Lead Opinion
1 1. The estate and parents of Jason Oddsen appeal the circuit court's summary judgment in favor of State Farm Fire & Casualty Company. The court found that State Farm has no continuing duty to defend or duty to indemnify its insured, Elizabeth Henry, under a condominium unit owner's policy, for tort claims alleging Henry was negligent in failing to render or obtain aid for Oddsen, who died from acute mixed drug intoxication. The material facts regarding Henry's tort liability — her knowledge and actions — are disputed and, as such, State Farm's motion for summary judgment seeking a declaration of no coverage must be denied.
¶ 2. On the night of February 2, 2010, Oddsen went to the home of Christopher Cavanaugh to watch a basketball game with Kyle Walters, Brian Hoffman, and Henry. During the course of the party, Oddsen, who was a regular abuser of drugs, consumed a mixture of heroin, methadone, oxycodone, and alprazolam that proved fatal eаrly the next morning. Oddsen began to show signs of having overdosed while staying at the home of Henry's mother. It is largely this time period, when Oddsen first began exhibiting signs of having overdosed to when Henry sought emergency assistance, that is critical for purposes of deciding whether Henry is still entitled to a defense, and ultimately, perhaps indemnity, in the action Oddsen's estate
¶ 3. The circuit court granted State Farm summary judgment declaring that it has no continuing duty to defend or duty to indemnify Henry. The circuit court concluded that public policy and a lack of an "occurrence" precluded coverage, a conclusion the circuit court based on its "important" finding that Henry's "failure to obtain aid was not an accident," that her actions were "intentional" in doing "nothing over a period of several hours as Jason Oddsen perished before her eyes." These facts were disputed and, as such, State Farm's motion for summary judgment must be denied.
BACKGROUND
. The Allegations of the Complaint
¶ 4. Joshua Oddsen, as special administrator of the estate of Jason Oddsen, along with Oddsen's parents, Carolyn Oddsen and Mark Oddsen (the Estate), commenced this action against, among others, Henry, alleging that Hoffman and Cavanaugh provided Oddsen with "numerous controlled and uncontrolled substances including . . . [a]lprazolam, [o]xycodone, [hjeroin and [m]ethadone."
¶ 5. The Estate's complaint alleges that, starting at approximately 4:00 a.m., Henry noticed that Oddsen was having difficulty breathing. Instead of calling "authorities," she called a number of acquaintances, including Hoffman and Cavanaugh, using Oddsen's phone. About one hour later, Henry again spoke with Hoffman who responded to her by trying to ride his bicycle to her residence. While in route, Hoffman was stoрped by police and taken to a park-and-ride. Hoffman did not mention to police that there was an emergency at Henry's residence. Using Oddsen's car, Henry drove to the park-and-ride to pick up Hoffman, leaving Oddsen at her residence.
¶[ 6. When Henry and Hoffman returned back to her residence, they "negligently attempted to render aid to Oddsen." They then dragged him outside Henry's residence and into the driveway. Hoffman and a neighbor contacted 911. Paramedics arrived, rendering emergency aid to Oddsen before taking him to the hospital where, at 7:28 a.m., he was pronounced dead. The Estate alleges claims against Henry based on her "negligent attempt to render aid."
¶ 7. Henry tendered a defense of this action to State Farm under a condominium unit owner's policy it issued to Henry's mother. State Farm accepted Henry's tender under a reservation of rights. State Farm moved to intervene in the action and to bifurcate and stay the underlying merits from the issue of coverage: State Farm's motion to intervene was granted, and the motion to bifurcate and stay was held in abeyance pending anticipated motions on coverage. State Farm filed an intervenor complaint, alleging that it had no duty to defend or indemnify Henry.
Henry's Deposition Testimony
¶ 8. Meanwhile, discovery progressed. Henry was deposed and testified that Oddsen was a regular user of opiates, although February 2 was the first time she saw him using heroin. Oddsen was "high" about "every other day," and, if he was not high, then he was in withdrawal, Henry testified. When Henry first saw Oddsen that day at around 3:00 p.m., he was not exhibiting any signs of withdrawal and so she assumed he had consumed drugs earlier that day. Oddsen showed Henry a bag and told her it contained heroin. Although Henry never saw Oddsen consume heroin that night, she knew that he had done so. Oddsen might have taken other drugs, she said, but she did not know for sure. She noticed that there were half-straws in the loft of Cavanaugh's home, which she knew were used to snort pills. Towards the end of the night,
Oddsen appeared intoxicated. He was falling asleep and not talking much, which was "so usual" for him.
¶[ 9. Around 12:00 a.m., Oddsen left with Henry, Hoffman, and Walters. Oddsen had no difficulty breathing and was able to walk to his car. Although he was still intoxicated, he started driving. He was "swerving on the road," going "in and out" of consciousness. Ultimately, Henry convinced Oddsen to let her drive. They arrived at her mother's home around 2:00 a.m. Later, she saw Oddsen crushing a pill, which turned out to be trazodone, but she told him that he had had enough, and he relented.
¶ 10. Over the next couple hours, Henry was up several times, and Oddsen might have gotten up to use the bathroom once. Hоffman called Henry multiple times, and he was asking strange questions, such as why was Oddsen snoring so loudly.
¶ 11. At some point, Oddsen stopped snoring. Henry woke him, and he was pale and groggy but responsive. She suggested that they go to the hospital to "make sure that everything's ok." Initially, he refused, but when she threatened to call 911, he agreed to go. They walked down the stairs to the front door, and Oddsen started putting on his shoes. Oddsen slumped down and was complaining about leaving when he then became unresponsive.
¶[ 12. By then Henry had opened the front door to find Hoffman outside in the
Cavanaugh's Deposition Testimony
¶ 13. Like Henry, Cavanaugh testified that Odd-sen was a habitual drug user. Oddsen was using opiates almost every day, and Cavanaugh had seen him using heroin hundreds of times. In thе last year of his life, Oddsen was ingesting a mixture of drugs like oxycodone, alprazolam, or methadone. It was common sense that mixing drugs was dangerous, and Oddsen knew this because he and Cavanaugh had talked about acquaintances that had died from mixing drugs. Odd-sen was incoherent every day, and it was "very, very noticeable."
¶ 14. On February 2, Oddsen consumed methadone, oxycodone, alprazolam, and heroin.
f 15. Around 3:30 or 4:00 a.m., Henry called Cavanaugh from Oddsen's phone — she may have called earlier, but Cavanaugh was sleeping — and she said that Oddsen was breathing "funny." Henry was "frantic." Henry held up the phone to Oddsen's mouth so that Cavanaugh could hear. Cavanaugh told her that Oddsen was a heavy sleeper or snorer, which is what it sounded like to him. He advised Henry that if she was really concerned she should wake up her mother or Oddsen's mother or call an ambulance.
Hoffman's Written Statement to Police
¶ 16. Hoffman gave a written statement to police stating that when they left Cavanaugh's residence, Oddsen's condition was no where near life-threatening. He was alert and was able to drive Hoffman home on the other side of town. Later, Henry called Hoffman, but did not tell him about
State Farm's Policy
¶ 17. Under Henry's mother's policy, State Farm agreed to defend and indemnify its insured if suit is brought "for damages because of bodily injury... to which this coverage applies, caused by an occurrence."
State Farm's Motion for Summary Judgment
f 18. State Farm moved for summary judgment on its intervenor complaint, arguing that it had no duty to defend or indemnify Henry because she had committed a series of volitional acts that led to Odd-sen's death and, thus, there was no "occurrence" or "accident." Alternatively, if the circuit court were to find that there was an initial grant of coverage, then the intentional acts exclusion barred coverage. Finally, the principle of fortuity and Wisconsin public policy precluded coverage.
The Circuit Court's Decision
f 19. The circuit court granted State Farm's motion, holding that public policy and the lack of an occurrence precluded coverage. The court reasoned as follows:
[T]his court finds here, 0 although it may have never been [Henry's] intent to let Oddsen die, I do find there were certain intentional actions on the part of Henry which contributed to Oddsen's death, and that includes not calling 911 sooner. A reasonable insured cannot expect that her insurance company would provide coverage while what [Henry] did here was to do nothing over a period of several hours as her friend, who had consumed a large amount of illegal drugs in her presence earlier in the evening, perished before her very eyes. Returning to occurrence [,] '[t]his court finds that there is no occurrence and thus no initial grant of coverage. This court finds that Henry's failure to obtain aid was not an accident. Plaintiff certainly encouraged this court to find that Henry's acts constituted negligence because they fеll below the standard of care, but this court finds that the actions on [Henry's] part were nonetheless intentional actions ....
I want to note, at least the way I read the plaintiffs material, the plaintiff does not dispute nor could the plaintiff disputethat Oddsen's death was from the consumption of drugs, which, in effect, was foreseeable. The fact that Henry did nothing over a period of several hours, as Jason Oddsen perished before her eyes, is important to this court in its findings. At some point she intentionally left Oddsen alone in her room so she could pick up Hoffman for assistance. At some point she drags Oddsen down the stairs to the driveway. Finally calls 911. The court finds that these choices were all intentional.
ANALYSIS
The Parties' Contentions
f 20. The Estate contends that Henry's actions in failing to render aid to Oddsen were not intentional or volitional but an occurrence, meaning an accident, and, thus, fall within coverage under the State Farm policy. Pointing largely to the complaint, but also some extrinsic evidence, the Estate contends that Henry took some action to render aid to Oddsen, in calling friends, in picking up Hoffman to help her, in trying to get him to the hospital, and in ultimately calling 911. Her "liability is not in wanting [Oddsen] to die, but in falling below the standard of care in the manner in which she rendered aid." Thus, the expected or intended acts exclusion does not exclude coverage because the record is devoid of any evidence that Henry intended to injure Oddsen. Henry's failure to render aid was merely negligent and not intentional.
f 21. State Farm acknowledges that at this posture, where it has provided a defense to Henry under a reservation of rights, the "four-corners rule" no longer governs and that "[t]his Court can look beyond the allegations in the [c] omplaint to determine if there is, in fact, any coverage under the terms of the [p]olicy." Nevertheless, State Farm cites to the amended complaint and proceeds to argue that there is no indemnity coverage "on the basis that the allegations of [the Estate's] complaint are true."
¶ 22. State Farm contends that it is entitled to a declaration of no indemnity coverage for Henry based on the allegations of the Estate's complaint because the Estate has conceded that if Henry's version is true then this lawsuit could not have been brought, since Henry would be entitled to immunity under Wisconsin's Good Samaritan law. See Wis. Stat. § 895.48(1) (2013-14).
¶ 23. State Farm further argues that, even if this court were to find that there was an initial grant of coverage, it would be excluded by the intentional or expected acts exclusion. Under the Estate's theory
Standard of Review and Summary Judgment Methodology
¶ 24. The procedure this court uses in reviewing a motion for summary judgment is the same as that of the circuit court and has been set forth in "numerous cases." Grams v. Boss,
¶ 25. The moving party has the burden to establish the absence of a genuine, that is, disputed, issue as to any material fact. Id. Our job is clear: "On summary judgment the court does not decide the issue of fact; it decides whether there is a genuine issue of fact." Id. "A summary judgment should not be granted unless the moving party demonstrates a right to a judgment with such clarity as to leave no room for controversy." Id.
f 26. Thus, the papers are "carefully scrutinized," and the nonmoving party is entitled to the benefit of all favorable facts and reasonable inferences drawn in his or her favor. See id. at 339. Should the material presented on the motion be subject to conflicting interpretations or if reasonable people might differ as to its significance, then summary judgment must be denied. Id. On summary judgment, the allegations in the complaint are not evidence. See Krezinski v. Hay,
The Duty to Defend and the Duty to Indemnify
¶ 27. At the initial duty to defend stage, the duty of an insurer to defend its insured "is determined by comparing the allegations of the complaint to the terms of the insurance policy," known as the "four-corners rule." See Estate of Sustache v. American Family Mut. Ins. Co.,
¶ 28. A determination of coverage means a determination on the duty to indemnify, that is, whether the claim is within the parameters of the policy and the insured is liable. Id., ¶ 29; Reid v. Benz,
¶ 29. In determining whether there is coverаge under the terms of an insurance policy, we first examine whether the policy's insuring agreement makes an initial grant of coverage, that is, whether the insurer has a duty to indemnify its insured for the claims asserted. Id., ¶ 41; Sustache,
Occurrence and Intentional Act Exclusion
¶ 30. As already noted, the State Farm policy provides coverage "for damages because of bodily injury . . . caused by an occurrence," which is defined as "an accident." Accident itself is undefined in the State Farm policy; thus, we apply the term's common everyday meaning, that is, " '[a]n unexpected, undesirable event' or 'an unforeseen incident' which is characterizеd by a 'lack of intention.' " Doyle v. Engelke,
¶ 31. The intentional or expected acts exclusion precludes coverage only where the insured acts intentionally and intends some harm or injury to follow from that act. See Liebovich v. Minnesota Ins. Co.,
State Farm is Not Entitled to Summary Judgment
¶ 32. Here, the circuit court erroneously granted State Farm summary judgment declaring that Henry is not entitled to coverage. The "accident" alleged in the Estate's complaint is that Henry's negligent failure to render aid resulted in his death. Central to the court's determination that Henry's actions were intentional, and not negligent, was its finding that Henry did "nothing over a period of several hours as her friend, who had consumed a large amount of illegal drugs in her presence earlier in the evening, perished before her very eyes." These are disputed issues of material fact that must be resolved by the trier of fact. See Olson,
¶ 33. As notеd above, State Farm largely relies on the allegations in the complaint. Starting at approximately 4:00 a.m., Henry noticed that Oddsen was having difficulty breathing. Instead of calling "authorities," she called Hoffman, who responded by riding his bicycle to her home. Henry, without Oddsen, picked up Hoffman and returned to her residence where she and Hoffman belatedly attempted to render aid to Oddsen.
¶ 34. Henry's version of the events, however, was quite different, testifying that while Oddsen was putting on his shoes in the doorway after having agreed to go with Henry to the hospital, he suddenly collapsed. She and Hoffman tried to get Oddsen into his car in order to drive him to the hospital, and then she called 911 "within that same couple minutes."
¶ 35. Henry also testified that, while she was aware that Oddsen had consumed heroin, she did not see him doing so, nor did she know for sure whether he took other drugs. Thus, her testimony indicates that shе did not know how much heroin he consumed, or about the drugs Cavanaugh testified Oddsen consumed and the autopsy revealed. She also denied taking any drugs other than her own prescription drugs. She denied going to get Hoffman in the middle of the night, and she denied that she was motivated by a desire to avoid getting in trouble. The fact finder at trial may believe the allegations in the complaint, if supported by the evidence presented at trial; the fact finder may believe Henry's testimony; or it may find that the facts lie somewhere between those two versions, given the testimony of others, such as Cavanaugh and Hoffman.
¶ 36. Before the circuit court, and again on appeal, State Farm seeks to avoid a trial on Henry's tort liability and obtain a declaration of no coverage by largely relying on the allegations of the complaint — the Estate's alleged case if рroven would establish that Henry's actions were not an occurrence and were intentional. State Farm justifies this approach by arguing that, if Henry's account is to be believed, the Estate would not have brought this lawsuit because she would have been entitled to immunity under the Good Samaritan law. Thus, the Estate argues, "Henry's
¶ 37. In effect, State Farm asks us to determine indemnity coverage for Henry based on a hypothetical outcome on liability, rather than on the evidence submitted on summary judgment. To some extent, the Estate goes along with the hypothetical approach, relying both on some оf the allegations of the complaint, while pointing to some of Henry's deposition testimony that is favorable to its negligence claim and ignoring that which might hurt the Estate's claim.
¶ 38. Neither State Farm nor the Estate provide any authority for us to determine coverage for the insured based on the insurer's and the plaintiffs preferred hypothetical outcomes on liability when the facts are disputed. The parties provide no authority for their suggestion that we could pick and choose which allegations and facts to rely on to either find no coverage for the insured as a matter of law, or no underlying liability of the insured as a matter of law, when the allegations of the complaint are not evidence and the facts of record on summary judgment create disputed issues of material fact.
¶ 39. As discussed above, the evidence in the record as to whether Henry's actions were negligent or intentional is disputed. As to the claimed immunity from liability under the Good Samaritan law, State Farm failed to adequately develop this issue, including an application of the elements of this defense to the facts of record. In any event, the facts are disputed as to Henry's knowledge and actions prior to her 911 call and Oddsen's physical state. Again, Cavanaugh and Hoffman relay that Henry was frantic, aware of Oddsen's dire consequences for hours, and wanted tо avoid getting into trouble. Henry has denied that she delayed in calling 911 because she did not want to get in trouble — a delay that was mere minutes under her version — creating disputed issues of fact as to whether her conduct was negligent, or amounted to emergency care rendered at the scene of the emergency, and if so, whether it was rendered in "good faith." See Wis. Stat. § 895.48(1); Mueller v. McMillian Warner Ins. Co.,
Remaining Public Policy Contention Based on the Insurance Agreement
¶ 41. The circuit court granted State Farm's motion partially on the ground that public policy barred coverage for Henry's "intentional actions." Again, the circuit court's resolution of this issue hinged on its choosing among disputed facts, which was inappropriate on a motion for summary judgment. See Ackerman v. Hatfield,
The Dissent's Public Policy Argument
¶ 42. Our dissenting colleague argues that the circuit court should have dismissed the Estate's complaint on public policy grounds, meaning that Oddsen's own actions in causing his death should cut off any liability of Henry. No one ever asked for that relief. While we have the power to raise an argument sua sponte, see Bartus v. DHSS,
CONCLUSION
| 43. The circuit court should not have granted State Farm summary judgment declaring that it has no continuing duty to defend or duty to indemnify Henry. Discovery has shown that there are disputed issues of fact, which must be resolved by a fact finder before it can be determined whether State Farm is obligated to indemnify Henry. Until such time, State Farm has a continuing duty to defend Henry in the underlying tort lawsuit.
By the Court. — Order reversed and cause remanded for further proceedings.
Notes
We take these allegations from the amended complaint.
State Farm initially moved for summary judgment on its intervenor complaint but was directed to rebrief the issue of coverage after the Estate was granted permission to amend the complaint io remove the allegation that Henry had provided Oddsen with drugs.
According to phone records, between 4:02 a.m. and 5:42 a.m., there were twenty phone calls from Oddsen's phone.
According to police records, the police responded to the scene at approximately 6:30 a.m.
Cavanaugh testified that Oddsen had brought alprazo-lam and heroin with him. Later that night, when Cavanaugh asked Oddsen what he had taken, he said alprazolam, heroin, and methadone. At another point in his deposition, Cavanaugh testified that Oddsen also consumed oxycodone by snorting it.
Cavanaugh testified that Henry consumed alprazolam and, he thought, heroin because she went up to the loft with Oddsen and, when she came back down, she was behaving differently. Henry testified that she only took alprazolam, which was under a doctor's prescription.
It is undisputed that Henry is considered an "insured" under the State Farm policy.
All references to the Wisconsin Statutes are to the 2013-14 version unless otherwise noted.
State Farm also relies on discrete facts from the summary judgment submissions, including Hoffman's statement to the police. Neither party addresses whether the statement is admissible on summary judgment, but because it is not necessary to our conclusion that other disputed issues of material fact preclude summary judgment, we need not address that issue.
Henry, who was represented by independent defense counsel, did not oppose State Farm's coverage motion. Henry, however, never moved for summary judgment dismissing the complaint against her on the basis that she was immune from liability under Wisconsin's Good Samaritan law.
While State Farm contends that the Estate conceded that Henry's version of events would support a Good Samaritan defense, the Estate argues that Henry's version is also not completely true, and her actions would thus amount to negligence. Again, neither party points to authority permitting us to rely on alleged concessions of the plaintiff as to whether the insured defendant's testimony supports or does not support liability, much less for us to defer to these parties' chosen versions of the facts to determine liability as a matter of law, rather than all the evidence in the record.
Dissenting Opinion
¶ 44. (dissenting). I respectfully dissent on two grounds. First, and foremost, public policy precludes liability as Elizabeth Henry was not the proximate cause of Jаson Oddsen's death; and, second, under the terms of State Farm's policy, Oddsen's death was not caused by an "occurrence."
BACKGROUND
¶ 45. On February 2, 2010, Oddsen, an undisputed drug addict, consumed methadone during the day, and then shortly after arriving at Christopher Cavanaugh's apartment, he voluntarily ingested oxy-codone, heroin, and alprazolam.
¶ 46. Oddsen's mother, Carolyn Oddsen, an emergency room nurse and emergency medical technician instructor, knew that Oddsen was a drug addict. Oddsen's father was a corrections officer.
¶ 47. When Oddsen and Elizabeth left Cavanaugh's home, Oddsen was the driver. When Oddsen later experienced trouble breathing, Elizabeth tried to convince him to go to the hospital, but Oddsen refused. I respectfully submit that Oddsen was the proximate cause of his own death.
¶ 48. Whether public policy acts as a bar to a claim in any given case is a question of law that this court decides de novo. Fandrey v. American Family Mut. Ins. Co.,
¶ 49. The undisputed fact is that Oddsen voluntarily ingested powerful, addictive, illegal, and known lethal drugs, and he alone is legally responsible for his actions. Oddsen (via his Estate) and his family now seek to profit from Oddsen's voluntary choices. Oddsen took the lethal dose of drugs, and he alone declined Elizabeth's offer to takе him to the hospital. While Wisconsin has adopted the minority view from Palsgraf
¶ 50. When a court precludes liability based on public policy factors, it is making a finding that despite the existence of cause-in-fact — in this case Elizabeth's failure to get help — the cause of the plaintiffs injuries is not legally sufficient to allow recovery. Fandrey,
¶ 51. The application of public policy factors to a specific set of facts to deny recovery is a question of law that courts decide de novo. Id., ¶ 29.1 will assume for purposes of public policy analysis that Elizabeth was "a" cause of Oddsen's death and I will also assume Oddsen's death was caused by an "occurrence" as that term is used in the State Farm policy. The six public policy factors are:
(1) the injury is too remote from the negligence; or (2) the injury is too wholly out of proportion to the culpability of the negligent tortfeasor; or (3) in retrospect it appears too highly extraordinary that the negligence should have brought about the harm; or (4) because allowance of recovery would place too unreasonable a burden on the negligent tortfeasor; or (5) because allowance of recovery would be too likely to open the way for fraudulent claims; or (6) allowance for recovery would enter a field that has no sensible or just stopping point.
Alwin v. State Farm Fire & Cas. Co.,
¶ 52. In my opinion, all of the factors apply. Given that I am in the dissent, I shall not fully analyze the factors but simply offer the following: Elizabeth and her
¶ 53. It is not reasonable under the facts presented to hold Elizabeth legally responsible for Oddsen's voluntary choices. Oddsen's family, friends, and society were all aware of and, under the Hocking view, at fault for not stopping Oddsen's death spiral. It is not reasonable under the circumstances that Oddsen's Estate and his mother should profit from Oddsen's voluntary bad choices. Legal liability lies solely and only upon Oddsen; moral responsibility lies in a different court of justice. I would dismiss the Estate's complaint.
INSURANCE CONTRACT INTERPRETATION
¶ 54. Oddsen's death was no accident — it was an occurrence nearly certain to happen given the voluntary choices Oddsen made to ingest lethal drugs. The insurance policy at issue in this case provides coverage for any claim or suit "against an insured for damages because of bodily injury or property damage . . . caused by an occurrence." An occurrence is defined as an "accident," including repeated or continuous exposure to the same general conditions, resulting in bodily injury or property damage. In other words, this is a standard liability policy providing coverage for accidental injuries or damages, a concept that has been explored repeatedly and at length by our courts over the years.
¶ 55. In Stuart v. Weisflog's Showroom Gallery, Inc.,
¶ 56. The court expanded upon this explanation more recently in Schinner v. Gundrum,
¶ 57. I am persuaded by these cases that Oddsen and his mother have not alleged an "occurrence" that triggers coverage under State Farm's policy. The only "event" that arguably could be said to have occurred "without one's foresight or expectation" was Oddsen's death. See Stuart,
¶ 58. Appellants argue that Elizabeth's actions are the "accident" in this case because she did not intend for Oddsen's condition to worsen. As Schinner explains, however, "our insurance case law does not require that an insured intend to harm, or know with substantial certainty that harm will occur, in order to determine that the harm was not an accident." Schinner,
¶ 59. For the forgoing reasons, I would affirm the circuit court's dismissal of State Farm.
The Waukesha county medical examiner determined that Oddsen died from acute mixed drug intoxication after finding heroin, methadone, oxycodone, and alprazolam in his blood.
For reasons unstated, Oddsen's father is not listed as a party on the plaintiffs' amended complaint.
Palsgraf v. Long Island R. R. Co.,
