OPINION
Case Summary
American Home Assurance Co. ("American Home") appeals the trial court's grant of summary judgment in favor of insurance agents Thomas G. Allen, Joe. M. Gil-strap, Thomas G. Grier, James H. Nelson, Donald K. Owens, Richard K. Patierno, Richard K. Patierno, Jr., Silvine M. Patier-no, and John M. Stone (collectively, "Plaintiffs"). This dispute arose over a professional liability policy issued by American Home with limits of liability of $250,000 for each wrongful act or series of continuous, repeated, or interrelated wrongful acts and $750,000 in the aggregate. American Home contends that the clear and unambiguous language of the insurance policy provides that the coverage is limited to $250,000, not $750,000. Because we find the terms of the policy-continuous, repeated, or interrelated wrongful acts-to be ambiguous, we strictly construe them against the insurer, American Home, and in favor of maximum coverage. We therefore affirm the trial court. 1
Facts and Procedural History
This is an appeal from a summary judgment order determining the policy limits of a Life Insurance Agents and Brokers Professional Liability Policy ("the Policy") issued by American Home Policy No. 2417052 to Glenn Guffey. The Policy provides that its limits of liability are $250,000 for "Each Wrongful Act or series of continuous, repeated or interrelated Wrongful Acts" or $750,000 in the aggregate. Appellant's App. p. 74 (emphasis 'added). The Policy did not define the terms "continuous, repeated or interrelated."
The relevant facts are that Plaintiffs are life insurance agents in North or South Carolina. Over the course of seven years, life insurance agent Glenn Guffey recruited Plaintiffs to sell the Flex II annuity, a tax-deferred annuity offered by Great American Reserve Insurance Co. ("Great Americam”). 2 In exchange for annual premiums, the Flex II promised annuity income in the future. Guffey individually trained Plaintiffs, and part of that instruction included telling them that the Flex II had no front-end load, meaning that no commission or other fees would reduce the amount of premiums used to build up the value of the policy. In fact, the Flex II did have a front-end load. After some of Plaintiffs' customers complained about misrepresentations in the sale of the Flex II, the South Carolina Department of Insurance launched an investigation. As a result of the investigation, most of the nine *665 Plaintiffs entered into consent decrees with the department admitting that they had misrepresented the Flex II as to the existence of a front-end load.
Plaintiffs initiated this suit in the Hamilton Cireuit Court, asserting twelve counts against Guffey and Great American. The substance of many of these claims is that Plaintiffs incurred liability to their customers and costs of regulatory proceedings and defense of civil lawsuits, all as a result of Guffey's and Great American's misrepresentations that the Flex II had no front-end load. 3
Because the allegations of the lawsuit centered on Guffey's professional lability, American Home, as Guffey's insurer, represented him. In June of 1999, Guffey filed a motion on behalf of American Home, along with a proposed order, requesting leave to tender to the trial court "the remaining policy limits under American Home Assurance Company Policy No. 2417052 to be held by the Court and used towards any judgment or award rendered in the above captioned case." Appellant's App. p. 92. Plaintiffs filed a response in which they agreed that the policy limits should be tendered to the trial court and suggested that the money be held in an interest-bearing account. In the response, to which Guffey did not reply, Plaintiffs also "contend[ed] that the applicable limit under the policy is $750,000." Appellant's App. p. 96. Later that month, the trial court signed Guffey's proposed order but added the condition that the money be held in an interest-bearing account. Specifically, the order provided that "the remainder of the policy limits from American Home Assurance Company Policy No. 2417052 shall be tendered to this Court and held in an interest-bearing account until such time as a judgment or award is rendered in this case." Appellant's App. p. 99. The order did not specify the amount of the remaining policy limits. Since that order, American Home has not tendered any monies to the trial court.
Thereafter, Plaintiffs filed a Motion to Enforce Court Order, in which it asked the trial court to enforce its Order requiring American Home to tender the remainder of the policy limits to the court. After a hearing on this motion, the trial court took the matter under advisement.
Before ruling on Plaintiffs' Motion to Enforce Court Order, the trial court entered partial summary judgment rulings that the Indiana Supreme Court ultimately affirmed in part, reversed in part, and remanded to the trial court. Allen v. Great Am. Reserve Ins. Co.,
Plaintiffs sought leave to add American Home as a party, which the trial court granted, and filed an amended complaint. American Home filed an answer asserting four defenses. Plaintiffs then filed a motion for summary judgment against American Home to establish American Home's indemnity obligations under the Policy. Plaintiffs also filed a Second Motion to Enforce Court Order. Following a hearing on these motions, the trial court issued the following order:
The Policy contains an aggregate limit of $750,000, with a limit of $250,000 for "each wrongful act or series of continuous, repeated or interrelated wrongful acts." The Policy does not define "interrelated wrongful acts." Courts regularly hold that the "interrelated wrong *666 'ful acts" language is ambiguous and must be construed to provide maximum coverage. The American Home policy is ambiguous as a matter of law. «The claims asserted by the Plaintiffs in this action against Guffey are separate, distinct claims, and American Home is obligated to pay under its Policy an amount up to the aggregate limit of $750,000.
On June 30, 1999[,] this Court ordered defendant Guffey and American Home to tender to this Court the remainder of the policy limits from the American Home Policy. The remaining amount of the aggregate limit of the Policy, as of June 30, 1999, should have been tendered to the Court at that time. Despite this Coutt's Order, the remainder of the Policy limits was not tendered to the Court.
Appellant's App. p. 23. Accordingly, the trial court entered summary judgment in favor of Plaintiffs and ordered American Home to tender an amount up to the aggregate limit of $750,000 to the court within twenty days. The trial court stated that the funds would be held in an interest-bearing account "until such time as a judgment or award is rendered in this case. The proceeds shall be released. and disbursed according to the judgment and award." Id. American Home appeals this order.
Discussion and Decision
American Home contends that the trial court erred in granting summary judgment in favor of Plaintiffs. "The purpose of summary judgment is to terminate litigation about which there can be no factual dispute and which may be determined as a matter of law." Bushong v. Willlamson,
Insurance contracts are [governed by the same rules of construction as other contracts. Colonial Penn Ins. Co. v. Guzorek,
Failure to define a term in an insurance policy does not necessarily make it ambiguous. Guzorek,
Here, the Declarations Page of the Policy provides that its limits of liability are $250,000 for "Each Wrongful Act or series of continuous, repeated or interrelated Wrongful Acts" or $750,000 in the aggregate. Appellant's App. p. 74. There is also a Limits of Liability special provision in the Policy, which provides:
The limit of liability stated in the Declarations as applicable to "Each Wrongful Act or series of continuous, repeated or interrelated Wrongful Acts" is the limit of the Company's liability for all amounts payable hereunder in settlement or satisfaction of claims, judge-ments or awards and defense costs, charges and expenses arising out of the same Wrongful Act or series of continuous, repeated or interrelated Wrongful Acts, without regard to the number of insureds, claims, demands, suits or proceedings or claimants.
Appellant's App. p. 78. Thus, under the terms of the policy, only $250,000 is available to satisfy claims arising out of the "same Wrongful Act or series of continuous, repeated or interrelated Wrongful Acts" regardless of the number of insureds, claims, demands, suits, proceedings, or claimants. Id.
American Home argues that according to the clear and unambiguous language of the Policy, Guffey's alleged misrepresentations to each of the nine Plaintiffs that the Flex II did not have a front-end load arose out of a "series of continuous, repeated or interrelated Wrongful Acts" such that the limit of liability is only $250,000. Plaintiffs, on the other hand, argue that the trial court correctly determined that the Policy language is ambiguous and therefore the limit of liability should be construed in their favor to provide maximum coverage. Each of the parties focus their arguments primarily on the term "interrelated."
Plaintiffs direct our attention to the only three published cases that construe the term "interrelated." In each of these cases, the ruling court determined that the term "interrelated" was ambiguous and construed the insurance policy in favor of the insured. In the first of these cases, McCuen v. American Casualty Co.,
In the second case cited by Plaintiffs, Home Insurance Co. of Illinois v. Spectrum Information Technologies, Inc., the insurance policy contained language strikingly similar to the language at issue here: "all claims arising from the same wrongful act or interrelated, repeated, or continuous wrongful acts of the insured shall constitute a single claim."
Finally, Plaintiffs cite Sigma Financial Corp. v. American International Specialty Limes Inswrance Co.,
American Home also directs our attention to several cases; however, all of these cases involve -the term "related" as opposed to "interrelated."
4
In Gregory v. Home Insurance Co.,
Two or more claims arising out of a single act, error, omission or personal 0377,qu or a series of related acts, errors, omissions or personal injuries shall be treated as a single claim.
Id. at 604. In addressing this provision, the Seventh Cireuit found that there is a common understanding of the term "related" and that it covers a very broad range of connections, both causal and logical. Id. at 606. Accordingly, the court concluded that the term "related" was not ambiguous and therefore affirmed the district court's conclusion that the individual eclass mem-bersg' claims constituted a single claim. Id.
The term "related" was also found not to be ambiguous in Continental Casualty Co.
*669
v. Wendt,
Here, we observe that the Policy contains the term "interrelated," not "related." Accordingly, we find that the cases following the Eighth Circuit's opinion in McCuen, which involved the term "interrelated," are more on point than the cases following the Seventh Cireuit's opinion in Gregory, which involved the term "related." Thus, we find the term "interrelated" in this insurance policy to be ambiguous. We do so for a number of reasons. First, unlike the term "related," "interrelated" has no common understanding as to its meaning. Second, the Policy does not define the term. Third, the definition of "interrelated" can be read restrictively or more expansively. The restrictive definition, as defined in Sigma, requires mutuality between the wrongful acts while the broader definition requires only parallelism between the wrongful acts. 5 Because of the expansiveness of the definition, we agree with the Eighth Circuit that the term "interrelated" can be interpreted as elastic and without practical boundary. 6 Given this ambiguity, we must strictly construe the term "interrelated" against the insurer, American Home. In so doing, we adopt the restrictive meaning, cited by Sigma, which requires a mutual relationship or connection. We find that there is no mutuality between the alleged wrongful acts of Guffey. While the acts all flow from Guffey, the acts do not share any mutuality or interdependence among themselves. In other words, each alleged wrongful act does not impact another act that in turn impacts it. This is particularly so as the acts are scattered over a seven-year period of time. As a result of this strict construal, we conclude that the trial court correctly determined that the claims were separate and distinct acts and the limit of liability available to satisfy any Judgment that Plaintiffs may ultimately recover under the Policy is $750,000. We affirm the trial court's grant of summary judgment in favor of Plaintiffs. 7
Affirmed.
Notes
. We hereby deny Plaintiffs' Petition for Oral Argument.
. The Flex II annuity was initially offered by Jefferson. National Life, which subsequently merged into Great American, a Texas life insurance company with its principal office in Indiana. . Great American succeeded to Jefferson's policies. For purposes of convenience, we refer to the annuities as those of Great American.
. Our Supreme Court has already heard an appeal of this case. Allen v. Great Am. Reserve Ins. Co.,
. Even if we were to find that the terms "related" and "interrelated" had the same meaning, we observe that division of authority on an issue is instructive and is evidence that more than one reasonable interpretation of a term is possible. Hartford Accident & Indem. Co. v. Dana Corp.,
. One definition of "interrelated" is "parallelism." Webster's Third New International Dictionary 1182 (1993). "Parallelism," in turn, is defined as "resemblance, correspondence, similarity." Id. at 1637.
. We likewise conclude that the terms "continuous" and "repeated" as used in the Policy are ambiguous. As to the term "continuous," we agree with the Spectrum court that "a series of continuous wrongful acts" is an expansive phrase with no practical boundaries.
. Plaintiffs also contend that American Home waived its right to now assert any policy defenses by requesting leave in 1999 to tender to the trial court the remainder of the policy limits. Essentially, Plaintiffs argue that by offering to tender the remainder of the policy limits to the trial court, American Home conceded it was liable for Guffey's alleged misrepresentations. However, the issue before the trial court on summary judgment was whether the Policy's limits of liability are $250,000 or $750,000. The issue was not Great American's liability. In fact, in its summary judgment order, the trial court instructed American Home to tender to the court "the amount remaining of the $750,000 aggregate limit of the American Home Policy ... to be held {[in] an interest-bearing account until such time as a judgment or award is rendered in this case." Appellant's App. p. 23 (emphasis added). Thus, it is evident that the issue of whether American Home is liable for Guf-fey's alleged misrepresentations has not yet been determined. Accordingly, it is premature to address any potential defenses American Home may have. In any event, the trial court did not make a determination on this point in its summary judgment order, and therefore we express no opinion on it.
