Western National Mutual Insurance Co. v. Decker , 2010 S.D. LEXIS 168 ( 2010 )


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  • #25507-a-JKK
    
    2010 S.D. 93
    IN THE SUPREME COURT
    OF THE
    STATE OF SOUTH DAKOTA
    * * * *
    WESTERN NATIONAL MUTUAL
    INSURANCE COMPANY,                        Plaintiff and Appellee,
    v.
    VALERIE DECKER, as Guardian
    Ad Litem of L.E.D., a minor,              Defendant and Appellant,
    and
    SARAH DECKER, formerly SARAH
    WALDNER; and BENJAMIN WALDNER,            Defendants.
    * * * *
    APPEAL FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF
    THE SECOND JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
    MINNEHAHA COUNTY, SOUTH DAKOTA
    * * * *
    HONORABLE STUART L. TIEDE
    Judge
    * * * *
    DOUGLAS M. DEIBERT of
    Cadwell, Sanford, Deibert &
    Garry LLP                                Attorneys for plaintiff
    Sioux Falls, South Dakota                 and appellee.
    STEPHANIE E. POCHOP of
    Johnson Pochop Law Office                 Attorneys for defendants
    Gregory, South Dakota                     and appellants.
    * * * *
    CONSIDERED ON BRIEFS
    ON OCTOBER 4, 2010
    OPINION FILED 12/08/10
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    KONENKAMP, Justice
    [¶1.]        A parent whose child was injured while in the care of a babysitter
    brought suit to recover damages. In a declaratory judgment action, the insurance
    company successfully argued that its policy did not cover injuries sustained in a
    daycare-type business. We conclude that the circuit court correctly ruled that the
    policy was unambiguous and the business exclusion applied.
    Background
    [¶2.]        On January 11, 2001, Joe Decker left his eight-month-old child, L.E.D.,
    with Sarah Decker. Sarah placed L.E.D. in his car seat thinking he would go to
    sleep. Moments later she heard him make an odd noise. She took him out of the
    car seat; he had stopped breathing; he was choking on a small object. Sarah called
    for help, but ultimately the child suffered permanent brain damage.
    [¶3.]        At the time, Sarah was living with Benjamin Waldner, her brother.
    Benjamin owned the home. It was insured by Western National Mutual Insurance
    Company. Benjamin allowed Sarah to live there rent free. She cleaned and cared
    for the home while Benjamin, a trucker, was gone. Sarah’s fiancé, Mark Decker,
    lived there also, along with others who rented rooms from Benjamin. Mark Decker
    is Joe Decker’s cousin. Benjamin, Sarah, Mark, and Joe all came from the same
    Hutterite colony.
    [¶4.]        Sarah cared for several children in Benjamin’s home. She did not have
    a name for her babysitting service or a written agreement with the parents about
    when and how she would be paid. In the year 2000, she provided care for nine
    children from six families. Sarah kept no records and filed no income tax returns.
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    She recalled that she charged some parents $1.50 per hour. The hours Sarah cared
    for the children varied, but she provided care five days a week, generally from nine
    to five.
    [¶5.]        In March 2000, Joe Decker and his wife Valerie began using Sarah to
    care for their older child, B.D. L.E.D. was born on May 23, 2000. Sarah started
    caring for him, according to Valerie, in August 2000. Sarah testified that when Joe
    dropped off and picked up the children, she did not charge him, in honor of the
    relationship between her fiancé, Mark, and his cousin, Joe. When Valerie picked
    the boys up, however, Valerie would pay her and Sarah accepted the payments.
    Valerie did not document these payments, but claimed $1,684 in child care credits
    on their 2000 federal income tax return for amounts paid to Sarah. It is undisputed
    that on the day of L.E.D.’s injury, Joe dropped off L.E.D. and Sarah did not charge
    him for her services.
    [¶6.]        A lawsuit on behalf of L.E.D. was brought against Sarah Decker and
    Benjamin Waldner for negligence. Western National sought a declaratory judgment
    that it had no duty to defend the action against Sarah or Benjamin or indemnify
    them because the policy unambiguously excluded coverage for L.E.D.’s injury. Both
    sides moved for summary judgment.
    [¶7.]        Western National argued that when the accident occurred, Sarah was
    operating a business, and the injury was sustained as a result of her business
    activities, which were not covered under the express terms of the policy. Valerie, on
    the other hand, asserted that Western National’s policy is ambiguous on the facts of
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    the case, and the ambiguity should be construed against Western National and in
    favor of coverage.
    [¶8.]        The policy defines “Business” as “a trade, a profession, or an
    occupation including farming, all whether full or part time. . . . ‘Business’ includes
    services regularly provided by an ‘insured’ for the care of others and for which an
    ‘insured’ is compensated. A mutual exchange of like services is not considered
    compensation.” The policy further states that “‘[b]usiness’ does not include: . . . b.
    activities that are related to ‘business,’ but are usually not viewed as ‘business’ in
    nature.” Under the section entitled “EXCLUSIONS THAT APPLY TO LIABILITY
    COVERAGES,” the policy provides, “‘We’ do not pay for ‘bodily injury’ or ‘property
    damage’ resulting from one or more of the following excluded ‘occurrences,’ . . . g.
    ‘bodily injury’ or ‘property damage’ resulting from activities related to the ‘business’
    of an ‘insured,’ except as provided by Incidental Business Coverage.” No incidental
    business coverage existed in this case.
    [¶9.]        Finding the policy language unambiguous, the circuit court ruled that
    Sarah regularly provided care for others for which she was compensated. In the
    court’s view, it was immaterial that Sarah did not charge Joe and Valerie Decker
    each time she cared for their children: she cared for children on a daily basis and
    was “compensated” as part of her business pursuit. The court ruled inapplicable the
    exception to the exclusion, which provided that “business” does not include
    “activities that are related to ‘business,’ but are usually not viewed as ‘business’ in
    nature.” In the court’s view, L.E.D. was injured as a result of the care provided
    through Sarah’s operation of her business. Because Sarah was operating a business
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    as defined under the policy, and the policy does not cover bodily injury caused by
    the operation of a business, the court granted summary judgment for Western
    National.
    Analysis and Decision
    [¶10.]         On appeal, Valerie argues that Western National’s insurance policy is
    ambiguous because the policy defines business to include certain activities while it
    excludes “activities related to ‘business’ but are not usually viewed as ‘business’ in
    nature[.]” Insurance contract interpretation is a question of law reviewed de novo.
    Auto-Owners Ins. Co. v. Hansen Hous., Inc., 
    2000 S.D. 13
    , ¶ 10, 
    604 N.W.2d 504
    ,
    509 (citations omitted). According to Valerie, without any parameters or guidelines
    on what activities Western National considers related to business but not usually
    viewed as business in nature, the policy provisions are “open to multiple
    
    interpretations” and are, therefore, ambiguous.
    [¶11.]         “Ambiguity in an insurance policy is determined with reference to the
    policy as a whole and the plain meaning and effect of its words.” Nat’l Sun Indust.,
    Inc. v. S.D. Farm Bureau Ins. Co., 
    1999 S.D. 63
    , ¶ 18, 
    596 N.W.2d 45
    , 48 (citation
    omitted). In construing the provisions of an insurance contract, we do not seek
    strained interpretations. 
    Id.
     Moreover, “[t]he terms of an unambiguous insurance
            Both parties cite to and quote language from other courts analyzing when
    daycare-type services constitute a business under various insurance policies
    from other companies. In some of those cases, the insurance policies did not
    define business to include compensation. Rather, the courts were asked to
    interpret the phrase “business pursuit,” and in so interpreting discussed
    compensation and profit motive. Here, however, business is defined in the
    policy. Therefore, we will restrict our analysis of the facts to the definitions
    given under the policy.
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    policy cannot be enlarged or diminished by judicial construction.” Am. Family Mut.
    Ins. v. Elliot, 
    523 N.W.2d 100
    , 102 (S.D. 1994) (citation omitted).
    [¶12.]       There are three policy provisions we must examine here. First, the
    policy defines business to include “services regularly provided by an ‘insured’ for the
    care of others and for which an ‘insured’ is compensated.” There is no dispute Sarah
    is an insured. Therefore, if Sarah regularly provided care to others and was
    compensated for such care, her activities satisfy the policy definition of a business.
    The fact that the policy does not define “regularly” or “compensated” does not make
    the policy ambiguous. “Ambiguity in an insurance policy is determined with
    reference to the policy as a whole and the plain meaning and effect of its words.”
    Nat’l Sun Indust., Inc., 
    1999 S.D. 63
    , ¶ 18, 
    596 N.W.2d at 48
     (citation omitted).
    [¶13.]       Valerie asserts that there is a material issue of fact in dispute on
    whether Sarah’s care was regularly provided because Sarah had no set schedule —
    she cared for children on a “those who came, came” basis. That Sarah did not have
    a concrete schedule does not create a material issue of fact on whether her care of
    others was “regularly” provided. From the undisputed evidence that Sarah
    provided care, even on an unscheduled basis, Sarah’s care of others was regular in
    nature. She cared for children in Benjamin’s home five days a week for over a year,
    and during that time L.E.D. was injured. Her care of others did not involve isolated
    acts, but was in fulfillment of a continuous, regular arrangement with the various
    parents. Sarah was L.E.D.’s regular caregiver, a point Valerie does not dispute.
    [¶14.]       Valerie next argues that because Sarah did not receive compensation
    on the day of the accident, and on the days when Joe dropped off and picked up the
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    children, Sarah was not “compensated” as required in the policy’s definition of a
    business. In construing the term “compensated,” Valerie concentrates, not on the
    fact that Sarah was paid for some of the care she provided, but instead on the fact
    that Sarah did not charge Joe Decker because of the relationship between Joe and
    Sarah’s fiancé, Mark.
    [¶15.]       Whether Sarah was compensated for purposes of this insurance policy
    depends on whether, under the policy language, Sarah’s activities with L.E.D. can
    be isolated to the day L.E.D. was injured, or whether Sarah’s regular and
    continuous child care must be examined in a more general sense. True, on the day
    L.E.D. was injured, Sarah received no compensation for her care of L.E.D. Yet, to
    disregard the fact that Sarah was paid in direct relation to her providing child care
    on a regular basis would require us to narrowly define the word “compensated”
    beyond its plain meaning and effect. There is no dispute that Valerie paid Sarah
    $1,684 to care for her children in 2000. There is also no dispute that in regularly
    providing care for others Sarah was compensated by the parents. Sometimes she
    charged parents $1.50 per hour, per child, and other times less, if more than one
    child in a family was cared for. Under a reasonable interpretation of the policy
    definition of “business,” Sarah was regularly providing care for others for which she
    was compensated.
    [¶16.]       We must next construe a second policy provision. Valerie argues that
    even if Sarah’s child care services can, in a broad sense, be regarded as a business
    under the policy, the policy provides in its definition of business that business does
    not include “activities that are related to ‘business’ but are not usually viewed as
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    ‘business’ in nature.” Because Sarah did not charge Joe for L.E.D.’s care on
    January 11, 2001, and free child care as a favor to a family member or friend is not
    usually viewed as business in nature, Valerie contends that the exception to the
    exclusion applies.
    [¶17.]       While babysitting on a single occasion for a family member or friend,
    or even occasionally, with or without compensation, might not ordinarily be viewed
    as business in nature, on January 11, 2001, Joe dropped L.E.D. off to be cared for by
    Sarah as part of a continuing arrangement. The care that day was beyond a casual
    accommodation for Joe or Valerie’s sake and was not an isolated or episodic favor to
    a friend or family member. Sarah’s care for L.E.D. that day was related to her
    business of providing child care and must be viewed as business in nature.
    [¶18.]       Valerie offers multiple scenarios for when the activity of caring for
    another would not be viewed as business in nature. These scenarios, however, are
    not the facts of this case. And simply because child care can be viewed as business
    in nature in one instance and not in another does not make the insurance policy
    ambiguous. Under these facts, the policy is not “capable of more than one meaning
    when viewed objectively[.]” See Ziegler Furniture and Funeral Home, Inc. v.
    Cicmanec, 
    2006 S.D. 6
    , ¶ 16, 
    709 N.W.2d 350
    , 355 (citation omitted). With
    reference to the entire policy, the “plain meaning and effect of the words” in the
    policy are clear. See Econ. Aero Club, Inc. v. Avemco Ins. Co., 
    540 N.W.2d 644
    , 645
    (S.D. 1995) (citation omitted). Sarah was caring for L.E.D. as part of her business
    activity.
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    [¶19.]       The third policy provision we must construe is: “A mutual exchange of
    like services is not considered compensation.” Valerie argues that Sarah provided
    care for free in exchange for the relationship between Joe and Mark and as part of
    what was expected of her having been raised on a Hutterite colony. But there are
    no facts to support the notion that Joe or Valerie exchanged any service equivalent
    to what Sarah provided in caring for Joe and Valerie’s children. The mutual-
    exchange-of-like-services clause does not apply here.
    [¶20.]       Finally, Valerie argues that because her complaint asserts a claim
    against Benjamin for negligent supervision — and he was not compensated and did
    not provide regular care of others — the business exclusion clause is not implicated
    against him. The insurance policy does not pay for bodily injury “resulting from
    activities related to the ‘business’ of an ‘insured’” “regardless of other causes or
    ‘occurrences’ that contribute to or aggravate the ‘bodily injury[.]’” Even assuming
    that Benjamin was somehow negligent or contributed to L.E.D.’s injury, the fact
    that L.E.D.’s injury resulted from Sarah’s business activities precludes coverage.
    [¶21.]       Affirmed.
    [¶22.]       GILBERTSON, Chief Justice, and ZINTER, MEIERHENRY, and
    SEVERSON, Justices, concur.
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Document Info

Docket Number: 25507

Citation Numbers: 2010 S.D. 93, 791 N.W.2d 799, 2010 SD 93, 2010 S.D. LEXIS 168, 2010 WL 4997387

Judges: Gilbertson, Konenkamp, Meierhenry, Severson, Zinter

Filed Date: 12/8/2010

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 11/12/2024