OPINION
A corporation was the named insured in a business auto policy. The corporation’s president, part-owner and key employee claimed he was a “family member” of the corporation and therefore entitled to under-insured motorist benefits. The insurance company denied coverage, filed this declaratory judgment action, and received summary judgment. We affirm.
I
James and Helen Chambers (“the Chambers”) and C & G Contracting, Inc. (“C & G”), appeal from the grant of summary judgment to American States Insurance Company (“American States”). James Chambers was a co-founder and half-owner of C & G, a small company that did paving, grading, asphalt and concrete work. James was also the president and key employee of C & G: he did the estimating, bidding, engineering, and much of the driving. Helen did bookkeeping and administration, including obtaining insurance.
American States issued a business auto policy in which C & G was the only named insured. The policy declarations page stated: “This policy provides only those coverages shown below. Each of these coverages will apply only to those autos shown as covered autos.” Coverages included $500,000 for single limit liability, uninsured motorist (“UM”), and underinsured motorist (“UIM”). The covered autos were five trucks.
James Chambers received an on-the-job injury while occupying a noncovered auto: he was a passenger in a vehicle that was owned by another contractor, driven by an employee of that other contractor — and rear-ended by a negligent driver. The Chambers recovered $50,000 from the negligent driver’s liability insurance, $17,500 from the other contractor’s UIM insurance, and $50,000 from the Chambers’ personal UIM insurance. The Chambers then claimed UIM coverage on the C & G business auto policy.
American States denied the claim and filed this declaratory judgment action. The parties moved for summary judgment and the trial court decided that:
The clear language of the business policy purchased by C & G Contracting, Inc. did not provide coverage under the circumstances in this case. There is no ambiguity regarding the language of the policy, or its endorsements which have been presented to the Court in the Statement of Facts. *423 Based on the clear language of the policy, the undisputed facts surrounding the accident in this case, and the absence of any persuasive public policy reason for rewriting this policy,
IT IS ORDERED granting [American States’] Motion for Summary Judgment.
The Chambers and C & G appealed. We have jurisdiction pursuant to A.R.S. section 12-2101(B) (1994).
II
The facts are undisputed. Judgment turns on interpretation of an insurance contract, a matter of law which we review de novo.
Thomas v. Liberty Mut. Ins. Co.,
The Chambers have three main arguments: 1) As an officer, owner and key employee of C & G, James reasonably expected coverage; 2) the “family member” language is ambiguous and illusory and should be construed to provide coverage; and 3) limiting UIM coverage to covered autos violates public policy. The arguments overlap and so does our discussion of them.
Ambiguous and Illusory
Page one, Part one of the C & G policy provides, in part, that: “The following words and phrases have special meaning throughout this policy and appear in boldface type when used: A. “You” and “your” mean the person or organization shown as the named insured in ITEM ONE of the declarations.” The Chambers agree that C & G is the only “you” and “your” in this policy.
The UIM endorsement to the C & G policy provides, in part, that:
A. WORDS AND PHRASES WITH SPECIAL MEANING
In addition to the WORDS AND PHRASES WITH SPECIAL MEANING in the policy, the following words and phrases have special meaning for UNDERINSURED MOTORISTS INSURANCE:
1. “Family member” means a person related to you by blood, marriage or adoption who is a resident of your household, including a ward or foster child.
D. WHO IS INSURED
1. You or any family member;
2. Anyone else occupying a covered auto or a temporary substitute for a covered auto____
3. Anyone for damages he is entitled to recover because of bodily injury sustained by another insured.
The Chambers agree that subsections D.2. and D.3. above are inapplicable to their case. The Chambers contend that “family member” is ambiguous and illusory. We will assume, without disagreeing with the trial court’s finding to the contrary, that “you or any family member” is ambiguous in a business auto policy when “you” is a corporation. The question then becomes whether that ambiguity results in coverage.
Many published opinions (none from Arizona) discuss the meaning, if any, of “family member” in a business auto policy. Most courts, like the trial court here, find that “family member” means nothing when “you” is a corporation, and they find no coverage on facts and language similar to what we have here.
See, e.g., Pearcy v. Travelers Indem. Co.,
A few courts have found coverage based on alleged “family member” ambiguity in a corporation’s business auto policy.
See, e.g.,
*424
Hawkeye-Security Ins. Co. v. Lambrecht & Sons,
Hawkeye-Security
involved a “general automobile policy” that provided UM coverage only to the corporation, meaning that it was illusory coverage because a corporation cannot receive bodily injury.
Ceci
found “family member” coverage on facts rather similar to those here; the corporation was closely-held and the claimant was the brother of the sole shareholder.
Ceci
and other cases basing coverage on alleged “family member” ambiguity followed a more rigid rule of contract interpretation than that adopted by the Arizona Supreme Court. In Connecticut, “an ambiguous provision in an insurance policy will be construed to favor the insured.”
Id.
at 548. In Texas, when ambiguity exists, courts “must adopt the construction that most favors the insured and must, as a matter of law, find in favor of coverage.”
Grain Dealers,
Contract Interpretation
The Arizona Supreme Court has rejected the rule that a court must always construe an ambiguous provision against the insurer, and has made clear that “[w]e prefer to adopt a rule of common sense and have attempted to do so on numerous occasions.”
State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co. v. Wilson,
When the named insured is a corporation, the main purpose of a business auto policy is to insure the corporation from liability for losses caused by operation of its vehicles. A reasonably intelligent consumer knows that a corporation is a legal entity, an artificial person that can neither sustain “bodily injury” nor have a “family member” within the meaning of a business auto policy. In the C & G policy, the same page of the UIM endorsement which mentions “family member” defines it as “a person related to *425 you by blood, marriage or adoption who is a resident of your household, including a ward or foster child.” We hold that, as a matter of common law and common sense, a reasonably intelligent consumer knows that he is neither related to a corporation by blood, marriage or adoption nor a resident of its household.
The Chambers argue that triable issues of fact exist regarding their “reasonable expectations”; we agree with the trial court that no such issues exist. The facts are undisputed, and the Chambers cannot prevail if Arizona law is properly applied to those facts. An Arizona court rewrites standardized insurance policy language only under the following limited circumstances:
1. Where the contract terms, although not ambiguous to the court, cannot be understood by the reasonably intelligent consumer who might check on his or her rights, the court will interpret them in light of the objective, reasonable expectations of the average insured;
2. Where the insured did not receive full and adequate notice of the term in question, and the provision is either unusual or unexpected, or one that emasculates apparent coverage;
3. Where some activity which can be reasonably attributed to the insurer would create an objective impression of coverage in the mind of a reasonable insured; [or]
4. Where some activity reasonably attributable to the insurer has induced a particular insured reasonably to believe that he has coverage, although such coverage is expressly and unambiguously denied by the policy.
Gordinier v. Aetna Casualty & Sur. Co.,
We have already discussed the first element and concluded that it is as apparent to the reasonably intelligent consumer as to this Court that James Chambers was not a “family member” of C & G. Notice of the coverage provided by the C & G policy is also not an issue here: the Chambers received and reviewed the C & G policy; the policy declarations and definitions are plain and simple; and the Chambers do not claim an inability to understand the policy.
The Chambers try to fit within the third and fourth Gordinier elements. James said he believed he had “full coverage” for himself and his employees and that this belief was reinforced when American States, on several occasions, requested names, birth dates, and drivers’ license numbers of C & G drivers, including himself. James claims he was shocked when American States denied coverage, and if he had known that UIM coverage applied only to covered autos, he would have taken steps to provide adequate coverage for himself and his employees. We respectfully conclude that these facts, when considered in light of the purpose and declarations of a corporation’s business auto policy, would not create an objective impression in the mind of a reasonable insured that he was a “family member” of the corporation or otherwise “covered” by the policy while occupying a noneovered auto.
Public Policy
The purpose of UIM coverage is to protect the insured from negligent, inadequately insured drivers.
See Wilson,
Arizona has consistently rejected exclusions or limitations on an insured’s UM and UIM coverage.
See Rashid v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co.,
The above-cited cases, however, all involved claims by persons who were an “insured” when injured. James Chambers was not such a person. In relation to the C & G policy, James Chambers was neither a named insured nor a family member of a named insured; he was an “anyone else” who had UIM coverage only when occupying a covered auto.
See Alcala v. Mid-Century Ins. Co.,
The Chambers rely on
Farmers Insurance Co. v. United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co.,
The
Farmers
trial court and Division Two of this Court both held that, because the employee was insured for liability by the Midway policy whether or not he was occupying a Midway-owned vehicle, USF & G could not provide less-inclusive UM coverage.
Id.
at 127-28,
The Chambers do not contend, nor could they successfully contend, that James Chambers was insured for liability by the C & G policy while using a noncovered auto. As relevant here, the liability section of the C & G policy provides as follows:
A. WE WILL PAY.
1. We will pay all sums the insured legally must pay as damages because of bodily injury or property damage to which this insurance applies, caused by an accident and resulting from the ownership, maintenance or use of a covered auto.
D. WHO IS INSURED.
1. You are an insured for any covered auto.
2. Anyone else is an insured while, using with your permission a covered auto you own, hire or borrow____
James Chambers was insured for liability under the C & G policy only when he was an “anyone else” in subsection D.2., a status he attained only while using a covered auto. Public policy does not restrict the parties’ right to agree on who is an insured.
Alcala,
Ill
James Chambers, who was an insured under the C & G policy only while occupying a *427 covered auto, was injured in a noncovered auto. The trial court’s judgment correctly declared that, as a matter of law, the Chambers had no UIM coverage under the C & G policy for this injury; they had no reasonable expectation of such coverage; and public policy does not require judicial revision of the C & G policy. The judgment is affirmed.
