OPINION
Appellant Jaclyn Patricia Larson brought negligence claims against the insureds of respondent SECURA Supreme Insurance Company based on injuries that she sustained when the insureds’ son attacked her. SECURA subsequently commenced a declaratory-judgment action, seeking to establish that it had no duty to *322 indemnify its insureds against Larson’s claim due to a criminal-act exclusion in the insureds’ homeowners’ insurance policy. The district court agreed that the exclusion barred coverage and granted SECU-RA’s motion for summary judgment. Larson now challenges that determination, contending that the district court erred by interpreting the criminal-act exclusion to preclude coverage for the injuries she sustained. Because we conclude that the district court did not err, we affirm.
FACTS
Patrick and Suzanne McArdle and their son, M.S.M., are neighbors of appellant Jaclyn Larson. On the morning of August 12, 2004, M.S.M., who was then 14 years old, unlawfully entered Larson’s residence and repeatedly stabbed her with a knife. Larson sustained grave injuries as a result of the attack but eventually recovered. The knife that M.S.M. used in the attack was part of a knife collection that the McArdles had given him. In September 2004, M.S.M. pleaded guilty and was convicted of attempted first-degree murder in an extended-jurisdiction-juvenile (EJJ) proceeding. M.S.M. is currently incarcerated in Utah.
In December 2005, Larson sued the McArdles, alleging that her injuries were the result of the couple’s negligent supervision of M.S.M. and their negligent en-trustment to him of a dangerous weapon (the knife used in the attack). The complaint also asserted a claim against M.S.M. for negligence or, in the alternative, assault and battery.
The McArdles tendered the defense of the lawsuit to SECURA, their homeowners’ insurer. SECURA accepted the tender with respect to both McArdles, subject to a reservation of rights, but refused to defend M.S.M. In June 2006, SECURA brought a declaratory-judgment action to establish that it was not required to indemnify the McArdles against Larson’s negligence claims based on a criminal-act exclusion contained in the homeowners’ policy.
The criminal-act exclusion that SECU-RA relies on is found within the same paragraph, but set apart from, an intentional-act exclusion in the policy. The language of the criminal-act exclusion provides: “Medical [pjayments to [ojthers do not apply to bodily injury or property damage ... [wjhich: ... (3) Results from the criminal acts of any insured.” The policy also contains a severability clause. The severability clause is contained in a different section of the homeowners’ policy than the criminal-act exclusion and states that “[tjhis insurance applies separately to each insured.” It is not disputed that the definition of “insured” under the policy encompasses both Patrick and Suzanne McArdle as well as M.S.M.
The McArdles subsequently entered into a Miller-Shugart settlement with Larson, assigning to her their right to contest SE CURA’s refusal to indemnify them under their homeowners’ policy. 1 Both Larson and SECURA subsequently brought cross-motions for summary judgment regarding whether SECURA was required to indemnify the McArdles against Larson’s negligence claims.
*323 The district court granted SE CURA’s motion for summary judgment and denied Larson’s. The district court determined that, as a matter of law, SE CURA’s insurance policy “bars coverage for any and all claims made by [ ] Larson.” The criminal-act exclusion was the district court’s sole basis in reaching this conclusion. This appeal follows.
ISSUES
1. Must SECURA establish that M.S.M. intended to harm Larson when he attacked her before it can properly invoke the criminal-act exclusion?
2. Is there any substantive difference between the phrases “results from” and “arises out of’ when used to describe the scope of the injuries for which coverage is precluded under the criminal-act exclusion?
3. Does the severability clause contained in the policy render ambiguous the criminal-act exclusion’s prohibition of coverage for “any insured” if the exclusion is otherwise unambiguous?
ANALYSIS
On an appeal from summary judgment, an appellate court determines (1) whether there are any genuine issues of material fact and (2) whether the district court erred in its application of the law.
Olmanson v. LeSueur County,
The insured bears the burden of demonstrating coverage under an insurance policy.
Travelers Indem. Co. v. Bloomington Steel & Supply Co.,
“General principles of contract interpretation apply to insurance policies.”
Lobeck v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co.,
In this appeal, we are required to determine whether SE CURA’s criminal-act exclusion, which states that it is not responsible for bodily injury that “[r]esults from the criminal acts of any insured,” precludes it from its obligation to otherwise indemnify the McArdles against Larson’s negligence claims. To fully answer this question, we must also examine how the severability clause affects application of the exclusion. The parties’ disagreement concerning these two clauses involves the interpretation and application of three separate terms or phrases: (1) “criminal acts,” (2) “results from,” and (3) “any insured” when applied in conjunction with the severability clause.
I.
The first point of contention concerns the relationship between M.S.M.’s conviction of attempted first-degree murder and the meaning of the phrase “criminal act” in the exclusion. SE CURA’s insurance policy does not define “criminal act” within the exclusion. Larson argues that, due to M.S.M.’s alleged mental illness, it is an open question whether he had the ability to form the intent to harm her when he perpetrated the attack. SECU-RA asserts that M.S.M.’s intent to harm Larson is not relevant under applicable case law.
Larson focuses on the cases of
Ill. Farmers Ins. Co. v. Reed,
In
Reed,
appellants’ young child was injured after his babysitter, Reed, violently shook him.
Reed,
Larson argues that these cases permit her to raise the issue of M.S.M.’s intent. But there is a critical distinction between
*325
this case and both
Reed
and
B.M.B.
In those cases, the clause at issue was an intentional-act exclusion. Here, the clause at issue is a criminal-act exclusion. Within the context of a criminal-act exclusion, the critical inquiry concerns the criminality of the conduct purportedly justifying invocation of the clause. The language of SEC-URA’s criminal-act exclusion says nothing about the intent of the person engaging in the criminal act. And we decline to graft onto the clause’s plain language an additional, separate inquiry regarding the intent of the tortfeasor in causing the injury.
Liebenstein v. Allstate Ins. Co.,
In Liebenstein, Allstate asserted that its criminal-act exclusion precluded it from having to indemnify its tortfeasor-insured, who was convicted of assaulting Lieben-stein. Id. at 74. Liebenstein countered that “a criminal conviction alone cannot trigger this exclusion,” claiming that it applied only if Allstate could demonstrate that its insured “intended to injure him” in the course of the assault. Id. at 75. But this court rejected Liebensteiris argument. We noted that the criminal-act exclusion contained no language regarding intent, in contrast to the separate intentional-act exclusion in the policy. Thus, we held that “the plain language of the [criminal-act exclusion] indicates that coverage is excluded for injuries resulting from a criminal act, regardless of intent.” Id.
Liebenstein
establishes that a criminal-act exclusion in an insurance policy is not limited to criminal acts involving a perpetrator’s intent to harm the victim. Instead, such exclusions extend to criminal acts causing injury even when the perpetrator possessed no specific intent to injure the victim.
2
This interpretation is consistent with the majority of courts in other jurisdictions that have considered this question.
See, e.g., Allstate Ins. Co. v. Brown,
In sum, in order to trigger a criminal-act exclusion, an insurer must establish that the insured committed a criminal act; but it is not required to also show that an insured possessed an intent to injure. Therefore, we conclude that M.S.M.’s conduct falls within the meaning of the term “criminal acts” as used in the exclusion, regardless of whether or not he intended to harm Larson.
II.
The second issue raised by the parties is whether there is any difference
*326
between language in an insurance policy barring coverage for injury that “results from” certain conduct versus injury that “arises out of’ that same conduct. Both the supreme court and this court have previously addressed insurance exclusions for injuries “arising out of’ various conduct.
E.g., St. Paul Sch. Dist. No. 625 v. Columbia Transit Corp.,
Larson argues that the phrase “results from” should be construed more narrowly than the term “arising out of.” She contends that the McArdles’ negligence in failing to supervise M.S.M. or in entrusting a dangerous weapon to him is the underlying cause of her injuries. Therefore, she reasons, this negligence, and not M.S.M.’s criminal conduct, must be the focus under the meaning of this phrase. SECURA asserts just the opposite: that the phrase “results from” is the equivalent of the term “arising out of’ and that it should be given an equally broad interpretation to preclude coverage for Larson’s negligence claims. The district court agreed with SECURA and determined that Larson’s injuries “resulted from” M.S.M.’s attack within the meaning of the criminal-act exclusion, notwithstanding any negligence on the part of the McArdles. We agree.
Larson’s claim that there is a substantive difference between the phrases “arising out of’ and “results from” is not supported by the relevant case law. In
Mork Clinic v. Fireman’s Fund Ins. Co.,
a case involving a claim for damages caused by the sexual misconduct of a physician, we addressed the issue of whether the phrases “results from” and “arising out of’ have different meanings.
Larson argues that
Redeemer Covenant Church of Brooklyn Park v. Church Mut. Ins. Co.,
We therefore conclude that the district court correctly determined that Larson’s injuries “resulted from” M.S.M.’s attack. This court’s decision in
Amos v. Campbell,
which involved an exclusion prohibiting coverage for any claims “arising out of ... assault or battery” is particularly relevant to this determination.
3
Amos,
Our conclusion in
Amos
was based
on
examination of cases addressing similar disputes, all of which concluded that the “arising out of’ language is satisfied if there is a casual connection between the conduct identified in the exclusion and the injuries for which compensation is being sought.
Id.
at 267-68;
see also Meadowbrook, Inc. v. Tower Ins. Co.,
Larson’s injuries were undeniably causally connected to M.S.M.⅛ criminal conduct in attacking her. As such, Larson’s injuries “resulted] from” this criminal act, notwithstanding the fact that the McAr-dles’ negligence may have also contributed to the same injuries. 4 Accordingly, the *328 district court correctly interpreted and applied this phrase in SECURA’s policy to allow invocation of the criminal-act exclusion.
III.
Larson’s third claim is that the exclusion of coverage for all insureds for bodily injury resulting from the criminal acts of “any insured” is inconsistent with the policy’s severability provision, which states that “[t]his insurance applies separately to each insured.” Larson argues that this purported inconsistency creates an ambiguity regarding whether SECURA must indemnify the McArdles in regard to her negligence claims. As a result, she contends that the criminal-act exclusion must be read narrowly and in conformance with the McArdles’ reasonable expectation of separate coverage. We disagree.
In the absence of a severability clause, the supreme court has stated that an exclusion prohibiting coverage for all insureds, including innocent insureds, based on the wrongful or intentional acts of “any insured” is not ambiguous.
See Watson v. United Servs. Auto. Ass’n,
In
Bloomington Steel,
Travelers provided insurance to Bloomington Steel, a eor-poration whose sole stockholder was Cecil Reiners.
Bloomington Steel,
In its discussion, the supreme court indicated that Travelers could have structured its insurance policy to enable it to invoke the intentional-act exclusion against Bloomington Steel despite the severability clause. To do so, the supreme court stated that Travelers could have used the terms “any insured” or “an insured” instead of “the insured” in the exclusion. Id. at 895. The supreme court opined that these other terms “would have unambiguously excluded coverage” for the company. Id. (emphasis added).
While this language in
Blooming-ton Steel
is admittedly dicta and, there
*329
fore, not determinative, supreme court dicta is given considerable weight when it expresses the opinion of the court.
In re Estate of Bush,
A simple application of the policy reinforces our conclusion that no ambiguity is created when the two clauses interact. When applying the criminal-act exclusion to Patrick McArdle alone, as the severability clause requires, the plain and unambiguous result is the exclusion of coverage for Larson’s negligence claim because the bodily injuries that her claim is premised on “resultfed] from” the “criminal acts” of “any insured,” with the “any insured” being M.S.M. The same result occurs when the policy is applied separately to Suzanne McArdle. The act of applying the policy separately to each insured does not alter or create ambiguity in the substance or sweep of the exclusion. Because there is no ambiguity, there is no basis for application of the reasonable-expectation doctrine.
Carlson,
DECISION
The district court correctly interpreted and applied the phrases “criminal acts,” “results from,” and “any insured” as contained in the criminal-act exclusion coverage of the McArdles’ homeowners’ policy. Because the exclusion precludes insurance coverage for Larson’s injuries that she sustained when M.S.M. attacked her, the district court properly granted SECURA’s motion for summary judgment.
Affirmed.
Notes
.
See Miller v. Shugart,
. We note that such a conclusion does not mean that every offense as defined by the laws of this state necessarily falls within the term “criminal acts.”
See generally Allstate Ins. Co. v. Burrough,
. We acknowledge that the exclusionary clause in Amos contained the "arising out of” language and not the “results from” language that we have here. But because we have already concluded that there is no meaningful difference between these two terms, reliance on Amos is proper.
. We note that it is important to distinguish as separate concepts the causation element of a negligence claim from the phrase "results from” or "arising out of” as used in an insurance policy. The most direct cause of an injury may not be the only cause in the context of a negligence claim. See Mork Clinic, 575 N.W.2d at 600-01 (distinguishing be *328 tween causation as an element of a negligence claim and injuries that arise out of certain conduct in the context of insurance-policy exclusions).
