OPINION
Following the death of Daniel Savage in early 2005, appellant Chong Suk Perry sought survivor’s economic loss benefits from Savage’s insurer, respondent Auto Owners Insurance Company. Respondent denied appellant’s request on the basis that she was not a survivor within the meaning of the insurance policy because she was not Savage’s “dependent.” Appellant sought arbitration, which the district court stayed after respondent filed a complaint in district court seeking a declaratory judgment to determine whether appellant qualified as a dependent. The district court granted respondent’s motion for summary judgment, concluding that appellant did not qualify as a dependent under the insurance policy and that the policy met the minimal coverage provisions required by the Minnesota No-Fault Act. We affirm.
FACTS
On December 23, 2004, Daniel Savage was fatally injured in an automobile accident while driving a vehicle owned and insured by his employer, Kincaids Cars, Inc. Respondent provided personal injury insurance coverage to Savage’s survivors. As a result of the accident, respondent paid out $20,000 in medical benefits and $2,000 in non-medical funeral benefits.
At the time of Savage’s death, appellant and Savage had lived together for seven years. According to appellant, she and Savage shared some expenses and a joint bank account, but she was financially dependent on him due to her inadequate income. Appellant made a claim to respondent for survivor’s economic loss benefits, which respondent denied on the basis that she did not meet the definition of a “dependent” within the meaning of the policy.
Respondent’s policy provides for “survivors economic loss benefits” that includes “loss ... of money or tangible things of economic value, not including services, that surviving dependents would have received from the eligible injured person for their support during their dependency.” The policy defines “dependent” as follows:
1. Dependent means:
a. the deceased person’s surviving spouse who resided with the deceased person at the time of his or her death;
*284 b. a child of the deceased person while under the age of 18 years or while over that age but physically or mentally incapacitated from earning provided:
(1) the child resided with the deceased person; or
(2) received support regularly from the deceased person;
at the time of his or her death.
Dependency of the surviving spouse ends at remarriage or death. The dependency of a child who is physically and mentally able to earn ends when the child attains majority, marries or otherwise becomes emancipated or dies.
After respondent denied appellant’s claim for economic loss benefits, appellant petitioned for no-fault arbitration, but the arbitration was stayed pending district court determination of the coverage issue. Respondent initiated a declaratory judgment action and later moved for summary judgment; the district court granted the motion, ruling that appellant did not meet the definition of “dependent” under the terms of the insurance policy and that the policy did not impermissibly restrict coverage in violation of the no-fault act.
ISSUE
Did the district court err in granting summary judgment to respondent because appellant did not meet the definition of a “dependent” for the purpose of receiving survivor’s benefits under respondent’s policy and the policy did not impermissibly restrict coverage under the Minnesota No-Fault Act?
ANALYSIS
The district court shall grant summary judgment if the pleadings, discovery, and affidavits show that there are no genuine issues of material fact and that either party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Minn. R. Civ. P. 56.03. “Generally, construction of a written contract is a question of law for the district court and therefore summary judgment is particularly appropriate.”
Knudsen v. Transp. Leasing/Contract, Inc.,
In interpreting respondent’s insurance policy, the district court concluded that appellant was ineligible for survivor’s economic loss benefits because she was neither a spouse nor a child of Daniel Savage and therefore did not meet the definition of “dependent” under the terms of the policy. We observe no error in this interpretation. The policy clearly and simply defines “dependent” as either a “surviving spouse” or “child of the deceased person.”
See Colangelo v. Norwest Mortgage, Inc.,
The district court also examined whether the policy coverage was within the requirements of the Minnesota No-Fault Act, which requires insurers to offer insurance coverage that satisfies the compensation purpose of the act, including offering survivor’s economic loss benefits.
See Iverson v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co.,
Appellant claims that the last sentence of the act’s definition of “dependent” creates a broader class of dependents. This sentence states that “Questions of the existence and the extent of dependency shall be questions of fact, considering the support regularly received from the deceased.”
Id.
No Minnesota court has interpreted this language, although in
Peevy v. Mutual Servs. Cas. Ins. Co.,
DECISION
Because appellant does not meet the definition of “dependent” under either respondent’s insurance policy or the Minnesota No-Fault Act, the district court properly ruled that she is not entitled to survivor’s economic loss benefits and granted summary judgment to respondent.
Affirmed.
