This appeal requires interpretation of a phrase common in homeowner’s insurance policies. The question presented is whether an insured party, Edward T. Fontneau, used an adjacent
1. Background. We summarize the facts from the trial judge’s findings and the uncontradicted evidence in the record. On March 23, 1995, while in the course of his law enforcement duties, police Officer Edward W. Burbank sustained an injury on a dirt track at 380 Old Colony Road in Norton (380). The track led to the rear of the adjoining parcel, 378 Old Colony Road (378). At the time of the accident, Fontneau owned both parcels.
The 378 parcel consisted of approximately two acres and contained a two-family house rented by Fontneau to tenants. A driveway led from Old Colony Road to the house. Behind the house lay an upper backyard and a lower backyard. The lower backyard was a flat, clear area. A drop-off and a concrete retaining wall, ranging from four to eight feet in height, separated the lower area from the house and upper yard. They made the lower area inaccessible to vehicles from the front of 378.
The adjacent 380 parcel consisted of approximately eleven acres of land on which Fontneau had built a 7,200 square foot metal building. He used part of the building to store equipment and materials, and to house offices for his construction business. He leased the remainder of the building to commercial tenants. A driveway connected the metal building to Old Colony Road. The concrete retaining wall extended from 378 to the rear of the metal building on 380.
A fifteen to twenty foot wide dirt track connected the rear of 378 and the rear of 380. It passed behind the metal building on 380, ran behind and parallel to the concrete retaining wall, and extended to the lower backyard of 378. Although it was not necessary to use the dirt track to access any part of 378 from 380, it was the most convenient way to get from 380 to 378, and it provided the only vehicle access to the lower backyard of 378.
Fontneau collected classic and antique automobiles as a hobby. In the early 1990’s, he brought four automobiles to the lower backyard behind the retaining wall on 378 by means of a tow truck along the dirt track from 380. He visited or inspected the cars on nights and weekends. He also stored some construction materials in this area.
On March 23, 1995, Fontneau learned that the children of the tenants at 378 had vandalized his antique cars. He arranged to meet Burbank that evening in front of 380. When Burbank arrived, no one was present. Knowing that the alleged vandalism involved cars stored “behind the building,” he proceeded in the dark on foot behind the metal building. He walked down the dirt track and investigated the site of the antique cars at the lower backyard of 378. While coming back on the dirt track, Burbank walked into the extended stabilizer arm of a backhoe behind the metal building and was injured.
From 1989 until approximately 1994, Fontneau had maintained separate insurance policies on 378 and 380. In 1994 or 1995, he allowed the policy on 380 to lapse. The dwelling policy issued for 378 by Utica Mutual, in effect at the time of Burbank’s injury, excludes coverage for “bodily injury” “arising out of a premises . . . owned by an insured . . . that is not an ‘insured location.’ ” The policy defines the term “insured location” as “the ‘residence premises’ ” or “any premises used by [the insured] in connection with [the residence premises]” (emphasis supplied). Fontneau had not altered the dirt track since he acquired the policy.
Burbank and his wife brought a personal injury action against Fontneau for negligent conduct on 380. Fontneau sought coverage from Utica Mutual. In June of 1999, Utica Mutual began this action for a declaration that its policy did not provide coverage for the Burbanks’ claims. In October of 1999, the Burbanks amended their complaint in the negligence action to include an allegation that Fontneau owned and controlled 378, and that he regularly used the dirt track tó access the lower backyard of 378 from 380.
2. Prior proceedings. By a memorandum of decision, the mo-
The case went to a jury-waived trial on the issue of indemnification. The parties stipulated that they were unable to locate any Massachusetts case law addressing the “used ... in connection with” clause at issue. The trial judge analyzed case law from other jurisdictions and concluded that “for premises to be used ‘in connection with’ other premises, the insured must use the premises regularly and on an ongoing basis for some purpose logically related to his use of the [insured] premises,” with “[t]he particular use of the premises in question [as] the determining factor.” Upon her findings of fact, she ruled that Utica Mutual had breached its duty to indemnify Fontneau.
After the trial judge issued her ruling, we held in Massachusetts Property Ins. Underwriting Assn. v. Wynn,
3. Discussion, a. The duty to defend. With the same summary judgment record as the motion judge, the reviewing court examines the allowance de nova. See Matthews v. Ocean Spray Cranberries, Inc.,
The motion judge correctly ruled that Utica Mutual had a duty to defend Fontneau against the allegation of negligence in the Burbanks’ amended complaint of October 12, 1999. As he observed, the proper analysis compares the pertinent language
In the amended complaint, the Burbanks pleaded in clear and separately numbered paragraphs (1) that “[a]s owner and possessor of 378 Old Colony Road, Mr. Fontneau and others entering with his permission regularly used portions of 380 Old Colony Road, including [the dirt track] at the rear of the building at 380 Old Colony Road, to gain access to the rear of his property at 378 Old Colony Road, and the [dirt track] was otherwise used by Mr. Fontneau in connection with 378 Old Colony Road”; (2) that at the time of the accident Fontneau possessed and parked a backhoe in the rear of 380 on or adjacent to the dirt track leading to 378, and that the backhoe’s stabilizer arms were dangerously extended outward; and (3) that this dangerous condition and the failure to warn Burbank as a foreseeable visitor walking on the dirt track behind 380 “in connection with” his investigation at the rear of 378 constituted negligence.
These allegations satisfied the standard of reasonable textual susceptibility and mere possibility of recovery so as to trigger the duty to defend.
b. The duty to indemnify. Utica Mutual is invoking an exclu
Several guidelines assist the interpretation and application of the phrase “any premises used by [the policy holder] in connection with” the insured location. If the insurer uses policy language permitting two rational interpretations, the court will adopt the one more favorable to the insured. See Rezendes v. Prudential Ins. Co.,
In Massachusetts Property Ins. Underwriting Assn. v. Wynn,
We confined the scope of the “used ... in connection with” clause to “the [insured] residence and premises integral to its use as a residence.” Id. at 830. The beach was not integral to the use of the residence as a residence, no matter how regularly the insured used the beach for recreation. Id. at 829-830. A contrary reading of the phrase “used ... in connection with” “would require knowledge by an insurer of not only the insured’s property but also of neighboring property and the insured’s hobbies and interests,” id. at 830, and would “provide no discernible geographical limit to coverage.” Id. at 829. We left open the question “whether a particular location, such as an offsite pathway or approach to the residence, is so integral to the use of the residence as to be an ‘insured location.’ ” Id. at 830 n.9.
Several criteria appear in the Wynn analysis and recur in the decisions of other jurisdictions cited there.
The determinants lead to a solution in this case. The storage of automobiles generally, and of antique automobiles particularly, in yards and garages qualifies as a residential activity. The policy did not exclude coverage for injuries generated by that activity. The dirt track from 380 provided the only vehicular access and the most convenient pedestrian access to the lower backyard of 378. Without the dirt track Fontneau could not have stored and cared for the antique automobiles there, unless he significantly altered the parcel to create vehicular access from the front of 378. The evidence at trial placed the accident at a spot only a short distance from the boundary line of 378.
No unforeseeable surprise befell Utica Mutual. Fontneau had insured 378 with Utica Mutual since 1989; he had stored the antique cars there since “the early 1990’s”; Utica Mutual renewed his policy on May 18 of each year; the accident occurred on March 23, 1995. He owned both 378 and 380. No evidence arose at trial to indicate that Utica Mutual did not know of the activities at 378 and 380 or that it had not been able to learn of them by application or renewal questionnaires or by direct inspection.
4. Conclusion. By both proximity and usage the accident site was sufficiently connected to the residence premises to receive coverage as an insured location. Utica Mutual did not carry its burden of proof to the contrary.
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
See also Continental Cas. Co. v. Gilbane Bldg. Co.,
Utica Mutual characterizes the Burbanks’ amended complaint “as a belated
Without the benefit of any Massachusetts precedent at the time of trial in this case, the trial judge correctly applied decisions from other jurisdictions to reach her determination of coverage. See Nationwide Mut. Ins. Co. v. Prevatte,
