Lead Opinion
On September 25, 1995, Melvin Burgess died as a result of injuries he sustained in a drunk driving accident nine days before. At the time of the accident, Mr. Burgess was ' covered by a life insurance policy for $100,-000 which he purchased from J.C. Penney Life Insurance Co. Mr. Burgess’ sons, as beneficiaries of this life insurance policy, sought to recover the benefits from J.C. Penney as a result of their father’s death. J.C. Penney denied payment based on two exclusions in the policy. The first exclusion denies payment if the loss occurred while the covered person’s blood alcohol level was 0.10% weight by volume or higher, and the second denies payment if the loss occurred while the covered person was committing or attempting to commit an assault or felony. The Burgesses then brought suit against J.C. Penney to recover the benefits of their father’s policy. They originally filed the suit in the Circuit Court of Chippewa County, Wisconsin, but J.C. Penney removed it to the Western District of Wisconsin. The district court, based on the alcohol exclusion contained in the policy, granted summary judgment in favor of J.C. Penney and dismissed the Burgesses’ complaint. The Burgesses now appeal that ruling, and we reverse.
I. BACKGROUND
The facts in this case have been stipulated by the parties. On September 16, 1995, at approximately 9:25 p.m., Melvin Burgess drove through a stop sign at the intersection of County Highway X and Ridgeway Drive in Chippewa County, Wisconsin. As a result, he collided into another car driven by Linda S. Glenz. When emergency medical personnel arrived on the scene, they observed that Mr. Burgess smelled of alcohol. Mr. Burgess was taken to Sacred Heart Hospital in Eau Claire, Wisconsin, where blood was drawn from him at approximately 11:58 p.m. A blood alcohol analysis revealed that Mr. Burgess’ blood alcohol content (“BAC”) at the time was 0.12% weight by volume. This content was higher than the state of Wisconsin’s legal limit of 0.10% weight by volume. Since his BAC was greater than 0.10% in the hospital, officials concluded that Mr. Burgess’ BAC at the time of the accident was also above 0.10%. As a result of the injuries he sustained in the accident, Mr. Burgess slipped into a coma. He never regained consciousness, and on September 25,1995, he
When the Burgesses sought to collect their benefits from J.C. Penney, it denied then-claim because Mr. Burgess’ blood alcohol level was 0.12% at the time of the accident, thus J.C. Penney claimed that this type of accident was not covered by Mr. Burgess’ insurance policy. The district court agreed with J.C. Penney, finding that, since Mr. Burgess was legally intoxicated at the time of the accident, the only reasonable interpretation of the policy’s alcohol exclusion was to deny benefits for a loss that occurred as a result of the insured’s being intoxicated. Because the lower court reached its decision on this ground, it did not determine whether the assault or felony exclusion applied.
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
Initially, we are confronted with a standard of review argument. The Burgess-es ask that, since this is an appeal of a granting of summary judgment, we review the case de novo, while J.C. Penney requests a review for clear error only. J.C. Penney points to our decision in Central States, Southeast and Southwest Areas Pension Fund v. Slotky,
III. DISCUSSION
This case presents us with an interesting scenario in which the insured, and not the insurer, insists that we apply the contract solely based on its terms rather than reading any terms into the policy. The district court found, and both parties agree, that the insurance policy is unambiguous. Therefore, the issue in this ease is not how to interpret an ambiguous provision of the policy, but rather the application of certain exclusions written into the policy by J.C. Penney. Although the district court only looked at one of the exclusions in making its decision, there are, in fact, two exclusions at issue here. The policy promises to pay the Principal Sum, in this case $100,000, in the event of the accidental loss of life. However, the policy contains the following provision: “No benefit shall be paid for Loss or Injury that: occurs while the Covered Person’s blood alcohol level is .10 percent weight by volume or higher; [or] occurs while committing or attempting to commit an assault or felony.” The term “Loss” is defined as loss of life. The district court concluded that the only reasonable construction of the exclusion is to ask “whether Melvin Burgess had a blood alcohol percentage higher than .10 percent when he was involved in the crash that led to his death.” While there is some logic to this interpretation, the district court’s decision required that it insert language into the life insurance policy that J.C. Penney could have easily included when it wrote the policy, but did not.
A. The Alcohol Exclusion
We have come across numerous cases involving insurance companies trying to limit their liability with similar types of alcohol exclusions. A great majority of those cases concern themselves with whether or not the insurer must show a causal link between the insured’s intoxication and the injury or death resulting therefrom. See, e.g., Jenkins,
J.C. Penney urges us, as it did the district court, to interpret the policy to mean that benefits would not be paid for a loss that resulted from an injury as a consequence of the insured’s being intoxicated. While that is certainly one way that the policy could have been written, J.C. Penney chose not to use that language in this policy. When an exclusionary clause in an insurance policy is unambiguous, the court only needs to apply it, rather than engage in any construction of the clause. Dipasquale v. American Family Ins. Co.,
J.C. Penney has been a party to numerous lawsuits involving the interpretation of alcohol exclusions in its insurance contracts. In a case in Tennessee, the plaintiff sought to recover benefits when the insured was drunk and got in a car accident. The plaintiff argued that J.C. Penney had to prove a causal link between the insured’s state of intoxication and the accident but the court rejected that argument. All the policy required was that the loss result from injuries sustained while the insured was intoxicated. The court refused to read the causal connection requirement into the unambiguous contract. Brown,
B. The Assault or Felony Exception
Since the district court disposed of the case by finding that J.C. Penney was not liable to the Burgesses based on the alcohol exclusion, it never reached the issue of whether the assault or felony exclusion barred the Burgesses’ recovery. The wording for this exclusion is identical to the alcohol exclusion — “[n]o benefit shall be paid for Loss that occurs while committing or attempting to commit ... a[ ] felony.” (emphasis added). J.C. Penney contends that, at the time of his loss, Mr. Burgess was in violation of Section 940.25(1), Wis. Stats., which states the following: “Any person who does any of the following is guilty of a Class D felony: (a) Causes great bodily harm to another human being by the operation of a vehicle while under the influence of an intoxicant. (b) Causes great bodily harm to another human being by the operation of a vehicle while the person has a prohibited alcohol concentration, as defined in s. 340.01(46m).” Appellee’s Brief at 11. It supports this contention with Mr. Burgess’ BAC at the time of the accident, and the nature of the injuries sustained by Linda Glenz in the accident. We do not take issue with either Mr. Burgess’ BAC at the time of the accident or the severity of Ms. Glenz’s injuries. Again, however, we do take issue with the language J.C. Penney chose to limit its liability. Mr. Burgess’ loss did not occur while committing or attempting to commit a felony, but occurred as a result of injuries sustained while (arguably) committing a felony.
IY. CONCLUSION
Admittedly, this is a strange case. However, insurance companies need to adequately spell out to their insureds exactly what types of accidents are excluded from their policies.
Notes
. Because we are basing our decision on the language chosen by J.C. Penney, we need not reach the issue of whether Mr. Burgess actually committed a felony.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
My colleagues can rely on certain well-settled maxims of insurance contract interpretation to support their interpretation of the contract. Exclusion clauses are construed strictly against the insurer, and the insurance company does bear the risk of establishing that a particular loss falls within the clause. Nevertheless, these maxims must be employed in a realistic manner so that, in the end, the insurance contract is construed to mean what a reasonable person standing in the shoes of the insured would have understood the policy to mean. See Garriguenc v. Love,
The district court correctly concluded that the reading urged by the plaintiffs makes sense only when the terms “loss” and “occurs while” are read in isolation — without any effort to deal with their relationship to the remainder of the alcohol exclusion clause and to the rest of the policy. All agree that the loss for which recovery is demanded is Mr. Burgess’ death. That death occurred some 9 days after the injury. All also agree that this injury is the covered event. In order to establish a right to recovery, it is therefore necessary for the beneficiaries to establish a causal nexus between the injury and the covered loss. Indeed, the beneficiaries do not contest that Mr. Burgess’ death was a result of the automobile accident.
The district court therefore gave the entire policy a practical, commonsense reading when it determined that, in determining the applicability of the exclusion, the focus must be on the circumstances surrounding the injury. Only in this manner can the intent of the parties — to exclude from coverage a loss caused by the ingestion of too much alcohol— be respected. See Garriguenc,
