Michael D. TYRRELL, Respondent,
v.
FARMERS INSURANCE COMPANY OF WASHINGTON, Petitioner.
Supreme Court of Washington, En Banc.
*834 Diehl Rettig, Cheryl Adamson, Kennewick, for Petitioner.
*835 Timothy B. Fennessy, Spokane, for Respondent.
GUY, C.J.
Michael Tyrrell, respondent, brought an action in Spokane County Superior Court against Farmers Insurance Company of Washington (Farmers), petitioner, requesting a declaratory judgment that Tyrrell's tripping while exiting a camper attached to his pickup truck, with alleged injuries resulting, was a "motor vehicle accident" covered under the personal injury provisions (PIP) of his automobile insurance policy. The trial court granted Tyrrell's motion for partial summary judgment on this question. Farmers appealed, arguing in relevant part that the legal conclusion that Tyrrell's injuries were the product of a "motor vehicle accident" was clearly erroneous. Division Three of the Court of Appeals affirmed. Farmers petitioned for this Court's review. We granted review, and now reverse the Court of Appeals and remand to the trial court for an entry of summary judgment in Farmers' favor.
FACTS
The following facts are undisputed. In 1992, Tyrrell, a chiropractor, parked a 1986 Toyota one-ton pickup, to which a detachаble camper was affixed, in a Spokane park for overnight camping. The vehicle was insured by Farmers. The camper's purchase, occurring three or four years after that of the truck, had included a single, unattached wooden objeсt used as a step to make entering and exiting easier. Upon exiting the camper, Tyrrell stepped down from the truck's tailgate onto the unattached wooden step that had been placed on the ground. The step somehow gave way, сausing Tyrrell to fall. In falling, his arm caught on the edge of the tailgate, cutting it. He then landed on a rock, further injuring himself. In addition to minor wounds, Tyrrell suffered two compression fractures in his back. Tyrrell first notified Farmers of the incident a few months later. Two and a half years lаter he filed a claim with Farmers under his policy's PIP provisions seeking payment for medical expenses, wage loss, and the purchase of a Nordic Track and medical equipment. Farmers denied the claim.
Tyrrell filed an action in Spokane County Superior Court seeking a declaratory judgment that the accident was covered under the PIP provisions of his Farmers policy. Farmers answered with two affirmative defenses: (1) The injuries were not caused by a "motor vehicle accident" and, thus, were not covered by the Farmers policy; and (2) Tyrrell breached conditions in his Farmers policy precedent to invoking its coverage by failing to cooperate with Farmers and timely submit his claim form. Farmers moved for summary judgment on the question of whether Tyrrell's injury claim was the result of a "motor vehicle accident" within the insurance policy's coverage, arguing it was not. Tyrrell cross-claimed for a partial summary judgment finding that there was coverage. The trial judge granted partial summary judgment on this question to Tyrrell and denied Farmers' motion. Farmers then moved for summary judgment on its second affirmative defense: breach of the policy's cooperation clause. This motion was also denied,[1] thus reserving this fact question for trial. Farmers appealed to Division Three of the Court of Appeals, which affirmed the trial court. See Tyrrell v. Farmers Ins. Group of Cos.,
ISSUE
Was Tyrrell's injury claim the result of a "motor vehicle accident" covered by his automobile insurance policy?
ANALYSIS
The cеntral issue in this case is whether Tyrrell's injury claim could have been covered by his automobile insurance policy inasmuch as the policy limits coverage to claims for "bodily injury to each insured person *836 caused by a motor vehicle accident." Clerk's Papers at 92 (emphasis added).
In reviewing an appealed summary judgment order, this Court engages in the same inquiry as the trial court. See Roller v. Stonewall Ins. Co.,
In reviewing the policy, it is considered as a whole so as to give effect to every clause in it. See Kitsap County v. Allstate Ins. Co.,
Where policy language is "clear and unambiguous," and not fairly susceptible to two different reasonable interpretations, courts may not creаte an ambiguity. Kitsap County,
We will provide the benefits described below for bodily injury to each insured person caused by a motor vehicle accident.
. . . .
Motor vehicle means a land motor vehicle or a trailer, but doеs not mean a vehicle:
. . . .
3. Located for use as a residence or premises.
Clerk's Papers at 92. There is no dispute over the fact that Tyrrell's injuries resulted from an "accident," which the policy defines as "a sudden event, including continuous or repeated exposure to the same conditions, resulting in bodily injury or property damage neither expected nor intended by the insured person." Clerk's Papers at 90. Thus, while "motor vehicle" and "accident" are defined, the term "motor vehicle accident" is not.
In defining "motor vehicle accident," Farmers heavily relies upon a Division Two decision, Farmers Ins. Co. v. Grelis,
*837 On appeal, Grelis argued that the term "automobile accident" was ambiguous and should be construed against Farmers. Grelis's policy defined "accident" in a manner identical to the definition of "accident" in Tyrrell's Farmers policy. Id. The сourt wrote that "[t]he issue ... is whether the word `accident' is ambiguous when modified by the word `automobile.'" Id. at 478,
"The term motor vehicle accident is not an enigmatic one. The words evoke an image of one or more vehicles in a forceful contact with another vehicle or person, causing physical injury."
Id. (quoting Manhattan & Bronx Surface Transit Operating Auth. v. Gholson,
Grelis is factually distinguishable, which Tyrrell argues makes it legally distinguishable as well. However, Farmers argues that the discussion in Grelis of the meaning of the similar term "automobile accident," and approvingly quoted definition from Gholson of the term "motor vehicle accident," is consistent with the plain, ordinary, and popular meaning of the lаtter term within the context of the insurance policy at issue here. Farmers argues that:
PIP coverage is simply not intended to cover a trip and fall accident during meal preparation activities while camping out in Riverside Park.... A motor vehiclе accident would entail a vehicle-to-vehicle impact, a vehicle-to-pedestrain impact, a one car rollover, a vehicle striking a retaining wall, and the like. The common thread is that, in all of these situations, the motor vehicle is being used as a motor vehicle.
Pet. for Review at 9.
Tyrrell counters that "using the same image invoked in Grelis, Tyrrell's injuries resulted from the forceful contact between a vehicle and a person." Answer to Pet. for Review at 6. This conception of an accident involving a person and a parked vehicle is quite a stretch as the word "forceful," as usеd in Gholson's definition, very obviously necessitates movement on the part of "one or more vehicles in a forceful contact with another vehicle or a person, causing physical injury." Gholson,
The definition of "motor vehicle accident" that Tyrrell arrives at is more expansive: "[A]ny unforeseen or unexpected bodily injury resulting from the use of a self-propelled device capable of moving upon a public highway." Resp't's Br. at 13 (emphasis added). An image that easily comes to mind is an insured tripping while making the oft-difficult step down from the high doorway of а pickup truck or sports utility vehicle. Another is trippingover, say, the threshold or a seatbeltwhile entering a vehicle. Making all such accidents "motor vehicle accidents" for insurance purposes is a logical extension of the Court of Appеals' holding that "the use of a vehicle depends on an insured's ability to safely enter and exit it." Tyrrell,
*838 We find Farmers' position comрelling: that the sensible and popular understanding of what a "motor vehicle accident" entails necessarily involves the motor vehicle being operated as a motor vehicle. See Pet. for Review at 9. A motor vehicle is being operated as a motor vehicle when it is being driven or when it is stopped while being driven. For example, if a tree limb were to fall on the motor vehicle while a person was driving or had stopped while driving, that would constitute a "motor vehicle accident." On the other hand, a motor vehicle is not being operаted as a motor vehicle when parked.
Tyrrell was not operating his motor vehicle when his injuries occurred. They were not caused by a "motor vehicle accident" and are not covered under the personal injury protection provisions of his Farmers policy.[2]
CONCLUSION
We hold that a "motor vehicle accident" occurs only when the covered motor vehicle is being operated as a motor vehicle. Tyrrell's injuries were not caused by a "motor vehicle accident." The Cоurt of Appeals' decision upholding the partial grant of summary judgment in Tyrrell's favor is reversed, and this case remanded to the trial court for an entry of summary judgment in favor of Farmers on the threshold question of whether Tyrrell's injury claim was the result of a "motor vehiсle accident" covered by his insurance policy.
SMITH, JOHNSON, MADSEN, ALEXANDER, TALMADGE, SANDERS, IRELAND, and BRIDGE, JJ., concur.
NOTES
Notes
[1] Farmers does not renew here its claim, denied below, that the trial court erred in denying this motion. See Pet. for Review at 5.
[2] Farmers further argues that Tyrrell's camper was being used as "lodging" when Tyrrell's injury occurred, and, аccordingly, fell within the policy's exemption from coverage for vehicles "[l]ocated for use as a residence or premises." Clerk's Papers at 92; see also Pet. for Review at 16. Tyrrell responds that he "does not believe that issue can be raised аt this late stage." Answer to Pet. for Review at 11. Tyrell cites no authority for his position, which contradicts the aforementioned rule that "[a] policy is considered as a whole so that the court can give effect to every clause in the policy." Kitsap County,
