State Farm Fire & Casualty Company (State Farm) brought an action against the administrator of the estate of C. W. Belt and others, seeking a declaration that Belt had expected or intended to inflict the fatal injuries to his son and daughter-in-law which were the subject of claims against State Farm, thereby precluding coverage under an exclusion in Belt’s homeowners’ liability insurance policy. The trial court denied State Farm’s motion for directed verdict and the jury returned a special verdict against State Farm. Judgment was entered on that verdict and State Farm appeals.
The record reveals the jury would have been authorized to find that C. W. Belt was a chronically heavy drinker who, apparently without provocation, shot and killed Kevin and Susan Belt and then killed himself. Although there was some conflict in the evidence regarding Belt’s demeanor before the occurrence, an autopsy showed that his blood alcohol content was .25 grams percent. The policy provision in question excluded coverage for “bodily injury or property damage which is expected or intended by the insured.”
1. Appellant contends the trial court erred by denying its motion for directed verdict because the policy provision excluding coverage for claims for bodily injury “expected or intended” by the insured bars coverage in this instance as a matter of law.
“A directed verdict is proper only where there is no conflict in the evidence as to any material issue and the evidence introduced together with all reasonable deductions or inferences therefrom demands a particular verdict. [Cits.]”
Carver v. Jones,
There was evidence that Belt was highly intoxicated at the time *378 he shot Kevin and Susan Belt. The question presented for review in this enumeration is whether intent or expectation on the part of the insured may be presumed from his acts and whether his intoxication is legally relevant to a determination whether the policy exclusion applies.
We begin our analysis with the rule set forth in OCGA § 16-3-4 (c), which provides that in criminal cases, voluntary intoxication is no excuse for any crime, and with the proposition that, at least in the eyes of the law, alcoholism is not involuntary intoxication, and therefore is not a defense to crimes.
Ford v. State,
Turning to the case at bar and applying this standard, because the autopsy evidence showed a high level of intoxication and evidence of Belt’s demeanor was conflicting, the evidence was not so clear and unequivocal as to demand the conclusion as a matter of law that the injuries resulting from Belt’s actions were either intended or expected by him. We find no error in the trial court’s denial of appellant’s motion for directed verdict. The question of whether the level of intoxication was such as to preclude the formation of intent or expectation was a question for the jury, and not amenable to directed verdict.
Thrift-Mart v. Commercial Union &c. Cos.,
2. Appellant also alleges error in the trial court’s refusal to give two requested jury charges.
(a) Appellant’s request to charge number 7 provided that “[a]cts cannot be ‘unexpected’ unless they are accidental.” This language is taken from
Stein v. Mass. Bay Ins. Co.,
(b) Appellant’s request to charge number 11 provided that “insanity or lack of competence is no defense to an intentional tort.” Appellant cites
Continental Cas. Co. v. Parker,
Any attempt to draw the charge requested in the case at bar from the specific facts of Parker must also fail. Although the insurance company’s main concern in that declaratory judgment action naturally would have been coverage under the policy for the insured’s intentional acts, in Parker, unlike the case at bar, the underlying tort action was in two counts, alleging negligence as well as an intentional assault. There, in the declaratory judgment action, an exculpatory insanity charge was given, and although that charge would have been apt as to the count alleging an intentional tort, it was improper as to the count alleging negligence. Thus the possibility that the jury’s verdict had been infected by the charge necessitated a reversal. Had negligence not been alleged in the underlying tort action in Parker, reversal in the declaratory judgment action would not have been necessary or warranted. Parker is therefore wholly consistent with our holding today. In the case at bar, however, appellant claimed the tort was intentional, and yet requested a charge that insanity was not a defense. This is simply incorrect, and the trial court properly refused to give the requested charge.
Judgment affirmed.
