Danny Ray Harrell v. The Minnesota Mutual Life Insurance Company ( 1998 )


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  •                  IN THE SUPREME COURT OF TENNESSEE
    AT KNOXVILLE
    FOR PUBLICATION
    Filed: September 3, 1996
    DANNY RAY HARRELL,               )
    )       KNOX CHANCERY
    Plaintiff-Appellant,       )
    )
    )       HON. H. DAVID CATE,
    Vs.                              )         CHANCELLOR
    )
    THE MINNESOTA MUTUAL LIFE        )
    INSURANCE COMPANY,               )
    )     NO. 03-S-01-9508-CH-00098
    Defendant-Appellee.        )
    For Appellant:                   For Appellee:
    Rufus W. Beamer, Jr.             Arthur G. Seymour, Jr.
    Knoxville, Tennessee             Robert L. Kahn
    FRANTZ, McCONNELL & SEYMOUR
    Knoxville, Tennessee
    OPINION
    COURT OF APPEALS REVERSED;
    REMANDED TO TRIAL COURT.                          ANDERSON, J
    We granted this appeal to determine whether we should retain "the
    Distretti Rule1" adopted by this Court sixty-seven years ago. The rule provides
    that before a death will be considered accidental under the terms of an insurance
    contract, the means, as well as the result, must be involuntary, unexpected, and
    unusual.
    In this case, the Chancellor held that the plaintiff's death in an automobile
    collision was caused by her driving under the influence of an intoxicant, and it
    therefore was not "death by an accidental injury which was unintended,
    unexpected, and unforeseen" and, as a result, benefits were not payable on the
    insurance contract. The Court of Appeals, while noting that the rule had been
    criticized and rejected by a number of jurisdictions, nevertheless affirmed.
    After careful consideration, we have determined that we should join the
    growing number of jurisdictions which have abandoned the distinction between
    "accidental means" and "accidental results." W e do so because the distinction is
    contrary to the understanding and reasonable expectations of the average
    insurance policyholder and contrary to the plain meaning of the terms of the
    insurance contract. We also think there is a fundamental flaw in analyzing
    insurance contract terms under tort principles, such as foreseeability. We,
    therefore, overrule Distretti and its progeny, reverse the Court of Appeals, and
    remand this case to the trial court for entry of a judgment in favor of the plaintiff.
    1
    Mutua l Life Ins. Co . of New York v. D istretti, 
    159 Tenn. 138
    , 17 S.W .2d 11 (1929).
    -2-
    BACKGROUND
    On December 18, 1990, at approximately 9:30 p.m., Robin Denise Harrell
    died as a result of injuries she sustained in an automobile collision on
    Maynardville Highway, a four-lane road divided by a grass median in Knox
    County, Tennessee. The car Robin Harrell was driving crossed the grass
    median and struck two southbound cars. Tests performed on a blood sample
    taken after Harrell’s death revealed a blood-alcohol level of .20 percent.2
    At the time of her death, Robin Harrell and her husband, Danny Ray
    Harrell, the plaintiff in this appeal, were insured under a credit life policy issued
    by the defendant, The Minnesota Mutual Life Insurance Company (hereafter
    “Minnesota Life”). This policy provides for payment of the balance of the
    mortgage on the home owned by Robin and Danny Ray Harrell in the event
    either suffered death by “accidental injury.” At the time of Robin Harrell’s death,
    the mortgage balance was approximately $48,000. With regard to coverage for
    accidental death, the policy provided as follows:
    What does death by accidental injury mean?
    Death by accidental injury as used in this certificate
    means that your death results, directly and
    independently of all other causes, from an accidental
    drowning or from an accidental injury which was
    unintended, unexpected and unforeseen. . . .
    Danny Ray Harrell filed a claim with Minnesota Life for payment under the
    policy, but Minnesota Life denied the claim. Harrell, thereafter, brought this
    action seeking to recover under the policy. For answer, Minnesota Life denied
    that Robin Harrell died from “an accidental injury which was unintended,
    2
    That level is more than twice the .08 percent required to “create a presumption” that
    Harrell was “under the influence” of an intoxicant and her driving ability was impaired. Tenn. Code
    Ann. § 55-10-408(b)(1995 Supp.).
    -3-
    unexpected, and unforeseen.” Instead, Minnesota Life argued that her death
    was the foreseeable consequence of driving an automobile under the influence
    of alcohol.
    Following a bench trial, the Chancellor, relying upon a prior decision of
    this Court, Mutual Life Insurance Co. of New York v. Distretti, 
    159 Tenn. 138
    , 
    17 S.W.2d 11
     (1929), and a long line of authority applying “the Distretti rule,”
    dismissed the case, finding specifically that Robin Harrell’s death did not result
    “directly and independently of all other causes . . . from an accidental injury
    which was unintended, unexpected, and unforeseen.” Danny Harrell appealed,
    arguing that the Distretti rule should be modified or overturned. While noting that
    the rule has been criticized and rejected by a number of jurisdictions, the Court
    of Appeals affirmed the Chancellor, stating that “Tennessee remains committed
    to the rule that before a death will be considered accidental the means as well
    as the result must be involuntary, unexpected, and unusual.” (Emphasis
    added.)
    Thereafter, we granted the plaintiff permission to appeal to consider this
    important question of insurance law -- whether recovery under an accidental
    death insurance policy requires that the means causing death, as well as the
    resulting death, be involuntary, unexpected, and unusual.
    ACCIDENTAL DEATH
    In this appeal, Danny Harrell urges this court to abandon the Distretti rule
    which differentiates between "accidental means" and "accidental results." Harrell
    argues that this Court should adopt a rule that would allow recovery if death is
    accidental in the common meaning of the word, regardless of the nature of the
    means which precipitated the accidental death, and asserts such a rule is
    -4-
    consistent with the plain understanding and objectively reasonable expectations
    of the average insured.
    Minnesota Life responds that the longstanding rule established by this
    Court in Distretti, that death is not “accidental” if it is a foreseeable result of a
    voluntary act, should be reaffirmed, and that Robin Harrell’s death was a
    foreseeable result of her driving an automobile under the influence of an
    intoxicant.
    We begin our analysis of this issue with a review of the case law in this
    jurisdiction. The decisions of the lower courts in this case were based upon this
    Court’s decision in Distretti interpreting accidental death. There, Distretti was
    robbed at gunpoint by bandits. As the bandits were fleeing, Distretti armed
    himself, ran outside the store, and opened fire on them. The bandits shot back,
    and Distretti was killed. His wife brought suit to recover under a life insurance
    policy which paid “upon receipt of due proof that such death resulted from bodily
    injury effected solely through external violent and accidental means."
    (Emphasis added.) The Distretti court denied recovery, concluding that
    Distretti’s death was a foreseeable result of his voluntary act of chasing the
    bandits and shooting at them, and therefore, his death was not produced by
    “accidental means,” for purposes of the insurance policy.
    The distinction adopted by the Distretti court between death by “accidental
    means” and “accidental death” was explained succinctly by Professor Couch as
    follows:
    [A]ccidental death is an unintended and undesigned result arising
    from acts voluntarily done, whereas death by accidental means is a
    result arising from acts unintentionally done or events undesignedly
    -5-
    occurring. The term ‘accidental means’ refers to the occurrence or
    happening which produces the result, rather than the result; it is
    concerned with the cause of the harm rather than the character of
    the harm.
    10 Couch, Insurance 2d (Rev. ed.) § 41:29, pp. 44-45 (1982 & Supp. 1995)
    (footnotes omitted). Therefore, under the Distretti rule, a death that is caused by
    an insured’s intentional act, or is a foreseeable consequence of an insured’s
    voluntary act, is not considered “accidental.” Though the distinction arose in the
    Distretti case and other cases where the specific term “accidental means” was
    used in insurance contracts, the distinction has been applied in cases, such as
    this one, where the term is not a part of the insurance contract. See, e.g.,
    Spears v. Commercial Ins. Co. of Newark, N.J., 
    866 S.W.2d 544
     (Tenn. App.
    1993). The Distretti rule has never been overruled and has been approved and
    applied in various contexts in later Tennessee cases. See, e.g., Seeley v. Pilot
    Fire & Cas. Co., 
    432 S.W.2d 58
     (Tenn. 1968); Baker v. National Life & Acc. Ins.
    Co., 
    201 Tenn. 247
    , 
    298 S.W.2d 715
     (1956); Jones v. Fireman’s Fund American
    Life Ins. Co., 
    731 S.W.2d 532
     (Tenn. App. 1986); Nicholas v. Provident Life and
    Acc. Ins. Co., 
    61 Tenn. App. 633
    , 
    457 S.W.2d 536
     (1970). Indeed, the
    distinction between “accidental means” and “accidental results” has been applied
    in Tennessee in a case similar to the Harrell case to deny recovery under an
    accidental death policy for an insured party who had been killed in a one car
    accident while intoxicated. Hobbs v. Provident Life & Acc. Ins. Co., 
    535 S.W.2d 864
     (Tenn. App. 1975). The Hobbs court concluded that “the danger of injury or
    death as result of operating a motor vehicle while intoxicated is a foreseeable
    one and the appellate courts of this State have repeatedly held that death is not
    caused by accidental means, within the meaning of an insurance policy if it is a
    foreseeable result of a voluntary and unnecessary act or course of conduct of
    the insured.” Id., 535 S.W.2d at 866.
    -6-
    While Tennessee has remained committed to the distinction between
    “accidental means” and “accidental death,” commentators and many other courts
    have criticized the distinction as illusory and contrary to the normal expectations
    of the average policy holder.
    The rejection of the distinction between "accidental means" and
    "accidental results" was first articulated by Justice Cardozo more than sixty years
    ago in dissent in Landress v. Phoenix Mut. Life Ins. Co., 
    291 U.S. 491
    , 
    54 S. Ct. 461
    , 463, 
    78 L. Ed. 934
     (1934). There, the insured died after suffering
    sunstroke. The majority said that since the insured voluntarily exposed himself
    to the sun and there were no unforeseen intervening causes, the death was not
    caused by accidental means. Id., 291 U.S. at 496, 54 S. Ct. at 462. Justice
    Cardozo strongly disagreed:
    The attempted distinction between accidental results and
    accidental means will plunge this branch of the law into a
    Serbonian Bog. Probably it is true to say that in the strictest sense
    and dealing with the region of physical nature there is no such thing
    as an accident. . . . On the other hand, the average man is
    convinced that there is, and so certainly is the man who takes out a
    policy of accident insurance. It is his reading of the policy that is to
    be accepted as our guide, with the help of the established rule that
    ambiguities and uncertainties are to be resolved against the
    company. . . . When a man has died in such a way that his death
    is spoken of as an accident, he has died because of an accident,
    and hence by accidental means. . . . If there was no accident in
    the means, there was none in the result, for the two are
    inseparable. . . . There was an accident throughout, or there was
    no accident at all.
    Id., 291 U.S. at 499, 54 S. Ct at 463 (Cardozo, J., dissenting). Justice Cardozo’s
    views in dissent have now gained the support of the great majority of
    jurisdictions.
    -7-
    Professor Appleman also illustrates the fallacy of the distinction as
    follows:
    Almost every action we take has some element of design; if we
    drive an automobile upon the highway, where another collided with
    us, could this not have been foreseeable, or at least within the
    realm of potential so far as the “means” were concerned? Every
    instance where a person walks, or jumps, and slips or falls, comes
    within a like category. To permit a rigid construction of such
    expressions is to permit a deception to be practiced upon the
    public. . . .
    1A Appleman, Insurance Law & Practice, § 363 at p. 492 (1981 & Supp. 1995).
    Although a few courts in other jurisdictions still cling to the distinction,3
    most courts have either abolished the distinction or refused to recognize it in the
    first place when considering whether a particular death or injury is accidental. 4
    Under the more recent cases, the unexpected consequences of an individual’s
    voluntary behavior provide the accidental element for purposes of an insurance
    policy. Carroll v. CUNA Mut. Ins. Soc., 894 P.2d at 751.
    3
    See, e.g., W eil v. Federa l Kem per Life A ssur. C o., 
    866 P.2d 774
     (Cal. 1994)(In Bank );
    Smith v. Continental Cas. Co., 
    203 A.2d 168
     (D .C. App . 1964); Evans v. Metropolitan Life Ins. Co.,
    
    174 P.2d 961
     (W ash. 1946).
    4
    INA Life In s. Co . v. Bru ndin , 
    533 P.2d 236
     (Ala ska 19 75); Knight v. Metropolitan Life Ins.
    Co., 
    437 P.2d 416
    , 420 (Ariz. 1986 ); Carroll v. CUNA Mut. Ins. Soc., 
    894 P.2d 746
     (Colo. 1995);
    Gulf Life Ins. Co. v. Nash, 
    97 So. 2d 4
    , 10 (Fla. 1 957); Dawson v. Bankers’ Life Co., 247 N.W .
    279, 282 (Iowa 19 33); Fryman for Fryman v. Pilot Life Ins. Co., 704 S.W .2d 205, 206 (Ky. 1986);
    Schonberg v. New York Life Ins. Co., 104 So . 2d 171 (L a. 1958) ; Collins v. Nationwide Life Ins.
    Co., 294 N.W .2d 194, 1 96 (Mic h. 1980) ; Taylor v. New York Life Ins. Co. 
    222 N.W. 912
     (Minn.
    1929); Murphy v. Travelers Ins. Co., 2 N.W .2d 576, 5 80 (Ne b. 1942) ; Catania v. State Farm Life
    Ins. Co., 
    598 P.2d 631
    , 633 (Nev. 19 79); Scott v. New Empire Ins. Co., 
    400 P.2d 953
    , 955 (N.M.
    1965); Burr v. Co mm ercia l Tra veler s Mu t. Acc . Ass ’n, 67 N.E.2 d 248, 25 2 (N.Y. 19 46); Cooper v.
    New York Life Ins. Co., 
    180 P.2d 654
     (O kla. 194 7); Botts v. Hartford Acc. & Indem. Co., 
    585 P.2d 657
    , 660 (Or. 197 8); Beckham v. Travelers Ins. Co., 
    225 A.2d 532
    , 534 (Pa. 196 7); W est v.
    Comm ercial Ins. Co. of Newark, N.J., 
    528 A.2d 339
     (R .I. 1987); Republic Nat. Life Ins. Co. v.
    Heyward, 536 S.W .2d 549, 5 57 (Te x. 1976 ); Carter v. Standard Acc. Ins. Co., 
    238 P. 259
    , 275
    (Utah 1 925); W iger v. Mut. Life Ins. Co. of New York, 236 N.W . 534, 538 (W is. 1931); W ickman v.
    Northwestern Nat. Ins. Co., 908 F.2 d 1077 (1st Cir. 19 90); W hitaker v. State Farm Mu t. Auto Ins.
    Co, 
    768 P.2d 320
     (Ka n. App. 19 89); Cons ume rs Life Ins . Co. v. Sm ith, 587 A.2d 1119,1124-25
    (Md. Ap p. 1991) ; see also John D . Ingram and Lynn e R. Os tfeld, The Distinction Between
    Accidental Means and Accidental Results in Accidental Death Insurance, 12 Fla. St. U. L. Rev. 1,
    9 (1984 ); 1A App lema n, Insurance Law and Practice, § 360, pp. 475-76.
    -8-
    A good example of the persuasive analysis used in such cases is
    provided by the Texas Supreme Court, which abandoned the distinction between
    "accidental means" and "accidental results," reasoning as follows:
    Texas courts have waded through Justice Cardozo’s Serbonian
    bog, and we are now convinced that the terms ‘accidental death’
    and ‘death by accidental means’ as those terms are used in
    insurance policies, must be regarded as legally synonymous unless
    there is a definition in the insurance contract itself which requires a
    different construction. These terms in an insurance contract should
    be given their ordinary and popular meaning according to the
    understanding of the average man; the court’s guide should not be
    the technical meaning of the words used, but rather the intention of
    the parties as inferred from the contract as a whole. A fine
    distinction between means and results would never occur to
    an average policyholder, and the insurer should not be able to
    escape liability by resort to such a technical definition. If the
    insurer wishes to distinguish between accidental results and
    injuries caused by accidental means, he should do so
    expressly, so as to give the policyholder clear notice of any
    limitations of liability which the insurer wishes to impose by
    use of the latter term.
    Republic Nat. Life Ins. Co. v. Heyward, 536 S.W.2d at 557 (emphasis added).
    Like the Texas Supreme Court, almost every court rejecting or abandoning the
    distinction has found the distinction contrary to both the plain meaning of the
    terms and the understanding and reasonable expectations of the average
    policyholder. See, e.g., Carroll v. CUNA Mut. Ins. Soc., 894 P.2d at 753; Buck v.
    Gulf Life Ins. Co., 548 So. 2d at 718. In addition, many courts have concluded
    that the distinction itself arises from an inappropriate importation of the tort
    concept of foreseeability into private insurance contracts.
    For example, the Michigan Supreme Court, in Collins v. Nationwide Life
    Ins., explained that “neither the level of foreseeability requisite for tort liability nor
    for criminal recklessness is sufficient to render a mishap a 'nonaccident' when
    conduct is measured against the terms of an accidental death insurance policy.”
    -9-
    Id., 294 N.W.2d at 196. In a similar fashion, the Kentucky Supreme Court
    observed that the “fundamental flaw” with the distinction between accidental
    means and accidental results is “that it subjects contract terms to analysis under
    tort principles, such as fault and foreseeability.” Fryman v. Pilot Life Ins. Co.,
    704 S.W.2d at 206. In rejecting the distinction, the Kentucky Court said “we are
    reluctant to analyze contract terms under principles which have technical
    meaning in other areas of the law.” Id.
    After careful consideration and a thorough review of the cases on the
    subject, we are persuaded that the better reasoned, more logical approach is to
    abandon the distinction between "accidental means" and "accidental results."
    Tennessee, therefore, joins the growing number of jurisdictions which have
    emerged from the “Serbonian bog.”
    The analysis used in construing insurance contracts is well settled. Like
    other contracts, insurance contracts should be construed so as to give effect to
    the intention and express language of the parties. Tata v. Nichols, 
    848 S.W.2d 649
    , 650 (Tenn. 1993). Words in an insurance policy are given their common
    and ordinary meaning, with ambiguous language construed against the
    insurance company and in favor of the insured. Id. The distinction we had
    adopted in Distretti is contrary to those now familiar rules of construction. In our
    view, an insured should not have to consult a long line of case law or law review
    articles and treatises to determine the coverage he or she is purchasing under
    an insurance policy. Policy language should be given its plain meaning, unless a
    technical meaning is clearly provided in the insurance policy. Elsner v. Walker,
    
    879 S.W.2d 852
     (Tenn. App. 1994). As the Texas Supreme Court recognized, it
    is inconceivable that the average insured would understand the fine distinction
    between "accidental means" and "accidental results."
    -10-
    In addition, we agree that the importation of the tort principle of
    foreseeability into the interpretation of a private insurance contract is
    inappropriate. As Justice Mosk observed in dissent in Weil v. Federal Kemper
    Life Assur. Co., “[t]he insurance company does not represent the public safety
    concerns of society but the commercial interest of its owners. Nor was the
    company forced to issue the policy; it voluntarily did so for the purpose of
    profiting from the transaction.” Id., 866 P.2d at 806. Insurance companies draft
    the policies they sell and are, therefore, free to exclude injury or death that
    results from reckless and foolhardy acts. With simplicity and clarity of expression
    they may remove all doubt. Knight v. Metropolitan Life Ins. Co., 437 P.2d at 420.
    Accordingly, Distretti, its progenitors and progeny are overruled. From
    this day forward, in Tennessee law there is no distinction between "accidental
    death" and death by "accidental means" in determining coverage under an
    insurance policy. Instead, if death is the unanticipated and unexpected result of
    an intentional, voluntary act, it is accidental in the ordinary and plain sense of the
    word and recovery is available under an accidental death insurance policy.
    Accidental deaths or injuries which are included within this definition, but which
    the insurance company does not intend be covered, can be specifically excluded
    in the insurance policy.
    Where, as here, the insured died as the result of an intentional act, such
    as voluntary intoxication, but did not intend or expect death to result, such death
    is accidental for the purposes of an accidental death policy. Accordingly, we
    conclude that Robin Harrell’s death resulted from an “accidental injury which was
    unintended, unexpected and unforeseen.”
    -11-
    CONCLUSION
    Because we conclude that the distinction between “accidental means” and
    “accidental results” is illusory, for the reasons previously articulated, we abandon
    the distinction. Accordingly, the Court of Appeals’ judgment is reversed, and the
    cause is remanded to the trial court for entry of judgment in favor of the plaintiff,
    Danny Ray Harrell. Costs of this appeal are taxed to the defendant, The
    Minnesota Life Insurance Company, for which execution may issue if necessary.
    ________________________________
    RILEY ANDERSON, JUSTICE
    CONCUR:
    Birch, C.J.
    Drowota, Reid, and White, JJ.
    -12-