Plaintiffs (collectively, Zidell) and defendants (collectively, London) petition this court to reconsider its decision in this case.
ZRZ Realty v. Beneficial Fire and Casualty
Ins.,
Our decision in this case resolved, among other assignments of error, London’s contention that the trial court should have granted its motion to dismiss Zidell’s claims under ORCP 54 B(2) because Zidell’s acts were, as a matter of law, expected or intended. We rejected London’s argument in that regard for two reasons. First, as we explained with respect to one of London’s other assignments of error,
In its petition for reconsideration, London submits that this court’s analysis of whether the harm was expected or intended “arguably conflates those two separate inquiries.” London acknowledges that, as a result of the court’s independent basis for rejecting the assignment of error (different allocation of the burden of proof), the court may well adhere to its previous decision; “[r]egardless, London is concerned that statements made by the Court after reaching the foregoing conclusion may lend themselves to further ‘wrangling’ on remand.”
Given our alternative and independent reason for rejecting London’s assignment of error regarding its ORCP 54 B motion, and in the interest of avoiding any confusion on remand, we agree with London that our subsequent discussion of the evidence in the record was unnecessary and
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should be deleted. Accordingly, we modify our original opinion to delete the discussion of London’s second assignment of error that begins with the sentence, “In any event, we disagree with London’s argument that the trial court was required, on the record before it, to conclude that the damage for which Zidell sought coverage was, as a matter of law, expected or intended.”
London also petitions this court to reconsider its rejection of London’s fourth assignment of error, which challenged the trial court’s conclusion that two “bumbershoot” policies provide coverage for losses that Zidell expected but did not intend. Initially, we agreed with London that the bumbershoot policies are marine insurance policies and are therefore governed by established, controlling federal law.
“question presented to us — whether a principle of admiralty law precludes recovery for expected but unintended loss — strikes us as substantively similar to the issue of first impression identified but not decided in Youell. Expected but unintended losses are akin to recklessly caused losses; the insured expects that some loss is highly probable to result from his or her intentional conduct, but the insured proceeds to act in the face of that expectation of harm. For that reason, we conclude that there is no established and controlling rule of admiralty law that excludes marine insurance coverage for expected but unintended damage.”
In its petition for reconsideration, London argues that our analysis did not take into account the trial court’s definition of “expected” damage, which neither London nor Zidell challenged on appeal. Before trial, in deciding Zidell’s motion for summary judgment, the trial court ruled:
*264 “A person intends a result when they act for the purpose of accomplishing that result. * * *.
“A person expects a result if they act with awareness that the result is substantially certain to follow. * * *”
(Emphasis and boldface in original.) This court’s understanding of Youell, London contends, “does not account for the trial court’s determination of what constitutes an ‘expected’ loss in this case.”
London is correct in that regard; our opinion did not account for the trial court’s definition of the term “expected.” As we observed in our original opinion,
Youell
explained the concept of recklessness as falling “somewhere “between intent to do harm, which * * *
includes proceeding with knowledge that the harm is substantially certain to occur,
and the mere unreasonable risk of harm to another involved in ordinary negligence.’ ”
“The three most basic elements of this most common usage of ‘intent’ are that (1) it is a state of mind (2) about consequences of an act (or omission) and not about the act itself, and (3) it extends not only to having in the mind a purpose (or desire) to bring about given consequences but also to having in mind a belief (or knowledge) that given consequences are substantially certain to result from the act.”
W. Page Keeton, Prosser and Keeton on the Law of Torts § 34, at 212 (5th ed 1984). Thus, London argues, “Prosser’s (and Youell’s) ‘extended’ understanding of ‘intent’ is plainly the trial court’s ‘intended and expected’: an ‘intended’ act, the trial court held, is a purposeful act, while an ‘expected’ act is one done ‘with awareness that the result is substantially certain to follow.’ ” (Emphasis by London.)
We agree with London that the trial court’s definition of the term “expected” appears to refer to one of the commonly understood permutations of “intent” — -that is, an act undertaken with knowledge that the result is substantially certain to occur. That is not how we meant to use the term “expected” in our discussion of London’s fourth assignment of
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error. Rather, we used the term “expected” to mean something
less than
the commonly understood definition of “intent” — that is, we understood “expected” to refer to a degree of awareness
less than a
“substantial certainty” that damage would occur.
With that clarification, we adhere to our previous discussion of the applicable federal law, but, in light of the trial court’s definitions of “expects” and “intends,” withdraw our conclusion regarding the correctness of the trial court’s ruling regarding the bumbershoots. Rather, we express no opinion on that issue, and, to the extent that the issue arises on remand, nothing in this opinion is intended to preclude London or Zidell from arguing about the legal effect of the trial court’s earlier definition of “expects” or “intends,” or to preclude London from arguing that, in light of those definitions, the bumbershoots do not cover damages that Zidell knew were “substantially certain” to occur.
Respondents - cross-appellants’ petition for reconsideration denied. Appellants - cross-respondents’ petition for reconsideration allowed; opinion modified and adhered to as modified.
