The city of Holyoke appeals from a judgment entered in the Superior Court in favor of Jefferson Insurance Company of New York (Jefferson). 1 The facts are not in dispute.
On or about September 20, 1979, Sandra J. Smigiel was taken into protective custody by members of the Holyoke police department. She committed suicide by hanging herself while still in protective custody. Jefferson had issued an insurance policy to Holyoke insuring the police department and its members against certain risks. The policy carried an exclusionary clause that read as follows:
“This policy does not apply: . . . (i) To claims arising from events during which the injured party was in the care, custody or control of any Insured under this policy other than during an overt attempt to escape from care, custody or control . . . .”
The policy was in effect at the time of Smigiel’s death.
As a result of Smigiel’s death, Dolores Miga, the mother of the decedent and administratrix of the estate of Smigiel, brought an action against Holyoke based on negligence. She later amended her complaint to include counts against Holyoke and six police officers on a violation of civil rights theory for “fail[ing] to insure the safe custody and protection of [Smigiel] due to the lack of frequent, diligent, and adequate supervision of [her] in her cell.”
After Miga brought her action but before it was tried, Jefferson filed a complaint in the Superior Court seeking declaratory relief as to Holyoke and Miga. The complaint sought a declaration that as a result of the exclusionary clause in the policy: (1) Holyoke and members of its police department were not covered in regard to the events concerning Smigiel that occurred on September 20 and 21, 1979, and (2) Jefferson was not obligated to pay any judgment awarded to Miga, in her capacity *474 as administratrix, as a result of her action brought against Holyoke and certain members of its police department.
After the defendants had filed their answers to its complaint, Jefferson filed a motion for summary judgment. It claimed that there was no genuine issue of any material fact among the parties and that the exclusionary clause in the policy denied coverage to Holyoke and its police officers in the circumstances. A Superior Court judge denied the motion and Jefferson’s subsequent motion for reconsideration. The motion judge stated in a memorandum that, in her opinion, the language in the exclusionary clause was ambiguous and that extrinsic evidence showing the circumstances of the making of the contract and the parties’ intent should be permitted at the trial of Jefferson’s complaint.
Miga recovered judgments against Holyoke and certain police officers after a jury trial in the Superior Court. 2 Trial was then held before a Superior Court judge, sitting without a jury, 3 on Jefferson’s complaint. She found that the language in the exclusionary clause was not ambiguous and, therefore, did not need clarification by extrinsic evidence. She ruled that as a result of the exclusionary clause, the insurance policy did not provide coverage for Holyoke or its police officers for liability in regard to Smigiel’s death and that Jefferson was not obligated to pay the judgments recovered by Miga in her capacity as administratrix.
1. Ambiguity in insurance contracts. Holyoke contends that the exclusionary clause is ambiguous, either standing alone or read in conjunction with the entire contract. It also claims that the judge should have applied the “doctrine of reasonable expectations” to resolve the dispute.
An ambiguity exists in an insurance contract when the language contained therein is susceptible of more than one meaning.
Ober
v.
National Cas. Co.,
The interpretation of an insurance contract is a “question of law for the trial judge, and then for the reviewing court.”
4
Cody
v.
Connecticut Gen. Life Ins. Co.,
The insurance contract provided comprehensive coverage for “all sums which the [Holyoke police department] shall become legally obligated to pay as damages because of negligent acts, errors, or omissions arising out of the performance of the . . . duties [of the Holyoke police department and its members] to provide law enforcement with respect to the following perils: Coverage A — Personal Injury; Coverage B — Bodily Injury; Coverage C — Property Damage.” The exclusionary clause
*476
clearly excludes from coverage those claims arising from events during which the injured party was in “the care, custody, or control” of the Holyoke police department or any of its members.
5
Here, there is no dispute that Smigiel was in the “care, custody or control” of the police department at the time she committed suicide. Holyoke argues, however, that the exclusion applies only to those situations where police officers use excessive force on persons who are under their “care, custody or control.” We reject that argument. The language in the exclusionary clause is not reasonably susceptible of such an interpretation. If the parties had intended that the exclusionary clause should apply only to a “hands-on” situation, they could have used appropriate language. “They did not do so, and we cannot distort the plain policy language to give it that construction.”
Save-Mor Supermarkets, Inc.
v.
Skelly Detective Serv., Inc.,
2.
The doctrine of reasonable expectations.
The judge refused to apply the “doctrine of reasonable expectations” in this matter, and Holyoke claims error. The doctrine has been described by Professor (now Judge) Robert Keeton as follows: “The objectively reasonable expectations of applicants and intended beneficiaries regarding the terms of insurance contracts will be honored even though painstaking study of the policy provisions would have negated those expectations.” Insurance Law Rights at Variance with Policy Provisions, 83 Harv. L. Rev. 961, 967 (1970). Also see
Markline Co.
v.
Travelers
*477
Ins. Co.,
The doctrine does not appear to have been explicitly adopted in Massachusetts.
Bond Bros.
v.
Robinson,
The courts that have adopted the doctrine are split as to whether it should be applied in the absence of an ambiguity. See Goodhue, The Doctrine of Reasonable Expectations in Massachusetts and New Hampshire: A Comparative Analysis, 17 New Eng. L. Rev. 891, 900 (1981-1982). However, even if the doctrine were applicable where there is no ambiguity in the insurance contract, its application in this case is inappropriate. Holyoke has not shown that the “structure, content, manner of printing of the [insurance contract], or the methods and practices of marketing . . . creat[ed] reasonable expectations of a [greater area] of coverage . . . .”
Davenport Peters Co.
v.
Royal Globe Ins. Co.,
3. Public policy. Finally, Holyoke contends that the exclusionary clause should not be allowed as a matter of “public policy.” It offers no Massachusetts statutory or case law in support of its argument. We have examined the contention and find it to be without merit.
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
The judgment also ran against another defendant, Dolores Miga, administratrix of the estate of Sandra J. Smigiel, but she has not pursued her appeal. Therefore, it is not before us.
These judgments were affirmed in
Miga
v.
Holyoke,
The Superior Court judge who heard the case was not the same judge who had denied Jefferson’s motion for summary judgment.
Holyoke argues that because the motion judge and the trial judge reached different conclusions as to the presence of an ambiguity, the language in the exclusionary clause must be ambiguous. That is not the rule. This court must itself determine, as matter of law, the question of ambiguity. Nor was the trial judge bound by the conclusion of the motion judge that the contract was ambiguous. See
Salter
v.
Scott,
Our interpretation (and that of the trial judge) does not reduce the coverage to ‘such a narrowly circumscribed area as to be ‘unrealistically limited.’ ”
Middlesex Ins. Co.
v.
American Employers Ins. Co.,
Because the language of the contract is clear and unambiguous, the judge was correct in not resorting to extrinsic evidence to interpret it.
Newell-Blais Post
#443,
Veterans of Foreign Wars of the United States, Inc.
v.
Shelby Mut. Ins. Co.,
