Case Information
*1
[This opinion has been published in
Ohio Official Reports
at
G EARING ET AL ., A PPELLANTS , v . N ATIONWIDE I NSURANCE OMPANY , A PPELLEE .
[Cite as
Gearing v. Nationwide Ins. Co.
,
Insurance—Incidents of intentional acts of sexual molestation of a minor do not
constitute “occurrences” for purposes of determining liability insurance coverage—Public policy precludes issuance of insurance to provide liability coverage for injuries resulting from intentional acts of sexual molestation of a minor.
1. Incidents of intentional acts of sexual molestation of a minor do not constitute
"occurrences" for purposes of determining liability insurance coverage, as intent to harm inconsistent with an insurable incident is properly inferred as a matter of law from deliberate acts of sexual molestation of a minor.
2. The public policy of the state of Ohio precludes issuance of insurance to provide
liability coverage for injuries resulting from intentional acts of sexual molestation of a minor.
(No. 94-2732—Submitted January 23, 1996—Decided July 3, 1996.) A PPEALS from the Court of Appeals for Cuyahoga County, Nos. 66421 and 66428.
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On July 2, 1991, Peter and Catherine Ozog and their three minor
daughters filed suit against Henry A. Gearing, a former neighbor and friend the girls called "Grandpa." The Ozogs sought recovery of damages arising from acts of sexual child molestation against the Ozog girls which allegedly occurred on multiple occasions during the period 1987 through 1990. In their complaint the Ozogs alleged that the girls had suffered actual harm, including permanent physical and emotional injuries and problems, growing out of Ozog's acts of sexual battery. They further alleged that the parents had suffered damages for which Gearing was liable based on a tort theory of negligent infliction of serious emotional distress.
{¶ 2} Contemporaneously, in 1991, Gearing pled guilty to three felony counts of gross sexual imposition in violation of R.C. 2907.05 based on his conduct towards the Ozog girls. In June 1992 Gearing filed a declaratory judgment action against his
homeowner's insurance carrier, appellee Nationwide Insurance Company ("Nationwide"). He sought a declaration that Nationwide was obligated to defend him in the civil suit brought by the Ozogs, and indemnify him in the event damages were awarded. The Ozogs intervened in the action asserting, as Gearing himself, that Gearing's homeowner's policy provided liability coverage of their tort claims. The Gearing and Ozog actions were consolidated in September 1992. During a discovery deposition in February 1993, Gearing admitted that
he had intentionally touched the breasts and genital areas of the three girls, and that he knew his actions were deemed morally wrong by his church. He claimed, however, that at the time of his actions, he did not know that his acts of sexual molestation could cause emotional and mental harm to the children. In his response to a request for admissions, dated May 6, 1993, he asserted he never intended to cause injury or harm to the Ozog sisters. On October 6, 1993, in the declaratory judgment action, the trial court
granted summary judgment in favor of Nationwide. On joint appeal, the court of appeals affirmed, holding that the incidents at issue fell within an "intentional injury" exclusion provision of the Nationwide policy, in that "sexual molestation of a child is per se, an intentional act from which an intent to harm must be inferred as a matter of law ***."
1. The record does not disclose the ultimate disposotion, if any, of the Ozog tort action. The cause is now before this court pursuant to the allowance of a
discretionary appeal.
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Michael F. Farrell , for appellant Henry A. Gearing.
Donald E. Caravona & Associates, Michael W. Czack and Kevin J. Lenhard , for appellants Peter J. Ozog et al.
Gravens & Franey Co., L.P.A., and Terrance P. Gravens , for appellee. Manley, Burke, Fischer, Lipton & Cook and Andrew S. Lipton , urging reversal for amicus curiae , Ohio Academy of Trial Lawyers.
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M OYER , C.J. In Physicians Ins. Co. v. Swanson (1991), 58 Ohio St.3d 189, 569 N.E.2d 906, we held, as syllabus law, that "[i]n order to avoid coverage on the basis of an exclusion for expected or intentional injuries, the insurer must demonstrate that the injury itself was expected or intended." (Emphasis added.) In that case, Bill Swanson fired a BB gun in the direction of a group of teenagers sitting at a picnic table seventy to one hundred feet away. He testified, however, that he aimed not at the teenagers, but rather at a sign on a tree ten to fifteen feet from the table. Nevertheless one of the teenagers lost his right eye when a BB fired by Swanson struck the victim. The trial court found the injury to be accidental, and found that the insurer was obligated to defend and indemnify under two policies in which Swanson qualified as an insured. We affirmed that finding. In the case at bar, Henry Gearing admitted that he did not subjectively
intend to hurt or harm his victims, even though he testified that he intentionally engaged in criminal sexual touching of the Ozog children. The Ozogs and Gearing, now aligned together as joint appellants against Nationwide, contend that, pursuant to Swanson and in light of Gearing's denial of a subjective intent to harm the girls, the Nationwide policy must be deemed to provide liability coverage for damages caused by Gearing's acts.
{¶ 9} It is axiomatic that an insurance company is under no obligation to its insured, or to others harmed by the actions of an insured, unless the conduct alleged of the insured falls within the coverage of the policy. Coverage is provided if the conduct falls within the scope of coverage defined in the policy, and not within an exception thereto.
{¶ 10} The Nationwide policy at issue provided personal liability coverage to the insured, Henry Gearing, as follows:
“COVERAGE E -- PERSONAL LIABILITY "We will pay damages the insured is legally obligated to pay due to an occurrence. " The policy specifically defined "occurrence" as:
"*** bodily injury or property damage resulting from: “a. one accident ; or
“b. continuous or repeated exposure to the same general condition.” (Emphasis added.) The Nationwide policy contained an "intentional injury exclusion,"
which provided:
"Coverage E-Personal Liability *** do[es] not apply to bodily injury or property damage:
“a. which is expected or intended by the insured ." (Emphasis added.) The court of appeals resolved this case on the basis of this exclusion. Nationwide urges us to affirm that court's reasoning, and to adopt the "inferred intent" rule for purposes of applying intentional injury exclusions to cases such as this where homeowner's insurance coverage is asserted for claims arising out of alleged sexual abuse of minors. Under the inferred intent rule, intent to injure is inferred as a matter of
law from the act of sexual abuse of a child itself, as harm is deemed inherent in the
sexual molestation, regardless of the offender's expression of subjective intent, and
regardless of whether the sexual abuse was "nonviolent" or unaccompanied by
penetration, or whether the abuse took place over a long or short period of time.
Wiley
v. State Farm Fire & Cas. Co.
(C.A. 3, 1993),
provides that acts of sexual molestation create, at best, only an inference of intent to
injure, rebuttable by evidence showing lack of subjective intent to injure. See,
e.g.
,
State Farm Fire & Cas. Co. v. Estate of Jenner
(C.A. 9, 1989),
and hold that intent to harm is properly inferred as a matter of law from deliberate acts of sexual molestation of a minor. However, rather than using the rule in the context of determining the applicability of intentional injury exclusions to homeowner's coverage, we believe that a better analytical use of the rule is in determining whether coverage may be deemed provided in the first instance. That is, we find the rule to be of value in determining whether intentional acts of child molestation may be deemed to constitute "occurrences," for which insurance may be obtained, or instead conduct in the nature of an intentional tort for which insurance coverage may not be issued consistent with the established public policy of this state. The Nationwide policy issued to Henry Gearing, by its terms, provides
coverage for damages flowing from an "occurrence," defined as either a single
"accident" or from "continuous or repeated exposure to the same general condition."
This court has long recognized that Ohio public policy generally prohibits obtaining
insurance to cover damages caused by intentional torts. See
State Farm Mut. Ins. Co.
v. Blevins
(1990),
harm to the Ozog children was "accidental," even though Gearing conceded that his acts of sexual molestation were intentional. There is, however, nothing "accidental" about acts of sexual molestation of children or harm resulting from that molestation; it is the result of the deliberate exercise of free will upon innocent and vulnerable victims. Sexual abuse of children constitutes conduct so reprehensible that the
General Assembly has categorized such conduct as felonious upon commission of the
proscribed acts themselves, irrespective of the defendant's intent, his capacity to form
intent, or failure of the child to resist. See,
e.g
., R.C. 2907.05.
[2]
Acts of sexual
molestation of a minor are "criminal offense[s] for which public policy precludes a
claim of unintended consequences, that is, a claim that no harm was intended to result
from the act."
Horace Mann Ins. Co. v. Leeber (1988)
,
Leu
(W.D. Wis. 1989),
Supreme Court, in an opinion authored by now United States Supreme Court Justice
Souter, recognized that sexual assaults upon an eleven-year-old victim "could not be
performed upon a boy without appalling effects on his mind,"
id
. at 524, 517 A.2d at
802, and that "[b]ecause the causation of psychological injury was thus inherent in the
acts alleged, the acts can not be treated as accidental causes,"
id
. at 524, 517 A.2d at
803. The court reasoned that an insured's intentional act does not cause "accidental"
results when the act "is so inherently injurious that it cannot be performed without
causing the resulting injury."
Id
. at 524,
liability coverage in
Swanson
was in the context of facts where the intentional
shooting of a gun did not necessarily equate to resulting injury. Even though all
evidence pointed to the conclusion that Swanson meant to shoot the gun, his act of
shooting the gun at a distance seventy to one hundred feet away from the ultimate
victim could not be said to necessarily result in personal injury, particularly in light of
his testimony that he was aiming elsewhere. Swanson’s testimony to the effect that
he never intended or expected for anyone to be harmed was not necessarily logically
inconsistent with the facts surrounding the shooting. Indeed, in
Swanson
we approved
of the premise that "‘resulting injury which ensues from the volitional act of an insured
is still an “accident” within the meaning of an insurance policy if the insured does not
specifically intend to cause the resulting harm
or is not substantially certain that such
harm will occur
.’" (Emphasis added.)
Swanson, 58 Ohio St.3d
at 193, 569 N.E.2d at
910, quoting
Quincy Mut. Fire Ins. Co. v. Abernathy
(1984),
been more analogous to those of
Preferred Risk Ins. Co. v. Gill
(1987), 30 Ohio St.3d
108, 30 OBR 424,
a minor do not constitute "occurrences" for purposes of determining liability insurance coverage, as intent to harm inconsistent with an insurable incident is properly inferred as a matter of law from deliberate acts of sexual molestation of a minor. The public policy of the state of Ohio precludes issuance of insurance to provide liability coverage for injuries produced by criminal acts of sexual misconduct against a minor. Gearing testified that he intentionally engaged in sexual molestation of the three Ozog children. Because harm is inherent in the act of sexual molestation, his representations that he was subjectively ignorant of the fact that his actions would harm his victims were insufficient to raise a genuine issue of material fact. Summary judgment denying coverage was properly granted in favor of Nationwide in that the alleged incidents of intentional sexual molestation did not constitute "occurrences." A finding to the contrary would violate the public policy of this state. Summary judgment in favor of Nationwide was also proper as to the
claims of the parents. Ohio courts have limited recovery for claims alleging negligent
infliction of emotional distress to situations such as where the plaintiff was a bystander
to an accident or was in fear of physical consequences to his own person.
High v.
Howard
(1992),
fall outside the scope of policy coverage. Preferred Risk Ins. Co. v. Gill , supra . Because Gearing's alleged acts of sexual molestation do not fall within the scope of coverage afforded by the Nationwide homeowner's policy, Nationwide possessed no duty to defend Gearing in the litigation brought by the Ozogs asserting damage arising out of those acts. Accordingly, the judgment of the court of appeals is affirmed.
Judgment affirmed . D OULGAS , W ISE , O’D ONNELL and C OOK , JJ., concur.
R ESNICK and P FEIFER , JJ., concur in judgment only.
J OHN W. W ISE , J., of the Fifth Appellate District, sitting for W RIGHT , J. T ERRENCE O’D ONNELL , J., of the Eighth Appellate District, sitting for F.E. WEENEY , J.
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