Appellant appeals the granting of appellees’ motions for summary judgment by the trial court. Because a genuine issue of material fact remains, the trial court incorrectly granted appellees’ motions for summary judgment. We therefore reverse.
On November 14, 1985, appellant, Leslie K. Bakos, drove his father’s automobile, a 1984 Buick Century, to Geauga Garden Towne, where appellant was employed. The automobile was insured under his father’s policy, No. IA 9283987, with appellee Insura Property & Casualty Insurance Company (“Insura”). Appellant’s father also held an additional Personal Liability Catastrophe Policy with appellee St. Paul Fire & Marine Insurance Company (“St. Paul”).
While appellant was at work, an individual, later identified as Steven Bell, entered Geauga Garden Towne and asked for someone to drive him to his automobile, claiming it had become disabled. Appellant proceeded to drive Bell west on Route 322 in Geauga County, Ohio. While appellant was driving, Bell started to jab at appellant’s head with what, appellant reported, “felt like a gun.” Appellant later stated that he was getting dazed by the blows.
Bell then grabbed appellant by the neck and hair and pushed his head against the window. Bell proceeded to push appellant as he sought to gain control of the automobile. The entire incident lasted approximately thirty seconds. Appellant was forced out of the car and onto the street, where he was struck by an oncoming vehicle driven by Don J. Woods. 1 Appellant was thrown into a ditch and sustained serious injuries. Bell left the scene and was later apprehended and prosecuted.
Appellant corresponded with Insura and St. Paul, asserting claims to any available medical payments benefits and uninsured motorist coverage in effect at the time of the incident. Appellant also filed suit against Bell on October 6, 1986. On December 2, 1986, St. Paul denied appellant’s claim. On November 11, 1987, Insura denied appellant’s claim.
Appellant amended his complaint in November 1987 to add Woods as a defendant. On September 21, 1988, after determining that Woods was not liable to appellant for his injuries, appellant accepted a “nuisance value settlement” of $900 from Woods’s insurance carrier. The trial court subsequently granted default judgment for appellant against Bell, awarding appellant $350,000 in compensatory damages and $100,000 in punitive damages.
“Plaintiffs injuries did not arise out of the operation, maintenance or use of an uninsured motor vehicle. Plaintiffs motion for summary judgment, requesting a declaratory judgment that coverage is available under either or both of defendants’ insurance policies, is denied.
“Defendant Insura Prop. & Cas. Ins. Co.’s motion for summary judgment is granted.
“Defendant St. Paul Fire & Marine Ins. Co.’s motions for summary judgment is granted.”
Appellant timely filed his appeal of the trial court’s determination.
I
In his sole assignment of error, appellant contends:
“The trial court erred in concluding, as a matter of law, that the injuries suffered by plaintiff-appellant did not arise out of the operation, maintenance or use of an uninsured motor vehicle, thereby denying access to the uninsured motorist coverages purchased from defendants-appellees.”
Appellant argues that the trial court incorrectly granted summary judgment for appellees Insura and St. Paul, as he is entitled to uninsured motorist coverage under both policies.
Pursuant to Civ.R. 56(C), summary judgment is proper when no genuine issue as to any material fact remains to be litigated, the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law, and it appears from the evidence that reasonable minds can come to but one conclusion, and viewing such evidence most strongly in favor of the party against whom the motion for summary judgment is made, that conclusion is adverse to that party. See
Welco Industries, Inc. v. Applied Cos.
(1993),
Initially, appellant argues that he is entitled to both medical payments coverage and uninsured motorist coverage pursuant to the Insura policy. However, appellant fails to allege any claims regarding the medical payments coverage in his complaint. He requests only a declaration that he “is an insured under the uninsured motorist provision of the policies with defendants” and that “the uninsured provision of the policies provide[s] coverage for the damages sustained as a result of the occurrence * * *.”
Furthermore, there is nothing in the record that indicates that Insura refused appellant’s request for medical payments coverage. The letter from Insura refusing to provide coverage to appellant stated only that there was “no legitimate uninsured motorist claim arising out of the circumstances of this incident.” Therefore, as there is no dispute regarding the medical payments coverage apparent from the record, neither the trial court nor this court need address this issue. See
Stover v. Progressive Cas. Ins. Co.
(Mar. 25, 1988), Miami App. No. 87CA37, unreported,
Appellant argues that he is entitled to coverage pursuant to the uninsured motorist provision of the Insura policy. Appellant’s insurance policy with Insura provides a maximum of $500,000 in uninsured motor vehicle coverage per accident. The policy includes the following language:
“We will pay damages for bodily injury an insured is legally entitled to collect from the owner or driver of an uninsured motor vehicle. The bodily injury must be caused by accident arising out of the operation, maintenance, or use of an uninsured motor vehicle.”
An “insured” as defined in the uninsured motor vehicle portion of the policy includes “the first person named in the declarations” and “their relatives * * The first person named in the declarations is Leslie Bakos, appellant’s father; thus, there is no question that appellant is an insured pursuant to the terms of the policy. Further, “ ‘[w]hen an insured is intentionally injured or killed by another, and the mishap is as to him unforeseen and not the result of his own misconduct, the general rule is that the injury or death is accidentally sustained within the meaning of the ordinary accident insurance policy and the insurer is liable therefor in the absence of a policy provision excluding such liability. * * * ’ ”
Kish v. Cent. Natl. Ins. Group
(1981),
The Ohio Supreme Court has previously interpreted a similar clause which required the insurer to pay bodily injury damages where the damages “result from an accident arising out of the ownership, maintenance, or use of the uninsured vehicles.”
Kish, supra,
at 49,
The court noted that a “but for” analysis would be inappropriate in such circumstances.
Id.
at 50,
The court later applied its reasoning in
Kish
to
Howell v. Richardson
(1989),
The
Howell
court first noted that the focus, according to
Kish,
was not on the mental state of the tortfeasor but on the instrumentality causing the death, again noting that the result in
Kish
would have been different had that death resulted from the intentional ramming from behind of the decedent’s vehicle by the tortfeasor’s vehicle.
Howell, supra,
at 369,
This court has also previously addressed this issue. In
Minshall v. Motorists Mut. Ins. Co.
(1991),
Recently, the Ohio Supreme Court again addressed this issue. In
Lattanzi v. Travelers Ins. Co.
(1995),
The relevant clause in the insurance policy in
Lattanzi
restricts coverage to bodily injuries which “arise out of the ownership, maintenance or use of the uninsured motor vehicle.”
Id.
The
Lattanzi
court, applying both
Kish
and
Howell,
noted that “the state of mind of the tortfeasor is irrelevant — it is how he causes the injury that is important.”
Id.
at 353,
The court concluded that since the victim had not received any injuries at the time she was removed from the car, any subsequent injuries she received were not “through the use of the automobile as an instrumentality.”
Lattanzi, supra,
at 353,
As the previously decided cases illustrate, the relevant determination is the relationship between the uninsured automobile and the injuries sustained by the insured. The connection is insufficient where the injuries sustained by the insured were not caused by the uninsured motor vehicle. Therefore, when determining whether an injury arises out of the operation, maintenance, or use of the uninsured vehicle, the focus of the inquiry is on causation.
However, a close examination of the facts of the action before us indicates that the instant action is distinguishable from the above-cited cases. In the action sub judice, appellant was in the act of operating the vehicle when Bell began to strike him with an object that “felt like a gun” and to attempt to take control of the vehicle. Bell took control and proceeded to push appellant out of the vehicle, forcing appellant onto the street, where he possibly sustained injuries caused by the motor vehicle itself. Furthermore, appellant was injured because he was pushed from his automobile onto a public roadway where he was struck by an oncoming automobile.
The facts now before this court are more similar to those in
Buckeye Union Ins. Co. v. Carrell
(1991),
In
Kish, Howell, Minshall,
and
Lattanzi,
the courts determined there was an insufficient causative link between the uninsured vehicle and the injuries sustained by the insured driver. See
Kish, Howell, Minshall,
and
Lattanzi, supra.
In contrast, given the facts in the action
sub judice,
there is a much more direct connection between appellant’s operation of the vehicle and the injuries appellant sustained. Reasonable minds may differ as to what extent the injuries appellant received while driving the car, while being pushed out of the car, and while being in the roadway and struck by an oncoming car arose out of the operation, use, or maintenance of the uninsured vehicle. A question of fact therefore remains as to
Insura alternatively argues that, if this court determines that appellant’s injuries did arise from the operation, maintenance, or use of the motor vehicle, the trial court’s decision was proper, as summary judgment was warranted on other grounds. Insura contends that appellant failed to comply with the terms of his policy with Insura, thus discharging Isura’s obligation to cover appellant pursuant to the policy.
First, appellant failed to exhaust the limits of the insurance coverage of Woods by accepting a settlement of $900 from Woods’s insurance carrier. The Insura policy provides:
“If this Insurance provides a limit in excess of the amounts required by the applicable law where your car is principally garaged, we will pay only after all liability bonds have been exhausted by judgments or payments.”
Ohio required minimum uninsured motorist coverage of $12,500; thus, appellant’s policy clearly was in excess of the required amount. Insura maintains that appellant faded to exhaust the limit of Woods’s policy. “An exhaustion clause is a valid precondition to the receipt of underinsured motorist coverage.”
Motorists Mut. Ins. Co. v. Grischkan
(1993),
Additionally, appellant’s policy prohibits coverage where the insured settles with a possible tortfeasor without first obtaining permission from Insura. The policy provides that there is no uninsured motorist coverage “for any insured who, without our written consent, settles with any person or organization who may be hable for the bodily injury.”
Furthermore, appellant failed to protect Insura’s subrogation rights. As a condition of the policy, regarding uninsured motor vehicle coverage, the policy states, “we are subrogated to the extent of our payments to the proceeds of any settlement the injured person recovers from any party liable for the bodily injury.”
A clause which protects rights of subrogation in an underinsured motorist provision is also valid and enforceable.
Grischkan, supra,
at 153,
The court determined that the plaintiffs’ failure to notify the defendant of the execution of the release destroyed defendant’s subrogation rights, thus constituting a breach of the insurance contract.
Id.
The court noted that the fact that the plaintiffs were twice denied coverage did not constitute a waiver of their insurance company’s right to consent to the proposed settlement where plaintiffs had not provided notice of the settlement offer to the defendant, since the defendant lacked the necessary knowledge to waive its right to consent to settlement.
Id.,
citing
Miraldi v. Life Ins. Co. of Virginia
(1971),
However, this court is not required to follow the decision of the Clermont County Court of Appeals and declines to do so. It is unreasonable to require that an insured notify its insurance company of a proposed settlement after the insurance company has already informed the insured that it would not provide coverage pursuant to the insurance policy. In the matter sub judice, Insura informed appellant that his policy of insurance would not provide coverage; therefore, appellant was essentially on his own. It would be disingenuous, at best, for Insura to deny coverage to its insured and then claim that he was, nevertheless, required to comply with the requirements in his insurance policy.
This court finds persuasive the reasoning applied in
Sanderson v. Ohio Edison Co.
(1994),
Although in the instant matter the issue is not Insura’s duty to defend, Insura did notify appellant that it would not provide coverage, leaving appellant to fend for himself. As appellant may indeed be entitled to coverage under the policy, Insura’s refusal to provide coverage constitutes a material breach. Thus, appellant logically could assume that he could make a reasonable settlement without prejudicing his rights under the contract. By its actions, Insura forwent its right to control the litigation.
Similarly, in
Ward v. Custom Glass & Frame, Inc.
(1995),
“The purpose for paying premiums of insurance coverage is to buy peace of mind so that when accidents occur, the insured can trust that his insurance company will not renege on its agreement. When an insurance company refuses to provide coverage and at the same time seeks to maintain control of the same litigation, it disclaims liability to indemnify and creates a frustration of purpose.” Id. at 137,663 N.E.2d at 737 .
In the instant action, appellant failed to exhaust the liability policy limit, failed to seek Insura’s approval of the settlement proposal, and failed to protect Insura’s subrogation rights. However, Insura had already made it clear to appellant that it would not be providing coverage to appellant for the uninsured motorist claim. To require that appellant still comply with the policy’s provisions before accepting the settlement offer would be unreasonable; to do so would allow Insura to retain control of the matter even after it had refused appellant’s claim.
Because a question of fact remains to be determined as to whether the incident arose out of the operation, maintenance, or use of the uninsured motor vehicle, and appellant was not required to comply with the terms of the insurance policy after Insura had already refused coverage pursuant to the policy, Insura’s motion for summary judgment was improperly granted by the trial court.
Judgment accordingly.
Notes
. It was unclear from the record whether the car was stopped or still moving when appellant hit the street.
. The policy included a provision requiring that the company would defend any suit "even if any of the allegations of the suit are groundless, false or fraudulent * * *.”
Id.
at 584,
