*295 Opinion
This appeal is from a judgment in favor of respondent insurance carrier and involves the interpretation and construction of a policy of insurance. The facts are not in dispute. The controversy arises out of a water skiing accident when respondent’s insured, Larry Hauck, was operating his motor boat and towing his wife, Rebecca Hauck. Mrs. Hauck collided with an irrigation pipe protruding above the water surface and died from the resulting injuries.
Respondent insured Mr. Hauck under its Trident Boat and Yacht Policy. Under coverage C of the policy, respondent agrees “to pay all sums which the insured shall become legally obligated to pay for bodily injury, including death at any time resulting therefrom, sustained by any person . . . .” Under the exclusions section, exclusion 7 states: “[This policy does not cover: . . .] 7. under coverages B, C and D3, bodily injury . . . sustained by (a) any member of the same household as the insured except a residence employee or (b) the named insured.” It is undisputed that decedent was a member of the same household as the insured, and, as Larry Hauck’s wife, Rebecca Hauck was by definition a “named insured” under the terms of the policy. The issue before us is whether the exclusion, since it speaks only of bodily injury, also includes death. The trial court concluded that exclusion 7 was not ambiguous and the subject policy excluded coverage for the death of Rebecca Hauck, and it entered a declaratory judgment stating that respondent Mid-Century Insurance Company had no obligations or duties of any kind or description to defendants under the terms of its policy on account of the accident.
“[W]e begin with the fundamental principle that an insurer cannot escape its basic duty to insure by means of an exclusionary clause that is unclear.”
(State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co.
v.
Jacober
(1973)
While no California decision appears, to have ruled directly on the question of whether “bodily injury” includes “death,” there is precedent for our determination that “bodily injuries” refer only to nonfatal injuries and that when a policy excludes “bodily injuries,” a death resulting therefrom is not so excluded unless specifically stated. (See, e.g.,
Housh
v.
Pacific States Life Ins. Co.
(1934)
Respondent relies on
Farmers Ins. Exch.
v.
Brown
(1967)
“A layman attempting to interpret an insurance policy ... is not likely to have the legal sophistication to deduce what an insurance company is attempting to accomplish by an ambiguous exclusionary clause; it is on just such grounds that our cases have uniformly required that exclusions be ‘conspicuous, plain and clear.’
(Steven
v.
Fidelity & Casualty Co.
(1962)
If the carrier sought to exclude an action for wrongful death, it should have included in the Special Conditions section a definition of “bodily injury” which would achieve that goal, and it should draft its exclusions so that a layman reading the policy understands the distinctions made therein.
*297
“[P]ast authorities have made it abundantly clear that an entirely different rule of construction applies to exclusionary clauses as distinguished from coverage clauses. Whereas coverage clauses are interpreted broadly so as to afford the greatest possible protection to the insured [citations], exclusionary clauses are interpreted narrowly against the insurer. [Citations.] These differing canons of construction [are] both derived from the fundamental principle that all ambiguities in an insurance policy are construed against the insurer-draftsman . . . .”
(State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co.
v.
Partridge
(1970)
Judgment reversed with directions to enter judgment for appellants.
