OPINION
This case is before the court on the appeal of the plaintiff, Peerless Insurance Co. (Peerless), from a Superior Court denial of its motion for summary judgment. It has long been established in Rhode Island thаt as a general rule only final judgments are ap-pealable to this court.
Murphy v. Charlie’s Home Improvement Co.,
Because of the particular importance of the issue raised by Peerless in its motion for summary judgment, we will, however, consider its appeal as a petition for certiorari and address the merits of the issue raised below.
Meehan v. Meehan,
I
Case Travel — Facts
On December 5, 1986, Sebastaio Viegas (Viegas) pled guilty to two first-degree and three second-degree child molestation charges and one charge of the abominable and detestable crime against nature. His *787 victim was Jane Doe, 1 a minor child, and the grandniece of Viegas. Some of or all the sexual assaults took place between September 20, 1981, and September 20, 1986. During that period Viegas was insured undеr a homeowner’s policy issued by Peerless.
In 1990 John and Mary Doe, the parents of Jane, filed a civil action against Viegas in the Providence County Superior Court (P.C. 90-4313). In that civil action, still pending, they seek damages resulting from the criminal acts of sexual abuse for which Viegas was convicted. They claim therein that Viegas breached his duty of care owed to Jane and negligently inflicted emotionаl distress upon her and that his actions were both negligent and wanton.
On September 25, 1991, Peerless commenced an independent civil action against Viegas and John and Mary Doe in the Providence Cоunty Superior Court (C.A.91-6533). In that action it sought declaratory relief in regard to whether it was required to defend Viegas in P.C. 90-4313 and/or indemnity Vie-gas against the claims made by the Does in that action.
On April 30, 1992, Peerless filed a motion for summary judgment on its complaint for declaratory relief. After hearing, on October 19, 1993, the motion calendar justice in the Superior Court, relying upon this court’s previous opinions in
Angelone v. Union Mutual Insurance Co. of Providence,
Viegas’s homeowner’s policy that is in issue here provides coverage for personal liability to others “if a claim is made or а suit is brought against an insured [Viegas] for damages because of bodily injury caused by an occurrence.” That homeowner’s policy also provides that coverage for “personal liability and * * * medical payments to others” does not apply if that bodily injury or property damage was “expected or intended by the insured.” (Emphasis added.) Peerless relies upon that specific liability exclusion provision in its policy оf insurance with Viegas in asserting that it has no duty to defend or to indemnify Viegas. We agree.
II
An Insured’s Intent to Cause Harm— Inferred as a Matter of Law
Peerless asserts here that in child sexual assault cases, the рerpetrator’s intent (in this case, Viegas’s) to cause harm should be inferred as a matter of law, thereby relieving Peerless of its duty to defend pursuant to the intentional injury by the insured exclusion provision in its pоlicy of insurance. That contention presents an issue of first impression in this state and permits us to address the duty of an insurer to defend against liability claimed as a result of an insured’s intentional sexual molestation of a child. In general, the duty to defend an insured in this jurisdiction is determined by applying the “pleadings test.”
Employers’ Fire Insurance Co. v. Beals,
If that pleadings test were applied tо the case at bar, Peerless would have a duty to defend in C.A. 90 — 4313 because the complaint in that case alleges bodily injury resulting from negligent conduct. That was the con- *788 elusion reached by the Superior Court motion hearing justice when hе denied Peerless’s motion for summary judgment despite his acknowledgment that plaintiffs would probably not ultimately recover against Peerless on Viegas’s homeowner’s policy since “it would be a highly unusual result if the victims of this incident can show that Mr. Vie-gas did not intent [sic] to do harm.” The Superior Court justice recognized the inextricable connection between an act of child sexual abuse and the resulting harm, but he denied Peerless’s motion because he felt bound by our holdings in Beals, Grenga, and Angelone. It is precisely for that reason that we choose, at this time, to treat Peerless’s appeal as a petition for writ of certiora-ri so as to reconsider our position with respect to the duty of an insurer to defend in cases involving child sexual abuse by an insured.
In
Whitt v. DeLeu,
“the alleged sexual contact is so substantially certain to result in some injury, or so inherently injurious, ‘that the act is considered a criminal offense for which public policy precludes a claim of unintended consequences, that is, a claim that no harm was intended to result from the act.’ ” Id. at 1014-15 (quoting Horace Mann Insurance Co. v. Leeber,180 W.Va. 375 , 379,376 S.E.2d 581 , 585 (1988)).
The Wisconsin Federal Court summarized its holding by saying that “because injury always ensues [from the sexual molestation of children], the offender is deemed to intend any injury resulting from the act as a matter of law.”
Id.
The cоurt stated that the only justification for a contrary holding “is that it benefits the victims by making possible another potential source of compensation for their injuries.”
Id.
at 1016. Yet, however laudable that benefit may be, it was “outweighed by the effect of allowing sexual offenders to escape having to compensate minors for the harm that the courts have established is inherent in such offenses.”
Id.; see also Perreault v. Maine Bonding & Casualty Co.,
The holding in
Whitt
is in accord with holdings from various other jurisdictions that hаve thus far considered this issue.
See Whitt,
Accordingly, we will join those jurisdictions that have addressed this issue. We will infer an intent to cause harm and injury in cases involving the sexual molesta *789 tion of a minor. In civil actions for damages that result from an act of child sexual molestation, an insurer mil be relieved from its duty to defend and to indemnify its insured if the perpetrator is insured under a policy in which thеre is contained an intentional act exclusion provision. Thus in this instance Peerless has no duty to defend against plaintiffs complaint in C.A. 90-4318 or to indemnify its insured, defendant Viegas. The fact that the allegatiоns in that complaint are described in terms of “negligence” is of no consequence. A plaintiff, by describing his or her cat to be a dog, cannot simply by that descriptive designation cause the cаt to bark. Viegas’s acts of sexual molestation that form the basis of plaintiffs complaint in P.C. 90-4313 were clearly intentional. The trial courts in this state shall hereafter infer, as a matter of law, an insured’s intent in this type of ease to have caused the alleged harm intentionally.
III
Late Notice Issue
This court declines to rule on Peerless’s contention regarding its late notice of the claim made against its insured, Viegas. Given this сourt’s holding on the inferred intent issue, the question of prejudice arising from any late notice has become moot. Moreover, the late notice issue was never initially presented to the Supеrior Court and is not now properly before us. We, therefore, do not consider the late notice issue.
IV
Conclusion
We hold that in the context of the liability insurance policy in this case, the intent to cause harm on the part of the insured is inferred as a matter of law. Consequently, the intentional injury exclusion provision contained in the insurance policy in question relieves Peerless of its duty to defend and its duty to provide indemnity coverage to its insured, Viegas, in C.A. 90-4313. To the extent that Beals, Grenga and Angelone are inconsistent with this opinion, they are no longer controlling. The petition for certiora-ri is granted and the Superior Court’s order is quashed. The papers are remanded to the Superior Court with the direction to grant Peerless’s motion for summary judgment in C.A 91-6533.
Notes
. The victim and her parents are referred to by fictitious names so as to protect their identity and privacy.
