These declaratory judgment actions, involving issues of automobile insurance coverage, arose after David Castles assaulted James Cannon on Interstate 93. Castles had been driving his employer’s car, which was insured by Universal Underwriters Group (Universal Underwriters), while Cannon had been driving his own car, insured by Maine Bonding & Casualty Company (Maine Bonding). The Superior Court (Hollman, J.) ruled that Cannon’s injuries did not arise out of any use of Castles’ employer’s car and, therefore, that Universal Underwriters is not obligated to provide Castles with liability coverage and that Maine Bonding is not obligated to provide James and Carol Cannon with uninsured motorist benefits. The Cannons appeal, and we affirm.
The narrow issue on appeal is whether the superior court correctly ruled that Cannon’s injuries did not arise out of any use of the car Castles was driving. Universal Underwriters’ contractual and statutory obligations to provide liability coverage for Castles depend on Cannon’s injuries arising out of the use of this car. See RSA 259:61,1 (1993); RSA 264:20 (1993). Under the Maine Bonding insurance policy, uninsured motorist coverage depends on the same condition.
We recently explained in Akerley v. Hartford Insurance Group,
Similarly, at thé time of Castles’ assault on Cannon, Castles was no longer using his vehicle or acting as a motorist. Thus, under Akerley, the causal connection between use and injury here is tenuous. The Cannons counter that Castles used his employer’s car to trap Cannon and render him helpless against Castles’ attack. This argument, however, ignores the salient point in this fact pattern: Castles brought his employer’s car to a stop and left it unattended before
In the cases chiefly relied on by the Cannons, the assailant shot the victim while driving or riding in a moving vehicle. See State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co. v. Davis,
Affirmed.
