McDaniel v. Sierra Health & Life Insurance

53 P.3d 904, 118 Nev. 596, 118 Nev. Adv. Rep. 62, 2002 Nev. LEXIS 76
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 18, 2002
Docket38008
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 53 P.3d 904 (McDaniel v. Sierra Health & Life Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McDaniel v. Sierra Health & Life Insurance, 53 P.3d 904, 118 Nev. 596, 118 Nev. Adv. Rep. 62, 2002 Nev. LEXIS 76 (Neb. 2002).

Opinion

OPINION

Per Curiam:

This appeal arises from the district court’s grant of summary judgment to Sierra Health, and Life Insurance Company, Inc. (Sierra Health), a California corporation authorized to underwrite insurance in Nevada, which had denied death benefits to the named beneficiary, appellant Lyndale D. McDaniel. McDaniel was listed as the beneficiary of an accidental death benefit policy that David B. Dawson, a resident of Nevada, held with Sierra Health. While driving intoxicated, Dawson failed to negotiate a left turn, allowing his vehicle to drift right, causing it to strike a guardrail and flip over, thereby killing himself and injuring McDaniel, his passenger. 1 Both McDaniel and Sierra Health agree that had Dawson survived the accident, the State of California could have prosecuted him for felonious drunk driving. 2

*598 Pursuant to Dawson’s accidental death benefit policy, McDaniel made a timely request for payment. Sierra Health denied his request, relying on the policy’s felony exclusion, which precludes accidental death coverage if the insured dies while committing a felony. McDaniel then filed for declaratory relief from the district court. Both parties moved for summary judgment. The district court initially denied both parties’ motions. The parties then submitted a joint motion for reconsideration with a stipulated set of facts. Based upon the stipulated facts, the district court granted Sierra Health’s motion for summary judgment and denied McDaniel’s motion. This appeal followed. McDaniel does not argue that summary judgment was improper, but only that the district court should have granted summary judgment on his, not Sierra Health’s, behalf. We disagree, and affirm the district court’s order of summary judgment.

DISCUSSION

On appeal, McDaniel argues that the policy’s felony exclusion does not bar his claim for recovery because: (1) it is ambiguous and must, therefore, be interpreted in his favor; (2) it does not include felonious drunk driving, which is not an intentional crime; and (3) the felony-exclusion provision is not triggered here because Dawson’s death was not proximately caused by his felonious drunk driving. We conclude that all of McDaniel’s allegations lack merit.

If the insurance policy were ambiguous, we would be required to interpret it narrowly against the insurer. 3 However, the felony exclusion contained in Sierra Health’s accidental death benefit policy is not ambiguous. The exclusion plainly states that “[a] loss that is directly or indirectly a result of one of the following is not a Covered Loss even though it was caused by an accidental bodily injury. ... (6) An attempt to commit, or committing, an assault or felony by the insured.” McDaniel argues that this provision is ambiguous as applied here because it is not clear that death from felonious drunk driving would trigger the exclusion. We disagree.

*599 In interpreting an insurance policy, this court examines the language “from the viewpoint of one not trained in law” or insurance, giving the terms their plain, ordinary, and popular meaning. 4 Contrary to McDaniel’s argument, the ordinary meaning of the term “felony” plainly includes felonious drunk driving. Because the felony exclusion is not ambiguous, we review it, like any other contract, as it is written, 5 without giving McDaniel the benefit of the doubt 6 or attempting to effectuate his reasonable expectations. 7

McDaniel urges this court to follow the Utah Supreme Court’s 1988 decision in LDS Hospital v. Capitol Life Insurance Co., which held that drunk driving did not trigger the felony exclusion in Capitol Life’s death benefit policy. 8 LDS Hospital, however, is both unpersuasive and distinguished from the case at hand.

The policy at issue in LDS Hospital suggested that insurance coverage would be denied for an “accidental” injury if it were the result of some intentional act.' 9 Here, the policy does not include similar language requiring that the injury resulted from an intentional act. In addition, the list of exclusions in the policy at issue in LDS Hospital consisted of acts that all required some element of intent. 10 Again, the exclusions listed in the Sierra Health pol *600 icy do not suggest a similar requisite element of intent. 11 As a result, unlike the felony exclusion in the policy considered by the Utah Supreme Court in LDS Hospital, the felony exclusion in the Sierra Health policy at issue here applies to all felonies regardless of criminal intent.

In addition, we note that even if the felony exclusion in Sierra Health’s accidental death policy were limited to conscious wrongdoings, the exclusion would still apply, as a matter of law, to felonious drank driving. By statute, felonious drunk driving, in both California and Nevada, does not require criminal intent, but merely driving while intoxicated resulting in serious bodily harm to another. 12 Although the Utah Supreme Court may have been correct that incidents involving drunk driving were commonly regarded as accidents in 1988, when it decided LDS Hospital, 13 that conclusion is not accepted by the courts today. Drank driving is now widely recognized as criminal conduct that is too reckless to be characterized as an “accident.” 14

Courts interpreting exclusionary provisions like the one at issue here have uniformly held that recovery is not limited unless there is some causal connection between the felony and the loss suffered. 15 The parties do not disagree that some causal connection is required, but disagree as to the degree of causal connection necessary to trigger the felony exclusion. A similar disagreement appears to exist between the courts that have considered this question.

On the one hand, some courts apply a narrow ‘ ‘but for’ ’ standard, whereby the beneficiary recovers unless the insured’s death was proximately related to his or her commission of a felony. 16 Specifically, when the insured’s death results from drunk driving, *601 which by statute is felonious in this case only because it causes harm to another, 17 the death of the insured is not considered sufficiently related to the felonious conduct, i.e.,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
53 P.3d 904, 118 Nev. 596, 118 Nev. Adv. Rep. 62, 2002 Nev. LEXIS 76, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcdaniel-v-sierra-health-life-insurance-nev-2002.