Lead Opinion
Opinion
Juliе R. was raped by the uninsured driver of a car in which she was riding. She filed a claim against her uninsured motorist insurance policy, contending that her injuries from the assault arose out of the use of her assailant’s vehicle. The insurance company filed a declaratory relief action, seeking a declaration that the policy did not cover Julie R.’s injuries. We agree with the trial court that the policy does not provide coverage because there is an insufficient causal link between Julie R.’s injuries from the assault and the assailant’s use of his vehicle.
On July 22, 1995, Julie R. accompanied an acquaintance, Hooman Sebastian Aazami (Aazami), to the beach in Malibu. After about two hours they went to dinner at a restaurant in Hollywood. They departed the restaurant in Aazami’s BMW, which he was driving. Aazami stopped the car along the side of the Interstate 5 freeway near the Los Angeles River. Aazami parked the car against a chain link fence so that the passenger side door of the car could not be opened. Aazami got out of the car, stating that he needed to relieve himself.
When he returned to the car he began to make unwanted sexual advances toward Juliе R. Julie R. resisted. She tried to open the door of the car, but it was locked. She tried to roll down the windows, but they were power windows and she could not find the control panel. She tried to kick the windshield, but she was not able to because the seat was pushed all the way back. Julie R. was secured in her seat by a seat belt. During the attack Aazami made the passenger seat recline. Aazami moved to the passenger side of the car and raped Julie R. After the attack, Aazami drove Julie R. home.
Julie R. made a claim for benefits under the uninsured motorist coverage of an automobile insurance policy issued by American National Property and Casualty Co. (ANPAC) to Julie R.’s father. ANPAC filed a declaratory relief action, seeking a declaration that the uninsured motorist provisions of the policy did not cover the injuries Julie R. sustained in the attack by Aazami. It is conceded that Aazami was an uninsured motorist. The policy language in dispute provides: “We will pay damages for bodily injury which an insured person is legally entitled to recover from the owner or operator of an uninsured or an underinsured motor' vehicle. The bodily injury must be caused by accident and result from the ownership, maintenance, or use of the vehicle.”
At a court trial, Julie R. testified about the circumstances of the attack, and the insurance policy was admitted into evidence. The court held that when injuries are “caused by an act independent of and remote from the insured vehicle use, the requisite causal connection between the use and the injury is not established.” The court found that Aazami and his assault “are the actions that are the substantial factors and predominating cause of the injuries at issue.” Therefore the trial court found that the insurance policy “does not cover the incident at issue.”
Discussion
As the trial court noted in its decision, “[t]he facts involved in this matter are not in dispute.” Therefore “we begin from the established rule that
The issue of construction here is the meaning of the phrase “[t]he bodily injury must . . . result from the ... use of the vehicle.” Insurance companies are required by Insurance Code section 11580.2 to include uninsured motorist coverage in all automobile insurance policies аbsent a statutorily specified waiver. So long as an uninsured motorist policy grants benefits that are equal to or greater than the statutorily required benefits, “ ‘[t]he rights of the parties are to be determined by the terms of their policy . . . .’ ” (Utah Property & Casualty Ins. etc. Assn. v. United Services Auto. Assn. (1991)
Numerous California cases discuss the meaning of the phrase “arising out of the use” of a vehicle in the context of interpreting the coverage clause of an automobile insurance policy. Both sides rely on these authorities in their briefs and no party argues that the phrase “result from” should be interpreted any differently from the phrase “arising out of.”
In the leаding case interpreting the “arising out of’ language of an automobile insurance policy, the California Supreme Court observed that “California cases uniformly hold that the ‘use’ of an automobile need not amount to a ‘proximate cause’ of the accident for coverage to follow. [Citations.] Some minimal causal connection between the vehicle and an accident is, however, required. ‘Although the vehicle need not be, in the legal sense, a proximate cause of the injury, the events giving rise to the claim must arise out of, and be related to, its use.’ [Citation.]” (Partridge, supra,
However, where the role of the vehicle in the injury is merely as a situs for the act causing injury, courts have found that the injury does not arise from the use of the vehicle and that the injury is not covered. For example, coverage was denied for an injury caused when a gun inside a car at rest discharged because the bolt of the gun was pulled back. (Aetna Casualty & Surety Co. v. Safeco Ins. Co. (1980)
In this case, the vehicle was at rest and served as the situs of the assault causing injury to Julie R. Julie R. argues, however, that the assailant “used” certain physical aspects of the vehicle to trap her and to consummate the assault.
Mere use of a vehicle in some way connected to the events giving rise to the injury is insufficient to establish coverage. If use alone established coverage, then coverage should have been found in cases where the vehicle merely was the situs of the injury. There must be a causal connection betweеn the use of the vehicle and the injury.
The exact nature of the required causal connection expressly was left open in Partridge, supra,
Subsequent to Partridge, the predominating cause/substantial factor test was expressly adopted in Rowe v. Farmers Ins. Exchange (1992)
Applying the predominating cause/substantial factor test to the facts of this case, we find that the “use” of Aazami’s BMW in the rapе of Julie R. was incidental to, and not a substantial factor in, the infliction of injury on Julie R. In this case, the vehicle was “used” in three ways. It was transportation to and from the scene of the assault. It was parked along a chain link fence, restricting egress from the passenger side of the car. And it served as a confining locale for the rape. None of these “uses” of the vehicle was a substantial factor in the injury to Julie R.
Use of a vehicle as transportation to the scene of an injury does not establish a sufficient causal connection between the “use” and the injury. “ ‘[T]he mere transpоrtation of a tortfeasor to a site where he commits a tort after departing from the uninsured vehicle’ does not establish the requisite causal relationship.” (Rowe v. Farmers Ins. Exchange, supra,
Nor does the fact that Aazami parked his car next to a fence so that the pаssenger side door could not open establish a use of the car that is a substantial factor in Julie R.’s injury. In Aetna, supra,
Certainly, Aazami’s placement of his vehicle against the fence increased the danger that he would be successful in carrying out his intent to rape Julie R. But the rape “originated from, grew out of [and] flowed from” Aazami’s intent to rape Julie R. and his actions with his body to achieve that end. (Aetna, supra,
For the same reasons, use of the interior of the vehicle as a confining circumstance during the rape does not rise to the level of a substantial factor in the injury. In any rape, the perpetrator will use whatever is available at the site of the attack to attempt to confine or subdue his victim. But the role of the automobile in the rape of Julie R. was merely as a locale for the attack. Although the door was locked and the passenger seat reclined, nothing about the operation of the vehicle contributed to the attack any more than furniture or a corner used to trap a rape victim in a house could be said to be a substantial factor in causing a rape. “The distinction between Partridge and Aetna, supra, and the cases arrayed therein is that the vehicle in Partridge provided more than just a situs for the accident. The movement of the vehicle and its manner of operation was a contributing cause.” (State Farm Fire & Cas. Co. v. Kohl (1982)
In Farmers Ins. Exchange v. Hansel (1970)
The Hansel court acknowledged that the facts of that case could be characterized as involving “use of an automobile as an instrument to create a weapon in the form of a broken bottle and as a shield for an assault with that weapon . . , (
In this case, as in Hansel, the use of the vehicle is not “a contemplated ‘use’ even though the car passively was involved in the chain of events leading to the victim’s injuries.” (Interinsurance Exchange v. Macias, supra,
The cases cited by Julie R. do not require a contrary result. Julie R. relies on National American Ins. Co. v. Insurance Co. of North America (1977)
Julie R. also relies on Hartford Accident & Indent. Co. v. Civil Service Employees Ins. Co. (1973)
In holding that the injuries from the dog bite potentially were covered, the Hartford court relied on precedents involving coverage for injuries during the loading and unloading of vehicles. (
Moreover, Hartford did not apply the predominant cause/substantial factor test. The court relied on precedents interpreting “arising out of’ variously as “ ‘importing] some kind of sequential relationship between the vehicle and the accident’ ” (33 Cal.App.3d at pp. 31-32, quoting Pacific Indem. Co. v. Truck Ins. Exch. (1969)
Finally, Julie R. relies on Interinsurance Exchange v. Flores, supra,
Because, on the facts presented here, the use of the uninsured vehicle was not a predominating cause or substantial factor in Julie R.’s injury, we affirm the trial court’s finding that the automobile policy at issue does not cover Julie R.’s injury from the rape by Aazami.
Disposition
The judgment is affirmed. ANPAC is to recover its costs on appeal.
Curry, J., concurred.
Notes
Judge- of the Los Angeles Superior Court, assigned by the Chief Justice pursuant to article VI, section 6 of the California Constitution.
We dо not address in this case whether Insurance Code section 11580.2 requires an uninsured motorist policy to include coverage for intentional acts. ANPAC did not contend at trial or before this court that coverage should be denied on the ground that Julie R.’s injuries were not “caused by accident.” Indeed ANPAC paid for some of Julie R.’s medical expenses under another policy provision that also covered injuries “caused by accident.” ANPAC apparently has conceded that the “caused by accident” language of its policy does not preclude payment for injuries caused by intеntional acts (i.e., the rape by Aazami). Although we requested postargument briefs on the subject of whether Insurance Code section 11580.2 requires insurers to provide uninsured motorist coverage for intentional acts, we do not reach this issue because (1) it was not raised below, and (2) even if we were to hold that Insurance Code section 11580.2 does not require coverage for intentional acts, ANPAC arguably has conceded that Julie R.’s injuries were “caused by accident” within the meaning of its policy.
Julie R. also relies on Nationwide Mutual Ins. Co. v. Munoz (Cal.App.) another drive-by shooting case, but the opinion in this case was withdrawn by order of the Califоrnia Supreme Court on June 30, 1998, and Julie R.’s citation of this case violates California Rules of Court, rule 977.
Dissenting Opinion
A man so operates and positions his car as to imprison his passenger, whom he then rapes. The more detailed pertinent facts are these: the man drove the young woman, soon to be his victim, to Malibu, then to Hollywood where they had dinner. He then drove the car, with the lady as a passenger, onto a freeway and pulled over in such a way that the passenger door was pressed against a chain link fence. The passenger door also was locked. When the man made sеxual advances toward the woman, she tried to get out of the car. She could not, because the passenger car door was locked with the window up, and she could not find the control panel to lower it. She also was too far back in the seat, which the man had reclined, to kick out the front window, although she tried to do so. The man took advantage of these circumstances to rape her.
In employing the car as a cage to imprison the woman, was the attacker using it in such a way that the victim’s injuries arose out of the “use of a motor vehicle”? To ask that question is to answer it. The answer is “yes.”
The posture of the case precludes our consideration of whether the uninsured motorist statute requires an “accident” to trigger coverage (it does not use that term) and whether the Legislature intended it to apply to injuries inflicted by the intentional tort of an uninsured motorist. Language in several cases views the legislative purpose as being to provide the same protection to a person who is injured by an uninsured motorist as that person would have if the tortfeasor had insurance covering the incident. (See Farmers Ins. Exchange v. Hansel (1970)
The issue is interesting, but I agree with the majority that the posture of this case prevents us from reaching it. (Maj. opn., ante, at p. 138, fn. 1.) We must assume, for purposes, of this case, that there is no prohibition against application of the uninsured motorist statute to intentional tort situations.
The leading case in the field is State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co. v. Partridge (1973)
The court refined the amount of use needed to trigger coverages. It need not amount to proximate cause; “[sjome minimal causal connection between the vehicle and an accident is, however, required. ‘Althоugh the vehicle need not be, in the legal sense, a proximate cause of the injury, the events giving rise to the claim must arise out of, and be related to, its use.’ ” (State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co. v. Partridge, supra,
As the majority point out, some later cases have added new qualifications: that the use be a predominant or substantial factor in bringing about the injury. I see no justification for a predominance requirement, but I will accept that the use or operation of the vehicle must be a substantial (as opposed to insubstantial) factor in bringing about the injury. To borrow the majority’s metaphor (maj. opn., ante, at p. 142), there is no coverage if thе role of the vehicle is merely that of “furniture.” Farmers Ins. Exchange v. Hansel, supra,
The majority cite authority to the effect that the mere circumstance that a vehicle is used to transport someone to the site where an injury occurs (e.g., Truck Ins. Exch. v. Webb (1967)
Nor is coverage prevented by the obvious fact that the rape would not have occurred if the driver had not willed it. The same thing, or something like it, is true in virtually every case in which a vehicle is used in the commission of a tort, particularly an intentional tort.
The majority say that, although the uninsured motorist used physical aspects of the car to confine the victim (maj. opn., ante, at p. 142), neither movement of the car nor its operation contributed to the attack. “Operation” is a concept broader than driving, and includes acts that are fairly regarded as necessary incidents to driving a vehicle. Use is an even broader concept. “It extends to any activity utilizing the vehicle.” (Cabral v. Los Angeles County Metropolitan Transportation Authority (1998)
Other cases cited in the majority’s canvass, and by the parties, might also be discussed, and either applied or distinguished. No case has been cited in which a vehicle was used to transport the victim to a remote location where the vehicle itself was used as a trap to prevent her escape.
One of the cited cases, however, illustrates by contrast the distinction between “furniture” or happenstance use of a vеhicle, and use of the vehicle as a significant factor in commission of a tort. The case is Peters v. Firemen’s Ins. Co. (1998)
In this case, the trial Court found no triable issue of material fact, and granted summary judgment in favor of the insurer. My colleagues agree,
I agree with the majority (maj. opn., ante, at p. 138.) that there is no difference between the phrase “result from” use or operation of the vehicle, used in the uninsured motorist statute, and the phrase “arising out of,” which is typically used in liability cases. Consequently, liability cases construing the latter are pertinent here.
