Intеrvenor Prudential Property and Casualty Insurance Company appeals a decision of the Orange Superior Court, which granted defendant Dr. Samuel Meyer’s motion for summary judgment and held that he was entitled to insurance coverage in this civil suit. Prudential argues that the court erred because Prudential is not required to defend or indemnify defendant for his nonphysical sexual exploitation of a minor based on Vermont’s inferred intent rule and the liability insurancе policies’ exclusionary clauses. We agree and reverse the summary judgment for defendant and grant Prudential’s summary judgment motion.
The facts that give rise to this appeal are as follows: On December 16, 1995, two minor children, T.B.H. and S.T., were playing at S.T’s house and got dirty. Due to a water problem at S.T’s house, the children were unable to wash, and they asked S.T’s mother if they could take a bath at defendant’s house. S.T.’s mother called defendant, a close family friend, and asked his permission to use his bathroom — which was granted. While the girls were in defendant’s jacuzzi, defendant took nude photographs and video tape of the two girls. Upon learning of the incident, S.T.’s father reported defendаnt’s actions to the police. Defendant was convicted on two counts of violating 13 V.S.A. § 2822(a) (use of a child in a sexual performance),
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and we affirmed. See
State v. Meyer,
At the time these crimes were committed, Prudential had in effect two liability insurance рolicies issued to defendant: a Prudential Homeowner’s Insurance Policy and a Prudential Personal Catastrophe Liability Policy. The homeowner’s policy stated that Prudential would indemnify and defend defendant in suits for damages due to bodily injury so long as the bodily injury was not expected or intended by defendant. The personal catastrophe liability policy stated that Prudential would defend defendant in
We won’t pay for or defend any claim which results from an act that is intended by [defendant] or can bе expected from the standpoint of a reasonable person to cause bodily injury, including personal injury, or property damage even if the injury or damage is of a different degree or type than actually intendеd or expected.
This restriction does not apply where the bodily injury, personal injury or property damage arises from [defendant’s] negligence or from [defendant] protecting persons or property.
In May 1996, T.B.H. cоmmenced a civil suit against defendant (1) alleging unlawful invasion of privacy and defamation by portrayal in a false light, (2) seeking to have the original and copies of the video tape and photographs turned over to T.B.H. for destruction, and (3) seeking a permanent restraining order against defendant. Prudential intervened and sought a declaratory judgment concerning its obligations under defendant’s two liability policies. T.B.H. subsequently amended her complaint against defendant to include claims of negligence and reckless or intentional infliction of emotional distress.
Prudential then moved for summary judgment, alleging that it had no duty to defend or indemnify defendant because he had been convicted of violating 13 V.S.A. § 2822(a), and such intentional sexual misconduct is excluded from coverage under either of defendant’s liability policies. Further, Prudential argued that the inferred-intent rule, that precludes coverage fоr perpetrators of sexual misconduct because an intention to injure is inferred from the nature of the conduct itself, should control. Defendant cross-moved for summary judgment claiming that the two policies covered his аctions, because, as was found at his criminal trial, he did not intend to harm the children. The court ruled that the inferred-intent rule was inapplicable, and finding no evidence of defendant’s intent to harm the children, granted defendant’s motiоn and denied Prudential’s. Prudential brings this interlocutory appeal pursuant to V.R.A.P 5.
For defendant’s acts to be excluded from coverage, Prudential must prove that defendant intended to cause bodily or personal injury to the children when he filmed and photographed them in the jacuzzi. The judge presiding over defendant’s criminal trial found no evidence of any intent by defendant to harm the children. Thus, it appears, at first blush, that defendant’s conduct is covered undеr Prudential’s policies. In Vermont, however, for cases involving child sexual abuse,
an insured’s conduct may fall within that class of conduct that is excluded from coverage if we apply the inferred-intent rule to an insured’s actions. See
Nationwide Mut. Fire Ins. Co. v. Lajoie,
In the two cases where we have applied the inferred-intent rule, the insured had either been found guilty of lewd and lascivious conduct with a minor, see
Ouellette,
“Vermont law reflects our enhanced concern for the protection and well-being of minors and the gravity we attach to crimes involving the exploitation of minors.”
State v. Searles,
Defendant’s sexual exploitation of T.B.H. was intentional. He perpetrated a crime upon a child by using the girl in a sexual performance. Because defendant’s conduct was so certain to result in injury to T.B.H., we infer defendant’s intent to injure T.B.H as a matter of law. See
Barthelemy,
Next, we consider whether the fact that T.B.H. pleaded negligence and reckless infliction of emotional distress in her amended complaint brought her cause of action under the policy’s coverage. We must focus on the factual allegations in TB.H.’s cоmplaint and not on the legal theories asserted, and unless the complaint alleges facts within the coverage of the policies, Prudential has no duty to defend or indemnify. See
Cooperative Fire Ins. Ass’n v. Bizon,
The facts that form the basis of these two torts are defendant’s intentional acts of promoting a performance of a child that included a lewd exhibition of the child’s genitalia, for which he was found guilty. Thus, defendant’s conduct was voluntary and intentional, not negligent or reckless. TB.H.’s emotional harm is a direct result of defendant’s intentional acts, and is not caused by any negligent or reckless act on the part of defendant. See
State Farm Fire & Cas. Co. v. Watters,
Because defendant’s sexual exploitation of T.B.H. is not covered under defendаnt’s
Summary judgment for defendant is reversed and summary judgment for intervenor is granted.
Notes
Section 2822(a) of Title 13 provides that:
No persоn shall, with knowledge of the character and content, promote a sexual performance by a child or a performance including a lewd exhibition of the genitals by a child, or hire, employ, procure, use, cause or induce a child to engage in such a performance.
The personal catastrophe liability policy defines “personal injury” as “injury to any person or organization arising out of one or more of the following: shock, mental anguish, mental injury, false arrest, false imprisonment, wrongful eviction, wrongful entry, wrongful detention, malicious humiliation, malicious prosecution, libel, slander, defamation of character, or invasion of privacy.”
