OPINION
In this declaratory judgment action, appellant State Farm Fire and Casualty Company challenges the district court’s grant of summary judgment to its insured, respondent Gary Harold Schwich. The district court ruled that appellant had a duty to defend and indemnify Schwich under the terms of his homeowners’ policy for the wrongful death of Alicia Sue Hack-barth. Schwich provided Hackbarth with methamphetamine for injection, which was a partial cause of her death.
Because intentional, willful, and malicious acts are excluded from coverage and intent to injure can be inferred from the facts and circumstances of Hackbarth’s death, and because it is against public policy to require a general liability insurance policy to cover deliberate and serious criminal acts, we reverse.
FACTS
State Farm Fire and Casualty Company (State Farm) began a declaratory judgment action to determine its duty to defend and indemnify its insured, respondent Gary Harold Schwich, for the death of Alicia Sue Hackbarth. For purposes of summary judgment, State Farm, Schwich, and respondent Brandon Mitchell Hack-barth, who was trustee for the next of kin of Alicia Hackbarth, stipulated to three facts, in addition to the other evidence presented: (1) Schwich provided Hack-barth with methamphetamine (meth) on the night she died; (2) the meth was at least one of the causes of Hackbarth’s death; and (3) although Schwich intentionally gave Hackbarth the drug, he did not intend to kill her.
In granting summary judgment in favor of respondents, the district court concluded that (1) Hackbarth’s death was not intentional and therefore her death was an accident or occurrence under the policy; (2) liability for Hackbarth’s death was not excluded as an intentional, willful, or malicious act, because the harm in question was not substantially certain to result from the insured’s conduct; and (3) appellant failed to show that insurance coverage for a criminal act should be void as against public policy.
At the time of her death in March 2005, Hackbarth lived at Sehwich’s home and had resided there intermittently for about nine months. While living with Schwich, Hackbarth drank heavily, smoked marijuana, and snorted meth, possibly on a daily basis. On March 10, 2005, another friend of Schwich’s, Jeanne Carol Stone, moved in; Stone also habitually used meth. Unlike Hackbarth, both Schwich and Stone preferred to inject meth rather than to snort or smoke it, accelerating the onset of the drug’s effect. On March 10, after injecting meth with breakfast, Schwich left for work; despite his heavy meth habit, Schwich continued to work full time as a well contractor. The two women spent the day together. Hackbarth snorted meth twice and drank steadily all day long. When Schwich returned home in the evening, he ingested his second dose of meth and then left with Stone to run errands and to stop at some bars. Hackbarth remained at home and continued to drink.
After Schwich and Stone returned home, Schwich had a third dose of meth. Stone
Schwich fell asleep in the master bedroom while Hackbarth sat in a Jacuzzi located in the master bathroom. Schwich woke after a couple of hours, heard the jets in the Jacuzzi and, upon investigating, found Hackbarth floating face down in the Jacuzzi. He called Stone, who attempted to resuscitate Hackbarth. Stone testified that initially Schwich assisted her with Hackbarth, but then he left the room and scurried around the house, disposing of drugs and paraphernalia, and putting his meth-tainted robe in the washing machine. Stone called 911 and continued CPR until the paramedics arrived some ten minutes later. According to the coroner’s report, Hackbarth died of cardiac arrhythmia, caused by the underlying factors of acute meth and ethanol intoxication, and ar-rhythmogenic right ventricular cardiomyo-pathy, with contributing factors of chronic alcoholism and cigarette smoking.
Schwich had used meth for at least ten years, without apparent ill effects. He testified that he did not consider it to be a dangerous drug and had never heard of anyone overdosing or dying from use of meth, although he acknowledged that a former girlfriend had gone through drug treatment twice; it was an expensive habit; and he would not want his daughter to use it. Schwich clearly knew that meth was illegal; his house and grounds were monitored by closed-circuit cameras and protected by various measures, including hidden microphones and a locked gate.
Schwich was tried and convicted for aiding and abetting third-degree murder: causing the death of another by administering a schedule I controlled substance without intent to cause death. Minn.Stat. § 609.195(b) (2004). Stone pleaded guilty to third-degree unintentional murder. Hackbarth’s next of kin initiated a wrongful death action against Schwich, who referred the lawsuit to his insurer, State Farm. State Farm began defending Schwich under a reservation of rights and initiated this declaratory judgment action.
ISSUES
1. Is liability for Hackbarth’s death excluded from coverage as an intentional act?
2. Is liability for Hackbarth’s death excluded from coverage as a willful and malicious act?
3. As a matter of public policy, should a general liability insurance policy provide coverage for liability resulting from a serious criminal act?
ANALYSIS
Construction of an insurance contract is a question of law subject to de novo review.
B.M.B. v. State Farm Fire & Cas. Co.,
Intentional Act Exclusion
Schwieh’s homeowners’ policy provides coverage for an “occurrence,” which it defines as an “accident,” and excludes coverage for expected injuries or injuries caused by intentional acts. Al
An insurer may establish intent by offering proof of actual intent to injure.
Id.
In
Walser,
although the insured intended the act (pulling a fellow student from the rim of a basketball hoop), he intended no injury, even though the injury was the natural and probable consequence of the insured’s action.
But when actual intent to injure is lacking, an insurer may prove intent to injure by inferring intent as a matter of law.
B.M.B.,
Generally, courts infer intent to injure as a matter of law when the injury involves a criminal act of a serious nature.
See Diocese of Winona v. Interstate Fire & Cas. Co.,
The parties stipulated that although he intentionally gave Hackbarth meth, Schwich did not intend to kill her. Schwich further testified that he did not believe meth to be harmful or that death could result from using meth, although he
We hold that when an insured has knowingly provided an injured party with methamphetamine, by preparing a syringe and encouraging the injured party to inject the drug, intent to injure is inferred as a matter of law, and therefore coverage under the policy is excluded.
Willful and Malicious Act
Schwich’s policy also excludes coverage for willful and malicious acts, which are not defined by the policy. As a legal matter, an act that a person knows is wrong and unlawful is malicious and willful.
Neises,
In some ways, this exclusion parallels our discussion of inferred intent. In
Walser,
the court stated that the purpose of the intentional act exclusion is to exclude coverage for wanton and malicious acts; in such a case, absent specific intent, a court may infer intent to injure as a matter of law.
Schwich provided meth to Hackbarth; although he stated that he did not think meth was dangerous, he did know that it was unlawful. In addition, although Hackbarth previously had only inhaled meth, Schwich pressured her to inject herself with meth, a more dangerous delivery method. Schwich knew that providing Hackbarth with meth was unlawful, but he did so regardless of its illegality,
see Neises,
Public Policy
Finally, State Farm argues that it should be against public policy to provide coverage for serious criminal acts. Courts may declare a contract void as against public policy, but it is “a very delicate power” invoked only in “cases free from doubt.”
United Steelworkers of Am., Local 6115 v. Quadna Mtn. Corp.,
Despite this limitation, we will declare an insurance contract void as against public policy under certain circumstances. One consideration stems from the nature of the insurance contract. An insured and an insurer enter into a contract to protect the insured against the occurrence of certain hazards; the insurer spreads the risk across a large pool of insureds to provide liability coverage at reasonable rates. But an insured is not, by commission of an intentional act, permitted to consciously control the risks covered by a policy.
Diocese of Winona,
Further, it is against public policy to “licens[e] intentional and unlawful harmful aet[s].”
Stone,
Although we have not addressed directly the question of liability coverage for injury as the result of providing a Schedule I drug, courts of other jurisdictions have declined to find coverage for injuries related to their use on public policy grounds. In
State Farm Fire & Cas. Co. v. Baer,
Likewise, in
Minnesota Fire & Cas. Co. v. Greenfield,
Insurance policies are intended to protect an insured from the consequences of unintended and accidental actions, even those undertaken with breathtaking stupidity and resulting in serious injury. But they are not intended to relieve an insured from the consequences of serious criminal acts, and we, as a matter of public policy, cannot condone coverage for such acts. We therefore hold that extending liability coverage for the act of providing an injured party with meth by preparing a syringe and pressuring the injured party to inject the drug is against public policy.
DECISION
Schwich’s act of supplying the victim, Alicia Hackbarth, with meth, by preparing a syringe and urging her to inject the drug, is both a willful and malicious act and an act for which intent may be inferred. Further, coverage for such acts is against public policy. We therefore conclude that this act is excluded from liability coverage under Schwich’s homeowners’ policy, and we therefore reverse.
Reversed.
Notes
. In limited circumstances, courts decline to find inferred intent despite an actor's commission of a serious criminal act. Generally, this occurs when the actor is deemed to be unable to form the requisite intent because of serious mental illness.
See B.M.B.,
