Opinion
An insurаnce policy insured the owner of an airplane for liability for death of passengers. A policy endorsement stated the insurance would be effective only when the airplane was operated by a pilot holding a current medical certificate. The airplane crashed while flown by a pilot with an expired medical certificate, killing him and his two passengers. The pilot’s physical condition did not cause the crash. The carrier denied coverage for wrongful death. The passengers’ heirs contended the expired medical certificatе had no causal connection to the accident and their damages were covered by the policy. We shall hold the lack of causal connection does not negate the current medical certificate requirement and the policy excluded liability for the passengers’ deaths, and reverse the judgment.
I
National Union Fire Insurance Company of Pittsburg, Pennsylvania (National) issued on June 29, 1981, an insurance policy insuring Sterling Meyer for liability for death of passengers carried in his Cessna 310 R airplane. A pilot warranty was attached to the policy as an indоrsement. The warranty included this paragraph; “1. Insurance will be effective only when the operation of the insured aircraft in motion is by a pilot designated below who posses[es] a current and valid pilot certificate of the kind specified with appropriate ratings, and a сurrent medical certificate; all as required by the Federal Aviation Administration for the flight involved and who meets the additional qualifications set forth below.” Ronald F. Miller and Meyer were specifically designated as pilots on the warranty.
*869 On October 28, 1981, passengers Lawrence R. Saenz and Carl Stanley Gilbert boarded the Cessna at Calexico, California, bound for John Wayne Airport at Santa Ana. Miller was the pilot. He held a current and valid pilot certification but his medical certificate had expired and was not current. While on approach, the airplane crashed into a mountain, killing Miller and his passengers. Miller’s medical condition did not cause the crash, which was occasioned by pilot error.
Saenz’s widow Alice for herself and as guardian for their two children, and Gilbert’s surviving son David (collectively the heirs) sued Susan Miller as representative оf Miller’s estate, Meyer, 1 and others for wrongful death damages. National then filed its complaint for declaratory relief contending Miller’s failure to possess a current medical certificate at the time of the crash as required under the pilot warranty indorsement prevented сoverage under the policy becoming effective.
Responding to requests for admissions, National admitted the policy “was in full force and effect on October 28, 1981,” the date of the crash. Motions for summary judgment and for adjudication of issues were made, denied and granted in part. On thе trial date, the parties stipulated to facts and submitted the case to the court on the stipulation and their memoranda of law. The court concluded National’s admission the policy was in full force and effect the day of the accident waived its contention a current medical certificate as to Miller was required to cause the coverage to be effective. The court then decided Miller’s failure to possess a current medical certificate had “nothing to do with the accident” and absence of the certificate did not toll the policy’s effectiveness. The court gave judgment for the heirs of the passengers declaring the policy covered their claims. National appeals. We reverse.
II
The heirs contend National’s admission the policy was in full force and effect the day of the acсident ended the coverage ball game. The trial court agreed. We don’t. In
Irwin
v.
Pacific Southwest Airlines
(1982)
National’s admission the policy was in full force and effect did not constitute a waiver of the policy requirement Miller possess a current medical certificate and National is not estopped from asserting the lack of a current certificate prevented the policy from becoming effective. The admission “lacks the gravity of a complete relinquishment of rights on the issue of liability.”
(Irving
v.
Pacific Southwest Airlines, supra,
Ill
National contends Miller’s failure to possess a current medical certificate at the time of the crash compels the conclusion thе policy did not afford coverage because the pilot warranty endorsement provided “Insurance will be effective only when [the aircraft is operated] by a pilot... who possesses] ... a current medical certificate____”
National argues in the same vein coverage is expressly excluded under part 2 of page two of the policy headed in large print, “Exclusions,” which provides, “This policy does not apply [fl] ... 2. To any insured while the aircraft is in flight [fi] (a) if piloted by other than the pilot or pilots designated in the Declarations____” The declarations stаte the aircraft will be piloted only by those named in the pilot warranty endorsement which lists Miller. National reasons Miller’s failure to possess *871 a current medical certificate means he cannot be a designated pilot and the coverage for the crash is thus expressly excluded under the exclusion part of the policy.
We address this paragraph 2(a) exclusion contention first. Assuming the policy does not apply to any insured if the aircraft is piloted by someone other than those designated, i.e., Miller and Meyer, it does not follow that Miller’s failure to pоssess a current medical certificate ipso facto eliminates him as a designated pilot. Exclusions are narrowly construed and uncertainties resolved in favor of the insured.
(Silberg
v.
California Life Ins. Co.
(1974)
IV
Middlesex Mutual Ins. Co.
v.
Bright
(1980)
“As noted above, Insurance Code section 11584 authorizes policy limitations on the use of the aircraft. In view of the liability assumed by Middle-sex under its contract with the insured, it was reasonable to provide for a suspension of coverage when the aircraft is used for illegal purposes. Thе insurer is otherwise made an unwilling insurer of unlawful activities.
*872
“We conclude that exclusion 4(c) herein had the effect of limiting liability under the policy by excluding from coverage the risks and hazards encountered by insured while operating or permitting the operation of the aircraft for illegal рurposes. It was unnecessary to show a causal relationship between the illegal use and the loss.”
(Middlesex Mutual Ins. Co.
v.
Bright, supra,
The language in Middlesex—“This policy does not apply”—is to the same effect as the language in the pilot warranty endorsement here—“Insurance will be effective only____” The heirs do not contend this phrase does not act to bar coverage and they do not argue the phrase is hidden or concealed such as to require we give it no effect
(Gray
v.
Zurich Insurance Co.
(1966)
An insurance policy is a contract to be construed to effect the intention of the parties.
(Roug
v.
Ohio Security Ins. Co.
(1986)
The public policy argument necessarily fails for several reasons. The courts hаve consistently held insurance policies are contracts and the terms of the policy are construed to effectuate the intent of the parties. The intent *873 to exclude coverage if the pilot lacks a current medical certificate clearly appеars in the pilot warranty endorsement in unequivocal language. The heirs do not specify the public policy violated by the exclusion other than the resultant bar to their claim for damages.
Middlesex
and its cited cases state the law as we see it, i.e., there need be no causal relationship between an excluded circumstance and the incident which gives rise to a claim under the policy. National and Meyer agreed the policy would not be effective if the pilot’s medical certificate was not current. The heirs cite cases dealing with causal relationship between a policy exclusion and an incident to support their contention lack of causal relationship does not bar coverage. None are on point.
(Sabella
v.
Wisler
(1963)
Judgment reversed.
Kremer, P. J., concurred.
Work, J., concurred in the result.
Respondents’ petition for review by the Supreme Court was denied August 20, 1987. Broussard, J., was of the opinion that the petition should be granted.
Notes
Meyer’s estate has since been substituted as a defendant.
