of the primary risks borne by the insurer,
see Aetna Casualty and Surety Company v. American Manufacturers Mutual Insurance Company,
. Of course, the mere absence of the insurer as a named party in the underlying state suit does not preclude reliance on the
Brillhart
doctrine in the present action because Allstate has a legal duty to defend the Falkosky family if the complaint alleges a state of facts which fall within the coverage of the policy.
Hartford Accident and Indemnity Co.,
. Of course, by defending the state court action Allstate is "in no way to be denied the right to reserve the question of coverage and is not to be deemed estopped from so doing.”
Dairyland Ins. Co. v. Frith,
