Floyd Walker, the plaintiff below, appeals the Jessamine Circuit Court’s summary judgment dismissal of Economy Preferred Insurance Company. For the reasons explained below, we affirm.
On February 3, 1992, Floyd Walker was driving home from school. In a car behind him were Brandon Mattingly, the driver, and Deatrice Gray, a passenger. The ear Mat-tingly was driving was owned by his grandmother, who is insured by Economy Preferred. Mattingly also lived with his grandmother, making him an “insured” under the definitions of the policy. Walker stopped his ear for an unloading school bus. At that time, Gray approached Walker’s car, asked him if he knew a Jimmy Hall, and told Walker to tell Hall that “Lex-Town was going to get him.” Gray then spit in Walker’s face and returned to Mattingly’s vehicle. Mattingly continued to follow Walker until he stopped at a stop sign. Mattingly got out of his car, approached Walker, gave him the same message, and punched Walker in the face. Walker was wearing sunglasses, which broke and cut the cornea of his eye, allegedly causing severe and permanent damage.
Floyd Walker brought suit in Jessamine Circuit Court naming as defendants Brandon Mattingly; Mattingly’s grandmother, Margaret Nunley; and her insurance carrier, Economy Preferred. The trial court granted Economy Preferred’s motion for summary judgment on the grounds that it was not obligated to provide coverage under the terms of the policy. Under “Coverage E— Personal Liability,” the policy provides liability insurance “for damages because of bodily injury or property damage caused by an occurrence.” However, the exclusions section states:
Coverage E — Personal Liability and Coverage F — Medical Payments to others do not apply to bodily injury or property damage:
a. which is expected, anticipated, foreseeable or intended by the insured[.]
Appellant Walker claims that, although Mattingly did intend to hit him, the testimony is uncontradicted that he did not intend to injure him, and that under the principles espoused in
James Graham Brown Foundation, Inc. v. St. Paul Fire & Marine Insurance Co.,
Ky.,
Appellee Economy Preferred relies on our decision in
Thompson v. West American Insurance Company,
Ky.App.,
We believe that sexual molestation is so inherently injurious, or substantially certain to result in some injury, that the intent to injure, or the expectation that injury will result, can be inferred as a matter of law. In Brown Foundation, supra, the court recognized that such inferences must necessarily be made by the courts because of the nature and circumstance of the particular fact situation:
Certainly the circuit judge is not absolutely prohibited from inferring on summary judgment that an insured intended or expected damage regardless of whether the objective or subjective test is used. In some eases, it is almost irrelevant whether an objective or subjective test is applied because of the circumstances.
Id.
at 581 (quoting
Brown Foundation,
In arriving at our holding we are persuaded by authorities in other jurisdictions that squarely address the issue of whether one who punches another in the face intends to injure. In
Clark v. Allstate Insurance Company,
The contention of young Clark that he did not intend to injure Niemi does not make the question of intention an issue of material fact which must go to the trier of fact. Perhaps if Clark maintained that striking Niemi was an accident, and that the blow itself was unintentional, summary judgment would be improper due to the dispute over a material fact. However, the act of striking another in the face is one which we recognize as an act so certain to cause a particular kind of harm that we can say a person who performed the act intended the resulting harm, and his statement to the contrary does nothing to refute that rule of law.
The fact that a state of mind is involved does not make summary judgment inappropriate.
Id.
The Supreme Court of Nebraska also has acknowledged the inherent contradiction in claiming that an intentional punch in the face was not meant to cause injury:
In the case at bar the evidence established that the defendant Norval intention *346 ally hit the plaintiff in the face with his fist_ To hold that under such circumstances the testimony of the insured, that he did not intend to injure the plaintiff, is sufficient to permit the fact finder to find that no harm to the injured party was intended, simply ignores reality. Any reasonable analysis requires the conclusion that from the very nature of the act harm must have been intended.
Jones v. Norval,
Although Norval may not have intended the specific injury which resulted, such specific subjective intent is not required to exclude coverage under the policy. The “intent” which is necessary to exclude coverage is not the intent to act nor the intent to cause the specific injury. Instead it is the intent to cause bodily injury to the person acted upon and it makes no difference if the actual injury is more severe or of a different nature than the injury intended.
Id.
Economy Preferred argues that the injection of the word “foreseeable” in its exclusion removes coverage because injury to Walker was at least foreseeable, even if not “intended” or “expected.” Walker responds that to adopt such a construction would impermissi-bly insert an objective test where
Brown Foundation
dictates a subjective one. We need not concern ourselves with which test is appropriate. The insertion of “foreseeable” in the policy exclusion is immaterial in this case. It is sufficient to say that in punching Walker, Mattingly “intended,” or at the very least “expected,” to cause injury regardless of which test is applied.
See Hartford Fire Insurance Company v. Spreen,
The appellant cites authority from other jurisdictions to support his argument that a strike or blow does not automatically demonstrate intent as a matter of law. He cites
Farmers Insurance Exchange v. Sipple,
We find value in the words of the Indiana court which colorfully articulates the failure of the appellant’s argument:
A defendant may assert the rock was accidentally released or was not aimed at the victim, but he will not be heard to say he intended to throw the rock softly.
Home Insurance Company v. Neilsen,
165 IncLApp. 445,
We do not contravene the distinction in
Brown Foundation
between an intended act and intended injury.
Brown Foundation
contained testimony regarding numerous “accidental” spills, and the plant managers’ testimony as to intent and expectations created a genuine issue of material fact.
Id.
at 278. Rather, we believe this case to present those “circumstances” mentioned in
Brown Foundation
that justify an inference of intent as a matter of law.
Brown Foundation,
While we sympathize with the plight of Mr. Walker, we cannot say that Economy Preferred contracted to provide coverage in instances like the one at bar. We must give the policy its plain meaning and are con
*347
strained from enlarging the risks contrary to the natural and obvious meaning of the insurance contract.
Pierce v. West American Insurance Company,
Ky.App.,
All concur.
