DocketNumber: No. CV95-0547865 S
Citation Numbers: 1995 Conn. Super. Ct. 13043
Judges: SHELDON, JUDGE.
Filed Date: 11/29/1995
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 4/18/2021
The plaintiff has countered the defendant's motion with her own opposing memorandum of law and two additional excerpts of transcript from the trial of her action against Landon. Her position, simply stated, is that the motion must be denied because there is a genuine issue of material fact as to Landon's intent or expectation to cause her injury, and thus as to coverage for her injuries under the Policy.
Factual and Procedural Background
This motion has been presented for decision on the following, undisputed set of facts. In 1989, when the plaintiff was thirteen years old, she was hired by Charles and Ann Marie Landon to work as a babysitter for their infant son. During that year, Charles Landon initiated a sexual relationship with the plaintiff, in which they engaged in sexual intercourse on more than thirty occasions. As a result of this relationship, and of the repeated sexual misconduct which characterized it, the plaintiff suffered severe emotional trauma.
In 1990, the plaintiff, through her next friend, brought suit against Landon in the Hartford Superior Court. The first count of her two-count complaint sounded in negligence. The second count alleged that defendant Landon had committed the intentional tort of sexual assault, in that:
Defendant Charles Landon intentionally had intercourse with the minor plaintiff when he knew or should have known that severe emotional trauma, bodily injury and/or physical injury would result.
Original Complaint, p. 2.
The Standard Fire Insurance Company which had issued a homeowners' insurance policy to Ann Marie Landon, provided defense counsel for Charles Landon but reserved its right to deny him coverage under the policy. In late 1994, no settlement having been reached despite the plaintiff's professed willingness to do so within the limits of the Landons' insurance policy, the case was tried without a jury CT Page 13045 before the Honorable Jon Blue.
At the trial, Ms. Doe testified as to the nature of her sexual relationship with Charles Landon and the emotional trauma she had suffered since the relationship ended. Defendant Landon, when called to testify, first admitted that in 1989, when the plaintiff was only twelve or thirteen years old, he had hired her to work as a babysitter for his son. When asked, however, whether he had then engaged in sexual intercourse with the plaintiff, Landon invoked his Fifth Amendment privilege against self-incrimination, refusing to say more than that in all of his dealings with the plaintiff, he had never done anything with the intent or expectation that it would cause her physical or emotional harm.
After hearing all of the evidence, Judge Blue ruled for defendant Landon on the negligence count, and for plaintiff Doe on the count alleging intentional sexual assault. "Trial Transcript — Verdict", pp. 4-5. As for the plaintiff's claim of negligence, Judge Blue concluded as follows:
[I]t seems to me that the intentional and negligence allegations are mutually exclusive[, a]nd that while it might be possible . . . to concoct a hypothetical where . . . one negligently has intercourse[,] that, certainly, . . . is not the situation here. And I don't think it's contended to be so by any party. . . . [W]hat we have here were intentional acts of intercourse, and it seems to me for that reason I must find for the defendant on Count One, which is the negligence count.
Id., pp. 3-4. So stating, Judge Blue ruled that the plaintiff was entitled to judgment on the Second Count of her complaint, declaring that
. . . there is overwhelming evidence, indeed there is proof beyond a reasonable doubt, if that standard were even necessary[, t]hat — to quote Count Two of the complaint: Charles Landon intentionally had intercourse with the CT Page 13046 minor plaintiff. And I believe that Count Two is amply established with respect to the plaintiff Jane Doe, so the verdict on Count Two must be in favor of the plaintiff Jane Doe.
Id., p. 5.
Turning next to the issue of damages, Judge Blue found that defendant Landon's initiation and continuation of his "terribly wrong relationship" with Ms. Doe were "criminal actions" which had caused her "profound damage." Id., pp. 10-11. Therefore, observing that this was a "case which would cry out for punitive damages, were punitive damages claimed,"id., p. 13, Judge Blue awarded the plaintiff compensatory damages in the amount of $521,174.75.
The plaintiff thereafter brought this action under General Statutes §
If a claim is made or a suit is brought against any insured for damages because of bodily injury or property damage caused by an occurrence to which this coverage applied, even if the claim or suit is false, we will
a. pay up to our limit of liability for the damages for which the insured is legally liable; and CT Page 13048
b. provide a defense at our expense by counsel of our choice. 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.
Policy, p. 10. To be covered by the plain language of this provision, any bodily injury in property damage for which a claim is made must have been "caused by" or "result[ed] from" an "occurrence."
An "occurrence," as defined by the policy, is
an accident, including exposure to conditions, which results, during the policy period, in
a. bodily injury; or
b. property damage.
Policy, p. 1. Under this definition, the term "accident" unmistakably refers to the event which is claimed to have caused bodily injury or property damage, not to the alleged consequences of that event. By explicitly limiting the policy's liability coverage to bodily injury and property damage "result[ing from]" an "accident," this language clearly excludes from coverage any injury or damage which has resulted, accidentally or otherwise, from any event which cannot fairly be described as an "accident."
Though the policy does not define the term "accident," the common meaning of that term, which any reasonable insured must be thought to have governed his rights under the policy, is well understood. That term, if not otherwise defined in a liability insurance policy,
is to be construed in its ordinary meaning of an "unexpected happening."
Commercial Contractors Corporation v. American Ins. Co.,
In this case, there is no question whatsoever that the "happening" which resulted in Ms. Doe's claimed injuries and losses was "expected" in every sense of the word. That "happening" — which was actually a lengthy series of "happenings," each an act of sexual intercourse by the insured, Charles Landon, with the then minor plaintiff — was a conscious course of conduct which, as the plaintiff alleged in her Original Complaint and proved, to the Court's satisfaction, at trial, Landon intentionally engaged in. That an act which is intentionally engaged in is not "unexpected" is a self-evident proposition which requires no further analysis. Therefore, since the record clearly establishes that the events which caused Ms. Doe's injuries were themselves intended, it also conclusively demonstrates that those events did not constitute an "occurrence" within the meaning of the subject insurance policy. For that reason, the defendant insurer's motion for summary judgment must be granted.
The Court leaves the decision of that issue to another forum, where it may prove dispositive of a pending claim.
Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, the defendant's Motion for Summary Judgment is hereby granted.
Michael R. Sheldon, Judge