OPINION
Plaintiff Ronald Draughon appeals from an order denying his motion for summary judgment and granting defendant CUNA Mutual Insurance Society’s cross-motion for summary judgment. The trial court ruled that the credit life insurance policy CUNA issued to Draughon and his wife unambiguously excluded coverage for the loss Draughon claimed. We reverse and remand with instructions to enter judgment for Draughon.
FACTS
In October of 1985, Draughon and his wife borrowed money from America First Credit Union to purchase an automobile. As part of this transaction, the Draughons bought a credit life insurance policy from CUNA. In relevant part, with our emphasis, the policy required CUNA to pay the remaining balance on the Draughons’ automobile loan upon the death of either of them, but excluded coverage “if any material contributing cause of [death] was from sickness or injury which first became manifest prior to the time insurance coverage was otherwise effective....”
On the effective date of coverage, Mrs. Draughon suffered from a kidney disease which was treated by hemodialysis three times per week. Her physician testified at his deposition that with continuing treatments she was expected to live an otherwise normal life for another twenty to thirty years. Nonetheless, in November of 1985 Mrs. Draughon elected to undergo a kidney transplant operation. The operation itself was successful, but Mrs. Draughon developed acute pancreatitis as a consequence of an immunosuppressive steroid drug administered to help prevent rejection of the transplanted kidney. 1 The pancreati-tis led to an internal abdominal infection *1107 and, in turn, Mrs. Draughon’s fatal cardiac arrest on February 7, 1986.
Shortly after his wife’s death, Draughon filed a claim under the policy and demanded that CUNA pay off the America First loan. CUNA denied Draughon’s claim, asserting that his wife’s pre-existing kidney disease was a “material contributing cause” of her death for which coverage was excluded. Draughon then filed this action. Both he and CUNA filed cross-motions for summary judgment, and CUNA’s motion was granted. The trial court held that Mrs. Draughon’s pre-existing kidney disease was a “material contributing cause” of her death for which coverage was unambiguously excluded as a matter of law. The court reasoned that “[i]f not for her kidney disease, Mrs. Draughon would not have elected to undergo a kidney transplant. If she had not had the kidney transplant, she would not have been given steroid drugs which caused acute pancreat-itis, which ultimately caused her death.”
On appeal, Draughon argues that the trial court erred by interpreting the phrase “material contributing cause” according to Oregon workers’ compensation law. 2 Draughon contends that he, not CUNA, is entitled to judgment as a matter of law given the undisputed evidence before the trial court.
OREGON CASES
No reported Utah decision has interpreted the phrase “material contributing cause” in the context of an insurance policy exclusion. Nor could we, the parties, or the trial court locate any such compelling cases from other jurisdictions. Noting this lack of authority, the trial court sought to construe the phrase consistent with Oregon decisions involving claims under Oregon’s workers’ compensation statutory scheme.
See Manous v. Argonaut Ins.,
The trial court’s reliance on these cases is misplaced for two reasons. First, we fail to see the substantive relevance of Oregon’s workers’ compensation law to the interpretation of insurance contracts in Utah, even if the same phrase is involved in both instances. Second, these Oregon cases are not helpful here as they do not purport to
define
the phrase “material contributing cause,” which is the task in this case. Rather, the Oregon courts utilize the phrase to further explain when an injury is deemed “arising out of” the injured person’s employment for purposes of adjudicating entitlement to workers’ compensation benefits.
See, e.g., Olson v. State Indus. Accident Comm’n,
We conclude the Oregon cases are irrelevant to the present matter, and shed no light on the meaning of the phrase “material contributing cause” as used in the CUNA policy.
SUMMARY JUDGMENT IN FAVOR OF CUNA
To sustain the judgment in favor of CUNA, we must conclude, as a matter of law, that Mrs. Draughon’s kidney disease was a “material contributing cause” of her
*1108
death. From all that appears, the phrase “material contributing cause” is not defined in the policy,
3
and it must be interpreted by us. CUNA bears the burden to prove Draughon’s claim falls within the policy exclusion.
See, e.g., LDS Hosp. v. Capitol Life Ins. Co.,
94 Utah Adv.Rep. 16, 18,
Rules of Interpretation
The interpretation of an integrated, unambiguous
4
contract is a question of law, and, accordingly, we give no particular deference to the trial court’s interpretation.
See, e.g., Kimball v. Campbell,
“Material Contributing Cause”
With the above rules of interpretation in mind, we note that the phrase “material contributing cause” as used in the CUNA policy is significant only as a legal concept of causation. The phrase is not employed to describe a person, place, or thing about which average purchasers of insurance can be expected to have much of an understanding. This compounds the insurer’s burden to prove coverage is clearly excluded. For example, the meaning of the term “motor vehicle,” when used in an insurance policy, may be somewhat unclear absent express definition. However, average persons have at least some understanding of the term’s intended meaning because of its familiarity, and we construe it accordingly.
See Clark,
As we see it, the average purchaser of insurance would understand the CUNA policy to exclude coverage where death is a natural, medically connected consequence of a pre-existing sickness or injury. The sickness or injury need not be the only cause of death, but there must be a medical link between the death and the disease. On the other hand, we think the average purchaser of insurance would not understand the policy to exclude coverage where a totally different illness caused by
medical treatment
for a pre-existing disease was the exclusive cause of death. If such an exclusion was intended, it is CUNA’s responsibility to draft its policy to clearly convey this message to its insureds. Indeed, other insurers with such an intention have found a way to say so.
See, e.g., Schick v. Nationwide Ins. Co.,
Moreover, our interpretation of the policy is entirely consistent with insightful hypothetical situations offered by the trial court in support of its ruling, and revisited by CUNA on appeal. The trial court explained that, in its view, coverage under the subject policy would be available where an insured cancer patient is hit by a car and killed while walking to the hospital to receive medical treatment. On the other hand, coverage would be excluded where an AIDS patient dies after contracting pneumonia. We do not take exception to this dichotomy. However, we find the distinction appropriate mainly because the AIDS patient’s death from pneumonia is a natural, medical consequence of the underlying disease, whereas the cancer patient’s being struck by an automobile is medically unrelated to the cancer. This is true even though “but for” the cancer or the AIDS, the patient in each scenario would not have encountered the precise event ultimately causing death. In our view, Mrs. Drau-ghon’s being struck with pancreatitis is more like the cancer patient being struck by a car than an AIDS patient being struck by pneumonia.
Thus, CUNA is entitled to its summary judgment only if the undisputed evidence *1110 establishes that Mrs. Draughon’s kidney disease itself contributed naturally and medically to her death. As explained above, the requisite causal link is not established simply because “but for” her disease, she would not have had the transplant. Conversely, if the undisputed evidence establishes as a matter of law that the medical treatment Mrs. Draughon received caused her death, without contribution by her kidney disease, Draughon is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.
CONCLUSION
A review of the evidence before the trial court requires the entry of a judgment for Draughon. CUNA has simply failed to meet its burden to prove Draughon’s claim falls within the exclusion. The only evidence before the trial court, in addition to noncontradictory deposition testimony, was the affidavit of Dr. Wayne Border, Mrs. Draughon's last attending physician, and the affidavit of Dr. Robert Bond, who reviewed Mrs. Draughon’s medical records following her death. Dr. Border asserts in his affidavit that Mrs. Draughon's death was caused by pancreatitis, an unusual complication of the kidney transplant but medically unrelated to her kidney disease. Dr. Bond stated in his affidavit that “pan-creatitis was a complication that in all probability occurred as a result of the treatment that was done for Sandra Draughon’s primary, underlying renal disease.”
Thus, the expert medical testimony in this case is undisputed and clearly establishes that Mrs. Draughon’s underlying kidney disease did not contribute to her death in any natural or medical sense. 6 It is equally clear that she died exclusively as a consequence of the medical treatment she had received three months previously. 7
Accordingly, the judgment in favor of CUNA is reversed and the case remanded with instructions to enter judgment in favor of Draughon.
Notes
. Her reaction to the drug was described in one doctor’s affidavit as "an unusual complication of kidney transplant operations and immuno-suppresive treatment.”
. Draughon argues that the phrase "material contributing cause” should he interpreted to mean "proximate cause." This argument is without merit. The phrase "proximate cause” has a well-established meaning as a legal concept. If CUNA had this concept in mind when drafting the exclusion, it would have employed the precise term "proximate cause” or some other phrase having a similarly recognizable meaning. It is obvious that by choosing the phrase "material contributing cause” CUNA intended to exclude coverage in a broader range of circumstances than would the phrase "proximate cause.”
See, e.g., Minyen v. American Home Assurance Co.,
. Oddly, the actual policy does not appear in the record before us. Both parties were content to merely quote the key provision in their moving papers. Because seeing particular provisions in their overall context often aids interpretation, it is always preferable for courts to have access to the entire policy.
See, e.g., LDS Hosp. v. Capitol Life Ins. Co.,
94 Utah Adv.Rep. 16, 17,
. Draughon also argues that the phrase "material contributing cause” is inherently ambiguous because the term "material" creates a subjective standard of causation. We disagree. As will be established, we find the phrase unambiguous because it has a plain meaning understood by "a person of ordinary intelligence and understanding, viewing the matter fairly and reasonably, in accordance with the usual and natural meaning of the words, and in the light of existing circumstances.”
Auto Leasing Co. v. Central Mut. Ins. Co.,
. A limited exception to the doctrine favoring construction of insurance policies in accordance with an average layperson’s understanding may exist where a technical phrase having a judicially established meaning is used. See G. Couch, Couch on Insurance § 15:17 (1984) (a technical phrase may be interpreted according to prior judicial construction even if the insured is unaware of that construction).
. Ordinarily, the cause of death for purposes of entitlement to insurance coverage is a question for the jury.
See, e.g., Whitlock v. Old Am. Ins. Co.,
. This is not to say that in every case a distinction between the causative effects of the disease and the treatment will be possible. In some situations, a disease and its treatment will be so inextricably linked as to make it impossible to distinguish between the two in determining a “material contributing cause” of death.
