OPINION
Respondents Depositors Insurance Company (Depositors) and Midwest Family Mutual Insurance Company (Midwest Family) each brought declaratory-judgment actions seeking a declaration that the respective homeowner’s insurance policies issued by them did not provide coverage for appellant’s injuries. Appellant (Tracy Olene) and the insureds, Douglas and Mathias Schmitt, were attempting to lift 01-ene’s car off of a flatbed trailer and move it to another location. Olene was injured when a chain, which had been wrapped through the car windows and attached to a motorized crane, broke, causing the car to fall on top of him. The district court granted summary judgment in favor of respondents, finding that the motor-vehicle exclusion in respondents’ policies precluded coverage for appellant’s injuries. Because the breaking of the chain could not have occurred independently of the use of a motor vehicle, it is not a divisible, concurrent cause, and the motor-vehicle exclusion in the insurance policies precluded coverage for appellant’s injuries. We affirm.
FACTS
Mathias Schmitt (Mathias) runs an auto scrap business from his home, which includes a shop for working on cars. The business, known as R & P Auto, sells salvaged car parts and scraps the metal. Mathias has a dealer’s license from the State of Minnesota and pays $25 a year for a county permit to store oil waste. R & P Auto has a separate bank account; these funds are kept separate from personal finances. The Schmitts schedule “R & P Auto” on their income taxes as a “business.”
On March 4, 2000, Olene went to Mathias’s home to drop off his 1970 Malibu, which he was selling for scrap value. There, he was to meet with Douglas Schmitt (Doug), Mathias’s son. Olene brought his car to Mathias Schmitt’s home on a flatbed trailer owned by Olene.
When the Malibu was lifted off the trailer, Doug noticed that oil was leaking from the car, and he placed a pan underneath the car to catch the oil. When the pan began to fill, he removed it, which caused his hands to become soiled. Doug turned his back on Olene and grabbed a rag to wipe his hands. At this time, Olene grabbed a second pan, placed it underneath the vehicle, and, as he was coming out from under the car, the chain broke on a weld on one of the links. The Malibu fell on Olene, causing serious injuries.
Olene sued Mathias and Doug Schmitt, who tendered defense of the lawsuit to Depositors and Midwest Family, their respective homeowner’s liability insurers. Both insurers brought declaratory-judgment actions claiming that they were not obligated to defend or indemnify the Schmitts. Midwest Family also contends that Olene’s negligent-inspection claim is barred on appeal because it was not specifically alleged in Olene’s complaint. The district court granted summary judgment in favor of Depositors and Midwest Family, finding that the motor-vehicle exclusion under both policies precluded coverage. Olene appeals.
ISSUES
1. Is Olene’s claim that the injury occurred as a result of the negligent inspection and breaking of the chain properly before this court?
2. Did the district court err when it concluded that the motor-vehicle exclusion in the homeowner’s policies issued by Depositors and Midwest Family precluded coverage?
ANALYSIS
On review of a summary judgment, an appellate court will assess whether there are genuine issues of material fact and whether the district court erred as a matter of law.
State by Cooper v. French,
“General principles of contract interpretation apply to insurance policies.”
Lobeck v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co.,
I.
Midwest Family argues that Ol-ene’s negligent-inspection claim is not properly before this court because it was not alleged in his complaint. We disagree.
Rule 8.01 of the Minnesota Rules of Civil Procedure provides for broad pleadings, also known as notice pleading. See Minn. R. Civ. P. 8.01. The Minnesota Supreme Court has stated that
[u]nder the Rules of Civil Procedure, only notice pleading is required. The rules do not require adherence to a mechanistic and rigid formula. Instead, the pleadings are liberally construed to insure that the defending party is given adequate notice of the claim.
L.K. v. Gregg,
Olene stated in his complaint that “defendants were negligent in the way they unloaded the automobile and in the manner in which they used the equipment.” Although Olene did not specifically allege negligent inspection of the chain until his brief was filed here on appeal, Midwest Family was clearly put on notice that Olene’s claim involved some allegation concerning the manner in which the equipment was used. Thus, Olene’s more specific negligent-inspection claim should not have been a surprise to Midwest Family and falls within the scope of the broader allegations in his complaint. Because pleadings are liberally and broadly construed, the allegations in his complaint were adequate to support his later, more specific negligent-inspection claim.
II.
Olene claims that the breaking of the chain is a divisible, concurrent cause covered under the Schmitts’ homeowners’ policies, and that the district court erred in concluding that the motor-vehicle exclusion in the policies precludes coverage. The motor-vehicle exclusion language is identical in both policies. Under this exclusion, there is no coverage for bodily injury or property damage arising out of
[t]he ownership, maintenance, use, loading or unloading of motor vehicles or all other motorized land conveyances, including trailers, owned or operated by or rented or loaned to an “insured.”
Appellant, however, relies on
Waseca Mut. Ins. Co. v. Noska,
But appellant’s reliance on
Noska
is misplaced because the Minnesota Supreme Court, in
State Farm Ins. Cos. v. Seefeld,
The
Seefeld
court further narrowed the holding in
Noska
by focusing the inquiry on the actual loss or injury suffered.
3
In other words, the relevant inquiry is whether the causes could have operated independently to cause the
actual injury
that occurred.
Seefeld,
Recently, this court has declined to apply
Noska
and instead has followed the more narrow standard set forth in
Seefeld.
In
Austin Mutual Ins. Co. v. Klande,
[b]ecause the negligent supervision claim is so intertwined with and intimately connected to the insureds’ ownership and use of the motorcycle it cannot be said that the claim arose independently of the motorized vehicle related cause.
Id. (emphasis added).
Similarly, in
Illinois Farmers Ins. Co. v. Duffy,
Seefeld makes clear that for the divisible, concurrent-cause doctrine to apply, the injured party must establish that the non-vehicle-related cause could have operated independently of a motor vehicle to cause the loss. In addition, the possibility that the injury could have been caused without the use of a motor vehicle cannot be too remote.
Here, a chain was wrapped around the roof of a car, and a cable, attached to the motorized crane, lifted the car off the ground. The chain broke, dropping the car on Olene. In determining whether the motor-vehicle exclusion precludes coverage under the homeowner’s policies, we must determine whether the two causes, the non-vehicle-related cause (the breaking of the chain) and the vehicle-related cause (the use of the motorized crane), could have operated independently] to cause the loss.
Seefeld,
Olene claims that Noska is applicable here because, in theory, the defective chain could have broken without the use of the motorized crane, making the two acts divisible. ■ Olene imagines a situation where
a stationary pole fitted with a horizontal, swinging boom to which a cable was attached that could be raised or lowered by a gas-powered winch. The boom could have been swung over the trailer, the cable attached to the chain that was wrapped around the roof of the car and then lifted off the trailer with the aid of the stationary winch. Before the boom could be swung over to deliver to a junkpile, the chain breaks, causing the same injury.
(Appellant’s Br. at 15.)
Olene stresses that under Noska, the court can consider alternate theoretical possibilities (even if unsupported by the factual record) in determining whether the injury could have occurred independently of a motor vehicle.
We acknowledge that
Noska
has never been overruled and that the district court may consider theoretical possibilities to explain how the accident could have occurred without a motor vehicle in determining whether to apply the divisible, concurrent-cause doctrine. But if those possibilities are too remote, the doctrine will not be applied.
Seefeld,
We conclude that while the negligent inspection of the chain was a factor in the cause of the accident, this factor operated inextricably with the use of the motorized crane to cause Olene’s injury. While the chain may not have been incorporated into the design of the crane, it was used only for lifting objects in conjunction with the crane. The chain itself was useless without being used in conjunction with the motorized crane; and indeed, as respondents note, the risk of injury only existed because of the use of the motorized crane.
The motorized crane was supposed to lift the vehicle off the ground and transport it across the scrapyard. The vehicle weighed 3,500 pounds. It is impossible to imagine how 3,500 pounds could be lifted without using something that is motorized. Without the use of the motorized crane, which operated together with the chain to lift the car, Olene would not have been injured. Olene’s alternative theories are implausible, too remote, and completely without factual support.
Because the injuries caused by the breaking of the chain were so intertwined with the use of the motorized crane, the motor-vehicle exclusion in respondents’ homeowner’s policies applies, and there is no coverage for appellant’s injuries. In light of this decision, we need not reach Depositors’ claim that coverage was also precluded under their business-pursuits exclusion.
Affirmed.
Notes
. The crane has three sets of wheels, dual on each side and dual in the back. It also has a four-cylinder gas motor and is designed to move across the land while lifting heavy objects. The crane has a three-speed manual transmission, brakes, and two white lights in the back.
. Thus, the
Seefeld
court observed that in
Nos-ka,
there was a divisible, concurrent cause because the burning embers might have caused the fire and resulting damage through other negligence unrelated to the use of a motor vehicle.
Seefeld,
. Appellant suggests that, under Noska, the injured party need not show that the actual injury could have occurred apart from the use of a motor vehicle, but only that an injury could have occurred under a range of possible scenarios. While we question whether Noska can be read that broadly, in any event, Seefeld focuses the inquiry on the actual injury suffered.
