Lead Opinion
OPINION
Appellant Matthew Jewison was injured after falling from the rim of a basketball hoop from which he had been hanging by his hands. Jewison fell because two of his acquaintances pulled on his ankles, causing him to lose his grip on the rim. After receiving medical treatment and therapy for the injury, Jewison sued the two acquaintances, one of whom was covered by a homeowner’s policy issued by American Family Insurance. American Family then initiated a declaratory judgment action, alleging that it had no duty to defend or indemnify. American Family argued that no coverage existed under the policy for
On May 6,1996, Matthew Jewison, Andy Walser, Jason Shoemaker, and other students were in a gym at the Mapleton High School. At the time, Jewison was in the ninth grade, Walser was in the tenth grade, and Shoemaker was in the twelfth grade. The three were in the gym because their choir teacher had asked them to move some chairs.
Jewison gave the following version of what happened in the gym. Jewison, who was about 6 feet 4 inches tall, jumped up and began hanging by his hands from the rim of a basketball hoop. After hanging from the rim for about 5 to 10 seconds, Walser and Shoemaker grabbed Jewison’s ankles and began tugging on them. Jewi-son characterized their actions as “just goofing around” and “playing around and stuff.” Walser and Shoemaker were standing under the basketball hoop facing Jewison as they held his ankles. Walser and Shoemaker backed up a bit while holding Jewison’s ankles, but then let go. Jewison held onto the rim for another 10 to 20 seconds and then Walser and Shoemaker grabbed Jewison’s ankles another time. Walser and Shoemaker again backed up while holding Jewison’s anHes, “pulled harder,” and this time Jewison lost his grip on the rim and fell to the floor. .After Jewison lost his grip but before he hit the floor, Walser and Shoemaker let go of his ankles. Jewison, “by instinct,” used his left hand to break his fall, injuring the middle finger in his left hand. Walser and Shoemaker both apologized to Jewison and when asked if he thought Walser and Shoemaker intended to injure him, Jewi-son responded, “No, not at all.”
Walser’s version of what happened differed only slightly from Jewison’s. Walser stated that Jewison jumped up and grabbed the rim a couple of times before the incident happened. On the last time Jewison jumped up, he hung on the rim. Walser told him to get down because he was not supposed to be hanging from the rim. Walser stated that he and Shoemaker each grabbed one of Jewison’s ankles, but he could not recall if they pulled Jewi-son in any specific direction. Walser thought that he and Shoemaker pulled Jewison “close to straight down.” Walser gave the following description of how Jewi-son fell. “I think he landed a little bit on his feet first and then kind of pushed himself backwards. And that was when he put his arms back.”
Walser stated that he and Shoemaker were just “goofing around” and did not have any hostile feelings toward Jewison; instead, everything was done in a friendly manner. Walser stated that although he and Shoemaker intended to pull Jewison down from the rim, they did not intend to injure him. Walser agreed with the statement that his pulling on Jewison’s ankles was “tjjust one of the things that high schoolers may do.”
Jewison testified that he had jumped up and hung on basketball rims “hundreds” of times before the May 1996 incident. In all of those times, he never injured himself doing so. Nor had he ever witnessed anyone else get injured from holding onto the rim and then falling down. Walser testified that before the May 1996 incident, he
In his fall from the basketball rim, Jewi-son injured his third metacarpal knuckle. For 6 months after the fall, Jewison received therapy for this injury. Jewison’s medical insurer, Blue Cross Blue Shield, paid $8,399.40 in medical bills as a result of his injury. Jewison and his father commenced an action against Walser and Shoemaker to recover these losses. Wal-ser, who was insured through his parents’ policy with American Family, tendered his defense to the insurance company.
American Family initiated a declaratory judgment action, asking the district court to conclude that American Family had no duty to defend or indemnify Walser. American Family asserted two reasons why it should not have such a duty. First, American Family argued that its policy does not cover the May 1996 incident because it was not an “occurrence” as defined in the coverage provision of the policy. Second, American Family asserted that the incident was the result of an intentional act by Walser and therefore coverage was excluded by the intentional act exclusion.
The parties agreed to submit the matter to the district court based on Jewison’s and Walser’s depositions. Relying on Hauenstein v. St. Paul-Mercury Indem. Co., the court found that Jewison’s injury was caused by an accident because it was “an unexpected, unforeseen, or undesigned happening or consequence * * *.”
American Family appealed to the court of appeals. The court of appeals reversed in an unpublished opinion, concluding that Walser and Shoemaker committed an intentional tort when they grabbed Jewison’s ankles. Am. Family Ins. Co. v. Walser, No. C1-00-349,
Jewison appealed and argues that because Walser had no intent to injure him, the incident in which he was injured was an accident under the American Family policy. He also asserts that this is not an
I.
Interpretation of an insurance policy and application of the policy to the facts in a case are questions of law that we review de novo. Franklin v. Western Nat’l Mut. Ins. Co., 574 N.W.2d 405, 406 (Minn.1998). When interpreting an insurance contract, words are to be given their natural and ordinary meaning and any ambiguity regarding coverage is construed in favor of the insured. Hauenstein,
There are two provisions of the American Family policy relevant to this appeal. The first is the coverage provision, which requires that Jewison must have been injured in an occurrence. The policy contains the following coverage terms under “Description of Liability and Medical Expense Coverages”:
1. Insuring Agreement. We will pay, up to our applicable limit, compensatory damages which any insured becomes legally obligated to pay as damages because of bodily injury or property damage to which this insurance applies. The bodily injury or property damage must be caused by an occurrence during the policy period. The occurrence must take place in the coverage territory.
(Emphasis omitted.) The coverage provision of the policy also provides the following definition of occurrence:
Occurrence means an accident, including continuous or repeated exposure to substantially the same general harmful conditions.
(Emphasis added.)
The second provision of the policy relevant to this appeal is the exclusionary provision, which is included under the “Exclusions” section of the policy. This provision contains the following language:
11. Intentional Injury. We will not pay for damages due to bodily injury or property damage expected or intended from the standpoint of the insured.
(Emphasis omitted.)
The coverage provision of American Family’s policy provides coverage for damages resulting from an occurrence, which the policy defines as an accident. However, the policy does not define accident. In interpreting the word accident, we are guided by the maxim that in insurance contracts, coverage provisions are construed according to the expectations of the insured and exclusions are construed narrowly. Atwater Creamery Co. v. Western Nat’l Mut. Ins. Co.,
In 1976, when considering the Hauen-stein definition of accident, we noted that “this definition or a similar one is universally accepted by the courts * * Bituminous Cos. Corp. v. Bartlett,
Following Hauenstein and Bartlett, the court of appeals strayed from the Hauen-stein definition in a series of cases interpreting coverage provisions. The first case, Sage Co. v. INA, involved an insurance claim by a partnership in an employment discrimination suit resulting from firing an employee.
Relying on Sage and Milbank, the court of appeals developed a new test for determining whether an incident was an accident. This test involves ascertaining whether the insured’s conduct was wrongful. Gilman v. State Farm Fire & Cos. Co.,
During this same time period, we developed a related analysis that we have used in determining whether an insured acted
After considering our jurisprudence and the court of appeals’ analysis leading to the definition of the word accident, we reject the court of appeals’ analysis because it excludes the inquiry into whether there was intent to injure. The result of the application of the court of appeals’ test from Gilman is that the coverage analysis is more restrictive — results in narrower coverage — than our intentional act exclusion analysis. This result is problematic, and the court of appeals recognized the need to avoid this illogical result in Milbank when it stated, “[i]t makes little sense to give a narrower reading to ‘occurrence’ than we do to an exclusion from coverage for the ‘occurrence.’ ”
We conclude that the Hauen-stein definition of accident as an unexpected, unforeseen, or undesigned happening or consequence remains applicable and should have been used in the present case. While we reject the court of appeals’ narrower definition of accident, we are mindful of our acknowledgment in Bartlett that the Hauenstein definition has proved troublesome in application. We believe that the appropriate solution is to recognize the relationship between the definition of accident in the analysis of coverage provisions and the definition of intentional conduct in the analysis of intentional act exclusions. It would be preferable-at least in terms of common sense expectations of the meaning of contractual provisions-that a general coverage provision provide a broad scope of coverage that is then limited by a specific exclusion. However, in the absence of a workable definition of accident that yields such a result, it is better here to acknowledge that accidental conduct and intentional conduct are opposite sides of the same coin. The scope of one in many respects defines the scope of the other.
Reconciling the scope of the coverage concept of accident and the exclusion concept of intentional act exclusions is not a new idea. In Tower Ins. Co. v. Judge, the U.S. District Court, reviewing Minnesota law, stated that “the question whether [the victim’s] death was an ‘accident’ and the question whether the intentional act exclusions apply are, for all practical purposes, identical issues.”
We do not conclude or suggest that the scope of coverage for accidents will always coincide with the scope of an exclusion for intentional acts. Rather, we conclude that in analyzing whether there was an accident for purposes of coverage, lack of specific intent to injure will be determinative, just as it is in an intentional act exclusion analysis.
Here, the American Family policy provides coverage for bodily injury caused by an occurrence, which in turn is defined as an accident. When the policy is construed with our definition of accident, the policy provides coverage for bodily injury caused by an incident in which the resulting harm was unintended or unexpected by
II.
Our conclusion that Jewison has shown that the May 1996 incident falls within the coverage provision of American Family’s policy does not end our inquiry. We next must consider whether the exclusionary provision of American Family’s policy should operate to deny coverage. When interpreting insurance policies, we construe language in an exclusionary provision in accordance with the expectations of the insured party. American Family Mut. Ins. Co. v. Peterson,
The district court found that Walser acted intentionally, but that he did not have specific intent to injure Jewison. We already have concluded that this finding was not erroneous. We have stated that the purpose of intentional act exclusions is to exclude insurance coverage for wanton and malicious acts by an insured, and therefore we may, absent a finding of specific intent to injure, infer intent to injure as a matter of law. Farmers Ins. Exch. v. Sipple,
We have previously stated that the inference of intent to injure as a matter of law arises when the insured acted in a calculated and remorseless manner or when the insured’s actions were such that the insured knew or should have known that a harm was substantially certain to result from the insured’s conduct. Cont’l Western Ins. Co. v. Tool,
There is no bright line rule as to when a court should infer intent to injure as a matter of law; rather, the determination is made through a “case by case factual inquiry.” R.W.,
This case by case factual inquiry has led us to infer intent to injure as a matter of law in certain circumstances. In Woida, we inferred intent to injure when the insured drove to a construction site armed with a high-powered rifle loaded with armor-piercing bullets and fired at a guard’s truck, which he knew was occupied.
We also have inferred intent to injure in a number of cases involving some type of sexual contact. In R.W., we inferred intent to injure when the insured had unprotected sexual intercourse even though he knew or should have known that he had herpes.
These cases provide examples of situations where there was a basis to infer intent to injure. In each case, the insureds acted in a manner in which they knew or should have known that some harm was substantially certain to result; that is, they acted with deliberate and calculated indifference to the risk of injury. R.W.,
The district court concluded as a matter of law that it could not infer that Walser intended to injure Jewison. We. agree with this conclusion. After comparing the facts in this case to those in which we have inferred intent to injure in the past, we conclude, as we did in Brown, that the cases in which we infer intent to injure are factually more extreme than those presented here. Jewison, Walser, and Shoemaker were teenage boys “goofing around” in a high school gym. The record shows that both Jewison and Wal-ser had hung by their hands from a rim of a basketball hoop on numerous occasions and had witnessed others doing so, but neither of them had ever seen anyone injured from a fall from a rim. Jewison testified that he had fallen while attempting to hang from the rim in the past, and
Reversed and remanded.
Notes
. The intentional act exclusion at issue in R.W. is similar to the one in the American Family policy at issue here in that it excludes coverage for injury “caused intentionally’' by the insured. R.W.,
. The dissent and American Family assert that the Hauenstein definition of accident that includes both unforeseen happening and unforeseen consequences cannot be used here because of the specific language in the American Family policy that speaks in terms of coverage for “injury caused by an occurrence.” American Family asserts that defining accident (and therefore occurrence) as an unforeseen consequence — injury—yields a grammatically unsound result in that the policy would provide coverage where “injury is caused by an unforeseen injury.” American Family argues that injury can only be caused by an event, so the focus must be only on whether the event was intended. This argument fails because the proper analysis cannot be driven merely by the syntax chosen for defining an accident. Although expressed as an unforeseen happening or consequence in Hauenstein, without changing the meaning, tire definition of accident could just as easily have been stated as "an unforeseen happening or a happening that results in unforeseen consequences.” Such wording would avoid the inconsistency relied on by American Family and the dissent.
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting).
I respectfully dissent. The insurance policy at issue here provides coverage if the insured becomes legally obligated to pay damages for “bodily injury or property damage * * * caused by an occurrence during the policy period.” The term “occurrence” is defined in the policy as “an accident, including continuous or repeated exposure to substantially the same general harmful conditions.” The policy also states that it “will not pay for damages due to bodily injury or property damage expected or intended from the standpoint of the insured.” Under the language of the insurance policy, it makes no difference whether the insured intended injury or not — the only concern is whether the act causing the injury was accidental or intentional.
It is undisputed that Jewison, a ninth grade student, was injured when he fell from where he was hanging from the rim of a basketball hoop to a gymnasium floor. It is also undisputed that Walser, a sophomore, and Shoemaker, a senior, deliberately and repeatedly tugged at Jewison’s ankles in an attempt to get him down from the basketball rim. Jewison testified that the boys backed up while pulling on his ankles so that he hung from the rim at an angle. Walser acknowledged they might have been pulling Jewison’s legs at an angle. Jewison fell when, after repeated attempts to dislodge Jewison from the basketball rim, Walser and Shoemaker both took hold of his ankles and pulled harder and at an angle from a direct line to the floor, causing him to lose his grip.
Beginning, as we must, with the language of the policy, Franklin v. Western Nat’l Mut. Ins. Co.,
We will pay, up to our applicable limit, compensatory damages which any insured becomes legally obligated to pay as damages because of bodily injury or property damage to which this insurance applies. The bodily injury or property damage must be caused by an occurrence during the policy period. The occurrence must take place in the coverage territory.
(emphasis removed). An occurrence, under the policy definition, is “an accident * * *.» ⅛6 p0iiCy provides coverage for bodily injury “caused by an accident.” “Accident,” as we defined it in Hauenstein, “is an unexpected, unforeseen, or unde-signed happening or consequence * * *.”
Coverage is also barred by the intentional acts exclusion. Paragraph 11 of the American Family policy provides an exclusion for intentional injury: “We will not pay for damages due to bodily injury or property damage expected or intended from the standpoint of the insured.” (emphasis in original). Jewison characterized the incident as “just goofing around.” An inference of intent to cause bodily injury arises and the insured’s conduct falls within the intentional injury exception of an accident policy however where the insured’s actions are such that the insured knew or should have known “that harm was substantially certain to result” from that conduct. See, e.g., R.W. v. T. F.,
The majority strains to redefine the common sense notion of accident to reach the conclusion that because the injury was not specifically intended, the event must have been an accident.
The majority states that an insured’s conduct does not fall within the intentional injury exception unless the insured “acted with deliberate and calculated indifference to the risk of injury.” Evidence of deliberate and calculated indifference to the inherent risks of an action taken against another may be helpful in determining that an act was not accidental, but such a standard is an unnecessary departure from our previous holdings regarding intentional injury. See R.W. v. T.F.,
The policy at issue does not provide coverage for liability resulting from the conduct presented here. I would affirm the court of appeals.
. The majority argues this dissent hinges on the grammatical structure of the policy language and rejection of our definition of accident in Hauenstein. This is plainly incorrect, as no amount of grammatical maneuvering will alter the intentional and injurious character of the actions taken by Walser and Shoemaker.
