NATURE OF CASE
Appellants in this case were, as children, patients of Daniel B. Schrein, M.D., an Omaha pediatrician. As adults, appellants brought actions against Schrein to recover damages for sexual abuse alleged to have been perpetrated by Schrein during the course of medical treatment. Appellants obtained default judgments against Schrein and commenced garnishment proceedings against Schrein’s professional liability insurer, The Medical Protective Company of Fort Wayne, Indiana (Medical Protective). The district court concluded that appellants’ claims were not covered by Schrein’s insurance policy and entered summary judgment for Medical Protective. In
R.W.
v.
Schrein,
ISSUES ON REHEARING
In our first opinion, we affirmed the judgment of the district court, relying in part on the affidavit of Harlan C. Schriner, Jr., M.D., a pediatrician who opined that Schrein’s actions did not constitute or arise out of professional services and that Schrein’s actions thus did not breach any applicable standard of care. Appellants filed timely motions for rehearing, arguing in part that this court erred in relying on Schriner’s affidavit because *820 the affidavit, although present in the record on appeal, had not been received into evidence by the district court. We granted appellants’ motions for rehearing. We ordered that the issues on rehearing include all the issues originally briefed and offered the parties leave to file supplemental briefs addressing the following additional issues:
(1) Did the district court rule on appellants’ objections to the affidavits of Schriner offered in each of these cases at the time the objections were made?
(2) If there were no rulings at the time of the objections, did appellants insist upon rulings prior to submission of the motions for summary judgment? If not, were the objections waived?
(3) Were the objections and/or the grounds upon which they were based addressed and resolved by the district court in its order of July 28, 2000, and if so, how were the issues resolved?
(4) Did the district court rule on appellants’ alternative requests for a continuance pursuant to Neb. Rev. Stat. § 25-1335 (Reissue 1995) at the time the requests were made?
(5) If not, did appellants insist upon such rulings prior to submission of the motions for summary judgment? If not, were the requests for continuance waived?
STANDARD OF REVIEW
Summary judgment is proper only when the pleadings, depositions, admissions, stipulations, and affidavits in the record disclose that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact or as to the ultimate inferences that may be drawn from those facts and that the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.
Pinkard
v.
Confederation Life Ins. Co., ante
p. 312,
The meaning of an insurance policy is a question of law, in connection with which an appellate court has an obligation to reach its own conclusions independently of the determination made by the lower court. See
American Fam. Mut. Ins. Co.
v.
Hadley, ante
p. 435,
*821 ANALYSIS
Schriner Affidavit
We turn first to the issues presented by the motion for rehearing. As set forth above, we granted rehearing on the issue whether Schriner’s affidavit, on which our opinion relied, was properly received into evidence by the district court. We conclude that we are unable to resolve this issue on the record presented. The record does not show that the district court either explicitly ruled on appellants’ objections to the affidavit or received the affidavit into evidence. This ambiguity in the record precludes us from relying on the affidavit or resolving any issues to which the affidavit might be relevant on appeal.
We note that the presentation of an adequate record for appellate review is primarily the responsibility of the parties. It is well established that a party who fails to insist upon a ruling to a proffered objection waives that objection. See, e.g.,
State
v.
Harris,
“ ‘If when inadmissible evidence is offered the party against whom such evidence is offered consents to its introduction, or fails to object, or to insist upon a ruling on an objection to the introduction of the evidence, and otherwise fails to raise the question as to its admissibility, he is considered to have waived whatever objection he may have had thereto, and the evidence is in the record for consideration the same as other evidence.’ ”
(Emphasis in original.)
State
v.
Nowicki,
The fact that Schriner’s affidavit is not available for our review, however, does not change our ultimate conclusion from
R.W. I.
There is no factual controversy regarding Schrein’s underlying conduct, which for purposes of this proceeding is assumed to have been as alleged in appellants’ petitions. Similarly, the interpretation of a contract is a question of law. See
Hadley, supra.
Thus, we are presented with an integrated question of law—whether the allegations in the petitions set forth a claim for damages based on “professional services” within the meaning of the insurance policy. See,
Cluett v. Medical Protective Co.,
A medical professional such as Schriner can opine regarding a breach of the applicable standard of medical care, but cannot advise this court on a question of law, i.e., the meaning of a term in a contract. Our previous opinion erred in relying on Schriner’s affidavit because the evidence was not relevant to the question presented to this court. After further consideration, we conclude that the dispositive question in this appeal is a question of law, on which expert testimony has no bearing. Therefore, we withdraw the section of
R.W. I
under the subheading “2. Rendering of ‘Professional Services,’”
id.
at 716,
Rendering of Professional Services
The applicable language of the insurance policy issued to Schrein provides that Medical Protective will pay damages “based on professional services rendered or which should have been rendered ... by the insured or any other person for whose acts or omissions the insured is legally responsible, in the practice of the insured’s profession.” An insurance contract is to be construed as any other contract to give effect to the parties’ intentions at the time the contract was made.
American Fam. Mut. Ins. Co.
v.
Hadley, ante
p. 435,
This court has previously defined the term “professional services” in the context of a liability policy for professional negligence.
In Marx
v.
Hartford Acc. & Ind. Co.,
The insurer’s liability is thus limited to the performing or rendering of “professional” acts or services. Something more than an act flowing from mere employment or vocation is essential. The act or service must be such as exacts the use or application of special learning or attainments of some kind. The term “professional” in the context used in the policy provision means something more than mere proficiency in the performance of a task and implies intellectual skill as contrasted with that used in an occupation for production or sale of commodities. A “professional” act or service is one arising out of a vocation, calling, occupation, or employment involving specialized knowledge, labor, or skill, and the labor or skill involved is predominantly mental or intellectual, rather than physical or manual____In determining whether a particular act is of a professional nature or a “professional service” we must look *824 not to the title or character of the party performing the act, but to the act itself.
(Citations omitted.)
Id.
at 13-14,
In
Marx, supra,
the determinative question was whether the act performed was “professional” as distinguished from the act of a layperson. In this case, however, the critical issue is whether the act performed is “professional” as opposed to unprofessional. In other words, the fact that the actions occurred between a doctor and patient is pertinent only if the act itself is of a professional nature. See
St. Paul Ins. Co. of Illinois
v.
Cromeans,
We recently revisited the
Marx
holding in
Iwanski
v.
Gomes, 259
Neb. 632, 640,
We agree that the fact that sexual misconduct occurs in a medical professional’s office “does not automatically transmute the act into a professional service [because the] location of an act’s occurrence is not determinative of liability.” Lindheimer v. St. Paul Fire & Marine Ins., 643 So. *825 2d 636, 638 (Fla. App. 1994). When the only connection between the sexual misconduct and treatment is that the activity occurred in the medical professional’s office, such a connection is too remote from the actual rendering of proper services to impose liability upon the medical professional for malpractice. See Roe v. Federal Ins. Co.,412 Mass. 43 ,587 N.E.2d 214 (1992).
We conclude, based on the foregoing rationale, that there must be a causal relationship between the alleged harm and the complained-of professional act or service. When there is a claim of medical malpractice based on unwanted sexual contact, the determination of liability should focus not solely on the locale of the alleged harm or the professional status of the actor, but, rather, on the context of the alleged medical service involved in the action. In other words, it is the physician’s deviation from the recognized medical standard of care during the course of treatment that is the essence of a claim for medical malpractice, and there must exist a causal relationship between the alleged harm and the complained-of deviation from that standard of care in order for liability to attach.
(Emphasis in original.) (Emphasis supplied.)
Iwanski,
Relying on our decision in
Marx, supra,
and consistent with our decision in
Iwanski, supra,
the clear majority rule among other jurisdictions is that outside the unique circumstance of mishandling the transference phenomenon in psychiatric counseling, sexual conduct is not a professional act or service for which medical malpractice insurance coverage is provided. See, e.g.,
Snyder v. Major,
There is no dispute among appellate courts, even in those cases that find insurers to be liable for sexual contact, about the applicability of the holding in
Marx
v.
Hartford Acc. & Ind. Co.,
Based on these standards, courts have generally refused to require insurers to provide coverage for sexual acts, based on professional liability insurance policies with medical care providers, because sexual activity with a patient is not a part of the delivery of professional services or part of medical treatment. See Snyder, supra. When the physician’s sexual contact with his or her patient is not necessitated by the particular course of medical treatment, then the malpractice insurance policy does not provide coverage for the damages sustained by the victim. Blakeslee, supra.
*827
The most well-known statement of the minority rule is
St. Paul Fire & Marine Ins. Co.
v.
Asbury,
The claims of Dr. Asbury’s patients that he manipulated their clitorises while performing routine gynecological examinations, if true, was tortious conduct committed while providing professional services and covered by his insurance policy. Most of the cases cited to us by St. Paul are distinguishable because the tortious sexual abuse of the patient was not intertwined with and inseparable from the services provided.
Id.
at 567,
“The question of insurance coverage does not turn on whether the conduct was negligent or intentional, or whether or not there was an assault and battery. Regardless of the category in which the underlying complaints are placed, they clearly allege tortious conduct while treating the patients, and seek damages resulting from the providing of professional services. Furthermore, the tortious conduct, if it occurred, took place in the course of and as an inseparable part of the providing of professional services. Consequently, any damages would be those resulting from the providing of professional services by the insured.”
Asbury,
*828
However, the
Asbury
rule has received significant criticism. First, it has been noted that in determining the scope of a liability insurance policy, the issue “is not whether the conduct in question is negligence, but whether a particular contract was intended to cover this conduct.”
Snyder
v.
Major,
Furthermore, the minority rule erodes the concept of legal causation until the requirement of proximate cause is essentially meaningless. As stated by one commentator:
The decisions that find coverage for allegations of sexual abuse or molestation against physicians and dentists do so only through flawed reasoning. They appear to apply what amounts to a simple “but for” test: Because the assault occurred during an otherwise proper and necessary medical procedure, the injury arose out of the performance of that professional service. Of course, the “but for” test is virtually boundless, as almost no subsequent event would take place were it not for some antecedent event, and as all events are, at some level, interrelated. It is simply unreasonable to conclude that conduct such as sexual molestation of a patient, which must be known to be only harmful and not beneficial, and which also must be known by the *829 doctor to further no preventive or corrective interest of the patient, is part of a professional medical procedure. It cannot, therefore, be part of the professional service that the doctor contracts with the patient to provide.
David S. Florig, Insurance Coverage for Sexual Abuse or Molestation, 30 Tort & Ins. L.J. 699, 727 (1995). This analysis, with which we agree, echoes some of the most basic and familiar concepts of tort causation.
“Proximate cause” ... is merely the limitation which the courts have placed upon the actor’s responsibility for the consequences of the actor’s conduct. In a philosophical sense, the consequences of an act go forward to eternity, and the causes of an event go back to the dawn of human events, and beyond. But any attempt to impose responsibility upon such a basis would result in infinite liability for all wrongful acts, and would “set society on edge and fill the courts with endless litigation.” As a practical matter, legal responsibility must be limited to those causes which are so closely connected with the result and of such significance that the law is justified in imposing liability. Some boundary must be set to liability for the consequences of any act, upon the basis of some social idea of justice or policy.
This limitation is to some extent associated with the nature and degree of the connection in fact between the defendant’s acts and the events of which the plaintiff complains.
W. Page Keeton et al., Prosser and Keeton on the Law of Torts § 41 at 264 (5th ed. 1984 & Supp. 1988).
The majority rule, then, expresses a difficult truth: that appellants’ injuries, in the instant case and most others, are not caused by any act of medical treatment that would normally be associated with the provision of a “professional service.” The common thread running throughout the majority rule cases is the necessity for, and lack of, a direct causal link between appellants’ damages and any legitimate medical treatment. “[T]here must be a causal relationship between the alleged harm and the complained-of professional act or service, that is, it must be a medical... act or service that causes the harm, not an act or service that requires no professional skill.”
Roe
v.
Federal Ins. Co.,
As most clearly stated by the Supreme Court of New Hampshire, “[t]he specified source out of which damages must arise, according to the terms of the insurance policy, is professional services rendered, or which should have been rendered.”
Niedzielski
v.
St. Paul Fire & Marine Ins. Co.,
The court in
St. Paul Fire & Marine Ins. Co. v. Asbury,
For the foregoing reasons, we reject appellants’ contention that this court should follow the minority mle. Instead, we continue to adhere to the majority mle as indicated by our decisions in
Marx v. Hartford Acc. Ind. Co.,
CONCLUSION
As previously indicated, the foregoing discussion is substituted for that section of our opinion in R.W. I in which we erred and which has been withdrawn. In all other respects, we continue to adhere to the reasoning and conclusions of R.W. I, as they pertain to appellants’ remaining assignments of error on appeal and rehearing. For the reasons stated in R.W. I and this supplemental opinion, we affirm the judgment of the district court.
Motions for rehearing sustained. Former opinion modified.
