[¶ 1] Donald D. Martin appealed from a Judgment entered after the Cass County District Court granted Defendant’s Motion for Summary Judgment. We affirm.
I
[¶ 2] On October 5,1995, Donald D. Martin was involved in a serious motor vehicle collision in Tennessee. Initially, Martin was treated at the University of Tennessee Memorial Hospital. His most serious injury was a severe fracture dislocation of his lower left leg. Dr. David Reath, a Tennessee physician, noted in his medical report “[Martin] does have a chance at limb salvage although certainly ankle function will be severely decreased.”
[¶3] At the end of October, Martin was transported by air ambulance to Dakota Heartland Hospital in Fargo. After weeks at Dakota Heartland, a local nursing home, and the Dakota Rehab Unit, Martin was discharged to his home in mid January. Throughout the initial hospitalization and rehabilitation, the viability of Martin’s lower left leg was in question.
[¶ 4] Martin was readmitted to the hospital at the end of February. He underwent two surgeries and was discharged to nursing home care. On April 18,1996,196 days after the initial injury, Martin’s lower left leg was amputated.
[¶ 5] Martin owned a group Accidental Death and Dismemberment Insurance policy offered through his. membership in the American Legion. The group insurance policy was underwritten by Allianz Life Insurance Company of North America, the Legionnaire Insurance Trust, the A.G.I.A., Inc., and the Life Insurance Company of North America (collectively, Allianz). The Allianz policy included the following provisions:
“WHEN BENEFITS ARE PAYABLE:
Allianz Life will pay benefits when all of the following conditions have been met:
(1) The Member or Insured Dependent sustained an accidental bodily injury while his insurance under the Group Policy was effective.
*825 (2) The injury, directly and independently of all other causes, resulted in a Covered Loss.
(3) The Covered Loss occurred within 90 days after the injury was sustained.
COVERED LOSSES AND AMOUNT PAYABLE:
The Principal Sum applicable to the Member and to each Insured Dependent is shown in the Schedule. When benefits are payable, Allianz Life will pay the percentage of the applicable Principal Sum for a Covered Loss as indicated below.
Covered Loss Percentage of Principal Sum Payable
loss of one limb 50%
If an insured person sustains more than one Covered Loss as a result of any one accident, the total amount payable for all Covered Losses shall never' exceed his Principal Sum.
Loss of a limb means severance at or above the wrist or ankle. Loss of sight means total and irrecoverable loss of sight.”
(Bold retained, emphases added).
[¶ 6] Martin filed a claim for accidental injury disability benefits. Allianz denied coverage because the severance of Martin’s lower left leg did not occur within the 90 day period in the insurance contract.
[¶ 7] Martin filed this action, claiming breach of contract and bad faith. Allianz and Martin each filed motions for summary judgment. The district court found Martin’s leg was not physically separated above the ankle until long after the 90-day limitation expired and granted Allianz’s Motion for Summary Judgment.
II
[¶ 8] On appeal, Martin claims the meaning of the word “severance” is ambiguous and should be interpreted to provide coverage because his leg was “functionally severed” following the collision. Martin also argues the 90-day contract limitation period is unreasonable and the district court erred in dismissing his bad faith claim. “Summary judgment under N.D.R.Civ.P. 56 is appropriate ... if the only issues to be resolved are questions of law.”
Security Nat. Bank, Edgeley v. Wald,
A. Ambiguity of “Severance”
[¶9] The legal effect of an insurance contract is a question of law.
Sellie v. North Dakota Ins. Guar. Ass’n,
[¶ 10] A “covered loss” under the Allianz policy includes “loss of a limb.” “Loss of a limb means
severance at or above
the wrist or ankle.” (Emphasis added). Martin claims the term “severance” is ambiguous because it could mean “physical severance” or “functional severance.” A contract term is ambiguous when it can have at least two alternative meanings.
Kief Farmers,
[¶ 11] Neither “physical” nor “functional” appears in the Allianz insurance contract. We will not add these words to the contract to create an ambiguity because they do not define, but rather modify, the true contract term, “severance.” Adding words to a contract in order to create an ambiguity violates the purpose of contract interpretation.
Cf. Kief Farmers,
[¶ 12] Where a term is undefined in the contract we usually look to its clear, ordinary meaning. N.D.C.C. § 9-07-09.
But see Walle Mut. Ins. Co.,
[¶ 13] In this case, the “plain meaning” and the “complex” or “legal meaning” of the word “severance” are in agreement.
See Walle Mut. Ins. Co.,
[¶ 14] In
Perrilloux v. First Standard Life Ins. Co.,
a case closely in line with the facts of this case, the plaintiff’s left leg was injured in a motorcycle collision.
“ ‘the overwhelming weight of authority is to the effect that, where an -insurance policy provides indemnity for the ‘loss of a hand’, or the ‘loss of a foot’, or the ‘loss of an arm’, and provides in the policy a definition or a specific statement as to what shall constitute a loss of such member, effect must be given to this qualifying definition or explanation.’
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“We conclude there is no ambiguity in the contractual provisions defining loss-and the time limitation within which coverage is afforded. [The insurer] had the contractual right to restrict its liability.... ”
*827
Id.
at 429-30 (Quoting in first part
Muse v. Metropolitan Life Ins. Co.,
[¶ 15] In the present ease Martin was covered by a group policy with the title “ACCIDENTAL DEATH & DISMEMBERMENT INSURANCE.” To conclude the definition of “severance” is somehow broader than the main “dismemberment” title would turn the typical insurance contract on its head. From our observations it is typical for the initial portions of an insurance contract to describe in broad terms the coverage provided with the limitations appearing later, in the “small print.” This Court construes insurance policies as a whole to give meaning to each word and phrase.
Symington v. Walle Mut. Ins. Co.,
[¶ 16] Under North Dakota law, “[a]n agreement which is essentially a ‘contract of adhesion’ should be examined with special scrutiny by the courts to assure [ ] it is not applied in an unfair or unconscionable manner against the party who did not participate in its drafting.”
Farmers Union Grain Terminal Ass’n v. Nelson,
[¶ 17] We conclude the district court was correct in granting summary judgment in favor of Allianz because “severance” of Martin’s leg did not occur within the 90-day limitation period.
B. Unreasonableness of 90-Day Limitation
[¶ 18] Martin argues the 90-day contract limitation period is unreasonable and against public policy because it requires the insured to chose between losing a savable limb or taking the insurance proceeds. There is authority holding similar limitation periods unenforceable.
Strickland v. Gulf Life Ins. Co.,
[¶ 19] In
Cornellier v. American Casualty Co.,
the plaintiff made a similar public policy argument.
*828 “In ruling on this question, we must keep in mind [] a court’s power to invalidate contractual provisions as offensive to public policy is not exercised in every case in which the contract may seem to operate harshly on one of the parties. As a general rule, parties to a contract are bóund by its provisions and an insured is entitled only to the coverage for which he contracted; it is not the function of a court to rewrite insurance policies so as to provide coverage which the court might have considered more equitable. Thus, the question is not whether the 90-day limitation in the present case results in a hardship to the plaintiff, but whether that provision ,is so unreasonable [] it must, be held contrary to the public interest and void.”
Id. at 644.
[¶ 20] In
Johnson v. Peterbilt of Fargo, Inc.,
“Public policy, with respect to contract provisions, is a principle of law whereby a contract provision will not be enforced if it has a tendency to be injurious to the public or against the public good. Ness v. Fargo,64 N.D. 231 ,251 N.W. 843 (1933). Whether a particular provision is against public policy is generally provided for by statute or by the State Constitution. However, when a contract provision is inconsistent with fair and honorable dealing, contrary to sound policy and offensive to good morals, courts have the authority to declare the provision void as against public pplicy. Sec. 9-08-01, N.D.C.C. See also [sic] Mees v. Grower,63 N.D. 74 ,245 N.W. 813 (1932).”
But when a court is faced with deciding whether a contract is against public policy, it must be mindful of the right of individuals, in this case an association, the American Legion, to- enter into a contract.
Id.
at 164. Although agreements will not be enforced if they are injurious to the public or against the public good, N.D.C.C. § 9-08-01,
Muscatell v. North Dakota Real Estate Comrn’n,
[¶ 21] We do not believe the 90-day limitation period is so unreasonable as to be contrary to the public interest of North Dakota. While the limitation period may appear to present the insured with the “gruesome choice” of collecting the insurance proceeds or cutting off his leg, the nature of death and dismemberment insurance is to provide coverage in gruesome situations.
[¶ 22] Citing
Strickland,
[¶ 23] We are not'willing to head down the slippery slope of holding a 90-day limitation unreasonable. Such a conclusion begs the question: What is reasonable?; 91 days?; 92 days?; 100? “[T]here has always been and there always will be those who will die [or are dismembered] on the 89th day following the injury and those who will die [or are dismembered] on the 91st day following an injury.”
Hawes,
[¶ 24] The district court correctly granted summary judgment because Martin’s leg was not severed within the 90-day limitation period.
*829 C. Bad Faith Claim
[¶ 25] Martin claims Allianz acted in bad faith in denying coverage. “A bad faith claim against an insurance company requires the breach of a duty.”
Isaac v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co.,
Ill
[¶26] Accordingly, we hold the district court did not err in granting summary judgment in favor of Allianz because Martin’s leg was not severed within the reasonable 90-day contract limitation period.
[¶ 27] We affirm.
