Connolly, J.
Jennifer Van Kleek agreed to watch Walter and Janet Chapman's dog while the Chapmans were out of town. While Van Kleek was caring for the dog, it bit her on her lower lip. Van Kleek filed a claim with the Chapmans' homeowner's insurer, Farmers Insurance Exchange (Farmers). Farmers rejected the claim because Van Kleek was also an insured and the policy excludes coverage for bodily injuries to insureds. The policy defines
The Chapmans planned to take a trip from July 2 to 12, 2011, and asked Van Kleek, a family friend, to watch their dog. The dog, D.J., was a "Chow" weighing about 60 pounds. Walter Chapman testified that chows are "territorial" and that D.J. was not allowed out in public. Unless the Chapmans were home, they confined D.J. to the basement. When he needed to be outside, the Chapmans let D.J. into a fenced-in area behind their house.
Van Kleek and Walter Chapman both testified that the Chapmans instructed Van Kleek to feed, water, and let D.J. into the backyard while the Chapmans were gone. Van Kleek testified that she "assume[d]" that she "would have to go find [D.J.]" if he got loose or take him to a veterinarian if he became ill. Van Kleek had permission to stay at the Chapmans' house to make caring for D.J. more convenient, but the Chapmans did not compensate Van Kleek.
Van Kleek stayed at the Chapmans' house from July 2, 2011, to the morning of July 5. She was the only person in the house during this period. On July 5, Chapman let D.J. into the enclosed backyard. After she let D.J. back into the house, she bent over to give D.J. a biscuit, "just showing him affection." Van Kleek testified that D.J. "lunged" or "charge[d]" at her as she was bent over and bit her lip. The bite removed the "fatty part" of Van Kleek's lower lip, requiring reconstructive surgery.
The Chapmans are the named insureds on a homeowner's policy issued by Farmers.
The policy also includes a number of exclusions from cover-age under section II, including bodily injury to "any
Van Kleek sent a claim to Farmers for her injuries from the bite, asserting that Walter Chapman was liable and that his liability was covered under section II of the policy. Farmers denied the claim because Van Kleek was "legally responsible" for D.J. and, therefore, the intra-insured exclusion applied to her claim. In a denial letter sent to Van Kleek, Farmers stated that she was "clearly in a position of responsibility with regard to the ongoing care and protection" of D.J. and that had D.J. bitten someone else, "the injured party could have potentially recovered for his/ her damages from [Van Kleek] to the extent of [her] negligence."
After Farmers denied her claim, Van Kleek filed a complaint for declaratory judgment. Van Kleek alleged that she "owed no legal duty to any third party or third-party's property" while feeding and watering D.J. because D.J. was "confined in the Chapmans' home" and not in her custody. Van Kleek requested a judgment declaring that she was not an insured; that section II of the policy covered her claim against Walter Chapman; and that, as a beneficiary of the Chapmans' policy, she was entitled to attorney fees and costs.
Farmers moved for summary judgment, arguing that Van Kleek was "legally responsible" for D.J. and that the intra-insured exclusion barred her claim. Van Kleek also moved for summary judgment, asserting that there was no genuine issue of material fact that the policy covered her claim against Walter Chapman.
The district court granted Farmers' motion for summary judgment. The court concluded that "legally responsible" is not ambiguous and framed the issue as whether Van Kleek had "legal control" over D.J. when the dog bit her. Emphasizing that Van Kleek was the only person responsible for feeding, watering, and letting D.J. into the backyard while the Chapmans were gone, the court determined that she was "legally responsible" for the dog. The court concluded that the policy did not cover her bodily injury because of the intra-insured exclusion.
Van Kleek assigns, restated, that the district court erred by (1) granting Farmers'
The interpretation of an insurance policy presents a question of law that we decide independently of the trial court.
In reviewing a summary judgment, an appellate court views the evidence in a light most favorable to the party against whom the judgment was granted and gives that party the benefit of all reasonable inferences deducible from the evidence.
Van Kleek argues that she was not "an insured" because she was not "legally responsible" for D.J. Initially, she asserts that the term "`legally responsible for'" animals is ambiguous because it might refer to a relationship between herself and D.J., but she admits that this is not the "most logical" reading of the language.
We begin by reciting some principles of insurance policy interpretation. An insurance policy is a contract, and we construe it like any other contract, according to the meaning of the terms that the parties have used.
Courts have generally interpreted "legally responsible" to mean a legal duty created by custody, control, or possession of the designated property.
The court reasoned that whether the mechanic was "legally responsible" for the boat depended on whether he owed duties or was open to liability arising from his dominion over the craft:
Under this definition, the court held that the mechanic was "legally responsible" for the boat when it exploded. The mechanic was "in possession, charge and control of the boat" and was authorized to exercise his "independent judgment with respect to what was necessary to be done."
Similarly, a court determined that a person was "legally responsible" for an animal because he had the power to exercise control over it, even if he did not intend to exercise control. In United Services Auto. Ass'n v. State Farm,
The insurer argued that the grandfather was not an insured because he was on the premises to watch his grandchild, not care for the horses. The court disagreed, reasoning that the grandfather's general responsibility over the premises extended to the animals corralled outside the house:
So, despite the lack of a "purpose" to exercise control over the horse, the court held that the grandfather was "legally responsible" for the animal.
In a case with facts analogous to those before us, the Wisconsin Court of Appeals held that a person was "legally responsible" for a dog she was caring for as a favor to vacationing friends. In Malik v. American Family Mut. Ins. Co.,
Similar to Van Kleek's argument, Malik argued that a reasonable insured would understand the "legally responsible" language to extend coverage "so that if a person who is legally responsible for the Hermans' dog becomes liable to a third person, the person responsible for the dog, as well as the Hermans, is covered under the policy."
We conclude that Farmers is entitled to summary judgment because there is no genuine issue that Van Kleek was "legally responsible" for D.J. In the context of homeowner's insurance policies, coverage for a person "legally responsible" for designated property extends to those "under a duty to use or operate the designated
The control Van Kleek exercised over D.J. obligated her to exercise care to prevent unreasonable risks of harm to third parties from DJ.'s behavior. Van Kleek testified that she was responsible for feeding, watering, and letting D.J. in and out of the house while the Chapmans were away. She also assumed that if D.J. got loose, she "would have to go find him," and she testified that she would have sought veterinary care if D.J. became sick. Van Kleek alone exercised control over D.J.'s position relative to the outside world. That she did not breach a duty of care by, for example, carelessly leaving the gate open or bringing D.J. into "the public domain where third parties reside,"
Van Kleek was an insured under the policy because she was "legally responsible" for the Chapmans' dog. As an insured, the unambiguous terms of the policy exclude coverage of her injury.
Accordingly, Farmers is entitled to summary judgment.
AFFIRMED.