OPINION
Eriе Insurance Group (Erie) appeals the trial court’s September 14, 1994 order in Erie’s declaratory judgment action, granting *1040 summary judgment in favor of Thomas Hin-kle (Hinkle).
We affirm.
The sole issue before this court is whether or not the trial court erred in granting summary judgment on behalf of Hinkle, thus determining that a homeowner’s policy issued by Erie to Lillie Adams (Adams) provided coverage for a bodily injury claim brought by Hinkle against Adams’ grandson, Eddie Greggs (Greggs), who resides in Adams’ home.
The facts of this case, which are largely undisputed are as follows. On October 31, 1992, Hinkle and Greggs were working on Greggs’ 1964 El Camino at Adams’ residence. Thеy were drilling a hole in a strip of metal procured at Greggs’ place of employment. It was to be used as a gas tank strap in order to attach the gas tank to the frame of the El Camino. As Greggs, using a power drill, drilled the hole in the strap, the metal coiled and sеvered Hinkle’s thumb, who was assisting Greggs.
The El Camino on which Hinkle and Greggs were working was not a fully functioning vehicle. It did not have a body on it. It had no seats, no brakes, and no engine. Greggs described the vehicle as wheels and a frame. It was clearly not operable.
Greggs had purсhased the El Camino in November of 1991. He drove it home and to work for approximately two weeks. It ran when he bought it, but subsequently the transmission failed, and he parked it at Adams’ residence, where he lived. He then began a process of restoring the vehicle. He took out the engine, gave it away, and stripped the vehicle down to its frame. He had the frame sandblasted and added the wheels, which was the vehicle’s state at the time of the accident.
After the accident, Hinkle filed suit against Greggs claiming that Greggs was negligent. The present declaratory judgment action is based upon the homeowner’s policy which Erie issued to Adams. Erie concedes that Greggs is covered for personal liability under Adams’ policy; however, Erie claims that the policy’s exclusions deny coverage for Hinkle’s injury under the present facts. The relevant part of the exclusion section at issue reads:
WHAT WE DO NOT COVER-EXCLUSIONS
Under Personal Liability Coverage and Medical Payments To Others Coverage we do not cover:
(6) Bodily injury or property damage arising out of the ownership, maintenance or use of:
(b) any land motor vehicle owned or operated by or rented or loaned to anyone we protect.
We do cover motor vehicles if:
1. used exclusively at an insured location and not subject to motor vehicle registration; [or,]
2. kept in dead storage at an insured location[.]
Record at 23-24.
The trial court granted Hinkle’s motion for summary judgment but did not indicate upon what grounds it did so. This court will review the trial court’s entry of summary judgment following the same рrocess as the trial court. Therefore, we will affirm the judgment if, as a matter of law, the moving party was entitled to judgment.
Goldsberry v. Grubbs
(1996) Ind.App.,
1) The El Camino was not a land motor vehicle;
2) The accident did not “arise out” of mаintenance of the El Camino;
3) The El Camino was used exclusively at Adams’ residence and was not subject to motor vehicle registration; or,
4) The El Camino was in dead storage.
It is clear from the record that Judge Zore at the summary judgment hearing felt that the dispositive issue was whether or not the El Camino was а “motor vehicle”. Because we hold that the vehicle in question was not a motor vehicle and therefore the granting of the summary judgment was proper, we need not address any of the other issues.
*1041
The interpretation of an insurance contract is a question of law for the court.
Tate v. Secura Ins.
(1992) Ind.,
Appellant’s brief cites several eases for the proposition that the injury before us is one which arose out of the maintenаnce of a motor vehicle. For example, in
State Farm Fire & Casualty Co. v. Salas
(1990)
The parties’ briefs direct us to two sources in determining the meaning of the term motor vehicle. The dictionary defines a motor vehicle as an “automotive vehicle.” Automotive, in turn, is defined as “containing within itself the means of propulsion.” WEBSTER’S THIRD NEW INTERNATIONAL DICTIONARY 148 (1976).- The Indiana Code, for purposes of traffic regulation and financial responsibility, defines a motor vehicle as “a vehicle that is self-propelled.” I.C. 9-13-2-105 (Burns Code Ed. Repl.1991). Hinkle argues that an El Camino without a motor is not self propelled and cannot be. Erie points out on the other hand that a vehicle without a battery is similarly not self propelled nor can it be, without more.
Case law is also inconclusive in defining “motor vehicle”. In
Citizens Bank of Michigan City v. Hansom
(1986) Ind.App.,
We are not the first court to find itself troubled by the idea of what is and what is not a motor vehicle. The Ohio Court of Appeals faced a remarkably similar situation in
Santana v. Auto Owners Ins. Co.
(1993) Ohio App.,
The
Santana
ease involved the term in the context of uninsured/underinsured motorist coverage, and the term was defined in. accordancе with the “principal purpose for such insurance.”
Santana, supra
In
Civil Service Employees Ins. Co. v. Wilson
(1963)
Of course, it could not be reasonably be maintained that if one were to remove a battery or some incidental operating part from a car, it would cease to be an automobile. Good sense presupposes that a vehicle designed for self-propulsion on land and which may be so self-propelled or restored to that condition with reasonable cost and effort may be considered an automobile. Id.35 Cal.Rptr. at 307 .
The vehicle in question in Wilson had no starter, no generator, no seats, no dash, no “everything.” The court found that there was no reasonable possibility of restoring the car to the condition of capability of self propulsion. Therefore, it was no longer an automobile.
In
Harshbarger v. Meridian Mut. Ins. Co.
(1974)
If, however, the car in question is in need of minor repairs, it is clearly still a motor vehicle. The Washington Supreme Court decided that a car in need of a battery and which had defective brakes and windshield wipers was an automobile within the meaning of the terms of the insurance policy.
Farmers Ins. Co. of Washington v. Miller
(1976)
In
Bedgood v. Hartford Acc. & Indem. Co.
(1980) Fla.Dist.Ct.App.,
Finally, in
Quick v. Michigan Millers Mut. Ins. Co., supra,
[1]n those cases, where such circumstances suggest either that the inoperable condition is probably permanent, or apt to be of long duration with little reasonable possibility of restoring the car to a condition where it can be driven on the roads, the courts have then tended to find that the vehicle is not an “automobile” within the terms of the policy. Id.250 N.E.2d at 821 .
The court сoncluded that the Chevrolet “was clearly in such condition that it could not have been made an operating private passenger automobile without incurring inordinate expense for parts and labor[,]” and that “[t]he ear was not ... in such condition that it could hаve been driven.” Id.
Ultimately this court is faced with the task of deciding whether or not Eddie Greggs’ El Camino was a motor vehicle. Appellee’s counsel asked the trial court to adopt a common sense approach to the definition of motor vehicle. “[W]е look to this word ‘motor vehicle’ a vehicle with a motor and this doesn’t fit it.” Record at 316. We decline to go so far as to hold that a vehicle without its motor cannot be a motor vehicle. Judge Zore noted that one could “pull” the engine in order to work on it, but the car would still be a motor vehicle.
It is clear that Greggs intended to eventually operate the El Camino again upon the public streets. However, it was not anywhere close to such operability at the time of the accident. Furthermore, the El Camino had bеen in storage for almost a full year before the accident occurred, the condition of the vehicle was such that one would be hard pressed to find one in a greater state of disrepair, and, most importantly, one major component of the аutomobile was missing and not even close to the frame — the motor. Under this limited set of facts, this court determines, as a matter of law, that Greggs’ El Camino was not a motor vehicle.
It is important to note again that Erie was free to limit its insurance policy as it deemed fit. Specific language in the contract defining a motor vehicle could have foreclosed the question of coverage. However, since Erie did not see fit to include such a definition, we have been obligated to decide the case without such assistance.
The decision of the trial court in granting summary judgment in favor of Greggs is affirmed.
Notes
. We do note that the Ohio court was interpreting the word "car” not "motor vehicle”; however, it is clear from that court's decision that “car” was defined by that court in much the same way that the term "motor vehicle” is used here.
. The Supreme Court of Ohio subsequently dismissed the appeal for want of conflict.
Santana v. Auto-Owners Ins. Co.
(1994)
. The Florida court was determining the meaning of “automobile” in a newly acquired automobile provision. The court also pointed out that "motor vehicle” had been defined in the policy as one required to be registered and licensed under Florida law.
