OPINION AND ORDER
This is a civil action brought pursuant to 29 U.S.C. § 1132(e) of the Employee Retirement Income Security Act and 28 U.S.C. § 1331. Plaintiff Bryan Tourdot is suing for benefits.he believes are due him under the terms of his employer’s group health plan. Defendant denies that it owes plaintiff any benefits, arguing that plaintiff was injured as a result of an illegal act (driving while intoxicated) and the plan provides no coverage for services provided as a result of an illegal act. The case is before the court on cross-motions for summary judgment filed by the parties.
Plaintiff began this action in a Wisconsin state court; defendant removed the case to this court. It is not entirely clear whether plaintiff is suing the correct defendant or whether venue is proper in this district. Section 1132(e)(2) of ERISA provides that actions may be brought “in the district where the plan is administered, where the breach took place, or where a defendant resides or may be found.” The parties
For the purpose of deciding this case, I find that the following facts are undisputed and material.
UNDISPUTED FACTS
Plaintiff Bryan Tourdot is' an insured of defendant Rockford Health Plans, Inc. At all relevant times, defendant was an insurance company licensed to issue group health policies to employers, with its principal place of business in Rockford, Illinois. It issued a group health policy to plaintiffs employer.
On July 16, 2003, while plaintiff was covered by his employer’s group health policy, he was involved in an accident involving his motorcycle and an automobile. The accident occurred in Janesville, Wisconsin, when plaintiff was momentarily distracted by the activities of dancers at Screamin’ Meemies, failed to stop with traffic and ran his motorcycle into the automobile stopped in front of him. He sustained personal injuries requiring medical treatment. During the two-hour period immediately preceding the accident, plaintiff had consumed more than two alcoholic beverages and in the four hours preceding the accident, may have consumed as many as four to five beers.
Plaintiff was issued a traffic citation for inattentive driving, which he resolved later with a plea of no contest. He was given a breathalyzer test, which resulted in a blood alcohol level of .10gm/dL. However, when his blood alcohol level was tested in the emergency room after the accident it was found to be .14 gm/dL.
On July 18, 2003, defendant wrote plaintiff, denying coverage for the cost of the medical services plaintiffs injuries required. Defendant cited Article XI, # 40 that excluded coverage for “treatment, services and supplies in connection with any illness or injury caused by a Member’s operation of a motorized vehicle when legally prohibited and/or intentional use of illegal drugs.”' At some point, defendant realized that the plan in effect at the time of the accident did not contain this exclusion and advised plaintiff that it was relying instead on an exclusion in the policy covering plaintiff that applies to “services which result from war or act of war, whether declared or undeclared, or from participation in an insurrection or riot, or in the commission of an assault, felony, terrorist action, or any illegal act.”
As of July 16, 2003, Wis. Stat. § 340.01(46m)(a) set the prohibited blood alcohol concentration at .10 or greater for drivers with 2 or fewer prior convictions, suspensions, or revocations. (The legislature reduced the level to .08, effective September 30, 2003.)
OPINION
Neither party has identified any provision of the plan documents that grants defendant discretion to determine how various provisions of the plan should be interpreted. Without any indication
Defendant’s denial of plaintiffs claim rested on its determination that plaintiffs operation of his motorcycle while legally drunk was an illegal act. Defendant contends that its term is straightforward and that it covers the act of driving with a blood alcohol level in excess of .10 because the Wisconsin legislature has declared such driving illegal in Wis. Stat. § 346.63, which provides that “(1) No person may drive or operate a motor vehicle while: ... (b) The person has a prohibited alcohol concentration.”
Plaintiff argues that the term “illegal act” is ambiguous for a number of reasons. First, the principles of ejusem generis apply, so that the general term, “illegal act,” must be understood in reference to the specific terms enumerated in the exclusion provision. Under this canon of construction, a reasonable reader would not read “illegal act” as including a minor traffic violation such as the inattentive driving for which he was ticketed, when the preceding acts are such serious matters as insurrection, commission of a felony or a terrorist act. Moreover, such a reading would apply to other acts punishable by no more than a civil forfeiture, such as driving over the speed limit or not wearing a seat belt. Second, the exclusion is ambiguous because it does not say whether an illegal act requires a conviction and third, it is ambiguous because it does not prescribe whether a causal connection is required between the illegal act and the accident. Finally, plaintiff argues that defendant must have realized that the exclusion on which it is relying is ambiguous because it amended the plan to incorporate a specific exclusion for coverage of injuries caused by the operation of a motorized vehicle when legally prohibited.
None of plaintiffs challenges to defendant’s plan is persuasive. The Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit decided in 1990 that a similar provision in a health plan barred an injured plaintiff or his as-signee from recovering medical expenses incurred for services for injuries while engaging in any illegal or criminal enterprise or activity. In
Sisters of the Third Order of St. Francis v. SwedishAmerican Group Health Benefit Trust,
Plaintiff argues that
Sisters of the Third Order
is distinguishable in several ways. First, the provision in that case was more
The more interesting question is whether Wisconsin’s treatment of a first offense drunk driving conviction as. a civil forfeiture “decriminalizes” plaintiffs act, so that it is no longer covered, by the term, illegal act. Neither party argues the point, perhaps conceding the persuasiveness of Judge Reynolds’s decision in
Lampen v. Albert Trostel & Sons Employee Welfare Plan,
Plaintiff argues that if drunk driving is considered a criminal act, insurers could deny coverage for other acts that are treated as civil forfeitures. The answer to this is that they cannot (assuming that they do not make such an exclusion explicit in their plans). Matters that are classified as civil forfeitures are’ not crimes under Wisconsin law. Drunk driving is classified as a crime but one for which the penalty for a first offense is treated as a civil forfeiture.
Plaintiff argues that the exclusion is ambiguous because it does not say whether an illegal act requires a conviction, but this argument cannot succeed. Illegal acts are illegal acts, whether or not they result in convictions. As Judge Reynolds explained in
Lampen,
The exclusion is not ambiguous for lack of a requirement of a causal connection between the illegal act and the accident. The need for a causal connection is clear in the exclusion, which applies to services “which result from ” any illegal act. “Result from” implies a connection; indeed, it requires one. However, it does not follow that because plaintiff was ticketed for inattentive driving, rather than drunk driving, defendant erred in denying him coverage. Plaintiff has offered no admissible evidence to suggest that his accident did not result from .his inebriated state. I can imagine no way in which he could persuade a reasonable jury that his blood alcohol level was not a cause of his accident.
Plaintiffs final argument rests on the subsequent amendment of the plan to clarify the exclusion’s application to driving with a prohibited blood alcohol level. The general rule of contract construction is that a contract purports to be a complete expression of the entire agreement between the parties and that parol evidence is admissible only to show that what appears to be a straightforward term might be ambiguous because of customs in the industry or to explain an ambiguous term.
E.g., Davis v. G.N. Mortgage Corp.,
I conclude that plaintiff has failed to show that defendant breached the terms of plaintiffs employer’s health benefit plan when it denied him coverage, .under the plan.
ORDER
IT IS ORDERED that plaintiff Bryan D. Tourdot’s motion for summary judgment is DENIED; defendant Rockford Health Plans, Inc.’s motion for summary judgment is GRANTED. The clerk of court is directed to enter judgment for defendant and close this case.
