OPINION
This is a declaratory judgment action. Nationwide Mutual Fire Insurance Company filed suit seeking a determination of its obligation to defend or indemnify its insured, Richard Irwin Gibbons, for personal injury claims asserted by Greg and Maribel Tanner, Individually and as Next Friends of their minor children, K.T. and R.T., resulting from an accident that occurred while Gibbons was fleeing the police. The jury found that Gibbons did not intentionally cause any property damage or bodily injury, but the trial court disregarded that finding and entered judgment n.o.v. in Nationwide’s favor. We affirm.
I. Background Facts
Gibbons was stopped by a Texas State Trooper on Interstate 35 south of San Marcos. Gibbons fled, and the trooper pursued him. In the subsequent chase, Gibbons drove into San Marcos, and several San Marcos police officers responded. Gibbons exited the interstate at Highway 80 and drove through the city. At one point he was in a residential neighborhood where the speed limit was thirty miles per hour. Gibbons was traveling at speeds in excess of eighty miles per hour and was making turns at forty-five to fifty-five miles per hour. He committed numerous traffic violations, including speeding, failing to stop at stop signs, and failure to yield the right-of-way.
Gibbons returned to Highway 80 and left San Marcos heading east. He reached speeds in excess of 100 miles per hour and swerved into oncoming traffic to maneuver around slower moving vehicles. Gibbons exited Highway 80, drove through a freshly plowed cornfield, doubled back, and headed west toward San Marcos on a road running parallel to Highway 80. San Marcos Police Sergeant Penny Dunn attempted to block the roadway to stop Gibbons’s vehicle. He drove off of the roadway and went around her.
Gibbons returned to the roadway and approached an intersection with Old Bas-trop Road. The Tanners were in a small sedan on Old Bastrop Road nearing the intersection and had the right-of-way. The two vehicles arrived at the intersection at the same time. Gibbons locked his brakes and struck the Tanners’ vehicle. He then left the intersection, doubled back, and headed east. Sergeant Dunn stayed to help the Tanners while Officer Daniel Arredondo continued the pursuit. Gibbons made a couple of turns and then veered into a plowed field. Officer Arre-dondo determined that it was too danger *332 ous to allow Gibbons to continue any further, and he shot out the front and rear right tires on Gibbons’s pickup. Gibbons was arrested and was charged with aggravated assault with a motor vehicle.
All four of the Tanners were injured. Their seven-year-old son was the most severely injured. The impact caved in the door where he was sitting. He was comatose for a week, in the hospital for over a month, and attended physical therapy for five years.
The Tanners filed suit against Gibbons. Nationwide was Gibbons’s liability carrier, and it filed a declaratory judgment action against Gibbons and named the Tanners as interested parties. Nationwide contended that Gibbons had no coverage for the Tanners’ claims because of the intentional-acts exclusion in his insurance policy. The jury returned a verdict favoring the Tanners, finding that Gibbons did not intentionally cause their damages. Nationwide filed a motion to disregard the jury finding. The trial court granted that motion and entered a declaratory judgment that Nationwide owed Gibbons no duty to defend or indemnify.
II. Issues
The Tanners challenge the trial court’s judgment with one issue contending that the trial court erred by granting Nationwide’s motion to disregard and entering judgment notwithstanding the jury’s verdict.
III. Analysis
A. Standard of Review.
A judgment n.o.v. is reviewed under the “no evidence” standard of review.
Best v. Ryan Auto Group, Inc.,
Nationwide had the burden of proof. Because Nationwide complained of the jury’s failure to find that Gibbons acted intentionally, it was required to show that the evidence conclusively established that Gibbons intentionally caused the Tanners’ injuries and that no reasonable juror could have concluded otherwise.
See Gallas v. Car Biz, Inc.,
B. The Policy.
Gibbons’s liability policy contained the following intentional-acts exclusion:
Property damage or bodily injury caused intentionally by or at the direction of an insured, including willful acts the result of which the insured knows or ought to know will follow from the insured’s conduct.
*333 Gibbons’s liability policy is an Ohio insurance policy, but neither party contends that Ohio law is controlling. However, because there are no Texas cases construing this precise language, both sides have discussed relevant Ohio caselaw.
In
Nationwide Mutual Insurance Co. v. Finkley,
The parties understandably take opposite positions on the impact of this decision. Nationwide argues that it is directly on point and supports the trial court’s judgment. The Tanners distinguish Fink-ley because the teenager had no formal or informal driver’s training and the accident occurred in an urban area. They note the absence of any evidence that Gibbons was unlicensed or untrained and point out that the collision occurred in a rural area and that Gibbons attempted to avoid striking them.
C. Texas Caselaw.
While Texas courts have not construed this specific policy language, they have considered similar intentional-acts exclusions. Texas follows the inferred intent rule, which considers a result (including injury to another) to be intentional whenever it is the natural and probable consequence of an intentional act.
State Farm Fire & Casualty Co. v. S.S.,
In
S.S.,
the insured had genital herpes and infected another during consensual intercourse.
D. The Evidence.
The Tanners correctly note that we must review the record in the light most favorable to the jury finding and
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argue that we may consider only the evidence and any inferences that tend to support the jury’s finding. In Keller; however, the supreme court indicated that in some instances a no-evidence review requires a broader evidentiary inquiry.
The Tanners concede that Gibbons was intentionally or willfully fleeing from the police and that he was driving inappropriately but argue that, when the evidence is reviewed in the light most favorable to the jury’s finding, its verdict must be reinstated. They point to the following testimony from Officer Arredondo to show that Gibbons did not intentionally hit their vehicle but took steps to avoid causing them any injury:
Q: What did you observe?
A: As we got closer to the intersection, I observed the truck apply the brakes, lock up the brakes, and strike the Tanner vehicle.
[[Image here]]
Q: Did I understand you to say that prior to the collision you saw the truck that Gibbons was driving, saw its brake fights come on?
A: Yes.
Q: And so as it approached the intersection where the Tanner vehicle was also approaching, you saw the truck brake lights come on?
A: Yes.
Q: And that’s before the impact?
A: Yes.
[[Image here]]
Q: It looked to you like he tried to stop, though, didn’t it?
A: Well, yes, he did apply his brakes. And the truck did skid before striking the vehicle.
Gibbons’s actions in the instant before the collision are clearly relevant to intent, but they cannot be viewed in a vacuum. In S.S., the supreme court quoted the following statement from Professor Prosser:
[Ijntent is broader than a desire or purpose to bring about physical results. It extends not only to those consequences which are desired, but also to those which the actor believes are substantially certain to follow from what the actor does.... On the other hand, the mere knowledge and appreciation of a risk— something short of substantial certainly — is not intent. The defendant who acts in the belief or consciousness that the act is causing an appreciable risk of harm to another may be negligent, and if the risk is great the conduct may be characterized as reckless or wanton, but it is not an intentional wrong. In such cases the distinction between intent and negligence obviously is a matter of degree. The line has been drawn by the courts at the point where the known danger ceases to be only a foreseeable risk which a reasonable person would avoid, and becomes in the mind of the actor a substantial certainty.
In this instance, the jury had undisputed evidence that Gibbons was willfully and
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intentionally attempting to evade the police, that he had been involved in a protracted chase, that he had driven 80 miles per hour in a residential neighborhood and was driving 100 miles per hour outside city limits, that he was disregarding traffic control devices, and that he had driven on the wrong side of the road in the face of oncoming traffic and left the road entirely to evade the police. Each of these actions carried with it an undisputed and substantial risk that someone would be injured. That risk became less hypothetical and more real the longer the chase continued. We agree with the analysis in
Finkley,
We recognize that there are factual distinctions between Finkley and our case, but these are not determinative. For example, in Finkley the chase and collision occurred in a residential neighborhood while Gibbons struck the Tanners in a rural setting. Location is relevant, but the exclusion turns on intent and not location. A high-speed police chase through a residential neighborhood involves a different quality of risk than one in a rural setting, but Gibbons’s conduct — and thus intent— was consistent throughout the chase. Moreover, it was merely fortuitous that the accident happened outside city limits. Gibbons drove through at least one residential neighborhood at a high rate of speed and was alternatively driving to and from San Marcos throughout the chase.
Finally, Gibbons’s intent is undisturbed by evidence that immediately before the accident he locked up his brakes. This action can be characterized in numerous ways. Because we must review the evidence in a light most favorable to the verdict, we assume that Gibbons did so solely to avoid striking the Tanners’ vehicle and causing them any injury. However, Gibbons’s attempt was unsuccessful precisely because of the increased risk of harm he created by driving 100 miles an hour and ignoring traffic signs. Because the evidence is undisputed that he intentionally created this heightened risk, the intentional-acts exclusion is still applicable.
The trial court correctly disregarded the jury’s finding and entered judgment n.o.v. in Nationwide’s favor because, as a matter of law, the intentional-acts exclusion in Gibbons’s liability policy excluded any coverage for the Tanners’ claims.
IV. Holding
The Tanners’ issue is overruled, and the judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
