The Supreme Court has vacated our opinion,
American Casualty Co. v. Corum,
“Plaintiff American Casualty Company (CNA) filed this declaratory judgment action to establish that it had no duty to defend or indemnify defendant Corum in two lawsuits. It also sought to establish that Truck Insurance Exchange (Farmers) was Corum’s primary insurer and had a duty to defend and indemnify Corum in the two lawsuits and to reimburse CNA for costs it incurred in defending Corum. In a counterclaim, ‘MJN,’ a plaintiff in one of the lawsuits, alleged that CNA had a duty to indemnify Corum, sought payment of a judgment that she had obtained against him and requested an award of attorney fees. [On summary judgment, the trial] court entered a declaratory judgment that neither CNA nor Farmers had a duty to indemnify Corum in the two lawsuits that had been brought against him and that Farmers had no duty to defend him. MJN appeals and CNA cross-appeals. We affirm.
“Corum worked at Tuality Community Hospital (Tuality) as a nurse. MJN and AD brought separate civil lawsuits against Corum arising out of sexual contact he had with them while they were patients. Farmers refused to defend Corum, and CNA defended him under a reservation of rights. MJN obtained a judgment for professional negligence against Corum, and he assigned his rights under the CNA policy to her.”131 Or App at 447 (footnotes omitted).
MJN appealed the partial summary judgment 1 in favor of CNA, which ruled that CNA was not obligated to indemnify Corum, and the denial of her motion for summary judgment. CNA cross-appealed against Farmers, assigning error to the trial court’s ruling that Farmers did not have a *62 duty to defend Corum. 2 We held that CNA had no duty to indemnify Corum in the MJN action, inter alia, because the allegation in the complaint of improper sexual contact was a sufficient basis on which to infer an intent to injure as a matter of law.
Ledford
was an action for indemnity filed by Kuhl against his insurer. Kuhl had been sued for malicious prosecution by Ledford, and Kuhl’s insurer had rejected the tender of defense. The complaint in the malicious prosecution action alleged that Kuhl “intended to harass, annoy, harm and cause expense to” Ledford and that Kuhl acted “for the purpose of injuring” Ledford.
The duty to defend is independent of the duty to indemnify, and, even though there may be no duty to defend, there may be a duty to indemnify. Id. at 403. In Ledford, the subjective intent to harm was part of the tort of malicious prosecution; an element of the tort is that a person has acted with the intent to cause harm by subjecting another to an *63 unjustifiable prosecution. Id. at 405. Therefore, although subjective intent is a question of fact, summary judgment was appropriate. It could be determined from the record that there was no duty to indemnify because Kuhl either was not liable for malicious prosecution, or, if he were liable, he had acted with the requisite subjective intent which would preclude coverage. Id. at 405.
With those principles before us, we turn first to CNA’s cross-appeal. CNA argues that the court erred in finding that Farmers did not have a duty to defend. That duty must be determined only from the complaint and the policy. MJN’s complaint 3 alleged three theories of recovery: hattery, nursing malpractice, and invasion of privacy. AD’s complaint alleged battery and negligence. Farmers’ policy defines an insured to include an employee “only when such employee * * * is acting within the capacity and scope of his duties as such.” The policy obligates the insurer to pay “on behalf of the insured” damages for personal injury “sustained by any person” or for injury to any person “arising out of the rendering of or failure to render * * * nursing or other health care service to such person[.]” “Injury” is defined to include injury “resulting from rendering or failing to render professional services, or from * * * invasion of privacy.” 4
Farmers’ original position was that
“[t]he MJN suit alleged conduct by Corum which was not insured by Farmers’ policy, i.e., Corum lied to or otherwise took advantage of a highly vulnerable person to allow him to *64 sexually molest and attempt to rape her. As a matter of law, Farmers had no duty to defend that kind of conduct.” 5
On remand, Farmers argues that Ledford “merely reaffirmed existing duty to defend law” and that,
“this case from Farmers’ standpoint was not decided on the basis of intentionally caused injuries. Therefore, the inquiry in Ledford whether the conduct alleged there was, as a matter of law, intentional harm is not a necessary inquiry here in deciding whether Farmers had any duty to defend Corum in either the MJN suit or the AD suit.”
Thus, Farmers argues, we were correct in concluding that it had no duty to defend, because sexual misconduct is conduct that could not potentially be covered.
We agreed with Farmers in our original opinion, concluding that an insurer cannot be required to insure an act of sexual abuse because the very nature of sexual abuse can permit only an inference that the perpetrator intended harm. However, under the methodology set out in Ledford, we erred in doing so. 6
Under
Ledford,
an insurer can consider only the complaint and should be able to determine from the face of the complaint whether to accept or to reject the tender of the defense.
“[T]he probing of a vagina by a registered nurse in a hospital setting could be considered a Vaginal exam’ and included in the definition of professional services. Obviously, * * * criminal sexual abuse is not the rendering of professional services, but one cannot tell from the complaint whether Corum’s actions were a vaginal exam or criminal sexual abuse.”
*65 Our conclusion to the contrary in our original opinion was incorrect. From the face of the complaint, Farmers had a duty to defend. 9
Farmers argues, however, that Corum’s conduct, and his acknowledgment of that conduct in the criminal proceeding, precluded coverage under Farmers’ policy and, therefore, Farmers had no duty to defend. Farmers relies on
Casey v. Northwest Security Ins. Co.,
The continued vitality of Casey after Ledford is uncertain: If an insurer is limited to the pleadings 10 and the policy in determining whether to defend, it is not clear how an insurer can look to “extrinsic” knowledge of prior criminal adjudications to refuse a tender of defense. 11 However, we need not resolve the issue of whether Casey is still good law. *66 Even assuming that Casey states an exception to Ledford’s general rule, defendant’s convictions here did not “incontrovertibly establish” his intent to injure, 12 as we discuss below.
We turn to MJN’s appeal, in which she assigns error to the trial court’s grant of partial summary judgment in favor of CNA on the ground that it had no duty to indemnify Corum. The duty to indemnify is independent of the duty to defend.
Ledford,
MJN argues that the judgment in the personal injury action conclusively determined that Corum acted negligently rather than intentionally. We have decided that contention adversely to MJN’s position, and decline to revisit it.
State Farm Fire and Casualty Co. v. Paget,
The record on summary judgment here, tinlike in Ledford, does not support summary judgment. There were *67 no issues of intent resolved in the tort action. 13 Moreover, Corum’s conviction does not establish that he intended the harm. 14 Corum pleaded no contest to one misdemeanor charge of sexual abuse in the second degree. 15 The count alleged that Corum
“did unlawfully and knowingly subject [MJN] to sexual contact, by touching her genitalia, a sexual part of the victim for the purpose of arousing and gratifying the sexual desires of the said defendant and victim, the said victim not consenting to the sexual contact.” (Emphasis supplied.)
Under the Oregon criminal code, the concepts of “intent” and “knowledge” are distinct.
State v. Francis,
On appeal, reversed and remanded; on cross-appeal, reversed and remanded with instructions to enter partial *68 summary judgment against Truck Insurance Exchange in favor of American Casualty Company.
Notes
The changes to summary judgment in ORCP 47 C made by the 1995 legislature do not affect the issues in this appeal.
The court’s rulings on the various motions for summary judgment disposed of all issues and claims pending among the parties.
An insurer is not obligated to defend any action not tendered to it.
Oregon Insurance Guaranty Assoc. v. Thompson,
The policy further defines an occurrence to mean
“an event or series of events * * * caused by an act or omission of the insured * * * which results during the policy period, in personal injury * * * neither expected nor intended from the standpoint of the insured [or]
“means the rendering of, or the failure to render, professional services during the policy period.”
The policy obligates Farmers to “[d]efend any suit * * * alleging such injury, sickness, disease, death, destruction, malpractice, error or mistake and seeking damages on account thereof, even if such suit is groundless, false, or fraudulent.”
Farmers contends that, for the same reason, the facts alleged by AD likewise showed that Fanners had no duty to defend.
The parties’ arguments regarding public policy do not require discussion.
AD’s complaint contained substantially the same allegations.
As CNA notes, the determination that Corum’s conduct was “sexual” was made in the criminal proceeding.
Additionally,
Ledford
makes clear that an insurer has a duty to defend if the complaint provides any basis for which the insurer provides coverage.
In
Oregon Insurance Guaranty Assoc.,
In
North Pacific Ins. Co. v. Wilson’s Distributing Service,
MJN’s action here was filed in November 1990 and AD’s in June 1991. The declaratory judgment action was filed in October 1991. The events giving rise to the criminal charge and the tort actions took place between October and December 1988. Corum was indicted in May 1990 and pleaded no contest to sexual abuse in the second degree, a Class A misdemeanor, in September 1990. Judgment on that conviction was entered in March 1991. In March 1992, a jury returned a verdict in favor of MJN on her complaint alleging negligence. In June 1992, the court heard oral argument on the motions for summary judgment in the declaratory judgment proceeding, and judgment was entered in February 1993.
Corum submitted an affidavit in this action that stated that he did not intend injury.
We recognize that, in
State Farm Fire & Cas. v. Reuter,
As a result of legislative amendments in 1991, the offense is now sexual abuse in the third degree.
