In this action, the plaintiff, Team Rental Group, Inc. (Team Rental), a car rental company, seeks to recover damages from the named defendant and the defendant Hartford Insurance Company of the Midwest, Inc., insurance carriers for Felix Velez, for property damage to an automobile rented by him from Team Rental. That automobile was later damaged in an accident when it was being operated by Michael Velez, a grandson of Felix Velez, allegedly without authority.
The following facts appear to be undisputed. Felix Velez was insured under an automobile policy issued *481 by the defendants. On September 13, 1996, Felix Velez rented a car from the plaintiff, naming himself as the sole authorized driver. While Felix Velez was asleep, his grandson, Michael Velez, took the keys to the rental car from Felix Velez' jacket and proceeded to drive the vehicle. Michael Velez was neither a named insured on Felix Velez' automobile policy nor was he named as an authorized driver on the car rental agreement. Felix Velez did not give Michael Velez permission to take his keys or to drive the rental car, and Michael Velez knew that he did not have permission to take the keys or to drive the rental car. On the morning of September 14, 1996, while Michael Velez was driving the rental car, he was involved in an accident resulting in property damage to the rental car. The plaintiff brought a negligence action against Felix Velez to recover sums for the property damage to the rental car and received a judgment on November 26, 1997, in the amount of $17,014.48.
Pursuant to General Statutes §
The defendants move for summary judgment on the ground that coverage is excluded under the policy for damages to a car rented to the insured and for damages to a nonowned auto used by a family member without a reasonable belief that he was entitled to do so. The plaintiff argues that coverage exists under the policy for a nonowned auto used as a temporary substitute for the insured's own auto while it is out of normal use, and the rental car qualifies as such. The plaintiff argues *482 further that coverage exists because Felix Velez reasonably believed that he was entitled to use the rental car, even if Michael Velez did not.
In Lyon v. Aetna Casualty Surety Co.,
A similar exclusion was at issue in Connecticut CarRental, Inc. v. Patla,
Finally, in Hine v. American Mutual Liability Ins.Co.,
In the present action, it is undisputed by the parties that the vehicle in question was rented to Felix Velez pursuant to a rental agreement with the plaintiff. The automobile insurance policy issued to Felix Velez by the defendants unambiguously excludes coverage for damage caused to property rented to the insured. While the car was being so rented to Felix Velez, it sustained damage; and it is for this damage to the rental car itself that Felix Velez has been held liable. However, "[l]iability cannot be imposed upon the defendant insurance carrier simply because . . . the policyholder, is legally liable to answer in damages to the [plaintiff]. The insurance carrier's liability can arise only because of and under the terms of the insurance contract." Id., 457. It must be concluded that liability coverage under Part A of the policy is excluded.
The parties do not dispute that the rental car was a "non-owned auto," although they do dispute under which of the two alternate parts of the definition of "non-owned auto" it ultimately falls. Resolution of this dispute is immaterial, however, since regardless of under which definitional part it falls, coverage is excluded by the express terms of the policy. The "EXCLUSIONS" contained in Part D provide in relevant part: "We will not pay for . . . 7. Loss to any nonowned auto when used by you or any family member without a reasonable belief that you or that family member are entitled to do so."
No material question of fact has been raised as to whether Michael Velez, the grandson of Felix Velez, was using the rental car at the time the damage to the car occurred and that he did not possess a reasonable belief that he was entitled to use the rental car. The defendants have submitted evidence undisputed and unrefuted by the plaintiff that Michael Velez was well aware of the fact that he did not have express or implied permission to use the rental car. The plaintiff's argument that the exclusion does not apply because Felix Velez reasonably believed that he was entitled to use the car is irrelevant to any material question of fact because Felix Velez was not the one using the car when the loss occurred.
Since the exclusion clearly applies and Felix Velez may not recover for the damage to the rental car under *486
Part D of the policy, the plaintiff also cannot recover from the defendants in the present action since the plaintiff simply stands in the shoes of Felix Velez when making a claim under §
The defendants' motion for summary judgment is granted.
