Opinion
Plaintiffs Pamela Malcom (Pamela) and Medmetric Corporation (Medmetric) appeal summary judgment favoring defendant Farmers New World Life Insurance Company (Farmers) on their first amended complaint for breach of life insurance contracts. Plaintiffs contend the court erred in determining the contracts’ suicide provision to be plain, clear, conspicuous and unambiguous as a matter of law. Plaintiffs also contend the court erred in concluding Farmers did not owe the decedent insured *299 Lawrence Malcom (Lawrence) 1 an affirmative duty at time of purchase to advise him of the suicide provision’s limiting effect. We affirm the summary judgment.
I
Facts
We state the undisputed facts in the record.
In 1982 Farmers issued and delivered two $100,000 policies on Lawrence’s life with plaintiffs as beneficiaries.
Each policy contained a clause providing: “Suicide, whether sane or insane, will not be a risk assumed during the first two policy years. In such a case we will refund the premiums paid.”
In May 1984, within two years after the policies were issued, Lawrence committed suicide. 2
In July 1984 Farmers received plaintiffs’ claims seeking each policy’s $100,000 benefit.
In December 1984 Farmers declined plaintiffs’ claims on the basis Lawrence’s death constituted a suicide occurring within the first two policy years.
II
Superior Court Proceedings
A
Plaintiffs’ Pleading
In December 1988 plaintiffs sued Farmers.
*300 Plaintiffs’ first amended complaint alleged Farmers breached the contracts by not paying plaintiffs’ claims for benefits “for covered risks which were not specifically excluded under the contracts [sic] terms.” Plaintiffs also alleged Farmers should have known Lawrence was a high suicide risk based on discussions with Lawrence and his insurance applications’ disclosure of his history of observation, care, and hospital treatment for depression.
B
Farmers’ Motion for Summary Judgment
Farmers sought summary judgment, asserting it was not obligated to pay plaintiffs benefits because the policies clearly, conspicuously and unambiguously precluded coverage for death by suicide within the first two policy years.
After hearing, the court stated the policies’ suicide provision was “conspicuous,” “bold,” “clear” and “unambiguous.” The court granted Farmers’ motion for summary judgment. Plaintiffs appeal.
Ill
Discussion
Plaintiffs seek reversal of the summary judgment, asserting the superior court erred in determining the policies’ suicide provision to be plain, clear, conspicuous and unambiguous. Plaintiffs also contend the suicide provision’s asserted ambiguity prevented the policies as a whole from meeting Lawrence’s reasonable expectation of coverage. Plaintiffs further contend circumstances at the time of purchase imposed on Farmers a legal duty— assertedly breached by Farmers—to point out the suicide provision and explain its limited effect to Lawrence. Interpretation of the meaning of Farmers’ policies’ language is a question of law for our independent determination.
(Fragomeno
v.
Insurance Co. of the West
(1989)
A
Suicide Provision Was Plain, Clear and Conspicuous
Plaintiffs contend the suicide provision is not “plain and clear” and “conspicuous.”
(Crane
v.
State Farm Fire & Cas. Co.
(1971)
*301 1
“To be plain and clear, the substance of the exclusion must be precise and understandable. ‘To be effective in this context, the exclusion must be couched in words which are part of the working vocabulary of average lay persons.’ [Citation.]”
(Travelers Ins. Co.
v.
Lesher
(1986)
At the hearing on Farmers’ motion for summary judgment, plaintiffs’ counsel, while contesting conspicuousness, conceded the language of the suicide provision was “plain and clear.” Plaintiffs now contend the court should not have found the suicide provision to be plain and clear because its words “a risk assumed” were assertedly “words of art in the insurance industry and are not used in the normal manner in which they are used by lay persons.” Plaintiffs also assert the suicide provision was unclear in not specifying whether risks were assumed by the insured or by the insurer. Assuming plaintiffs may raise those contentions on appeal despite their concession in superior court, we conclude as a matter of law the suicide provision was plain and clear.
Farmers’ policies’ suicide provision contains only 27 words. The provision states: “Suicide, whether sane or insane, will not be a risk assumed during the first two policy years. In such a case we will refund the premiums paid.” None of those words was beyond the working vocabulary of lay persons. Further, the suicide provision’s second sentence expressly states
Farmers
would refund premiums for claims for suicide occurring within the policies’ first two years. Thus, the policies clearly identified Farmers as the party not assuming risk of loss for such suicides. Where, as here, an insurer has clearly limited its coverage, the limitation’s plain language must be respected.
(Blumberg
v.
Guarantee Ins. Co.
(1987)
*302 2
“To be conspicuous, an exclusion must be positioned in a place and printed in a form which will attract the reader’s attention. [Citation.]”
(Travelers Ins. Co.
v.
Lesher, supra,
Farmers’ policies mentioned suicide twice. On the policies’ second page, the “Alphabetic Guide to Your Policy” listed “Suicide” and the suicide provision’s location in the policy. Following the page with the alphabetic guide was the page containing the suicide provision.
Plaintiffs contend the policies’ two references to suicide were not conspicuous. Plaintiffs assert the alphabetic guide’s reference to suicide appeared in small type as the 31st of 32 items. Plaintiffs assert the suicide provision appeared as the sixth item in an eight-item list in the second column of the policies’ “General Provisions.” However, we conclude the suicide provision was in a place and form readily attracting the reader’s attention.
(Travelers Ins. Co.
v.
Lesher, supra,
The suicide provision was located on the policy’s third page—the first operative page after the cover page and the alphabetical guide—and preceded by the bold-faced capitalized word “Suicide.” The suicide provision contained only 27 words and was clearly separated from its neighboring provisions by several blank lines and blank spaces. The provision was neither submerged in “a sea of print” nor “inserted incidentally in a paragraph dealing with promised benefits.”
(Schmidt
v.
Pacific Mut. Life Ins. Co.
(1969)
In sum, Farmers had the right to limit its policies’ coverage.
(Blumberg
v.
Guarantee Ins. Co., supra,
*303 B
Farmers Had No Duty to Point Out and Explain Suicide Provision
Plaintiffs contend the summary judgment should be reversed because the record assertedly contained triable material factual issues about whether at the time Lawrence bought the policies Farmers owed him an affirmative duty to point out the suicide provision and explain its limiting effect on coverage. Citing
Westrick
v.
State Farm Insurance
(1982)
Plaintiff’s theory Farmers breached an affirmative duty of disclosure exceeds the scope of their first amended complaint. Plaintiffs pleaded only breach of contract. Plaintiffs did not allege Farmers breached any duty of disclosure under the theory of
Westrick
v.
State Farm Insurance, supra,
*304 Supporting its motion for summary judgment, Farmers submitted its life claims examiner Olson’s declaration asserting she determined Lawrence’s death was not covered by Farmers’ policies and benefits were not payable due to the policies’ suicide provision. Attached to Olson’s declaration were copies of the policies. As discussed earlier, the suicide provision of those policies was as a matter of law plain, clear, conspicuous, and unambiguous and thus barred plaintiffs’ benefit claims.
Opposing Farmers’ motion for summary judgment, plaintiffs submitted their counsel’s declaration attaching portions of Farmers’ agent Sullivan’s deposition. At deposition Sullivan stated when applying for the policies Lawrence asked about any effect his treatment for depression would have on his application and Sullivan replied the decision was up to the underwriter. Sullivan did not recall discussing with Lawrence or Pamela the suicide provision, the two-year contestability provision, or any other policy term or condition.
The mere fact when applying for the policies Lawrence asked Farmers about the effect his treatment for depression might have on his application did not impose upon Farmers an affirmative duty to advise him specifically about the suicide provision and its effect on coverage. The record contained no evidence suggesting Lawrence asked Farmers for coverage for all suicide-related death or asked Farmers whether the policies would cover suicide-related death. Neither did the record contain evidence suggesting Lawrence sought clarification of the suicide provision after receiving the policies.
6
In sum, there was no evidence suggesting Farmers knew Lawrence entered the transaction under a mistaken belief the policies would cover all suicide-related death.
(Westrick
v.
State Farm Insurance, supra,
Farmers was entitled to judgment as a matter of law because this record disclosed no triable issue of material fact. The superior court properly granted summary judgment favoring Farmers.
*305 Disposition
The judgment is affirmed.
Work, J., and Froehlich, J., concurred.
Appellants’ petition for review by the Supreme Court was denied June 10, 1992.
Notes
For purposes of clarity we refer to the Malcoms by their first names.
The parties stipulated Lawrence’s death constituted a “suicide” under
Searle
v.
Allstate Life Ins. Co.
(1985)
We also reject plaintiffs’ similar contention the suicide clause was ambiguous because it could be read to mean that Lawrence did not have to worry about assuming any risk of suicide during the policies’ first two years. Courts may not fabricate an ambiguity through a strained or absurd construction of otherwise clear language.
(Producers Dairy Delivery Co.
v.
Sentry Ins. Co.
(1986)
In
Westrick
v.
State Farm Insurance, supra,
In
Westrick
v.
State Farm Insurance, supra,
“A reasonable person will read the coverage provisions of an insurance policy to ascertain the scope of what is covered. [Citation.]”
(Hallmark Ins. Co.
v.
Superior Court, supra,
