Wе affirm the judgment of the district court on the basis of the memorandum opinion of Senior U.S. District Judge Walter E. Hoffman, attached hereto as an appendix.
AFFIRMED.
APPENDIX
United States District Court, Middle District of Florida, Orlando Divisiоn.
Alpha Therapeutic Corporation, Plaintiff, v. Hunter Blood Center, Inc., Defendant/Third-Party Plaintiff, v. St. Paul Fire and Marine Insurance Company, Third-Party Defendant.
Case No. 85-855-CIV-ORI^19.
MEMORANDUM OPINION
On March 1, 1983 Alpha Therapeutic Corporation (Alрha), the original plaintiff in this action, entered into a contract whereby Hunter Blood Center (Hunter), the original defendant, agreed to sell Alpha its entire
In November of 1983, Hunter found four units of plasma to be reactive for HBsAg on the first test. However, due to a transcribing error made by a mediсal technician, 4 Hunter failed to retest the contaminated blood and instead tested four different units that were nonreactive to HBsAg. Consequently, Hunter shipped HBsAg positive plasma to Alpha which resulted in the contamination and ultimate destruction of a portion of Alpha’s plasma products.
Alpha sued Hunter and Hunter’s professional liability carrier, Great American-South Inc. (Great American), for breach of contract. Hunter made a demand to its general liability carrier, St. Paul Fire and Marine Insurance Co. (St. Paul), that St. Paul defend Hunter against Alpha’s allegations and indemnify Hunter for liabilities arising out of the allegations. St. Paul refused, and Hunter filed a third party complaint for declaratory relief seeking to establish St. Paul’s duties under its insurance contract with Hunter. Hunter’s third party complaint is before this сourt.
St. Paul provided Hunter with a comprehensive general liability insurance policy which contains a professional services exclusion which reads:
Professional services. We won’t cover injury or damage caused by the providing or failure to provide any professional service. This includes liabilities assumed under a contract or agreement to pay for injury or damage causеd by an architect, engineer or surveyor in performing or failing to perform professional services.
St. Paul contends that the language of its policy unambiguously excludes coverage for the еrror of Hunter’s medical technician because the error was committed while providing professional services. 5
Hunter contends that “professional service” is not adequately defined in St. Paul’s рolicy. Consequently, argues Hunter, the policy must be construed in favor of coverage. Hunter further argues that a medical technician does not have the requisite training to qualify as a professional and that the technician’s job of transposing test re-
The lаw is well settled that ambiguities in insurance policies are to be construed in favor of the insured.
Hess v. Liberty Mut. Ins. Co.,
At trial of the third-party аction, Robert Hannegan, the underwriting manager for St. Paul’s Medical Services Department, testified that St. Paul did not charge Hunter for medical professional liability during 1983. To support this claim, St. Paul introduced into evidence Hunter’s premium recap sheet, which showed no entry in the line called “medical professional liability.” Mr. Hannegan testified that the absence of an entry means that St. Paul provided no coverage for medical professional liability. During 1984, however, St. Paul picked up Hunter’s medical professional liability charging Hunter $6,800.00 on a pro rated basis. Thus, the evidence shows that Hunter paid nо premiums for medical profession liability during 1983. Consequently, the insurance contract in effect at the time of the medical technician’s error did not provide for medical professional liability coverage.
Hunter argues, however, that the technician’s error was covered by St. Paul’s policy without the additional medical professional liability insurance. In its trial brief, Hunter maintains that, “arguably, a medical technician is not a profession. Therefore, any act or omission of a medical technician may be construed not to be the rendering of a professional service.” While Huntеr concedes in its brief that “for some activities, the medical technician may be a professional,” Hunter concludes that “if [an] act or omission is not performed by a professional as that term is generally understood and recognized, then the exclusion should not apply.” This court cannot agree. Even if a medical technician is not a professional, there are certain рrofessional duties that, when delegated to the medical technician, bring the technician within the definition of “professional” for insurance purposes.
Multnomah County v. Oregon Automobile Ins. Co.,
In
Northern Insurance,
a physician mistakenly performed an аbortion on a patient because the physician’s clerical employee mistook the patient for someone else. The court in
Northern Insurance
concluded that the mistake “occurred during the рerformance of professional services” because the doctor’s duty to operate on the right patient is nondelegable.
/S/ Walter E. Hoffman
Senior United States District Judge
(Sitting by Designation)
At Norfolk, Virginia
June 22nd, 1988.
Notes
. Alpha Therapeutic Corporation is in the business of manufacturing and distributing human plasma derivatives. Hunter Blood Center is in the business of collecting and distributing human plasma.
. Title 21 section 610.40 of thе Code of Federal Regulations requires that
Each donation of blood plasma or serum to be used in preparing a biological product shall be tested for the presence of heрatitis B surface antigen by a method of sufficient sensitivity to detect all sera labeled A, (a), B, (b) and C(c) ...
21 CFR § 610.40(a).
. Hunter Blood Center uses the Auszyme II test for determining the presence of HBsAg in plasma.
. On November 11, 1983, Hunter Blood Center tested plasma units T-25190, T-25191, T-25193 and T-25194 in testing wells 97, 98, 99 and 100 respectively. Each unit tested positive to HBsAg on the first test. On the second test, required under the Auszyme II system, the medical technician mistakenly tested the plasmа units in testing wells 92, 93, 94 and 95. These wells contained different blood than wells 97, 98, 99 and 100. As a result of the error, units T-25190, T-25191, T-25193 and T-25194 were never tested a second time. The plasma units in wells 92, 93 94 and 95 tested nonreactive to HBsAg. As a result, the presence of HBsAg was not detected in plasma unit T-25193. This unit ultimately contaminated a large portion of Alpha Therapeutic’s products.
.To support its contention that the general liability policy does not cover the medical technician’s error, St. Paul maintains that the professional liability policy provided by Great American-South Inc. specifically covers damages arising out оf liability for testing or failing to test plasma for hepatitis. While the Great American policy does contain language supporting coverage in the instant case, that policy is irrelevant in determining the extent of coverage provided by St. Paul's policy with Hunter Blood Center.
. Most professional medical services involve clerical or ministerial duties that court’s typically consider as an intricate part of the professional service.
See e.g. Northern Ins. Co. of N. Y. v. Super. Ct. Etc.,
Some courts distinguish -purely ministerial functions from those duties requiring some expertise.
See e.g. American Casualty Co. v. Hart
