Opinion
SONENSHINE, J.—
Background
On April 8, 1991, Bruce De May caused a vehicle accident in which his passenger, Jeannette Davenport, suffered serious permanent injuries. De May and Davenport are co-owners of the automobile and co-insureds under a policy issued by Interinsurance Exchange of the Automobile Club of Southern California (Auto Club). They are not spouses or otherwise related to each other.
Davenport filed a personal injury suit against De May. He tendered a request for defense and indemnification to Auto Club. The policy provides, in pertinent part, “We will pay damages for which any person insured is legally liable because of
bodily injury
. . . arising out of the ownership, maintenance or
use
of an [insured] automobile“We will defend . . . any
suit claiming damages for
bodily injury
... if covered by your policy”; “In the
use
of an
insured automobile,
the following are insured: [<][]... you;” “ ‘[Y]ou’ and ‘your’ mean the insured named in Item 1 in the declarations, and if the insured named is one person, the spouse if a resident of the same household”; and — under exclusions — “[W]e will not defend suit[s] alleging liability for, nor does the policy apply to liability for: ...(f)
bodily injury
to you or a
relative."
There are two persons “named in Item 1 in the declarations” — De May and Davenport.
The insurer rejected De May’s tender and later turned down Davenport’s offer to settle for policy limits of $100,000. De May allowed a default to be entered against him. Following Davenport’s prove-up hearing, the court entered a default judgment in excess of $485,000.
De May and Davenport then sued Auto Club, alleging the insurer’s wrongful refusal to defend and indemnify De May and its wrongful denial of policy benefits to Davenport. On June 28, 1993, the court granted De May’s motion for summary adjudication of the first cause of action for breach of contract; it found Auto Club was obligated to pay De May $528,614.49, representing the amount of the default judgment plus interest accruing from the date of its entry. To facilitate Auto Club’s appeal, the parties entered into a release and settlement agreement stipulating to dismiss the remaining cause of action for bad faith. Judgment was entered in favor of De May.
Discussion
Auto Club concedes De May’s claim for defense and indemnification comes within the basic coverage of the liability policy. The question is whether the claim falls within the clause
excluding
coverage for “bodily injury to
you,"
defined as “the insured.” The issue on appeal involves interpretation of the singular term
“the
insured” in the context of more than one insured person. Auto Club insists the only reasonable interpretation is that “the insured” refers to everyone “named in Item 1 in the declarations.” De May offers another interpretation: The policy’s exclusion of “bodily injury to you [the insured]” may reasonably be construed as referring only to the party facing liability for negligent use of the vehicle.
Where, as here, a claim falls within the insuring clause, the insurer has the burden of showing an exclusion applies.
(American Star Ins. Co.
v.
Insurance Co. of the West
(1991) 232 Cal.App.3d 1320, 1327 [284 Cal.Rptr. 45].) An exclusionary clause “must be
conspicuous, plain and clear.'” (Steven
v.
Fidelity & Casualty Co.
(1962) 58 Cal.2d 862, 878 [27 Cal.Rptr. 172, 377 P.2d 284], italics added.) “A conspicuous, unambiguous applicable exclusion will override the insuring clause and eliminate coverage the policy might otherwise afford. [Citation.]”
(American Star Ins. Co.
v.
Insurance Co. of the West, supra,
232 Cal.App.3d at p. 1325.)
Policy language is ambiguous when it is amenable to more than one reasonable construction.
(Delgado
v.
Heritage Life Ins. Co.
(1984) 157 Cal.App.3d 262, 271 [203 Cal.Rptr. 672].) The appellate court determines the issue of ambiguity as a question of law.
(Id.
at p. 270.) It does not decide which of various interpretations is correct because, “under settled principles so long as coverage is available under any reasonable interpretation of an ambiguous clause, the insurer cannot escape liability.”
(State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co.
v.
Jacober
(1973) 10 Cal.3d 193, 197 [110 Cal.Rptr. 1, 514 P.2d 953].)
The trial court found
State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co.
v.
Jacober, supra,
10 Cal.3d 193, governed its disposition of the coverage issue. In
Jacober,
three consolidated appeals all involved incidents in which the vehicle owner was injured while riding as a passenger with the also-injured permissive user at the wheel. At issue was interpretation of a form automobile liability policy, in which the insurer agreed “ ‘to pay on behalf of the insured all sums which the insured shall become legally obligated to pay as damages because of (a) bodily injury sustained by other persons’ arising from the use of the owned automobile. . . .”
(Id.
at p. 199.) The term “insured” was defined in five categories, including, in pertinent part, “ ‘(1) the named insured, . . . and (4) any other person while using the owned automobile, provided the operation and the actual use of such automobile are with the permission of the named insured . . . .’”
(Ibid.)
Under a policy exclusion, the insurance did not apply to “
‘bodily injury to the insured . . .
.’”
(Ibid.,
original italics.)
The
Jacober
court perfunctorily determined the threshold question, finding the insuring clause of the policy provided coverage to a permissive user for injuries sustained by the vehicle owner.
(State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co.
v.
Jacober, supra,
10 Cal.3d at p. 200.) It then turned to the clause excluding coverage for injuries “ ‘to the insured.’ ”
(Id.
at p. 201.) It noted the parties had offered three alternative interpretations of “the insured:” only the person facing potential liability and claiming protection of the policy; all persons in
all five categories defining “insured”; all persons defined as “named insured.”
{Id.
at p. 202.) In light of these alternative interpretations, the court found the exclusion “is by no means phrased ‘in clear and unmistakable language’ [citation] and can hardly be characterized as ‘conspicuous, plain and clear.’ [Citation.]”
{Id.
at p.
Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI
Opinion
SONENSHINE, J.—
Background
On April 8, 1991, Bruce De May caused a vehicle accident in which his passenger, Jeannette Davenport, suffered serious permanent injuries. De May and Davenport are co-owners of the automobile and co-insureds under a policy issued by Interinsurance Exchange of the Automobile Club of Southern California (Auto Club). They are not spouses or otherwise related to each other.
Davenport filed a personal injury suit against De May. He tendered a request for defense and indemnification to Auto Club. The policy provides, in pertinent part, “We will pay damages for which any person insured is legally liable because of
bodily injury
. . . arising out of the ownership, maintenance or
use
of an [insured] automobile“We will defend . . . any
suit claiming damages for
bodily injury
... if covered by your policy”; “In the
use
of an
insured automobile,
the following are insured: [<][]... you;” “ ‘[Y]ou’ and ‘your’ mean the insured named in Item 1 in the declarations, and if the insured named is one person, the spouse if a resident of the same household”; and — under exclusions — “[W]e will not defend suit[s] alleging liability for, nor does the policy apply to liability for: ...(f)
bodily injury
to you or a
relative."
There are two persons “named in Item 1 in the declarations” — De May and Davenport.
The insurer rejected De May’s tender and later turned down Davenport’s offer to settle for policy limits of $100,000. De May allowed a default to be entered against him. Following Davenport’s prove-up hearing, the court entered a default judgment in excess of $485,000.
De May and Davenport then sued Auto Club, alleging the insurer’s wrongful refusal to defend and indemnify De May and its wrongful denial of policy benefits to Davenport. On June 28, 1993, the court granted De May’s motion for summary adjudication of the first cause of action for breach of contract; it found Auto Club was obligated to pay De May $528,614.49, representing the amount of the default judgment plus interest accruing from the date of its entry. To facilitate Auto Club’s appeal, the parties entered into a release and settlement agreement stipulating to dismiss the remaining cause of action for bad faith. Judgment was entered in favor of De May.
Discussion
Auto Club concedes De May’s claim for defense and indemnification comes within the basic coverage of the liability policy. The question is whether the claim falls within the clause
excluding
coverage for “bodily injury to
you,"
defined as “the insured.” The issue on appeal involves interpretation of the singular term
“the
insured” in the context of more than one insured person. Auto Club insists the only reasonable interpretation is that “the insured” refers to everyone “named in Item 1 in the declarations.” De May offers another interpretation: The policy’s exclusion of “bodily injury to you [the insured]” may reasonably be construed as referring only to the party facing liability for negligent use of the vehicle.
Where, as here, a claim falls within the insuring clause, the insurer has the burden of showing an exclusion applies.
(American Star Ins. Co.
v.
Insurance Co. of the West
(1991) 232 Cal.App.3d 1320, 1327 [284 Cal.Rptr. 45].) An exclusionary clause “must be
conspicuous, plain and clear.'” (Steven
v.
Fidelity & Casualty Co.
(1962) 58 Cal.2d 862, 878 [27 Cal.Rptr. 172, 377 P.2d 284], italics added.) “A conspicuous, unambiguous applicable exclusion will override the insuring clause and eliminate coverage the policy might otherwise afford. [Citation.]”
(American Star Ins. Co.
v.
Insurance Co. of the West, supra,
232 Cal.App.3d at p. 1325.)
Policy language is ambiguous when it is amenable to more than one reasonable construction.
(Delgado
v.
Heritage Life Ins. Co.
(1984) 157 Cal.App.3d 262, 271 [203 Cal.Rptr. 672].) The appellate court determines the issue of ambiguity as a question of law.
(Id.
at p. 270.) It does not decide which of various interpretations is correct because, “under settled principles so long as coverage is available under any reasonable interpretation of an ambiguous clause, the insurer cannot escape liability.”
(State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co.
v.
Jacober
(1973) 10 Cal.3d 193, 197 [110 Cal.Rptr. 1, 514 P.2d 953].)
The trial court found
State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co.
v.
Jacober, supra,
10 Cal.3d 193, governed its disposition of the coverage issue. In
Jacober,
three consolidated appeals all involved incidents in which the vehicle owner was injured while riding as a passenger with the also-injured permissive user at the wheel. At issue was interpretation of a form automobile liability policy, in which the insurer agreed “ ‘to pay on behalf of the insured all sums which the insured shall become legally obligated to pay as damages because of (a) bodily injury sustained by other persons’ arising from the use of the owned automobile. . . .”
(Id.
at p. 199.) The term “insured” was defined in five categories, including, in pertinent part, “ ‘(1) the named insured, . . . and (4) any other person while using the owned automobile, provided the operation and the actual use of such automobile are with the permission of the named insured . . . .’”
(Ibid.)
Under a policy exclusion, the insurance did not apply to “
‘bodily injury to the insured . . .
.’”
(Ibid.,
original italics.)
The
Jacober
court perfunctorily determined the threshold question, finding the insuring clause of the policy provided coverage to a permissive user for injuries sustained by the vehicle owner.
(State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co.
v.
Jacober, supra,
10 Cal.3d at p. 200.) It then turned to the clause excluding coverage for injuries “ ‘to the insured.’ ”
(Id.
at p. 201.) It noted the parties had offered three alternative interpretations of “the insured:” only the person facing potential liability and claiming protection of the policy; all persons in
all five categories defining “insured”; all persons defined as “named insured.”
{Id.
at p. 202.) In light of these alternative interpretations, the court found the exclusion “is by no means phrased ‘in clear and unmistakable language’ [citation] and can hardly be characterized as ‘conspicuous, plain and clear.’ [Citation.]”
{Id.
at p. 207.) It reiterated a well-established principle: “If an insurer intends to exclude coverage for injuries to the owner of the insured vehicle, even though incurred while some other insured is driving, it must draft its policy to avoid any misinterpretation by the average lay [person].”
(State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co.
v.
Jacober, supra,
10 Cal.3d at p. 207.) The
Jacober
court concluded, “[T]he policy’s exclusion of ‘bodily injury to
the insured'
may reasonably be interpreted as referring
only to injuries sustained by the party facing liability for an alleged misuse of the vehicle,
that is, the party who seeks a legal defense and indemnity from the insurer. . . . Because under this interpretation coverage would not be excluded for the injuries in the instant case, we hold that the trial courts correctly declared that the insurer was bound to its duty to defend and indemnify.”
{Id.
at p. 203, italics added.)
Here, as in
Jacober,
the policy uses the term “the insured,” albeit by a more circuitous route. It provides, “In the
use
of an
insured automobile,
the following are insured: [H . . . you.” It then defines “you” as
“the
insured named in Item 1 in the declarations” and covers damages “for which any person insured is legally liable because of
bodily injury . . .
arising out of the ownership, maintenance or
use"
of the insured vehicle. But it excludes coverage for
“bodily injury
to you . . . .”
Here, as in
Jacober,
there is a problem with interpretation of the singular term “the insured.” For at least three reasons, De May’s construction of the term as referring only to the party against whom the claim is made is reasonable. First, in a decision subsequent to
Jacober,
the Supreme Court noted there is a significant difference between
“the
insured” and
“any
insured.” In
California State Auto. Assn. Inter-Ins. Bureau
v.
Warwick
(1976) 17 Cal.3d 190 [130 Cal.Rptr. 520, 550 P.2d 1056], the court stated: “In our view,
Jacober
is distinguishable because its exclusion clause refers to injuries to
‘‘the
insured’ while the present policy refers to injuries sustained by
‘any
insured.’ The term ‘any insured’ has a plural connotation, unlike ‘the insured.’ ”
(Id.
at p. 195, fn. omitted.)
Second, as noted in
Warwick,
Insurance Code section 11580.1
“supports] this semantic distinction.”
(California State Auto. Assn. Inter-Ins. Bureau
v.
Warwick, supra,
17 Cal.3d at p. 195, fin. 3.) Indeed, section 11580.1, subdivision (c)(8) authorizes insurers to write appropriately worded exclusion clauses into liability policies, but cautions as follows: “The term ‘the insured’ as used in [pertinent] paragraphs . . . shall mean
only
that insured under the policy against whom the particular claim is made or suit brought. The term ‘an insured’ as used in [pertinent] paragraphs . . . shall mean
any
insured under the policy including those persons who would have otherwise been included within the policy’s definition of an insured but, by agreement, are subject to” statutory limitations. (Italics added).
And finally, words used in an insurance policy are construed in their ordinary and popular sense and the policy “should be read as a lay[person] would read it and not as it might be analyzed by an attorney or an insurance expert.”
(Crane
v.
State Farm Fire & Cas. Co.
(1971) 5 Cal.3d 112, 115 [95 Cal.Rptr. 513, 485 P.2d 1129, 48 A.L.R.3d 1089].) As noted by the
Jacober
court, “A layfperson] attempting to interpret an insurance policy ... is not likely to have the legal sophistication to deduce what an insurance company is attempting to accomplish by an ambiguous exclusionary clause; it is on just such grounds that our cases have uniformly required that exclusions be ‘conspicuous, plain and clear.’ [Citation.] If an insurer intends to exclude coverage for injuries to the owner of the insured vehicle, even though incurred while some other insured is driving, it must draft its policy to avoid any misinterpretation by the average lay [person].”
(State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co.
v.
Jacober, supra,
10 Cal.3d at p. 207.)
Thus, decisional law, statutory law and the commonsense view of the layperson support the reasonableness of De May’s interpretation of the term “the insured” as referring to one person, namely
the
insured “named in Item 1 of the declarations” against whom the bodily injury claim is made.
Auto Club argues
Jacober
was limited to its facts in
Schwalbe
v.
Jones
(1976) 16 Cal.3d 514 [128 Cal.Rptr. 321, 546 P.2d 1033], in which the Supreme Court held enforceable policy exclusions for bodily injury of a named insured caused by an additional-insured permissive user. But the
Schwalbe
issue was not the clarity or ambiguity of the exclusionary clause; it was the
constitutionality
of a provision of former section 17158 of the Vehicle Code “dealing with injury to, or death of, an owner riding as a passenger in his [or her] own vehicle." (16 Cal.3d at p. 516.) And, quite ironically,
Schwalbe
does not advance Auto Club’s position, but adds fuel to De May’s fire. It states, “We may judicially notice as a matter of generalized knowledge [citation] that substantially all [automobile liability] policies presently contain exclusions of this nature — which exclusions,
if stated in unambiguous terms
clearly operate to preclude an owner from recovering under his [or her] own liability policy under any circumstances, including those here at issue. The [Jacober] case . . . simply held that the particular exclusion there in question was ambiguous with respect to whether the named insured was to be excluded from recovery when a second ‘insured,’ the permissive user-driver, negligently injured him.
It is to be assumed that insurance companies will be studious to avoid such ambiguity in the future
by modelling their exclusion upon that which was approved in the
Geyer
and
Brown
cases, a course which we clearly invited in
Jacober
[citation]. In so doing they will merely avail themselves of an exclusion expressly permitted by section 11580.1 of the Insurance Code.”
(Schwalbe
v.
Jones, supra,
16 Cal.3d at pp. 521-522, fn. 9, italics added.)
Despite
Jacober, Warwick
and
Schwalbe
and other decisions dealing with the issue,
and the enactment of section 11580.1, with its explicit reference to the meaning of “the insured” (§ 11580.1, subd. (c)(8)), Auto Club has chosen, for whatever reason, to define the excluded “you” as
“the
insured named in Item 1 of the declarations,” rather than
“any
insured . . . ,”
“all
insureds . . . ,” or “a person named as an insured ....’’ Even assuming the insurer’s interpretation of the term
“the
insured” as a collective reference
to De May
and
Davenport is reasonable, De May’s interpretation — excluding coverage for bodily injury only to the insured against whom the claim has been made — is also reasonable. Ambiguous exclusions are construed in favor of the insured; we must affirm the trial court’s finding of coverage. (See
State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co.
v.
Jacober, supra,
10 Cal.3d at p. 203.)
The judgment is affirmed. De May shall recover his costs on appeal.
Sills, P. J., and Wallin, J., concurred.
Appellant’s petition for review by the Supreme Court was denied May 18, 1995.