UNUM Life Insurance Company of America (“UNUM”) appeals the district court’s denial of its motions for new trial and expanded findings of fact in Shirley Adzick’s action to recover long-term disability insurance benefits. The district court denied the motions after concluding that UNUM’s policy contained ambiguous material terms and Adziek did not fraudulently report her income. We reverse.
II. Facts
Adziek purchased a long-term disability insurance policy from UNUM in February 1993 when she worked as a dentist for Pentagon Dental Group. UNUM’s application process required Adziek to answer a series of eligibility questions on the application form. Adziek, the UNUM insurance agent, and Adzick’s employer, Michael Perpich, D.D.S., completed the form together. Adziek reviewed the completed application for accuracy before she signed it.
UNUM issued the policy, effective February 28, 1993, to Adziek. The policy provided that “[ejxcept for fraudulent misstatements, we will not contest those statements made by you in the application for a coverage provided under this policy after that coverage has been in effect for two years during your lifetime.” 2
Over four years later on March 10, 1997, Adziek filed a claim for long-term disability benefits. Adziek claimed she became unable to work on January 23, 1997, because she “had no confidence in [her] ability to perform” the duties associated with her practice. Adzick’s physician diagnosed Adziek primarily as having cocaine dependency. After submitting her application, Adziek admitted herself for treatment at a drug-treatment clinic. 3
During its investigation of Adzick’s claim, UNUM requested copies of Adzick’s federal income tax returns. Adzick’s returns indicated that she made $17,125 in 1991 and $17,600 in 1992, but that she claimed a loss in 1993. In addition, Ad-zick’s 1992 divorce decree indicated that she earned $1,000 per month as an employee of Pentagon Dental Group.
On June 16, 1997, UNUM rescinded the policy and denied Adzick’s claim for benefits. UNUM claimed that Adziek fraudulently misrepresented both her income and cocaine use in the application. Adziek appealed this decision pursuant to the plan’s terms, but UNUM affirmed the denial. Adziek filed this lawsuit.
The district court ruled in Adzick’s favor after a bench trial in January 2000. The district court found that the application *886 term “regularly used” 4 was ambiguous and construed it against UNUM. The court also concluded that UNUM failed to establish that Adzick “regularly used” cocaine during the five years preceding submission of the application. Furthermore, the district court found that UNUM failed to establish that Adzick fraudulently misrepresented her income. UNUM moved for amended findings or, in the alternative, for a new trial on these issues and on the issue that the application term “currently use” precluded coverage. The district court denied these motions, and UNUM appealed.
When considering whether to grant or deny a motion for new trial, a district court must consider whether the verdict is against the weight of the evidence and if allowing it to stand would result in a miscarriage of justice.
In re Air Crash at Little Rock, Arkansas, on June 1, 1999,
III. Analysis 5
Minnesota courts recognize that Minnesota Statutes § 62A governs disability insurance.
6
See Kersten v. Minnesota Mut. Life Ins. Co.,
The falsity of any statement in the application for any policy covered by sections 62A.01 to 62A.09 hereof [accident and health insurance], may not bar the right to recovery thereunder unless such false statement materially affected either the acceptance of the risk or the hazard assumed by the insurer.
Because Adzick’s policy is more than two years old, UNUM must also prove fraud in addition to materiality. Minn.Stat. § 62A.04(2);
Independent Sch. Dist. No. 197 v. Accident and Casualty Ins.,
As noted, the application contained the following question:
Other than already mentioned in this Application, have you in the past five years:
* * * * * *
(c) regularly used, or do you currently use, cocaine ....
Adzick answered “no” to this inquiry. The application did not define the terms “regularly” or “currently.” Adzick indicated at trial that she defined the word “regularly” to mean “every day.”
Second, UNUM sought income information as reported on Adzick’s federal income tax returns. Adzick’s written answer indicated that she earned $30,000 each year in 1991 and 1992 after she began working at Pentagon Dental in 1990, and that she anticipated earning $35,000 in 1993. At trial, Adzick testified that she did not know how much income she had earned at the time she provided the answers, but that Perpich volunteered the information concerning her current and projected income.
1. Contract Ambiguity
UNUM first argues that the terms “regularly used” and “currently use” are not ambiguous. UNUM asserts that the evidence supports a finding that Adzick regularly used cocaine within the five years prior to submitting the application and currently used cocaine at the time she submitted the application. The district court determined that both phrases were ambiguous and read them against the drafter, UNUM. We disagree.
We review a district court’s interpretation of the contractual provisions of an insurance policy de novo as a question of law.
See Noran Neurological Clinic, P.A. v. The Travelers Indem. Co.,
If an ambiguity in the language of an insurance contract exists, then the court is obliged to construe the ambiguity against the insurer, and in favor of the insured.
Noran Neurological Clinic,
Because UNUM’s insurance contract and application do not define “regularly used” or “currently use,” we must give these terms their plain, ordinary, or popular meaning.
Smith,
Although Adzick testified that she believed that “regularly used” meant “daily use,” there is no support for that interpretation. Case law indicates that the courts have generally determined that terms such as “regularly used” or “current” are unambiguous in the context of an insurance policy. Minnesota courts have concluded that the term “regular use” and others like it are unambiguous in the context of automobile insurance policies.
Le Doux v. Iowa Nat’l Mut. Ins.,
More specifically, the term “regularly used, or is currently using” illegal drugs has been found to be unambiguous in the context of a claim for life insurance proceeds.
Johnson v. Prudential Ins. Co. of America,
Johnson is clearly analogous to this case. Here, too, the insurance application asks whether Adzick “regularly used, or is currently using ...” cocaine or other illegal drugs. Given the plain meaning of the terms, there could be no reasonable confusion as to the meaning of the terms. Ad-zick’s assertion that she believed that “regularly used” meant “daily use” is unreasonable when viewed under the common definition of the term. In addition, Adzick’s assertion offers no explanation for her denial to the question regarding whether she “currently use[d]” illegal drugs when she applied for coverage. Therefore, the district court erred in determining that this phrase is ambiguous in this case.
2. False Statement
Because we find that the terms “regularly used” and “currently use” are unambiguous in this case, we must next determine whether Adzick provided a false answer to allow UNUM to avoid the contract.
7
Rule 52(a) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure mandates that in cases tried to the court, findings of fact shall not be set aside unless clearly erroneous.
Washington v. Simpson,
The strongest evidence of the frequency of Adzick’s cocaine use arises from Adzick’s medical records produced after she submitted her claim for benefits in 1997. These records indicate that Adzick herself reported to numerous doctors, therapists, the Minnesota Board of Dentistry, and her expert witness, Carl Malmquist, M.D., a twenty-year history of cocaine use that became a problem sometime between 1991 and 1993, except during her pregnancies. 8
Adzick’s treatment records indicate that she reported that her cocaine use was “continuous,” except during her pregnancies, during the twenty years prior to treatment. In June 1997, Adzick described her cocaine use to Dr. Specker as “intermittent” until 1991 or 1992 when her usage “developed into a substantial problem for her.” In September 1997, Adzick told the neuropsychologist, Dr. Roman, that her “use was occasional until 1991 or 1992 when she began using on a more frequent basis, generally a couple of times per week.” During the litigation, Adzick told Dr. Malmquist that she used cocaine five to six times a year from 1985 through 1990, that her use increased over the next eighteen months, and finally that in 1992 her cocaine use increased further.
Adzick, however, asserted that she did not regularly use cocaine until October *890 1995 and that her behavior between 1988 and 1993 provides no indication that she was a chronic user. Adzick presented evidence from witnesses who claimed that they did not witness any behavioral problems indicative of chronic cocaine use. However, these witnesses included people who worked with Adzick and saw her only in her office or other work settings. This is consistent with Adzick’s statements to her counselors that she did not use cocaine at work. Adzick was able to conceal her cocaine use as evidenced by the fact that she admittedly began using cocaine nearly every day beginning in October 1995, but was able to conceal this behavior until she was reported to the Minnesota Board of Dentistry in December 1997.
The district court discounted the numerous treatment records that included Ad-zick’s own statements regarding the history of her cocaine use and addiction. The court apparently determined that the records were of little value because they were created years after the period at issue. However, these records-created by doctors and counselors reporting and recording Adzick’s own statements-consistently point to a history of “regular” use particularly beginning in 1991 and 1992 when she reported that she began using cocaine at least two times a week. In contrast, the decedent in the Johnson case reportedly only smoked marijuana approximately once a month, which the court determined was sufficient to qualify as “regular” or “current” use. In addition, the district court credited the testimony of Adzick’s various witnesses who testified that she did not appear to be under the influence of cocaine during the period in question. However, following the district court’s reasoning, these recollections, too, occurred years after the events in question, and would, pursuant to the district court’s analysis, render the testimony of little value.
After reviewing the entire record, we find that the district court clearly erred in determining that Adzick did not regularly use or was not currently using cocaine during the relevant period. Adzick’s negative response on the insurance application constitutes a false answer to a material matter at issue in this case. As such, we find that the district court abused its discretion in denying UNUM’s motion for new trial and clearly erred in denying UNUM’s motion to amend the court’s findings of fact. We reverse.
Notes
. UNUM's insurance application provided that the completed application is incorporated into the insurance contract between UNUM and its insured.
. Prior to UNUM’s receipt of the claim form, Adziek entered a one-week drug-treatment Professional Assessment Program at Abbott Northwestern Hospital spurred by a disciplinary referral to the Minnesota Board of Dentistry. Following completion of the assessment program in February 1997, Adziek entered the Talbott-Marsh Treatment Center in Georgia for chemical-dependency treatment. Beginning in June 1997, Adziek was treated by Sheila Specker, M.D. On September 9, 1997, Adziek underwent a neuropsy-chological exam, administered by Deborah D. Roman, Psy.D. During each of these periods, Adziek reported similar histories of cocaine usage over approximately twenty years beginning in 1978, occurring on an intermittent basis until approximately 1992 or 1993, when her usage increased to several times a week and then to everyday.
. The application contained the following question:
Other than already mentioned in this Application, have you in the past five years:
* * * * * *
(c) regularly used, or do you currently use, cocaine ....
Adzick answered "no” to this inquiry. The application did not define the terms “regularly” or "currently.”
. UNUM raised two issues on appeal. Because we reverse the district court's decision on the first issue regarding the ambiguity of the contract language and the falsity of Ad-zick’s answers thereto, we need not address UNUM's second point on appeal regarding the falsity of Adzick's responses to the income questions.
.Federal jurisdiction in this case is based on diversity. Thus, Minnesota's substantive law applies.
Larsen v. Mayo Medical Center,
. At trial, the parties stipulated to the materiality of the drug-use and income questions. As such, we need not address this issue here.
. Three of Adzick’s pregnancies resulted in successful deliveries on February 11, 1981; August 11, 1987; and August 10, 1995. Ad-zick also contended that she was pregnant for a time in 1983, 1984, 1985, 1989, 1992, and 1993; however, those pregnancies did not go to term.
