OPINION
¶ 1 Allen K. Radkowsky, M.D., maintains that he is disabled according to the terms of five disability and business overhead policies purchased from contract predecessors of two insurance companies, Provident Life & Accident Insurance Company and Provident Mutual Life Insurance Company of Philadelphia (collectively, “Provident”). After his claims were denied by Provident, he sued it for breach of contract and bad faith, requesting compensatory and punitive damages. After considering cross-motions for summary judgment, the trial court granted judgment for Provident on the contract claim but denied it attorneys’ fees, denied judgment to Dr. Rad-kowsky and found the issue of bad faith to be moot.
¶ 2 Dr. Radkowsky appeals from the judgment. Provident cross-appeals from the denial of its request for attorneys’ fees. We affirm.
I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
¶ 3 The material facts are not in dispute. Dr. Radkowsky was born with several serious eye maladies, which always have posed problems and limited activities for him. Regardless, he chose to enter medical school, and, although he realized that his performance might be circumscribed, he believed that he could successfully practice internal medicine.
¶4 While in medical school, Dr. Radkow-sky purchased two disability income insurance policies from Provident. He purchased the other three policies after he began private practice.
¶ 5 Following medical school, Dr. Radkow-sky served as a contract physician in various locations. He then accepted a contract with Thunderbird Samaritan Hospital before establishing his solo practice in June 1993. From the beginning of his medical career, due to his eye condition, Dr. Radkowsky has been unable to perform certain procedures routinely done by other internists, and he has required more time per patient to maintain the necessary records. Because of his limitations, he characterized his practice as “strict internal medicine.”
¶ 6 Eventually Dr. Radkowsky applied for benefits under the five Provident policies. He filed his first claim on January 10, 1996. He then closed his office when his lease expired twelve months later. Although his eye condition had not worsened, he had decided that he could not generate sufficient income without working significantly longer hours than other internists to achieve the same financial rewards.
*112 II. DISCUSSION
¶7 The trial court found that Dr. Radkowsky,
when he began his practice, purposely limited the areas in which he practiced. Although he was slow in performing the paperwork required, there are no facts upon which a jury could find that he could not perform his duties in the same manner at the beginning of his time in practice and at the conclusion. Dr. Radkowsky was not disabled under the terms of the policies.
However, the interpretation of an insurance contract is a question of law reviewed by us de novo.
Thomas v. Liberty Mutual Ins. Co.,
¶ 8 All five policies require that the insured be unable to perform the substantial and material duties of his “Regular Occupation” or “your occupation.” “Occupation” is defined by two of the policies as “your occupation at the time Total Disability begins” and by three policies as “the occupation ... in which you are regularly engaged at the time you become disabled.” It is clear from these definitions that each policy provides benefits for an insured whose “[disability begins” or who “becomes disabled” while he was engaged in the occupation he is claiming he can no longer perform. Coverage thus exists for the insured who once was performing the substantial and material duties of his occupation but who became unable to continue due to disability, not for one who has come to realize that a condition he always has had prevents him from performing effectively or profitably in his chosen occupation.
¶ 9 Dr. Radkowsky did not “become disabled” while an internist. Although his vision worsened slightly over the years, no evidence was offered that Dr. Radkowsky’s ability to perform his duties diminished as a result. Rather, the testimony was consistent that Dr. Radkowsky was never efficient in the practice of internal medicine.
¶ 10 Dr. Radkowsky relies upon
Nystrom v. Massachusetts Cas. Ins. Co.,
*113 ¶ 11 Dr. Radkowsky then argues that, because he disclosed his eye condition to Provident when the policies were issued, Provident should be foreclosed from objecting now because of the preexisting condition and the incontestability clauses in the policies. We disagree.
¶ 12 The clauses provide that, except when a preexisting condition has been expressly excluded, a disability beginning after two years from the effective date of the policy will not be denied even if arising out of a preexisting condition. Nothing in these clauses, however, changes the requirement that the disability must begin after the policyholder has been engaged in his occupation, although the condition that eventually gives rise to the disability may be in existence earlier.
¶ 13 To support his theory, Dr. Radkowsky cites
Robinson v. Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen Ins. Dept.,
¶ 14 In contrast, Dr. Radkowsky’s preexisting condition is no more “disabling” now than it was when the policies were issued. There is no question of a preexisting condition that more than two years later precipitated a disability. In this case, the “disability” is the discovery that the preexisting condition makes it impractical for Dr. Rad-kowsky to engage in the solo practice of internal medicine, and such is not covered.
¶ 15 Next Dr. Radkowsky argues that there is a factual issue as to whether he had reasonable expectations that the policies would encompass this situation, relying on
Darner Motor Sales v. Universal Underwriters,
¶ 16 The policies unambiguously provide in language that readily can be understood by the reader that they cover a disability only if it is one beginning after a policyholder is engaged in his occupation. And Dr. Rad-kowsky offered no evidence of circumstances outside the policy, such as conversations with an insurance agent, permitting him to argue that, apart from the policy, he had expectations that he would be covered under the circumstances presented.
¶ 17 Dr. Radkowsky’s remaining argument regarding Provident’s bad faith is moot because of our disposition of the contract claim.
¶ 18 In its cross-appeal, Provident challenges the trial court’s denial of its request for attorneys’ fees in the amount of $64,281.50. The court considered the factors enumerated in
Associated Indemnity Corp. v. Warner,
¶ 19 Provident also has requested an award of its costs and attorneys’ fees on *114 appeal. We grant that request upon its compliance with Arizona Rule of Civil Appellate Procedure 21.
¶ 20 The judgment is affirmed with costs and attorneys’ fees on appeal awarded to Provident.
Notes
. The courts consistently have focused upon the unique and specific tasks of the insured’s occupation to determine whether he no longer can engage in his profession in the usual or customary way. Accordingly, a disability exists when a practicing physician can no longer perform the specific tasks of his practice, regardless of the duties of a more general practice.
See Dixon v. Pacific Mutual Life Ins. Co.,
