OPINION
On appeal from summary judgment for respondent, appellant argues that the district court erred in finding respondent an occupant of a vehicle insured by appellant for the purposes of underinsured motorist coverage. Appellant further argues that the district court erred in finding that respondent’s injuries arose out of the maintenance and use of the insured vehicle as a vehicle. Because we conclude that the district court did not err in finding that respondent was entitled to recover under-insured motorist benefits, we affirm.
FACTS
Respondent Mariese Marvin 1 was injured as a result of being pinned between an automobile owned by Tonya Weigel and one owned by Joseph Betz. Weigel is an insured of appellant Illinois Farmers Insurance Company.
On the day of her injury, respondent accompanied Weigel to the house of Weig-el’s father, Joseph Betz, to pick up some toys. Upon arrival, Weigel drove her Explorer to the back garage and parked. Respondent and Weigel exited the vehicle and began placing large toys in the Explorer’s rear cargo area. At one point, respondent leaned into the cargo area of the Explorer and pushed toys back to make room for one more toy. As she slid off of the cargo floor onto the ground, Betz’s vehicle backed into the Explorer, crushing respondent’s legs between the bumpers of the two automobiles.
Betz and Weigel were the only witnesses at the scene, although neither of them actually saw the impact occur. Weigel testified that the accident happened less than five minutes after she and respondent exited the Explorer, and at the moment of impact, her back was turned to the Explorer. However, when Weigel heard the impact, she turned to see respondent standing upright, crushed between the Betz vehicle and the Explorer. After Betz moved his car forward, Weigel *750 lowered - respondent to the ground. Respondent sustained compound fractures in her right and left knees and right ankle as a result of the accident.
Respondent settled a claim against Betz, exhausting his liability coverage, but the settlement did not fully compensate for her damages. She then submitted the remainder of her claims to appellant, Weig-el’s insurer, for underinsured coverage, and requested arbitration as required by appellant’s policy. In response, appellant instituted a declaratory-judgment action and moved for summary judgment, arguing that respondent was not covered under the policy on the Explorer because she was not an “occupant” of that vehicle at the time she was injured. Respondent also moved for summary judgment and submitted an affidavit in which she stated that she was climbing out of the Explorer’s cargo area at the time of impact.
During the motion hearing, appellant argued that the affidavit submitted by respondent with her summary judgment contradicted an earlier affidavit in which she described herself as a pedestrian. Appellant’s attorney stated, however, that “even if the Court were to. consider her affidavit as true, and even if we would concede for purposes of today’s argument only that there is no fact issue, it simply doesn’t matter, ... because they cannot prove maintenance of their vehicle as a vehicle.” The district court granted respondent’s motion for summary judgment and this appeal follows.
ISSUES
I. Was respondent an “occupant” for purposes of underinsured motorist coverage?
II. Did respondent’s injuries arise from the maintenance or use of a motor vehicle?
ANALYSIS
On appeal from a grant- of summary judgment, this court asks two questions: (1) whether there are any genuine issues of material fact and (2) whether the district court erred in its application of the law.
State by Cooper v. French,
The moving party has the burden to prove that there is an absence of any genuine issue of material fact.
Sauter v. Sauter,
If summary judgment is supported by affidavits, depositions, etc., the nonmoving party cannot rely on assertions in its pleadings to create a fact issue.
Ahlm v. Rooney,
An insurer’s liability is determined by the insurance contract as long as the insurance contract does not omit coverage required by law or violate applicable statutes.
Kelly v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co.,
I.
Because Betz’s vehicle was inadequately insured to fully compensate respondent, respondent can look to Weigel’s policy for coverage if respondent is an “additional insured” as defined by both Minnesota statutes and the insurance policy. Under Minnesota law, an injured person has statutory coverage up to the specified limits of the policy involved “[i]f at the time of the accident the injured person is occupying a motor vehicle.... ” Minn.Stat. § 65B.49, subd. 3a(5) (2004) (emphasis added). Similarly, appellant’s policy defines an insured as “[a]ny other person while occupying [the] insured car.”
Although Minnesota statutes do not specifically define occupancy, the supreme court has ruled that the definition contained within the policy at issue shall govern, as long as it is not narrower than common usage.
Allied Mut. Ins. Co. v. W. Nat’l Mut. Ins. Co.,
Appellant asserts that whether respondent was an occupant raises an issue of material fact because respondent never claimed she was an “occupant” of the Explorer prior to the affidavit submitted with her motion for summary judgment. 2 During the discovery process, respondent described herself as a pedestrian in an answer to an interrogatory, and hospital records describe the accident as one involving a “pedestrian versus car.” In her summary judgment affidavit, however, she states that just before the collision she was leaning forward into the rear of the vehicle and was in the process of sliding off the cargo floor onto the ground. Further, she states that it was her intent to take her seat in the passenger side and leave the area, being transported again by Weigel’s Explorer to return home.
We conclude that respondent’s description of herself as a pedestrian and the description in the hospital records are not sufficient to raise a question of genuine fact. In response to the interrogatory asking respondent to describe damages sustained to her vehicle, she replied that vehicle damage was inapplicable, as she was a “pedestrian” and the only property damage was to her clothing. Likewise, the hospital records referring to respondent as a “pedestrian” cannot reasonably be construed as legally binding for purposes of insurance coverage. Further, even under the facts most favorable to appellant, respondent was in the process of loading the vehicle, and indisputably the upper half of her body had been in the vehicle mere moments before the accident.
The party opposing the summary judgment cannot rely on general averments in resisting summary judgment.
Ahlm,
274 Minn, at 262,
II.
Our determination that respondent was an occupant of the Explorer at the time she was injured does not end our inquiry. Courts have long required some causal connection between the occupancy of the vehicle and the injury sustained. Allied Mut., 552 N.W.2d at 563. We must therefore also determine whether respondent’s injury arose out of the maintenance or use of the Explorer as defined by Minnesota statute and caselaw. Minn.Stat. § 65B.43, subd. 3 (2004).
“Whether an injury arose out of the maintenance or use of a motor vehicle is a question of law.”
Kemmerer v. State Farm Ins. Co.,
Under the Minnesota No-Fault Act, “maintenance or use” for purposes of un-derinsured-motorist (UIM) coverage is defined as “[mjaintenance or use of a motor vehicle as a vehicle.” Minn.Stat. § 65B.43, subd. 3 (2004). This definition, however, does not include “conduct in the course of loading and unloading the vehicle unless the conduct occurs while occupying, entering into or alighting from it.” Id. (emphasis added).
In determining whether respondent’s injuries arose from the maintenance or use of the Explorer, we apply the three-part maintenance-and-use analysis set forth in
Klug,
The first consideration is the extent of causation between the automobile and the injury.... [T]he vehicle must be an “active accessory” ... “something less than proximate cause in the tort sense and something more than the vehicle being the mere situs of the injury.” ...
If a court finds the requisite degree of causation, it should next determine whether an act of independent significance occurred, breaking the causal link between “use” of the vehicle and the injuries....
If a court finds the requisite degree of causation and no intervening independent act, it must consider one final inquiry. ... [T]he court must determine what type of “use” of the automobile was involved.... [Cjoverage should exist only for injuries resulting from use of an automobile for transportation purposes.
Klug,
A. Active Accessory
For a vehicle to be an active accessory does not require that it actively
cause
the damages; rather, the require
*753
ment is satisfied if the injury occurred because the vehicle’s use is actively
connected
with the injury.
Fire & Cas. Ins. Co. of Conn. v. Ill. Farmers Ins. Co.,
In struggling with the question of when a vehicle is an active accessory and when it is not, courts have denied coverage when, as the mere situs of the injury, the vehicle had nothing to do with the injury itself. In
Allied Mwt.,
the claimant, standing a short distance away from the insured vehicle, was struck by an oncoming vehicle as she waited for the insured vehicle to be unlocked.
Appellant urges that the result of
Allied Mut.
requires a denial of coverage here because the Explorer, too, was parked and unmoving. While appellant’s argument may have superficial persuasiveness, the cessation or absence of movement alone has been held not to preclude coverage.
Kern v. Auto Owners Ins. Co.,
We conclude that the unique facts of Allied Mut. do not compel a similar result under the unique facts of this case. Unlike respondent here, who was using the vehicle at the time of impact, the claimant in Allied Mut. was not making any use of the vehicle at the time of the accident, nor did the vehicle contribute in any way to the injuries. Here, respondent was using the Explorer to load toys, and the bumper of the Explorer was the object against which respondent was pinned.
In
Marklund v. Farm Bureau Mut. Ins. Co.,
In
Tlougan v. Auto-Owners Ins. Co.,
State Farm Fire & Cas. Co. v. Sirope,
In reviewing cases where coverage has been found, the active involvement of the vehicle is admittedly more easily identified than here. In
Kern,
the injured party had parked her vehicle in the parking lot of a grocery store.
Other cases have noted that so long as the vehicle is being used as a motor vehicle during the time of injury, the vehicle is more than a mere situs for the accident.
See, e.g., N. River Ins. Co. v. Dairyland Ins.,
In arguing that the Explorer is not an active accessory, appellant contends that because the Explorer was simply the vehicle against which respondent was pinned, it was nothing more than a passive accessory to the accident and was, therefore, merely the situs of the injury. Appellant relies on
Short v. Midwest Family Mut. Ins. Co.,
Similarly, appellant relies on
State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co. v. O’Brien,
Finally, appellant relies on
Auto-Owners Ins. Co. v. Great W. Cas.,
The only issue in
Auto-Owners
was which of two insurers would be liable for payment of no-fault insurance benefits.
Appellant urges that pursuant to Auto-Oumers, the vehicle. that is, in the tort sense, the direct “cause” of the injury should be the only vehicle liable. There are factors in this case, however, that prompt a different analysis. Further, we are called upon here to answer a question that was not present in Auto-Oumers. The coverage at issue in Awto-Owners was basic economic loss benefits. Here we are concerned with liability coverage on one vehicle (the Betz vehicle) and underinsured motorist coverage on another vehicle (the Explorer), and must answer the question of whether and when and under what circumstances the exhaustion of the former permits invocation of the latter. It is undisputed in this case that damages may exceed the liability limits of the Betz vehicle. There was no discussion in Auto-Oumers of whether damages exceeded basic economic loss benefit limits and what other insurance might be invoked to cover excess damages. Also, respondent here, unlike the injured person in Auto-Oumers, has been found to be an occupant of the Explorer and was actively using that vehicle as a motor vehicle at the time of her injury. We conclude that Auto-Oumers does not compel a decision here similar to that reached in that case.
In the present case, recognizing how very fine are the factual distinctions to be made in deciding the “active accessory” prong of the Klug test, we conclude that the involvement of the Explorer was less than proximate cause but more than mere situs, and that it was an active accessory. Being pinned against the bumpers of the Explorer actively contributed to crushing respondent’s lower extremities. The hospital admission notes indicate that her “severe bilateral lower extremity injuries [arose] from [car bumpers] when she got caught between two cars ... with [her] legs trapped between.” Had the Explorer not been where it was, respondent may *756 have suffered other injuries, but we do not believe she would have suffered the ones that she did.
B. Act of Independent Significance
The second contested
King
factor must also be resolved in respondent’s favor if coverage under appellant’s policy is to be invoked. Was there an act of independent significance that broke the causal chain? An act of independent significance occurs where an independent tortfeasor intercedes to cause the injury.
See Lindsey v. Sturm,
In contrast, caselaw instructs that negligent actions are not considered to be acts of independent significance. The supreme court has established that the purpose of UM or UIM is to “protect against the risk that the motorist who injures the purchaser is uninsured (or underinsured) and unable to pay the damages the purchaser is entitled to recover under tort law.”
McIntosh v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co.,
The recent case of
Dougherty v. State Farm Mut. Ins. Co.,
We recognize that the coverage being sought in
Dougherty
was no-fault benefits under Minn.Stat. § 65B.42(1) (2004), and that the coverage being sought here is underinsured motorists benefits. Should a
*757
distinction be made? The dissent in
Dougherty
points to the language of Minn. Stat. § 65B.46 (2004), which indicates that coverage is to be available for injuries “arising out of maintenance or use of a motor vehicle.”
Dougherty,
Appellant argues strenuously that Betz’s act did break the causal chain. To the extent that appellant relies upon cases involving intentional torts, those cases are distinguishable. It is understandable that the consequences of those intentional torts — at least to the extent those consequences are manifested in invoking uninsured and underinsured motorists’ coverage — should not fall upon the motoring public. Here, unquestionably, Betz was negligent. He did not intentionally back his vehicle into respondent. We conclude that to determine that his negligence constituted an act of independent significance would be contradictory to the purpose and policy of the UIM statute, which is to provide the insured (respondent here) with financial protection against an underin-sured motorist whose negligence results in injury.
Nygaard v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co.,
In determining that respondent was an occupant of the Explorer, that the Explorer was an active accessory, and that the negligence of Betz was not an act of independent significance breaking the causal link, we conclude that the purpose of the No-Fault Act, rather than being violated, is being effected.
DECISION
Coverage for injuries sustained during the loading of an automobile is not precluded by the fact that the automobile was stationary at the time of the accident. The victim was an occupant of the vehicle and was in the process of using the vehicle as a motor vehicle at the time of impact. Because the insured automobile directly contributed to the victim’s specific injuries, the automobile is more than a mere situs of the accident, but is instead an active accessory. Finally, the tortfeasor’s act of impacting respondent and pinning her against the bumper of the insured vehicle is not an act of independent significance breaking the causal chain. Consequently, we affirm the district court’s grant of summary judgment to respondent.
Affirmed.
Notes
Retired judge of the Minnesota Court of Appeals, serving by appointment pursuant to Minn. Const, art. VI, § 10.
. Mariese and husband Jeffrey Marvin are the respondents, but because Mariese is the one injured, for purposes of this appeal she is referred to as respondent.
. This specific argument is only summarily raised in appellant's brief, but it was presented to the district court.
