Sheely v. Sheely ( 2012 )


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  • [Cite as Sheely v. Sheely, 
    2012-Ohio-43
    .]
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO
    THIRD APPELLATE DISTRICT
    AUGLAIZE COUNTY
    TABITHA SHEELY, ADM. ESTATE
    OF IVY SHEELY, DECEASED,
    PLAINTIFF-APPELLANT,                              CASE NO. 2-10-38
    v.
    DANIEL SHEELY, ET AL.,                                    OPINION
    DEFENDANTS-APPELLEES.
    Appeal from Auglaize County Common Pleas Court
    Trial Court No. 2009 CV 0145
    Judgment Affirmed
    Date of Decision: January 9, 2012
    APPEARANCES:
    Clay W. Balyeat and Andrew R. Bucher for Appellant
    Ronald A. Rispo and David L. Jarrett for Appellee
    Case No. 2-10-38
    SHAW, J.
    {¶1} Plaintiff-appellant, Tabatha Sheely (“Tabatha”), appeals the October
    19, 2010 judgment of the Auglaize County Court of Common Pleas denying her
    motion for partial summary judgment, granting defendant-appellee’s, Lightning
    Rod Mutual Insurance Company (“Lightning Rod”), motion for summary
    judgment and declaring that there is no coverage under Lightning Rod’s home and
    personal liability policy insuring Daniel Sheely (“Dan”) for the wrongful death of
    Ivy Sheely.
    {¶2} On May 13, 2007, Ivy Sheely, the sixteen-year-old daughter of
    Tabatha and Dan, died when she consumed a large bottle of Vodka, which Dan
    purchased for her earlier that evening.
    {¶3} Tabatha and Dan divorced in the mid-nineties. After the divorce, Ivy
    lived with Tabatha in Findlay. Up until several months before her death, Ivy
    visited her father at his St. Johns residence in Auglaize County on the weekends
    and during some school vacations. However, after Ivy reached the age of sixteen
    and obtained her driver’s license, she made more frequent trips to St. Johns to visit
    Dan. Some of the trips would last several days. It is during this time that Dan
    permitted Ivy and her teenage friends to consume alcohol in his home.
    {¶4} On the night of her death, Ivy and her best friend, Heather Davies,
    were spending the weekend at Dan’s home in St. Johns. Dan purchased a large
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    bottle of Vodka, at Ivy’s request. Ivy and Heather later took the bottle to John
    Grieshop, Sr.’s residence, a neighbor of Dan’s, where a party was taking place.
    According to the accounts of those who were present, Ivy consumed almost the
    entire bottle of Vodka in a short amount of time and was later found in the
    Grieshop residence unconscious, not breathing, with her mouth full of vomit.
    Emergency medical personnel were called to the scene.           However, Ivy was
    pronounced dead shortly thereafter.
    {¶5} Dan was subsequently charged with child endangering, among other
    charges, and entered a plea of not guilty. After a jury trial, Dan was convicted of
    child endangering, in violation of R.C. 2919.22(A)(E)(2)(c), a felony of the third
    degree, and of furnishing intoxicating liquor to an underage person, in violation of
    R.C. 4301.69(A) and R.C. 4301.99(I), a misdemeanor of the first degree. On May
    27, 2008, Dan was sentenced to serve three years in prison, but was judicially
    released prior to the expiration of his sentence.
    {¶6} On May 4, 2009, Tabatha, in her capacity as the administrator and
    personal representative of Ivy’s estate, filed wrongful death and survivorship
    actions against Dan and John Grieshop, Sr., alleging them to be jointly and
    severally liable for Ivy’s death.
    {¶7} In November of 2009, the parties presented a consent judgment entry
    to the trial court in which Dan admitted he was negligent as alleged in the
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    complaint, and accepted liability for Ivy’s death. Dan also consented to award
    Ivy’s estate $300,000.00 for the wrongful death and survivorship claims. Tabatha
    agreed to dismiss the claims against John Grieshop, Sr., without prejudice. The
    trial court memorialized the consent judgment entry in its November 20, 2009
    entry.
    {¶8} On November 25, 2009, Tabatha’s attorney sent a letter to defendant,
    Lightning Rod Mutual Insurance Company, the insurer on Dan’s homeowner’s
    policy at the time of Ivy’s death, demanding it pay the $300,000.00 judgment
    entered against Dan on November 20, 2009.
    {¶9} On April 22, 2010, Tabatha filed a “Supplemental Complaint by
    Judgment Creditor” pursuant to R.C. 3929.06, alleging that Lightning Rod’s
    policy covered Dan’s “conduct which caused bodily injury, including death, to
    another person.”1 (Supp. Complaint Apr. 10, 2010 at 2). Tabatha asserted that
    none of the coverage exclusions in the policy applied to this case, and that Ivy’s
    death is an insurable event under the policy.
    {¶10} Lightning Rod filed an answer admitting that, at the time of Ivy’s
    death, Dan was insured under a home and personal liability insurance policy
    issued by Lightning Rod. However, Lightning Rod asserted that Ivy’s death was
    1
    We note that, according to Tabatha’s supplemental complaint, Lightning Rod had previously refused to
    intervene in the pending wrongful death and survivorship case, claiming “the allegations in the lawsuit do
    not trigger any duty to defend or indemnify.” (Supp. Complaint Apr. 10, 2010).
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    excluded by the terms of the policy and therefore not covered. At this time,
    Lightning Rod also filed a counterclaim for a declaratory judgment requesting the
    trial court to find that there is no coverage for the wrongful death of Ivy under the
    policy.
    {¶11} The case proceeded to the discovery phase. Several witnesses were
    deposed, including Dan, Tabatha and the people present on the night Ivy died—
    specifically, Heather Davies, John Grieshop, Sr., John Grieshop, Jr. (“JR”), and
    Mary Sheely, Ivy’s grandmother.         In addition, partial transcripts from the
    testimony given by Dan and Heather Davies at Dan’s criminal trial were also filed
    as part of the record in this case.
    {¶12} On September 27, 2010, Lightning Rod moved for summary
    judgment asserting that there is no genuine issue of material fact and that it is
    entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Specifically, Lightning Rod argued that its
    liability for Ivy’s wrongful death is excluded under the terms of its policy.
    Lightning Rod contended that Ivy was a resident of Dan’s household and that
    claims by one resident of the household against another resident insured are
    excluded from liability coverage. Lightning Rod also argued that Dan’s felony
    conviction for child endangering provided evidence that Dan’s action of supplying
    alcohol to Ivy, which resulted in her death, was an intentional act triggering an
    exclusion from coverage under the policy. Finally, Lightning Rod maintained that
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    the policy only covered bodily injury, including death, that is caused as a result of
    an “occurrence,” which under the policy language means an accident, and that
    Ivy’s death was not caused by an accident.
    {¶13} On September 30, 2010, Tabatha filed a motion for partial summary
    judgment arguing that Lightning Rod is required by law and under the terms of the
    policy to pay the $300,000.00 judgment against Dan, as its insured, and
    accordingly, requested the trial court to dismiss Lightning Rod’s counterclaim for
    a declaratory judgment.
    {¶14} On October 19, 2010, the trial court entered judgment granting
    Lightning Rod’s motion for summary judgment, overruling Tabatha’s motion for
    partial summary judgment, and declaring that there is no coverage for the
    wrongful death of Ivy Sheely under the policy.         Specifically, the trial court
    concluded the following:
    The alcohol was purchased for the child by [Dan] in Allen
    County, the alcohol was consumed by the child at the residence
    of a third party, the supplying of the alcohol was expected and
    intended to permit the child to consume alcohol illegally (with its
    attendant risks of harm and/or death), there is no “occurrence”
    under the definitions of the policy and applicable case law, the
    child was living with [Dan], her father, during a period of
    visitation with him as her non-residential parent pursuant to his
    parental rights and responsibilities, and therefore the claims are
    by a resident (through her representative) of the insured
    household against another resident of the same household and
    subject to the exclusion from liability, and the exclusion for
    intentional acts also applies.
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    Case No. 2-10-38
    (JE, Oct. 19, 2010).
    {¶15} Tabatha subsequently filed this appeal, asserting the following
    assignments of error.
    ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR NO. I
    THE TRIAL COURT ERRED IN GRANTING SUMMARY
    JUDGMENT FOR LIGHTNING ROD THROUGH ITS
    APPLICATION OF “INFERRED INTENT” ANALYSIS TO
    DETERMINE THERE WAS NO “OCCURRENCE” UNDER
    THE POLICY DEFINITIONS AS THE HARM SUFFERED IN
    [SIC] CANNOT BE DEEMED AN INHERENT RESULT OF
    THE INTENTIONAL ACT OF DAN SHEELY.
    ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR NO. II
    THE TRIAL COURT ERRED IN GRANTING LIGHTNING
    ROD’S MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT BECAUSE
    AT THE VERY LEAST A GENUINE ISSUE OF MATERIAL
    FACT EXISTS AS TO WHETHER IVY SHEELY WAS A
    “RESIDENT” OF DAN SHEELY’S HOME AT THE TIME OF
    HER DEATH.
    First Assignment of Error
    {¶16} In her first assignment of error, Tabatha argues that the trial court
    erred in granting Lightning Rod’s motion for summary judgment. Specifically,
    Tabatha claims that Dan’s conduct of furnishing alcohol to Ivy, which led to her
    death, is not subject to the intentional-act exclusion in his homeowner’s policy
    issued by Lightning Rod. Rather, Tabatha maintains that Ivy’s death is the result
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    of an “occurrence,” which is covered under the personal liability provisions in the
    policy.
    {¶17} Initially, we note that an appellate court reviews a grant of summary
    judgment de novo, without any deference to the trial court. Conley-Slowinski v.
    Superior Spinning & Stamping Co. (1998), 
    128 Ohio App.3d 360
    , 363, 
    714 N.E.2d 991
    .       A grant of summary judgment will be affirmed only when the
    requirements of Civ.R. 56(C) are met. This requires the moving party to establish:
    (1) that there are no genuine issues of material fact, (2) that the moving party is
    entitled to judgment as a matter of law, and (3) that reasonable minds can come to
    but one conclusion and that conclusion is adverse to the non-moving party, said
    party being entitled to have the evidence construed most strongly in his favor.
    Civ.R. 56(C); see Horton v. Harwick Chem. Corp., 
    73 Ohio St.3d 679
    , 
    653 N.E.2d 1196
    , 
    1995-Ohio-286
    , paragraph three of the syllabus.
    {¶18} The party moving for summary judgment bears the initial burden of
    identifying the basis for its motion in order to allow the opposing party a
    “meaningful opportunity to respond.” Mitseff v. Wheeler (1988), 
    38 Ohio St.3d 112
    , 
    526 N.E.2d 798
    , syllabus.        The moving party also bears the burden of
    demonstrating the absence of a genuine issue of material fact as to an essential
    element of the case. Dresher v. Burt, 
    75 Ohio St.3d 280
    , 292, 
    662 N.E.2d 264
    ,
    
    1996-Ohio-107
    .       Once the moving party demonstrates that he is entitled to
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    summary judgment, the burden shifts to the non-moving party to produce evidence
    on any issue which that party bears the burden of production at trial. See Civ.R.
    56(E).
    {¶19} In ruling on a summary judgment motion, a court is not permitted to
    weigh evidence or choose among reasonable inferences, rather, the court must
    evaluate evidence, taking all permissible inferences and resolving questions of
    credibility in favor of the non-moving party. Jacobs v. Racevskis (1995), 
    105 Ohio App.3d 1
    , 7, 
    663 N.E.2d 653
    . Additionally, Civ.R.56(C) mandates that
    summary judgment shall be rendered if the pleadings, depositions, answers to
    interrogatories, written admissions, affidavits, transcripts of evidence, and written
    stipulations of fact show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and
    that the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.
    {¶20} “It is axiomatic that an insurance company is under no obligation to
    its insured, or to others harmed by the actions of an insured, unless the conduct
    alleged of the insured falls within the coverage of the policy.”         Gearing v.
    Nationwide Ins. Co., 
    76 Ohio St.3d 34
    , 36, 
    665 N.E.2d 1115
    , 
    1996-Ohio-113
    .
    “Coverage is provided if the conduct falls within the scope of coverage defined in
    the policy, and not within an exception thereto.” 
    Id.
     Thus, the pertinent inquiry is
    whether Ivy’s death from acute alcohol toxicity, which resulted from her drinking
    alcohol provided by Dan, is an insurable event under Lightning Rod’s policy. Our
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    resolution of this case depends upon the policy language applicable to the present
    facts.
    {¶21} The policy language at issue provides:
    COVERAGE E – Personal Liability
    If a claim is made or a suit is brought against an “insured” for
    damages because of “bodily injury” or “property damage”
    caused by an “occurrence” to which this coverage applies, we
    will:
    (1) Pay up to our limit of liability for the damages for
    which the “insured” is legally liable. Damages include
    prejudgment interest awarded against the “insured;” and
    (2) Provide a defense at our expense by counsel of our
    choice, even if the suit is groundless, false or fraudulent.
    We may investigate and settle any claim or suit that we
    decide is appropriate. Our duty to settle or defend ends
    when the amount we pay for damages resulting from the
    “occurrence” equals our limit of liability.
    ***
    (Lightning Rod Policy for D. Sheely, at 15).
    DEFINITIONS
    ****
    1. “Bodily Injury” means bodily harm, sickness or disease,
    including required care, loss of services and death that results.”
    ***
    3. “Insured” means you and residents of your household who
    are:
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    (a) Your relatives; or
    (b) Other persons under the age of 21 and in the care of
    any person named above.
    ***
    5. “Occurrence” means an accident, including continuous or
    repeated exposure to substantially the same general harmful
    conditions, which results, during the policy period in * * *
    (a) “Bodily Injury[.]”
    ***
    (Lightning Rod Policy for D. Sheely, at 1-2) (Emphasis added).
    SECTION II- EXCLUSIONS
    (1) Coverage E-Personal Liability * * * do(es) not apply to
    “bodily injury” or “property damage”
    (a) Which is expected or intended by the “insured[.]”
    (Lightning Rod Policy for D. Sheely, at 16).
    ****
    (2) Coverage E-Personal Liability, does not apply to:
    ***
    f. “Bodily Injury” to you or an “insured” within the meaning
    of part a. or b. of “insured” as defined.
    (Lightning Rod Policy for D. Sheely, at 18).
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    {¶22} With the policy language in mind, we now turn to the undisputed
    facts deduced from the pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories, written
    admissions, affidavits and transcripts of evidence contained in the record.
    {¶23} In his deposition for this case, Dan testified that for several months
    prior to Ivy’s death, he permitted Ivy and her teenage friends to drink alcohol in
    his home. Dan recalled in his testimony at his criminal trial for child endangering,
    that he also supplied Ivy and her underage friend, Brittany Brand, with Tequila
    during a vacation in Florida on New Year’s Eve of 2006. Nevertheless, other than
    this one instance, Dan maintained that the girls were only permitted to drink in his
    home and were not allowed to leave his home with the alcohol. Dan recalled that
    he never saw the girls drink straight liquor, but that he permitted them to make
    mixed drinks with the alcohol. He admitted that he would not be in the room with
    the girls because “they didn’t want to be around [him],” but he would always be in
    the next room watching TV. (Tr. Feb. 12, 2008 at 10). Dan also admitted,
    however, that he did not caution Ivy against abusing alcohol.
    {¶24} In her deposition for this case, Heather Davies, Ivy’s friend, who was
    with her on the night she died, explained that in the months preceding Ivy’s death,
    she and Ivy spent a significant amount of time together drinking alcohol. Heather
    recalled that every time they consumed alcohol it was at Dan’s house, with the
    exception of the night that Ivy died. Heather testified that she and Ivy drove from
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    Findlay to Dan’s house in St. Johns to drink alcohol at least a couple times a
    month.     Specifically, Heather recalled that the drinking at Dan’s began in
    November of 2006, occurring every “now and again.” (Davies Depo., at 19).
    However, Heather admitted the trips to Dan’s house from Findlay gradually
    increased in frequency during the months prior to Ivy’s death in May of 2007.
    Heather explained that she and Ivy would stay at Dan’s overnight for a day or two,
    usually over the weekend. Heather recalled that she drank at Dan’s house with Ivy
    around fifteen different times.
    {¶25} Heather and Ivy’s friend, Brittany Brand, provided similar testimony
    in her deposition, stating that every time she went to St. Johns with Ivy, they drank
    alcohol at Dan’s house. Brittany testified that she and Ivy made alcoholic mixed
    drinks in Dan’s home with his knowledge. She recalled two occasions in which
    Dan took the girls to a liquor store to purchase alcohol for them. Brittany testified
    that there were times at Dan’s house where she would be intoxicated to the point
    that she was unable to drive. Brittany remembered that Dan was always in his
    bedroom when the girls were consuming alcohol. Brittany testified that one night
    she was talking with Dan in his basement and he appeared “slightly drunk.”
    (Brand Depo., at 57). She recalled Dan lamenting that he wished he was a better
    father to Ivy. Brittany provided the following testimony in her deposition for this
    case:
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    Q: Do you think the fact that he allowed you girls to drink and
    party there at the house was any reflection on something he was
    attempting to do?
    A: Yeah.
    Q: What was that?
    A: He wanted to be, I think psychologically, he wanted to be the
    best friend, the awesome uncle. And the only way a lot of people
    have tried to—and I think in his way, he wanted to have a
    relationship with his daughter in a cool way, and the only cool
    way would have been that way.
    Q: What, to let her drink and party?
    A: (Witness nodding). I believe so, yes.
    Q: When you were down there at Dan’s house, did you ever see
    Ivy and Dan really interact a whole lot together?
    A: He would take us out to eat, but that’s really all that was
    much interaction. He’ll come out of [his] room sometimes, but
    that was pretty much it.
    (Brand Depo., at 57-58).
    {¶26} Turning back to the night of Ivy’s death, Dan adamantly maintained
    that he did not know Ivy left his home with the bottle of Vodka. Dan recalled that
    earlier that evening, he went out to dinner with Ivy, her friend, Heather Davies,
    and his brother and sister-in-law. After dinner, Ivy, Heather and Dan went to a
    liquor store to purchase a bottle of Vodka, at Ivy’s request. Dan explained that the
    Vodka was not intended just for Ivy’s use, but that it was supposed to be the house
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    supply. Dan stated that he regularly kept alcohol in the house for visitors to
    consume, including Ivy and her friends. Dan testified that the alcohol was always
    accessible and that Ivy knew he kept it on the top of the refrigerator. Dan recalled
    that he usually kept four or five bottles of liquor in the house.
    {¶27} Ivy, Heather and Dan were in Dan’s car when they drove to the store
    to purchase the Vodka. Ivy was driving, Dan was in the front passenger seat and
    Heather was in the backseat. Dan admitted that this was not the first time he
    purchased alcohol for the girls to consume at his house, and that he had done so a
    “few times” on previous occasions. (Tr. Feb. 12, 2008 at 21). On this night, Dan
    purchased a large bottle, over a liter, of 80-proof Vodka, at Ivy’s request, and a
    beer for Heather.2 In her testimony at Dan’s criminal trial, Heather recalled that
    she and Ivy left the Vodka in the back of the car when they arrived to Dan’s house
    and went into the house to freshen up their hair and make-up.
    {¶28} Heather testified that about ten minutes later they drove down the
    street to the Grieshop’s trailer, where they intended to consume alcohol. Once
    they arrived to the Grieshop’s, Ivy opened the full bottle of Vodka and began to
    drink it. Heather testified that Ivy started drinking the Vodka by doing a couple of
    2
    Heather provided testimony at Dan’s criminal trial that, while at the liquor store, Dan was initially given
    a smaller, 40-proof bottle of Vodka by the clerk, but Ivy objected to purchasing that bottle, expressing she
    wanted a larger bottle and a higher proof of alcohol. When deposed for this civil case, Heather testified
    that Ivy told Dan that night that she wanted to get “really, really drunk. That was her obvious intention, she
    made that obvious.” (Davies Depo. at 57). However, Dan did not admit to these facts. Accordingly, in our
    review, we have not considered this testimony and instead have relied only on testimony which is
    undisputed in evaluating the trial court’s decision to grant summary judgment.
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    shots and then began to swig it. Heather remembered that Ivy had left the trailer at
    one point and when she returned, Heather noticed that much of the alcohol in the
    bottle was gone. Heather stated that shortly after that point, Ivy became extremely
    incoherent and unable to stand-up. Heather recalled that she gave Ivy a pillow and
    helped her lay down on the floor. Heather then went back into the kitchen to
    converse with JR Grieshop. Heather testified that when she went to check on Ivy,
    it was obvious something was seriously wrong.
    {¶29} John Grieshop, Sr., the owner of the trailer where Ivy died, testified
    that he recalled Heather and Ivy coming to the house that night. Grieshop stated
    that he warned Ivy two or three times that night about the reckless manner in
    which she was drinking the Vodka, specifically, that she was “putting it down a
    little bit too heavy.” (Grieshop, Sr. Depo., at 18). He recalled that each time he
    said something to her, Ivy would respond to him by saying, “My dad said I could
    drink.” (Grieshop, Sr. Depo., at 18). John, Sr., testified that shortly thereafter Ivy
    had passed out on the couch and then fell on the floor. He remembered that she
    began to make some strange noises and told his son, JR, to fetch Dan. Ivy
    subsequently died from acute alcohol toxicity.
    {¶30} The trial court found that Ivy’s death was not an insurable event
    under the policy because it was not the result of an “occurrence” and that the
    intentional-act exclusion applied. On appeal, Tabatha argues that the trial court
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    erred in its application of the doctrine of inferred intent when it found that the
    intentional-act provision in the policy excluded from coverage Dan’s conduct of
    supplying his daughter with alcohol.3
    {¶31} We note that since the trial court’s decision granting summary
    judgment in favor of Lightning Rod, the Supreme Court of Ohio issued its
    decision, Allstate Insurance Company v. Campbell, 
    128 Ohio St.3d 186
    , 
    942 N.E.2d 1090
    , 
    2010-Ohio-6312
    , which clarifies the application of the doctrine of
    inferred intent to an insurance policy’s intentional-act exclusion.
    {¶32} After reviewing its prior cases on the subject, the Court in Campbell
    concluded the following:
    It is clear that as applied to an insurance policy’s intentional-act
    exclusion, the doctrine of inferred intent applies only in cases in
    which the insured’s intentional act and the harm caused are
    intrinsically tied so that the act has necessarily resulted in the
    harm. Limiting the scope of the doctrine is appropriate because
    the rule is needed only in a narrow range of cases—those in
    which the insured’s testimony on harmful intent is irrelevant
    because the intentional act could not have been done without
    causing harm. Thus, an insured’s intent to cause injury or
    damage may be inferred only when that harm is intrinsically
    tied to the act of the insured—i.e., the action necessitates the
    harm.
    Campbell, 128 Ohio St.3d at 1097-98.
    3
    The doctrine of inferred intent is based on the principle that the insured’s commission of a particular,
    deliberate act may, as a matter of law, give rise to an inference of intent—i.e., that the insured intended to
    cause the resulting harm. Until recently, the Supreme Court of Ohio had only applied the doctrine in cases
    involving murder and sexual molestation of a minor, and had not enunciated a clear standard for the courts
    to apply the doctrine in other circumstances.
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    {¶33} In the instant case, we cannot say that there is no genuine issue of
    material fact as to whether Dan’s act of furnishing alcohol to Ivy and her death are
    intrinsically tied so as to infer as a matter of law that Dan’s conduct necessarily
    resulted in Ivy’s death. Dan testified that he was unaware Ivy took the bottle of
    Vodka to the neighbor’s house on the night she died. He was adamant in his
    testimony that he would only allow Ivy and her underage friends to drink in his
    house while he was there; something he had allowed on several prior occasions
    without causing bodily injury or death. Thus, it cannot be said in this instance that
    Dan’s act of furnishing alcohol to Ivy necessitated her death as a matter of law.
    For instance, even on the night in question there are numerous other possibilities
    that could have occurred as a result of Dan’s conduct of supplying Ivy alcohol
    besides her death. Therefore, based upon the Supreme Court’s enunciation of the
    doctrine of inferred intent in Campbell, we cannot conclude that Lightning Rod’s
    intentional-act exclusion is applicable as a matter of law to Dan’s conduct of
    supplying alcohol to his minor child.
    {¶34} However, just because a parent, who has furnished alcohol to a minor
    child on several prior occasions without causing bodily injury or death, might not
    be found in a particular case to have intentionally caused a death, does not mean
    that bodily injury or death is an unexpected or unforeseeable result of such
    conduct within the meaning of an accidental “occurrence” provision.            Thus,
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    notwithstanding our conclusion as to the intentional-act exclusion, we must still
    resolve the issue of whether Ivy’s death was caused by an “occurrence” and is,
    therefore, covered under the terms of Lightning Rod’s policy. The policy defines
    an occurrence as “an accident, including continuous or repeated exposure to
    substantially the same general harmful conditions, which results, during the policy
    period in * * * “Bodily Injury[.]” (Lightning Rod Policy for D. Sheely, at 2).
    Notably, the word “accident” is not defined in the policy.
    {¶35} Under Ohio law, when a term in an insurance contract is not defined
    by the policy, the term is to be given its ordinary meaning. Black v. Richards, 5th
    Dist. Nos. 08 CA 19, 09 CA 4, 09 CA 12, 09 CA 13, 
    2010-Ohio-2938
    , ¶ 49, citing
    Owens-Illinois, Inc. v. Aetna Cas. & Sur. Co. (C.A.6 1993), 
    990 F.2d 865
    , 872.
    “The ordinary meaning of the term ‘accident’ in an insurance policy refers to
    ‘unintended’ or ‘unexpected’ happenings.” Morner v. Giuliano, 
    167 Ohio App.3d 785
    , 
    2006-Ohio-2943
    , 
    857 N.E.2d 602
    , ¶ 25. Moreover, the Ohio Supreme Court
    has stated that the word “occurrence” when defined as “an accident” is “intended
    to mean just that-an unexpected, unforeseeable event.” Randolf v. Grange Mut.
    Cas. Co. (1979), 
    57 Ohio St.2d 25
    , 29, 
    385 N.E.2d 1305
    .
    {¶36} After reviewing the record before us, it is our determination that
    there is no genuine issue of material fact upon which reasonable minds could
    conclude that Ivy’s death was an unexpected, unforeseeable event in these
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    circumstances, falling within the category of an “occurrence” under Lightning
    Rod’s policy. It is undisputed that Dan knowingly engaged in a repeated pattern
    of conduct over several months in which he permitted his sixteen-year-old-
    daughter and her minor friends to consume alcohol in his home.            It is also
    undisputed that in all those instances Dan provided his daughter and her friends
    the alcohol by either purchasing it for them, or by furnishing an array of liquor in
    his home for their use. By his own admission, Dan was not present in the room
    with the teenagers while they consumed the alcohol, but rather he remained in the
    next room for the vast majority of the time. Dan also admitted that even though he
    permitted Ivy to consume liquor, he never cautioned her against alcohol abuse.
    Furthermore, Dan does not dispute that, on the night of Ivy’s death, he purchased a
    large bottle of 80-proof Vodka, at her request, and that her consumption of the
    liquor resulted in her dying from acute alcohol toxicity.
    {¶37} Moreover, even though our review of Ohio case law did not reveal a
    case which addressed this precise issue, other jurisdictions have determined that
    the unintended harm resulting from an adult furnishing alcohol to a minor is not an
    “occurrence” covered by an insurance policy, where an “occurrence” is defined as
    an “accident,” as in this case. See e.g., American Modern Home Ins. Co. v. Corra
    (2008), 
    222 W. Va. 797
    , 
    671 S.E.2d 802
     (holding that “absent policy language to
    the contrary, a homeowner’s insurance policy defining ‘occurrence’ as ‘an
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    Case No. 2-10-38
    accident, including continuous or repeated exposure to substantially the same
    general harmful conditions, which results, during the policy period in bodily injury
    or property damage,’ does not provide coverage where the injury or damage is
    allegedly caused by the homeowner’s conduct in knowingly permitting an
    underage adult to consume alcoholic beverages on the homeowner’s property”);
    Allstate Ins. Co. v. J.J.M. (2002), 
    254 Mich. App. 418
    , 
    657 N.W.2d 181
    (concluding that injuries to a minor who was raped while at party in homeowner’s
    residence where alcohol was served to minors were not an “occurrence” within
    meaning of homeowner’s policy, where the homeowner reasonably should have
    expected that giving minors enough alcohol to allow them to pass out would result
    in harm; the fact that specific harm that occurred was intentional act of rape rather
    than alcohol poisoning was irrelevant to determination whether occurrence was an
    accident); Illinois Farmer’s Ins. Co. v. Duffy (Minn., 2000), 
    618 N.W.2d 613
    (finding that the insureds’ supplying of alcohol to teenagers at a party was not an
    “occurrence” within meaning of the homeowner’s insurance policy, for purposes
    of determining insurer’s obligation to defend or indemnify insureds in negligence
    action to recover for injuries subsequently sustained by teenagers in automobile
    accident, as wrongful or tortious acts on part of insureds in providing the minors
    with alcohol were not accidental).
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    Case No. 2-10-38
    {¶38} Based on the foregoing, we conclude that Ivy’s death from acute
    alcohol toxicity as a result of her consuming liquor furnished to her by Dan cannot
    be classified as an accident within the meaning of the insurance policy in this case.
    As a result, Ivy’s death is not an insurable event as an “occurrence” under Dan’s
    homeowner’s policy with Lightning Rod.
    {¶39} Based on the record, we find that there is no genuine issue as to any
    material fact, that Lightning Rod is entitled to judgment as a matter of law, and
    that reasonable minds can come to but one conclusion and that conclusion is
    adverse to Tabatha, as the non-moving party. Accordingly, we conclude that the
    trial court did not err in granting summary judgment in favor of Lightning Rod and
    determining that there is no coverage for Ivy’s wrongful death under the insurance
    policy at issue. Tabatha’s first assignment of error is, therefore, overruled.
    Second Assignment of Error
    {¶1} In her second assignment of error, Tabatha argues that the trial court
    erred in granting summary judgment in favor of Lightning Rod because there
    remained a genuine issue of material fact as to whether Ivy was a resident of
    Dan’s household at the time of her death. Under the terms of the personal liability
    provisions of the policy, Lightning Rod is liable for covering bodily injury caused
    by an “occurrence.”      Having found that Ivy’s death was not caused by an
    “occurrence,” we do not need to address whether Ivy was a resident under Dan’s
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    insurance policy and therefore subject to the residential exclusion from coverage.
    Tabatha’s second assignment of error is rendered moot and is therefore overruled.
    {¶2} For all these reasons, the judgment of the Auglaize County Court of
    Common Pleas is affirmed.
    Judgment Affirmed
    PRESTON, J., concurs.
    WILLAMOWSK, J., concurs in Judgment Only.
    /jlr
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