James Rufener appeals a summary judgment dismissing State Farm Fire & Casualty Company from his personal injury action against Jerry Martin, State Farm's insured under a homeowner's policy. The trial court determined, as a matter of law, that Martin's liability for Rufener's injuries was excluded by the "business pursuits" exclusion of the State Farm policy. We conclude that the activities that led to Rufener's injuries were "ordinarily incident to non-business pursuits," and therefore fall within an exception to the business pursuits exclusion. We there
BACKGROUND
Jerry Martin operated a part-time snowplowing business from his home, using his personal pickup trucks for the plowing. When Martin plowed, he attached to the back of his truck a salter/sander which spread salt or sand on parking lots and driveways. The salter/sander was heavy — about 650 pounds when empty — and Martin removed and reattached it to his trucks as necessary.
To facilitate the removal and reattachment of the salter/sander, Martin decided to attach a hoist to the rafters of his garage. James Rufener, Martin's coworker at his regular full-time job, assisted with the installation of the hoist. Rufener and Martin temporarily nailed a 4" x 4" wooden beam to the rafters so that the location of bolts could be marked on it. As Rufener and Martin were removing the beam, Rufener fell from a ladder and was seriously injured. The record does not establish the precise cause of Rufener's fall.
Rufener sued Martin and State Farm, Martin's homeowner's liability insurer.
1
The State Farm policy containеd a "business pursuits" exclusion common to homeowner's liability policies. This exclusion provides
ANALYSIS
We review the trial court's grant of summary judgment using the same methodology as the trial court.
See M&I First Nat'l Bank v. Episcopal Homes Management, Inc.,
The issue before us is the interpretation of the State Farm policy and its application to the facts of this case. Specifically, we must interpret the business pur
The interpretatiоn of an insurance contract presents a question of law which we review de novo.
See Oaks v. American Family Mut. Ins.
Co.,
The facts material to the coverage issue are not disputed, although the parties disagree about the cause of Rufener's injuries. Rufener contends his injuries were сaused by Martin supplying him with a defective ladder. State Farm contends that the record does not show that the ladder was defective before the
Thus, we begin with the business рursuits exclusion itself. We conclude, as did the trial court, that it applies to Martin's liability for Rufener's injuries. The exclusion applies to "bodily injury ... arising out of the business pursuits of any insured . .. ." Martin's snowplowing operation was a business pursuit under the two-prong test adopted in
Bertler v. Employers Ins.,
Rufener's injuries "arose out of' Martin's snowplowing operation even though Martin was not plowing snow at the time. "The words 'arising out of in liability insurance policies are very broad, general, and comprehensive; and are ordinarily understood to mean
We consider first whether the language of the exception to the business pursuits exclusion is ambiguous. A policy provision is ambiguous when "reasonably susceptible to more than one сonstruction from the viewpoint of a reasonable person of ordinary intelligence in the position of the insured."
Cardinal v. Leader Nat'l Ins. Co.,
In Bartel,
a "rоad band" was transporting its musical equipment to an engagement when the trailer containing the equipment became detached from the van pulling it. The plaintiffs husband was killed in the ensuing accident. The band member who had attached the trailer to the van was insured under a homeowner's policy with a business pursuits exclusion and an exception identical to the one at issue here. The plaintiff argued that the exception applied and the accident should be covered because the act of hitching a trailer to a van is so common to everyday life that it must be viewed as an "activity ordinarily inсident to non-business pursuits."
Id.
at 316,
We rejected that interpretation as unreasonable because it would "require insurers to provide liability coverage for many persons (e.g. self-employed cooks, gardeners, and janitors) under homeowners policies merely because these businesses involve aсtivities common to non-business life."
Id.
at 317,
Before applying the
Bartel
analysis to the present facts, we note that
Brown,
Two principles from
Bartel
are applicable to the present case. First, in determining whether the injury-producing activity is "ordinarily not associated with or relatеd to the insured's business pursuits," we examine
The second principle we derive from Bartel is that in applying the exception to the business pursuits exclusion, the proper inquiry is whether the activity is ordinarily part of or related to the insured's business. Thus the decisive question here is whether the installation of the hoist was ordinarily part of or related to Martin's snowplowing business. We conclude that it was not, and that Rufener's injuries are covered under the State Farm policy by virtue of the exception to the business pursuits exclusion. We base our conclusion on two undisputed facts.
First, the installation of the hoist was not "ordinarily" a part of Martin's business, in the sense that it was not typically or regularly a part of Martin's snowplowing business. The hoist installation was a one-time occurrence, and it would not be repeated whenever Martin would plow snow. The attachment of the trailer in Bartel, on the other hand, occurred whenever the band traveled to an engagеment.
Second, the hoist installation was not "part of Martin's business, in the sense that it occurred in a separate place and at a separate time from Martin's income-producing activity. Thus, this case is also distinguishable from a recent case where we determined that the exception did not apply. In
Ruff v. Graziano,
We reject State Farm's argument that the exception should not apply to Rufener's injuries because the intended use of the hoist was "directly related to" Martin's snowplowing business. We recognize that Martin's hoist had a predominantly business purpose, because it facilitated switching his trucks between personal and business use. But State Farm's interpretation would render the exception superfluous. The exception operates to restore coverage to some activities that admittedly "arise out of' the insured's business pursuits. When an activity is not at all related to the business pursuit, there is no need to invoke the exception, because the exclusion itself does not apply. By the same token, if the exception does not apply whenever the injury-producing activity is related in any way to the insured's business, the exception would be robbed of all effect. In Bartel, we rejected an interpretation that would deprive the exclusion of effect; here, we reject an interpretation that would deprive the exception of effect. 2
By the Court. — Judgment reversed and cause remanded.
Notes
Rufener also sued State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Company, which provided Martin with automobile liability insurance, and American Family Mutual Insurance Company, which provided Rufener with underinsured motorist coverage. The trial court detеrmined that Rufener's injuries were not covered under these policies because Rufener's injuries did not arise out of the use of an insured vehicle. Rufener does not appeal the summary judgments granted to these two defendants.
We also reject the "but for" test applied by the Seventh Circuit in
Thoele v. Aetna Cas. & Sur.,
