MEMORANDUM OPINION
JOHN L. CARROLL, United States Magistrate Judge.
I. FACTS
The plaintiff, Horace Mann Insurance Company, has moved this court for a declaratory judgment as to the scope of its duty to indemnify or defend its insured, Cecil Fore, and for summary judgment. The motion for summary judgment was filed November 6, 1991. On November 15, 1991, Judge Hobbs ordered that a response be made on or before December 4, 1991, and informed the parties that as of December 4, 1991 the motion would be deemed submitted by the court.
The defendants have filed no response.
The defendants in this case are Mr. Fore, a teacher, and the three minor victims of his unwanted and illegal sexual attentions, John, Harry and James Doe, as represented by their next friends Mary, Sue and Jane Doe, respectively, hereafter the “Doe party.” The facts giving rise to this dispute are the existence of an insurance policy, issued by the plaintiff to Mr. Fore as a member of the state affiliate of the National Education Association, which excludes coverage for activities not related to the insured’s educational employment, for civil suits arising from criminal acts, and for the consequences of the insured’s intended actions. During the course of the 1989-90 or 1990-91 school year, Mr. Fore committed the acts against the children, each of whom was enrolled in Montgomery County’s special education program and each of whom was in junior high school.
On January 16, 1991, Mr. Fore was convicted in consolidated proceedings of multiple counts of sodomy in the second degree in violation of Ala.Code § 13A-6-67 and of one count of sexual abuse in the second degree in violation of Ala.Code § 13A-6-64. The Doe party filed their civil suit January 25, 1991.
Under a reservation of rights, the plaintiff insurer provided counsel to defend Mr. Fore in the civil suit.
The insurer seeks a declaration that it owes no duty to defend or indemnify Mr. Fore in the civil suit because of exceptions in coverage accruing from the sexual abuse of John, Henry, and James Doe, his students. The court examines each of the three relevant exceptions to coverage in turn.
II. DISCUSSION
The Exclusion of Noneducational Employment Activities
The plaintiff insurer contends that Mr. Fore’s sexually abusive acts do not constitute “educational employment activities” within the meaning of the contract of insurance. The policy provides:
The term ‘Educational Employment Activities’ means the activities of the insured performed:
1. Pursuant to the express or implied terms of his/her employment by an educational unit; [or]
2. At the express request or with the express approval of his/her supervisor; provided that, at the time of such request or approval, the supervisor was performing what would appear to be his/her educational employment activities ...
While it is intuitively obvious that sexual abuse is not an activity concerned with education, there is case law amplifying the point. The court in
Worcester Ins. Co. v. Fells Acres Day Schl., Inc., 408
Mass. 393, 413, 558 N.E.2d 958 (1990), noted that- sexually abusive acts “were not of the kind [a
school employee] was employed to perform” and were not “motivated ... by a purpose to serve the employer.” Similarly, a California court construing the same policy provision as that at issue here found that, as a matter of law, sexual abuse is not identified with employment as a teacher and that the insurer had no duty to indemnify or defend an elementary school teacher who molested a pupil. Summary judgment was entered for the insurer.
Horace Mann Ins. Co. v. Analisa N,
214 Cal.App.8d 850, 263 Cal.Rptr. 61 (1989). The court averred that it could not “fathom a more personal activity less related to the goal of education” than a teacher’s sexual abuse of his student.
Analisa N.,
263 Cal.Rptr. at 64.
The court finds no Alabama authority that disputes this eminently reasonable conclusion.
Accordingly, finding the authority from other jurisdictions persuasive on this identical issue, the court finds that no genuine issue of material fact has been presented as to the educational employment activities exclusion and that the plaintiff is entitled to judgment on this issue as a matter of law.
The Exclusion for Liability Based on Criminal Activity
Alabama law is unambiguous on the point that nothing requires an insurer to indemnify a third party for the insured’s criminal acts.
See Hooper v. Allstate Ins. Co.,
571 So.2d 1001, 1003 (Ala.1990). Nor does the insurer’s exclusion of coverage for criminal acts violate public policy, because “insurance companies have the right to limit their liability and to write policies with narrow coverage.”
Hooper,
571 So.2d at 1003.
Part VII of the policy specifically denies coverage for “civil suits arising from criminal acts.” The policy states, “[T]his contract does not apply to any civil suit arising out of an act ... which has been held by a court to constitute a crime.”
Mr. Fore was convicted in the Circuit Court of Montgomery, Alabama, of multiple counts of sodomy in the second degree, a crime under Ala.Code § 13A-6-67, and one count of sexual abuse in the second degree, a crime under § 13A-6-64. These crimes are the gravamen of the civil suit. But for the acts of sexual abuse which constitute criminal offenses, there would be no civil suit. Accordingly, coverage is expressly excluded since the criminal activity is beyond dispute. The plaintiff is also entitled to judgment on this issue as a matter of law.
The Intended Injury Exclusion
The policy provides, “[T]his contract does not apply to occurrences involving damages which are the intended consequence of action taken by [you] or at your direction.” The court finds this language to be substantially equivalent to the standard language “Coverage ... [does] not apply to bodily injury or property damage which is expected or intended by the insured,” which is the subject of interpretation in the cases cited and discussed below. Accordingly, the court believes that any effort to distinguish the cases cited below from the instant case based on semantics would be hypertechnical and dissembling. It finds the cases discussed below instructive.
Because the insurer has prayed for summary judgment, it is necessary to discuss in extensive detail this issue so gingerly avoided by the insurer in its brief supporting its motion for summary judgment. The court believes that the avoided issue is at the heart of this case, and notes that summary judgment would be inappropriate in this case if the reasoning and holding of our sister court in the Northern District were an accurate understanding of Alabama law and the public policy of this state, provided that this court is correct in viewing this case as intimately concerned with an intentional act of sexual abuse by an insured whose policy excludes coverage for such acts.
However, no amount of
qualification could persuade this court that the decision in
State Auto Mut. Ins. Co. v. McIntyre,
652 F.Supp. 1177 (N.D.Ala.1987), is correct. Some discussion of the
McIntyre
opinion must preface this court’s discussion of what it has determined would accurately reflect Alabama law.
In
McIntyre,
a grandfather sexually abused his nine-year-old granddaughter on two occasions. Presumably because his penis did not penetrate the little girl’s vagina, the court repeatedly throughout its opinion characterized the abuse as “nonviolent.”
See, e.g., McIntyre,
652 F.Supp. at 1178, 1183, 1221. Apparently, the court thought that the quantum of violence used had great relevance to construing the policy language, which excluded coverage for “bodily injury or property damage which is expected or intended by the insured.” 652 F.Supp. at 1186.
The
McIntyre
court was convinced that the so-called subjective standard governed all manner of cases in which an exclusion for intentional acts existed. The
McIntyre
opinion indicates that the court believed this to be the pure edict of the Alabama Supreme Court in
Alabama Farm Mut. Cos. Ins. v. Dyer,
454 So.2d 921 (Ala.1984).
This court believes the
McIntyre
court’s reliance on
Dyer
to be misplaced.
Dyer
did not involve sexual abuse, but the discharge of a gun. This court finds that
Dyer
can easily be distinguished from the instant case and that the
Dyer
result has a certain internal logic that the
McIntyre
result lacks. It might be plausibly argued, for example, that as a matter of metaphysics, a person such as the shooter in
Dyer
has a certain detachment from and ignorance of the mechanics of shooting even as he squeezes the trigger. Surely he knows that the gun will fire; surely he expects that when the gun fires the bullet will not fall ineffectually from the chamber onto the floor. But he cannot fully know until he has fired how the gun will react and what the bullet will do to its target. Obviously, in the state of Alabama, this realization of certain psychological or metaphysical workings aids an insured in his quest to force the insurer to pay for his deliberate act;
Dyer
governs just the precise situation in which an insured acts more out of . detached stupidity or blunted sensitivity to others than out of evident malice.
But there is no similar detachment caused by a lack of experiential knowledge of the consequences when one’s body, rather than a gun, lead pipe, or bazooka, is the offending instrumentality. With sexual abuse, as presented in the
McIntyre
facts and the facts of the instant case, there is no intervening instrumentality that could malfunction or behave in a way that the operator could not predict. The body of the perpetrator is the instrumentality, and the thought or impulse he has to do harm is the governor of the instrumentality. The perpetrator alone controls his movements, and he knows the consequences of them. By virtue of a thousand ordinary, daily movements, he learns kinetics and sensations — his body is not a stranger with properties that surprise him. The
Dyer
case is thus distinguishable in an important physical respect from cases like
McIntyre
and the instant case.
At least one court has grasped this analytical distinction.
Worcester Ins. Co. v. Fells Acres Day Schl., Inc.,
408 Mass. 393, 558 N.E.2d 958 (1990), was a case in which several of the preschool program’s employees, including the proprietor, were convicted of rape and indecent'assault and battery against several of the children. The homeowner’s insurance policy excluded coverage for intentional injuries. The court noted that “forceful sexual molestation and rape are unlike” hurling a piece of blacktop at a passing motorist and causing injury because in the latter instance it is “possible that the insured’s intentional acts were accidental.”
Fells Acres Day Schl.,
408 Mass, at 403, 558 N.E.2d 958 (discussing
Quincy Mut. Fire Ins. Co. v. Abernathy,
393 Mass. 81, 84, 469 N.E.2d 797 (1984)).
The
McIntyre
court was well aware that the Alabama Supreme' Court had not ruled on the applicability of the subjective-intent standard to cases involving sexual abuse. However, the court felt comfortable in making a prediction of how the Alabama court would rule: “[T]he judge who is here sitting is thoroughly persuaded by his 31 years of trial and appellate practice in the Alabama courts as a private practitioner and by his 6 (plus) years of federal judicial experience sitting in the Northern District of Alabama that he can reasonably predict the opinion and holding of Alabama’s highest court ...” 652 F.Supp. at 1195.
This court cannot agree with the
McIntyre
court’s prediction. Fully four years later, the Alabama Supreme Court still has not ruled on the issue, and this court is in the position of making a prediction just as was the judge in
McIntyre.
However, this court in making its own prediction has the benefit of judicial criticism of the
McIntyre
court’s prediction. The decision has been decried by those courts that have discussed it.
The opinion in
Allstate Ins. Co. v. Roelfs,
698 F.Supp. 815 (D. Alaska 1987), is particularly thoughtful. The court identified three approaches the courts have taken to the question of whether the insured intended to cause injury and thus whether the intentional injury exclusion applies. The first of these is the
McIntyre
approach, which seeks the insured’s actual, subjective intent to cause injury. The second is the objective test, which inquires whether a reasonable person would have foreseen that his action would cause harm. The third approach, and that taken by the vast majority of courts that have considered the issue, is the inference test, by which intent to harm is inferred from the nature of the act of sexual molestation or abuse regardless of the standard that governs other types of cases.
See Roelfs,
698 F.Supp. at 820.
It is this sensible third approach that
McIntyre
rejected, preferring the subjective-intent test. As the
Roelfs
court points out, however, the
Dyer
case on which the
McIntyre
court ostensibly relied purported to follow the reasoning of
Continental Western Ins. Co. v. Toal,
309 Minn. 169, 244 N.W.2d 121 (1976). However, the
McIntyre
court ignored one prong of
Toal:
in some cases, intent to injure may be inferred from the act committed, as a matter of law.
See Roelfs,
698 F.Supp. at 820 n. 5. The
Roelfs
court believed that this oversight led the
McIntyre
court to an
error of reasoning. The
McIntyre
analysis, that court wrote, "confuses the objective test with the inference test.”
Id.
This court agrees.
Two other courts have termed the minority rule embodied by
McIntyre
“logically untenable.”
Horace Mann Ins. Co. v. Leeber,
180 W.Va. 375, 376 S.E.2d 581, 591 (1988);
Western Nat’l Ins. Co. v. Hecker,
43 Wash.App. 816, 719 P.2d 954, 960 (1986). As one commentator has expressed it, “A completely subjective test would virtually make it impossible to preclude coverage for intentional [injuries] absent admissions by insureds of a specific intent to harm or injure. Human nature augurs against any viable expectation of such admissions.” James L. Rigelhaupt, Annotation, Construction and Application of Liability Insurance Policy Expressly Excluding Injuries Intended or Expected by Insured, 31 A.L.R.4th 957, 962 (1991).
In 1988, a California court critical of the subjective-intent approach made the following observation:
Insureds and their victims prefer us to follow a minority of decisions treating insurance coverage for sexual misconduct as dependent on evidence of the insured’s actual, subjective intent to injure
(citing McIntyre; MacKinnon v. Hanover Ins. Co.,
471 A.2d 1166, 1167-69 (N.H.1984);
Zordan v. Page,
500 So.2d 608, 610-11 (Fla.1987)). We note that the latter two decisions are questionable authority in their own jurisdictions ... The Nevy Hampshire Supreme ..Court has apparently reversed itself without citing its earlier
MacKinnon
opinion. ' Two different appellate courts in Florida have adopted the dissent of
Zordan v. Page ...
and certified this conflict for review by the Florida Supreme Court.
Fire Ins. Exc. v. Abbott,
204 Cal.App.3d 1012, 251 Cal.Rptr. 620 (Cal.App.1988).
The prescience of those remarks of the
Abbott
court is apparent when one reads the comments of a federal district court in Wisconsin just one year later:
The courts in five cases have taken what has become the minority approach, applying a subjective test and holding that the ‘intentional injury’ exclusion does not preclude coverage unless the claimant shows the actor acted with actual intent to harm.... [T]his holding in two of the cases was subsequently rejected by the ... courts in the same jurisdiction (Florida
[Zordan
] and New Hampshire
[Mac-Kinnon
]); in two other cases the holdings by, respectively, a state court of appeals and a federal circuit court of appeals may be contrary to earlier rulings by the state supreme courts in those jurisdictions (California
[State Farm Fire & Cas. Co. v. Estate of Jenner,
856 F.2d 1359 (9th Cir.1988)] and Colorado
[Allstate Ins. Co. v. Troelstrup,
768 P.2d 731 (Colo.App.1988) ]); and in one case the federal district court applied state law from cases not involving sexual offenses, where the state courts had not yet addressed the issue of intent to harm in liability insurance cases involving sexual assaults of minors (Alabama
[McIntyre]). Whitt v. DeLeu,
707 F.Supp. 1011, 1015 & n. 7 (W.D.Wis.1989).
The decisions referred to which gutted the
Zordan
decision were
McCullough v. Central Florida YMCA,
523 So.2d 1208 (Fla. Dist.Ct.App.1988), and
Landis v. Allstate Ins. Co.,
516 So.2d 305 (Fla.Dist.Ct.App.1987). New Hampshire overruled
Mac-Kinnon
sub silentio with
Vermont Mut. Ins. Co. v. Malcolm,
128 N.H. 521, 517 A.2d 800 (1986). Moreover, the 1988
Troelstrup
case was reversed by the Colorado Supreme Court.
Allstate Ins. Co. v. Troelstrup,
789 P.2d 415 (Colo.1990) (en banc). Thus, in reality, the only cases truly enunciating the minority rule that have not been overruled (because the issue has not been entertained by a higher court) are the Ninth Circuit
Jenner
case, which the
Whitt
court noted might be at odds with state law as the California Supreme Court would have construed it, and the
McIntyre
case, which has not attracted one word of approbation from the judiciary. Every other jurisdiction has subsequently corrected the errant court that embraced the subjective-intent test for sexual-abuse cases.
The
Abbott
court, like the
Roelfs
court, expressed reservations about
McIntyre
particularly, writing, “We are not persuaded by this minority view, even assuming the federal district court opinion has correctly predicted [that] Alabama state courts will not presume an intent to injure from an insured’s sexual misconduct with a minor in disregard of the insured’s subjective intent.”
Abbott,
204 Cal.App.3d at 1027, 251 Cal.Rptr. at 653.
See also Atlantic Employers Ins. Co. v. Tots & Toddlers Pre-Schl. Day Care Center,
239 N.J.Super. 276, 284, 571 A.2d 300, 303 (N.J.Super.1990) (rejecting subjective-intent test generally and
McIntyre
specifically).
In short, the court believes that the
McIntyre
opinion stands in disrepute. No court has ever quoted the case with approval or subscribed to the reasoning offered there. Instead, the vast majority of courts that have considered the issue have rejected the
McIntyre
approach.
For example, the
Whitt
case involved a § 1983 action brought by parents for sexual assaults committed against two minors by a school district employee. The defendant had a homeowner’s policy, the terms of which excluded “bodily injury or property damage ... which is expected or intended by the insured.” 707 F.Supp. at 1013. The insurer moved for summary judgment, arguing that the insured’s intent to harm created a genuine issue of material fact precluding summary disposition. The court rejected that argument, stating:
[T]he alleged sexual contact is so substantially certain to result in some injury, or so inherently injurious, ‘that the act is considered a criminal offense for which public policy precludes a claim of unintended consequences, that is, a claim that no harm was intended to result from the act’
(quoting Horace Mann Ins. Co. v. Leeber
[180 W.Va. 375], 376 S.E.2d 581, 585 (W.Va.1988)).
Whitt,
707 F.Supp. at 1015.
The
Whitt
court held that, in cases involving the sexual abuse of children, intent to injure would be inferred as a matter of law “regardless of claimed intent,” 707 F.Supp. at 1016. Consequently, the exclusion for intentional injury precluded coverage for the abusive acts. The
Whitt
court marshalled an impressive array of authority for its holding, citing cases in states with radically different legal cultures which nonetheless all agreed on this rule. These states included Arkansas, California, Colorado, Florida, Georgia, Iowa, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, New Hampshire, Oklahoma, Washington, and West Virginia.
Nevada and Pennsyl
vania courts have now held the same way, the federal district court in Nevada being persuaded that the “well-reasoned decisions” found that intent to harm could be inferred from sexual contact with a minor regardless of the insured’s subjective intent.
Allstate Ins. Co. v. Foster,
693 F.Supp. 886 (D.Nev.1988).
See also Foremost Ins. Co. v. Weetman,
726 F.Supp. 618, 622 (W.D.Pa.1989) (“A person who sexually abuses a minor cannot expect his insurer to cover his misconduct and cannot escape personal liability by claiming that he did not intend to cause any harm. In situations such as this, injury always ensues, and we conclude that one who manipulates children for his own sexual gratification intends any resulting injuries, as a matter of law.”).
Two courts have forcefully expressed the reason for implying intent to harm as a matter of law. In
Vermont Mut. Ins. Co. v. Malcolm,
128 N.H. 521, 517 A.2d 800, 802-03 (1986), the court discussed the injury inflicted by homosexual assault, writing, “[T]he assaults were inherently injurious in the most obvious sense that they could not be performed on a boy without appalling effects on his mind as well as forbidden contacts with his body.” Similarly, the court in
People v. Garciadealba,
736 P.2d 1240, 1243 (Colo.App.1986), denominated sexual molestation of children “a heinous crime that causes devastating results whenever it is committed, particularly when the perpetrator is in a position of trust” (as would be a teacher, especially a teacher of the uniquely vulnerable Doe children, all special-education students).
See also Allstate Ins. Co. v. Kim W.,
160 Cal. App.3d 326, 334, 206 Cal.Rptr. 609, 613 (1984) (discussing debilitating mental and emotional effects of child sexual abuse).
The
Whitt
court noted that the legal and social values embodied in such a rule may militate against compensation of the actual victims of such assaults. While the court noted that the primary reason for the minority view of
McIntyre
was compensating the victims, it found that the vast majority of courts had correctly “determined that this benefit is outweighed by the effect of allowing sexual offenders to escape having to compensate minors for the harm that the courts have established is inherent in such offenses.” 707 F.Supp. at 1016 (citations omitted). In addition, the desire to place moral liability with the same precision with which we would place economic liability gives force to the rule:
[The majority rule] stands for the proposition that a person who sexually manipulates a minor cannot expect his insurer to cover his misconduct and cannot obtain such coverage simply by saying that he did not mean any harm. The courts following the majority approach have concluded that sexual misconduct with a minor is objectively so substantially certain to result in harm to the minor victim, that the perpetrator cannot be allowed to escape society’s determination that he is expected to know that. Hence, these courts infer the intent to harm as a matter of law in sexual misconduct liability insurance cases involving minors.
Id.
The inferred-intent rule has been adopted by other states that apply the subjective-intent standard to other categories of insurance-liability cases, without sacrifice of the principle in those other cases. Moreover, this court agrees with the
Roelfs
court that the
Dyer
standard is not at odds with the inferred-intent rule.
Dyer
is simply irrelevant to the almost-universal rule of inferring intent to injure in child sexual-abuse cases. As the
Roelfs
court noted, where intent to injure is inferred as a matter of law from the nature of the act committed, the insured’s subjective intent does not matter. Similarly, the objective standard, whereby a court would inquire
whether a reasonable person doing the act would expect injury to result, is irrelevant. In a jurisdiction that follows the inferred-intent rule in cases involving insurance coverage for sexual abuse, it simply would not matter whether the jurisdiction applied the subjective or objective test to the action of shooting a victim with a BB gun or hurling blacktop at him.
See Roelfs,
698 F.Supp. at 820 n. 5.
It is the opinion of this court that
Dyer
does not dictate that
McIntyre
follow. This court, with the luxury of hindsight, concludes that
McIntyre
offered an incorrect prediction. The court believes that Alabama would follow the inferred-intent rule, joining virtually every court in the nation that has considered the issue. Because the vast weight of authority inveighs against the
McIntyre
result and because the court does not believe that the Alabama Supreme Court is a judicial pariah, it believes that Alabama would make the same sensible determination that other courts have made without abandoning its subjective-intent rule for other types of cases.
See, e.g., Abbott,
251 Cal.Rptr. 620. This being so, there is no subjective-intent issue in this case that presents a genuine issue of material fact. Where, as here, intent to injure can be inferred as a matter of law, summary judgment is proper if the policy excludes coverage for intended injuries.
See, e.g., Linebaugh v. Berdish,
144 Mich. App. 750, 376 N.W.2d 400 (1985).
This court also believes that public policy demands the result it reaches in this case. Any other result subsidizes the episodes of child sexual abuse of which its victims complain, at the ultimate expense of other insureds to whom the added costs of indemnifying child molesters will be passed. While cases such as these tug at the court’s sympathies, the court cannot indulge its sympathies where, as here, they run counter to the mandates of public policy and common sense. To do so would do violence to the law and to common sense, because as a matter of both law and common sense, hurling a piece of blacktop at someone is not the same thing as sexually abusing a child.
This court believes that where the law ranges too far afield from common sense and common experience, it will soon part company with common decency. Allowing insureds to abdicate personal responsibility for actions such as this does not accord with traditional notions of what is decent and honorable in the law. If Alabama law did countenance any result other than the one the overwhelming majority of jurisdictions reach in these cases, it would be an affront to common sense. This court believes that the state courts of Alabama have respect for the dictates of common decency and common sense, and it has applied the law as it believes the Alabama Supreme Court would.
An order will be entered accordingly.
DONE.
JUDGMENT
In accordance with the Memorandum Opinion entered this date, it is the ORDER, JUDGMENT and DECREE of this court that the motion for summary judgment filed by the plaintiff, Horace Mann Insurance Company, be GRANTED on their complaint for declaratory judgment and that judgment be entered for the plaintiff declaring the rights, duties, obligations and conclusions of law as to these parties of law as follows:
1. That the plaintiff insurer has no duty to defend or indemnify the defendant-insured Cecil Fore for any acts of sexual abuse excluded by that provision of the contract of insurance excluding such coverage for criminal acts;
2. That the plaintiff insurer has no duty to indemnify or defend the defendant-insured Cecil Fore for acts of sexual abuse excluded by that provision of the contract of insurance excluding such coverage for activities that do not qualify as “educational activities”; and
3. That the plaintiff insurer has no duty to indemnify or defend the defendant-insured Cecil Fore for any acts of sexual abuse excluded by that provision of the contract of insurance excluding coverage for “intended injuries.”
It is further ORDERED that each party bear its own costs.