¶ 1 Businesses sometimes buy employee fidelity or commercial crime insurance policies to protect them against loss from employee theft. In this case we must determine whether a standard form insurance policy treats the loss from a series of thefts by a single employee as one occurrence.
I
A
¶ 2 The facts crucial to our decision are not in dispute. In 2002, DGG & CAR, Inc., doing business as Metrol Security Services (“Metrol”), discovered that John Wallace Brown, an accounting employee, had embezzled more than $500,000 during a five-year period by forging company checks.
¶ 3 Metrol had purchased employee fidelity policies from Employers Mutual Casualty Co. (“EMC”) covering two plan years, 2000-2001 and 2001-2002. Under the policies, EMC agreed that it would “pay for loss of, and loss from damage to, Covered Property resulting directly from the Covered Cause of Loss.” Covered property included money; the “Covered Cause of Loss” was “Employee dishonesty.” The policy defined “Employee dishonesty” as “dishonest acts committed by an ‘employee’ ... with the manifest intent to” cause loss and obtain a financial benefit.
¶ 4 The EMC policy promised that EMC would “pay ... for loss that you sustain through acts committed or events occurring at any time and discovered by you during the
B
¶ 5 Metrol filed a claim with EMC seeking reimbursement for the full amount of the company’s loss, arguing that each act of theft was a separate occurrence. EMC countered that Brown’s series of thefts constituted a single occurrence and thus Metrol was entitled only to $50,000.
¶ 6 EMC filed a declaratory judgment action seeking a ruling that it owed only $50,000. Metrol counterclaimed, alleging breach of contract, bad faith, and other claims. Cross-motions for summary judgment grappling with the definition of occurrence followed. The superior court concluded that the policy was ambiguous as to whether each act of theft attributable to Brown was itself an occurrence, or whether all acts of theft were a single occurrence. The court concluded Metrol was entitled to recover up to $50,000 for each theft. The parties eventually agreed to a stipulated judgment in favor of Metrol, conditioned on EMC’s right to appeal the superior court’s resolution of the cross-motions for summary judgment.
¶ 7 In a memorandum decision, the court of appeals reversed. Employers Mut. Cas. Co. v. DGG & CAR, Inc., 1 CA-CV 05-0702, ¶ 1 (Ariz.App. Dec. 14, 2006) (mem.decision). The court reasoned that a series of thefts committed by one employee constituted one occurrence. Id. at ¶ 19. Consequently, the court concluded that Metrol’s recovery was subject to the policy limit of $50,000 for the series of thefts. Id. at ¶ 33.
¶ 8 We granted Metrol’s petition for review because this case concerns a matter of first impression in Arizona and because the definition of “occurrence” in the policy commonly appears in employee fidelity or commercial crime insurance policies. 1 See ARCAP 23(c)(3). We have jurisdiction under Article 6, Section 5 of the Arizona Constitution and Arizona Revised Statutes, (“A.R.S.”) section 12-120.24 (2003).
II
¶ 9 The interpretation of an insurance contract is a question of law we review de novo.
Sparks v. Republic Nat’l Life Ins. Co.,
A
¶ 10 The EMC policy treats “all loss” caused by or involving an employee, resulting from a “series of acts,” as a single occurrence. John Brown’s embezzlement, although including a number of thefts, was a “series of acts,” each one following the other.
B
¶ 11 Metrol nonetheless maintains that the policy is ambiguous. For example, it argues that the phrase “all loss” in the definition of occurrence is unclear because it uses the word “loss” in the singular. To clearly encompass the entire loss attributable to Brown, Metrol claims that the policy needed to refer to losses. But using the singular “loss” does not mean that the phrase “all loss” somehow can be read as “each loss.”
¶ 12 Metrol makes a second, equally unpersuasive, argument to suggest the word loss is ambiguous. It argues that any time the term “loss” is used in employee fidelity or commercial crime policies the term refers to each individual theft in a series of thefts.
See Lincoln Technical Inst. v. Fed. Ins. Co.,
¶ 13 For three reasons, this argument does not help Metrol. First, in their effort to secure coverage for loss that occurred before an increase in the applicable policy limits took effect, the plaintiffs in Lincoln Technical argued that the term “loss sustained” in a commercial crime policy was ambiguous. Id. at 378. Thus, the critical issue was when the loss was “sustained.” Id. at 378-79. The issue here is the construction of the defined term “occurrence.”
¶ 14 Second, even assuming that a “loss” occurred each time Brown embezzled from Metrol, the policy here expressly groups “all loss” attributable to an employee’s act or series of acts into a single “occurrence.”
¶ 15 Third, Metrol’s alternate reading of the definition of “occurrence” is unpersuasive. Metrol argues that the policy definition of “[ojccurrence” — “all loss caused by, or involving, one or more ‘employees,’ whether the result of a single act or series of acts,”— should be interpreted only as preventing an insured business from claiming that the number of occurrences is determined by the num
ber
C
¶16 Metrol next asserts that we should reject the plain meaning of the phrase “all loss” in the definition of occurrence because it would treat all dishonest acts of employees resulting in multiple instances of loss as a single occurrence. Metrol argues that because all covered losses necessarily result from either an act or a series of acts by employees, a literal reading of the policy would limit coverage to a total of $50,000 even when the thefts were unrelated. Metrol complains that such an interpretation would “nulliffy]” coverage. But this case does not present us with a situation involving unrelated thefts by multiple employees. Because the plain language of the policy covers the situation in this case, we need not consider whether the policy is ambiguous as applied to other circumstances.
See Preferred Risk Mut. Co.,
¶ 17 Citing
A.B.S. Clothing Collection, Inc. v. Home Insurance Co.,
D
¶ 18 Metrol also contends that the phrase “series of acts” in the definition of occurrence is ambiguous. It argues that the phrase could apply to a series of thefts or a series of acts leading up to a theft.
See Karen Kane,
E
¶ 19 Metrol asserts that because certain courts have found this policy language ambiguous it must be subject to more than one reasonable interpretation. Varying judicial interpretations, however, do not automat
ically
¶20
A.B.S. Clothing,
for example, addressed similar policy language in a distinct scenario. There, the issue was whether an insured business was entitled to a policy-limit recovery each year for an employee’s embezzlements when the insured business maintained a policy with the insurance company for a number of years.
¶ 21
Karen Kane,
which cited and relied upon
A.B.S. Clothing,
is similarly distinguishable.
Karen Kane,
¶ 22 In addition, Metrol argued before this Court that it is entitled to recover for close to 300 “acts,” but it has not argued that it is entitled to recover for two “series of acts” in two plan years.
¶ 23 Finally, the New Jersey Supreme Court held that, under at least some circumstances, language like that employed by EMC may be subject to a different eonstruetion. In
Gentilini Ford,
the court found multiple occurrences, allowing for multiple recoveries, when an employee used fraudulent credit applications to sell individual cars to individual ear buyers.
Ill
¶ 24 When “the provisions of the contract are plain and unambiguous upon their face, they must be applied as written, and the court will not pervert or do violence to the language used, or expand it beyond its plain and ordinary meaning or add something to the contract which the parties have not put there.”
D.M.A.F.B. Fed. Credit Union v. Employers Mut. Liab. Ins. Co.,
¶ 25 In any event, Metrol has not suggested any public policy that supports its construction of the contract. Under Metrol’s interpretation, a dishonest employee would
IV
¶ 26 For the foregoing reasons, we vacate the court of the appeals’ decision, reverse the judgment of the superior court and remand for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. See Edward Gallagher, Limit of Liability, in Commercial Cnme Policy 451 (Randall I. Marmor & John J. Tomaine, 2d ed.2005).
. The court of appeals indicated that ”[t]he term ‘series’ implies some sort of relationship between the acts, and not merely the fact that the same person committed them.” Employers Mut., 1 CA-CV 05-0702, slip op. at ¶ 31. Because the acts in this case were caused by Brown's dishonesty, we need not decide whether the same policy would treat a series of unrelated acts by the same employee as a single occurrence.
. Metrol never argued to this Court that cases addressing the reasonable expectations of consumers subject to standard form contracts apply here.
See, e.g., Darner Motor Sales, Inc. v. Universal Underwriters Ins. Co.,
. The parties and the appeals court spent time analyzing
Arizona Property and Casualty Insurance Guaranty Fund
v.
Helme,
