USCA1 Opinion
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
____________________
No. 95-1608
DRYDEN OIL COMPANY OF NEW ENGLAND, INC., DRYDEN OIL COMPANY,
INC., and DRYDEN OIL COMPANY OF PENNSYLVANIA, INC.,
Plaintiffs, Appellants,
v.
THE TRAVELERS INDEMNITY COMPANY,
THE TRAVELERS INDEMNITY COMPANY OF ILLINOIS, and
AMERICAN MANUFACTURERS MUTUAL INSURANCE COMPANY,
Defendants, Appellees.
____________________
APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS
[Hon. Nathaniel M. Gorton, U.S. District Judge]
___________________
____________________
Cyr, Circuit Judge,
_____________
Bownes, Senior Circuit Judge,
____________________
and Boudin, Circuit Judge.
_____________
____________________
Darragh K. Kasakoff, with whom Seder & Chandler was on brief
___________________
_________________
appellants.
John A. Nadas,
_____________
and
with whom Bret A. Fausett,
_______________
Choate, Hall & Stewart
_______________________
were
on brief
Elizabeth M. McCar
__________________
for appellees
Travel
Indemnity Company and Travelers Indemnity Company of Illinois.
Karl S. Vasiloff, with whom
_________________
Larson
______
were on
brief
for
Catherine M. Colinvaux and
______________________
appellee
American
Insurance Company.
____________________
August 5, 1996
____________________
Manufacturers
Zell
____
Mut
CYR, Circuit Judge.
CYR, Circuit Judge
______________
Company of
Company
district
New
England,
Dryden
of Pennsylvania
Oil Company,
(collectively:
ruling rejecting
their
and
Dryden Oil
Dryden
"Dryden") challenge
Oil
claim
that defendants-
appellees, The Travelers Indemnity Company, The
Travelers Indem-
nity
court
Plaintiffs-appellants
Company of Illinois (collectively:
can Manufacturers
"Travelers") and Ameri-
Mutual Insurance Company
("American Mutual"),
are obligated to defend and indemnify Dryden in connection with a
lawsuit brought against
Dryden by Raymond
King, trustee of
150
Boulevard
("Worcester
Worcester
Dryden's former
Center
landlord.
Trust
We affirm in
remand in part.
part, and
the
Trust"),
reverse and
BACKGROUND
BACKGROUND
__________
A.
A.
The Historical Facts
The Historical Facts
____________________
For the period July 30,
1986, to July 30, 1987, defen-
dant-appellee Travelers issued Dryden (i) a primary comprehensive
general liability insurance policy
("primary liability policy"),
which included "property damage" and "personal
and
(ii) a
policy").
1987,
catastrophic
For
umbrella liability
the period
Travelers issued
December 31,
Dryden
injury" coverage,
policy
1986, to
property
and
("umbrella
December 31,
inland
marine
insurance policy ("property insurance policy") as well, affording
coverage "against all risks
of direct physical loss
Travelers
with
provided
Dryden
similar primary
or damage."
and
umbrella
liability coverage to July 30, 1988.
Defendant-appellee American
Mutual
provided
primary
comprehensive
liability
coverage
to
Dryden from July 31, 1988, to December 1, 1989.
On December 29,
Center Boulevard
("White
1986, Dryden had leased
(the "Property")
& Bagley").
Thereafter,
from White
150 Worcester
& Bagley
Dryden used the
Company
Property for
mixing and manufacturing industrial lubricants and oils, as White
& Bagley
had done for many years.
On December 30, 1986, Dryden
listed the Property both in its primary and its umbrella liabili-
ty policies with Travelers.
its property insurance
Later, Dryden listed the Property in
policy with Travelers and
its comprehen-
sive liability policies with American Mutual as well.1
On
December
31,
1986, White
Property to the White & Bagley
1987, the White
&
Bagley
Liquidation Trust.
& Bagley Liquidation Trust sold
conveyed the
On August 28,
the Property to
Worcester Trust, together with an assignment of the Dryden lease.
The
latter transfer occurred
the
results of
an
conducted pursuant
after Worcester Trust
environmental
assessment
to Mass. Gen. L. ch.
of
had learned
the
Property
21E ("Massachusetts Oil
and Hazardous
which
Material
indicated
remediation."
Release Prevention
"limited
Dryden
contamination"
continued to
lease
and Response
requiring
the
Act"),
"minimal
Property until
December 31, 1988.
B.
B.
The Litigation
The Litigation
______________
____________________
1As Dryden
afforded
in any
need not
does not
contend that
the liability
coverages
under the American Mutual and Travelers policies differ
respect material
to the claims
discuss either the
presented on
Travelers umbrella or
Mutual primary liability policies.
appeal, we
the American
In
Massachusetts
August
1990,
Superior
Worcester
Court
Trust
against,
brought
suit
in
alios,
_____
White
&
inter
_____
Bagley, the White & Bagley Liquidation Trust, Dryden and Prescott
Bagley, President
"Owners/
of Dryden
Oil of
New England
Operators"), alleging, among
(collectively:
other things,
that there
had been "spills or releases of oil, industrial lubricants and/or
hazardous material
during
the
transfer,
manufacturing process" throughout
the
under
storing,
the time White &
mixing
and
Bagley owned
Property, which continued while Dryden occupied the Property
its lease
with
White
& Bagley
and
resulted in
contamination from "oil and/or hazardous material."
severe
After the pleadings were closed, three
against,
inter alios,
_____ _____
the
counts remained
Owners/Operators, including
Dryden.
Counts I and II charged Dryden with liability for past and future
response
costs imposed upon
Gen. L. ch.
for
21E, for damage to
related attorney fees,
"releases"
at the
liability for
"improper,
Dryden,
Worcester Trust, pursuant
Count
damages sustained
unsafe
and
inter alios,
_____ _____
hazardous materials."
Dryden alone,
real and personal property,
incurred in connection
Property.
otherwise
III charged
by Worcester
negligent
and
with alleged
Dryden
Trust due
manner"
"stored oil, industrial
Five
to Mass.
in
with
to the
which
lubricants and/or
additional counts, directed
against
demanded damages for past and future losses caused
Worcester Trust due to
Dryden's breaches of its
lease,2 various
____________________
2The lease obligated
materials
Dryden to:
(1) pay
for all supplies,
and labor associated with cleaning and maintaining the
Property; (2) reimburse
the lessor for repairs
and replacements
forms
of "waste"
personal
committed
on
the
Property,3
property, and engaging in unfair
practices in its
conversion
of
and deceptive acts or
leasehold relationship with Worcester
Trust in
violation of Mass. Gen. L. ch. 93A,
In due
course,
declined to defend
action
alleged violations
Travelers
and
after Travelers
or indemnify,
for declaratory
relief,
of Mass. Gen.
American
2 and 11.
and
American
Dryden brought
breach
of
Mutual removed
district court pursuant to 28 U.S.C.
a state
contract,
L. ch. 93A
Mutual
and
& ch. 176D.
the
action
court
for
Once
to federal
1332, 1441, Dryden sought
____________________
necessitated by Dryden's negligent or willful acts; (3) surrender
the Property in rentable condition; and (4) pay all attorney fees
and expenses
default by
incurred by the lessor in the
Dryden under
the lease.
with the lessor's approval,
with
all applicable
event of a breach or
The lease
allowed Dryden,
to alter the Property in
federal, state
and
local laws,
ordinances and regulations.
3For example, Count VI alleged as follows:
a.
Lessee failed
to maintain
and re-
conformity
statutes,
pair the property in satisfactory manner;
b.
Lessee physically damaged the Prop-
c.
Lessee failed to remove trash which
erty;
it left strewn throughout the Property;
d.
Lessee made alterations, additions,
improvements or changes to the Property without the consent
of the lessor and
tion of applicable
es, rules,
in viola-
laws, statutes, ordinanc-
orders, regulations
and require-
ments of federal, state and local government;
e.
Lessee
willfully
and
indiscrimi-
nately removed property and fixtures from the
premises causing damage to the realty;
f.
trade
Lessee abandoned personal property,
fixtures
and
equipment,
making
the
premises unrentable; and
g.
. . . lessee caused the
oil and/or hazardous material.
release of
summary judgment on its claim
for declaratory relief relating to
the alleged
The
duty to defend.
defendant insurers
responded
with cross-motions for summary judgment on all three counts.
district
court ultimately
adopted the
judge and
entered summary
judgment for
Mutual on all counts.
report
of a
Travelers and
The
magistrate
American
Dryden appealed.
II
II
DISCUSSION4
DISCUSSION
__________
Under Massachusetts law, a
liability insurance carrier
must defend an action against its insured if the allegations "are
___________
`reasonably
susceptible' of an interpretation that they state or
adumbrate a
claim covered by the policy terms . . . ."
GRE Ins.
________
Group v. Metropolitan Boston Hous. Partnership, Inc., 61 F.3d 79,
_____
___________________________________________
81 (1st
Cir. 1995) (quoting Liberty Mut. Ins. Co. v. SCA Servs.
______________________
__________
Inc., 588 N.E.2d
____
only
1346, 1347 (Mass. 1992)).
show, through general
liability
claim falls
Servs., Inc.
____________
(Mass. 1995).
The "complaint need
allegations, a possibility
within
the
insurance
v. Transportation Ins. Co., 646
_________________________
The duty
that the
coverage."
N.E.2d 394,
SCA
___
397
to indemnify is defined less generously,
see Travelers Ins. Co. v.
___ ___________________
Waltham Indus. Labs. Corp.,
__________________________
883 F.2d
1092, 1099 (1st Cir. 1989) (citing Sterilite Corp. v. Continental
_______________
___________
Cas. Co.,
________
458 N.E.2d 338,
341 n.4 (Mass.
App. Ct.
1983), rev.
____
____________________
4We review summary
judgments de novo, to
__ ____
there is a trialworthy dispute as
applicable law.
F.3d 1047, 1048
pure
determine whether
to any material fact under the
Commercial Union Ins. v. Walbrook Ins. Co., 7
______________________
__________________
n.1, 1050 (1st Cir.
questions of Massachusetts
tract interpretation, our
1993).
As all
law relating to
claims pose
insurance con-
review is plenary throughout.
1048 n.1.
Id. at
__
denied,
______
459 N.E.2d
evidence, rather
________
(citing
826
(Mass.
1984)), as
than an expansive
Newell-Blais Post #443
_______________________
v.
view of
it
depends on
the
the complaint,
id.
__
Shelby Mut. Ins. Co., 487
______________________
N.E.2d 1371, 1374 (Mass. 1986)).
We interpret the
relevant policy language with
a view
to whether "`an objectively reasonable insured . . . would expect
to be covered.'"
GRE Ins. Group, 61 F.3d at 81 (quoting Trustees
______________
________
of Tufts Univ. v.
_______________
(Mass. 1993)).
Commercial Union Ins. Co.,
_________________________
616 N.E.2d 68, 72
Unambiguous terms are given their plain
High Voltage Eng'g Corp. v. Federal Ins. Co., 981
_________________________
________________
(1st Cir.
1992) (citing Stankus
_______
meaning,
F.2d 596, 600
v. New York Life Ins. Co., 44
________________________
N.E.2d 687, 689
(Mass. 1942)), and ambiguous terms are construed
against the insurer.
v.
Id. (citing August A. Busch & Co. of Mass.
___
_______________________________
Liberty Mut. Ins. Co.,
______________________
158 N.E.2d
351, 353
(Mass. 1959)).
Once an insured
establishes that a claim comes
within the terms
of coverage, the
insurer must demonstrate "the
applicability of
any
exclusion."
GRE Ins. Group,
_______________
Dresser & McKee, Inc.
______________________
61 F.3d
v. Home Ins. Co.,
______________
at 81
(citing Camp
____
568 N.E.2d, 631,
633
(Mass. App. Ct. 1991)).
A.
A.
Property Damage Liability Coverage
Property Damage Liability Coverage
__________________________________
The
Travelers
primary
liability
policies
inter alia, a comprehensive general liability ("CGL")
_____ ____
Broad Form CGL Endorsement.
included,
Form and a
The CGL Form obligated Travelers to
pay
"all
obligated
sums [for]
which the
. . . because of
policy] applies, caused by
[i]nsured shall
. . . property
become legally
damage to which [the
an occurrence . . . ."
The CGL Form
likewise imposed "[a]
duty to defend any suit
sured seeking damages on
."5
against the [i]n-
account of . . . property damage
. . .
Among the relevant
property damage
exclusions in
__________
the
CGL Form are (i) a "Contractual Liability Exclusion" for "liabil-
ity
assumed
by the
except an incidental
______ __ __________
[i]nsured under
any contract
contract" (emphasis added),
________
or agreement
which includes
_____ ________
any written lease of premises, and (ii) exclusion (f) relating to
___ _______ _____ __ ________
the
"emission,
discharge,
seepage, release
or
escape
of any
liquid, solid, gaseous or thermal waste or pollutant . . . ."
the
primary liability policies, exclusion (f)
"Absolute
of
the
Pollution Exclusion" for
actual,
release or
alleged
or
named [i]nsured
owns, rents
is replaced by an
"property damage arising out
threatened
escape of pollutants
In
. . .
or occupies
discharge,
at or from
. .
. ."
dispersal,
premises the
Under
the
Absolute Pollution Exclusion, "[p]ollutants means any solid, liq-
uid, gaseous or thermal irritant or contaminant, including smoke,
____________________
5"Property damage" is
(1) physical
tangible
policy
injury
property
period,
to
or
destruction
which occurs
including
the
of
during
the
loss of
use
thereof at any time resulting therefrom, or
(2)
loss of use
of tangible
property which
has not been physically injured or
provided such
loss of
use is
destroyed
caused by
an
occurrence during the policy period.
"Occurrence"
is
"an
accident,
repeated exposure to conditions, which
damage neither expected
including
or
results in . . . property
nor intended from the
insured."
continuous
standpoint of the
vapor, soot, fumes,
acids, alkalis, chemicals and
waste.
Waste
includes materials to be recycled, reconditioned or reclaimed."
The CGL Form
also contains an exclusion (k), the Owned
or Leased Premises Exclusion, which bars coverage for damage to:
__
"(1) property owned or occupied by or
rented
to the
by the
[i]nsured, (2)
property used
[i]nsured, or (3) property in the care,
tody or
which
control of
the [i]nsured
or as
custo
the [i]nsured is for any purpose exer-
cising physical control . . . ."
The Broad Form CGL Endorsement in the primary liability
policies
affords
further
Contractual
Liability
Coverage
by
extending the definition of "incidental contract" to include "any
oral or written contract or
the
named
insured's
coverage is exempted
the
sion
agreement relating to the conduct of
business."
This
contractual
from various property damage
liability
exclusions in
CGL Form, but the list of exemptions does not mention exclu-
(f), its replacement
the Absolute Pollution
exclusion (k) (Owned or Leased
Contractual
Premises Exclusion).
Exclusion, or
In sum, the
Liability Coverage provided under the Broad Form CGL
Endorsement is subject
to both the Absolute
Pollution Exclusion
and Owned or Leased Premises Exclusion (k).
1.
1.
The Absolute Pollution Exclusion
The Absolute Pollution Exclusion
________________________________
We think the
district court correctly determined
that
the
claims alleged in
damage caused
cants and/or
the Worcester Trust
by `spills or
hazardous
releases of oil,
material'")
Absolute Pollution Exclusion.
complaint ("property
came
industrial lubri-
squarely
within
the
Dryden Oil Co. of New England v.
______________________________
The Travelers Indem. Co., No. 92-40135,
________________________
slip op. at 10 (D. Mass.
Nov. 18, 1994) (Report and Recommendation) (citing Essex Ins. Co.
______________
v. Tri-Town Corp., 863 F. Supp.
______________
chusetts law,
38 (D. Mass. 1994) (under Massa-
Absolute Pollution Exclusion excepts
physical injury from carbon monoxide releases)).
of
the Absolute
"'any
form of
Pollution Exclusion
pollution.'"
Bourbeau, 49 F.3d
________
clause
coverage for
A fair reading
bars coverage
United States Liab. Ins. Co.
______________________________
786, 788 (1st Cir. 1995)
law, lead paint chips deposited
for
v.
(under Massachusetts
on land in the course of
strip-
ping and painting building constitute a "pollutant").
Dryden nonetheless contends that it cannot now be known
whether the damage
from
allegedly sustained by the
"pollutant."
It
relies on
Westchester Fire Ins. Co. v.
___________________________
Property resulted
inapposite
authority, see
City of Pittsburg, Kan.,
________________________
791 F.
Supp. 836 (D. Kan. 1992), for its claim that diesel fuel is not a
"pollutant."
There, a
sprayed mixture of
diesel fuel
and the
insecticide malathion was held not to be a "pollutant" within the
meaning of
an exclusion clause
which defined "pollutants"
manner similar
to the present
apparent
from
an earlier
however,
see Westchester Fire Ins. Co.
___________________________
Kan., 768 F. Supp. 1463 (D.
____
and
exclusion clause.
related
As
case cited
in a
is readily
by
Dryden,
v. City of Pittsburg,
___________________
Kan. 1991), aff'd sub nom., Pennsyl______________ ________
vania Nat'l Mut. Cas. Ins. Co. v. City of Pittsburg, Kan., 987
________________________________
________________________
F.2d 1516
(10th Cir. 1993), and from an earlier and related case
not cited
by Dryden, see
Westchester Fire Ins. Co. v.
__________________________
City of
_______
Pittsburg, Kan., 794 F. Supp. 353 (D. Kan. 1992), aff'd sub nom.,
_______________
______________
Pennsylvania Nat'l Mut. Cas. Ins. Co. v. City of Pittsburg, Kan.,
_____________________________________
_______________________
10
987
F.2d
1516
(10th
Cir. 1993),
Pittsburg, Kan. trilogy
_______________
fuel
not diesel
Pittsburg, Kan., 987
_______________
the
issue
in
the City of
________
was whether malathion mixed
fuel
alone
F.2d at 1517.
is
a pollutant.
Moreover,
with diesel
City of
_______
the Tenth Circuit
affirmed the district court on
been
"sudden
the basis that the "spraying" had
and accidental"
explicit language
of the
thereby
exclusion clause
that the City was spraying a pollutant.
Finally, the Massachusetts
which we look
removing it
not on
from the
the basis
Id. at 1519-20.
__
Supreme Judicial Court,
to
in this matter, see Commercial Union Ins., 7 F.3d
___ ______________________
at 1048, n.1, recently assumed that a home heating oil spill "was
comprehended by
an exclusion for
release, discharge or
England Ins. Co.
________________
Ct.
1993)
. . caused
dispersal of contaminants.'"
v. Smith, 621
_____
(quoting Jussim
______
by . .
Hanover New
___________
N.E.2d 382, 383 n.2
(Mass. App.
v. Massachusetts Bay Ins. Co., 610
____________________________
N.E.2d 954, 955 (Mass. 1993)).
chemicals
`loss .
Whether
necessarily constitute
or not oil or industrial
pollutants
in
all forms
and
circumstances, however, given
the policy definition of
"pollut-
ants" and our reasoning in Bourbeau, supra, we think the absolute
________ _____
pollution exclusion
permitted
an
language in
objectively
liability coverage
would not
policyholder
expect
or
lubricants and/or hazardous material
manufacturing process"
the Worcester Trust complaint against
least,
to
have
resulting from "spills
transfer, storing, mixing and
as alleged in
the very
reasonable
for contamination
releases of oil, industrial
during the
these policies
an objectively
reasonable
11
Dryden.
policyholder
At
would
regard
spills or
releases
of
oil,
hazardous material
as "materials to
Bourbeau,
________
49 F.3d
at 788
Thus, we
think an
have believed
industrial
be disposed
(internal
considered pollutants,"
of or
quotation marks
objective policyholder
that "`smoke, vapor,
lubricants
waste."
omitted).
reasonably could
soot, [and] fumes'
id. at 788-89
___
not
would be
(alteration in original),
whereas oil, lubricants and hazardous waste "[were] not."
789.6
2.
2.
or
Owned or Leased Premises Exclusion (k)
Owned or Leased Premises Exclusion (k)
______________________________________
Id. at
___
Dryden challenges
plain meaning
liability
claims
of Owned or
coverage
for the
for damages to
controlled
alleged in
court ruling
Leased Premises Exclusion
Worcester
the Property
the Property.
related claims
the district
that the
(k) barred
Trust breach-of-contract
while Dryden
Dryden argues that
counts VI, VII
leased and/or
the nonpollution-
and VIII
are neither
comprehended within the Absolute Pollution Exclusion nor Owned or
Leased
Premises
[Worcester
Exclusion
Trust]
claims
(k),
were
because
"[a]t
filed with
Superior Court] Dryden [no longer] own[ed],
[the
the
time
the
Massachusetts
occupi[ed], rent[ed]
____________________
6Our view comports with the position taken in Titan Holdings
______________
Syndicate, Inc. v.
_______________
City of Keene, N.H.,
___________________
898 F.2d 265 (1st
Cir.
1990), where we determined under New Hampshire law that excessive
noise
and light
from a
"pollutants" within the
sion barring
city
sewage treatment
meaning of an absolute
coverage for
"irritants" and
noted that though excessive noise and
. . . they are
Nor are
soot, fumes, acids,
"contaminants."
We
light "may be `irritants,'
irritants.
similar to
smoke, vapor,
alkalis, chemicals, or waste,
the illustra-
used in the
thought of as
not
pollution exclu-
not solid, liquid, gaseous or thermal
_____ ______ _______ __ _______
they generally
tive terms
plant were
policy definition.
Id. at 268 (footnote omitted).
___
12
or control[led] the property."
Noscitur
________
a sociis."
_ ______
Assuming
these
claims
Pollution Exclusion, we are
was barred by
Although
exclusions must be
v.
Owned or Leased
damage
797, 799 (Mass.
"damage to
Waltham Indus.
______________
policies explicitly
restricted
1984)), these primary
coverage to
occurrences "during the policy period."
Leased
Absolute
Premises Exclusion (k).
strictly construed,
reasonably objective policyholder could
or
the
F.2d at 1097 (citing Quincy Mut. Fire Ins. Co.
__________________________
Abernathy, 469 N.E.2d
_________
liability
within
nonetheless persuaded that liability
coverage
Labs. Corp., 883
___________
are not
Premises
Exclusion (k),
. . . property
Consequently, no
have believed that Owned
which
rented to the
______
property
barred
coverage for
Insured," somehow con_______
verted the policies into "claims-made" policies to which Owned or
Leased Premises Exclusion (k) no longer applied because the lease
_________
had lapsed.
A primary function
Exclusion (k) "is
served by Owned or
to prevent the insured from
Leased Premises
using a liability
insurance policy as if it provided property insurance."
Kenneth
S. Abraham, Environmental Liability Insurance Law 163 (1991).
_____________________________________
likewise insulates against
insured has
less
"the `moral hazard' problem
incentive
existence of insurance."
to take
precaution
Barry R. Ostrager &
Handbook on Insurance Coverage Disputes
________________________________________
It
where an
owing
to
the
Thomas R. Newman,
10.03[b], at 441
(8th
ed. 1995) (quoting United States v. Conservation Chem. Co., 653
______________
_______________________
F. Supp.
omitted)).
152,
199 (W.D.
Mo.
1986) (internal
These recognized aims
quotation
marks
would be subverted by Dryden's
13
overly
inventive reading of
Owned or Leased
Premises Exclusion
(k).
3.
3.
Contractual Liability Coverage
Contractual Liability Coverage
______________________________
Next, Dryden advances
two grounds
for its
contention
that the nonpollution-related contract claims alleged
by Worces-
ter Trust
are comprehended
coverage.
First, coverage
tract," which
is extended by
include not only "any
"any
oral
conduct of
or written
by the
"property damage"
is provided for
an "incidental con-
the Broad Form CGL
written . . . lease of
contract
or
the insured's business."
Worcester Trust nonpollution-related
Endorsement to
premises" but also
agreement relating
Second,
liability
to
the
Dryden says,
the
contract claims arise
from
matters having to do with the written lease of the Property.
Its
argument is untenable.
The policies exempt an
lease,
"incidental contract," viz.,
from the Contractual Liability Exclusion contained in the
CGL Form, but not from Owned or Leased Premises Exclusion (k)
___
the CGL Form.
in
Under the Broad Form CGL Endorsement, the defini-
tion of
"incidental contract"
Liability
by the
Contractual
Coverage provision, but the Broad Form CGL Endorsement
leaves Owned or Leased Premises
reference
to Contractual
implication
extended
is broadened
Owned
or
Exclusion (k) in full force with
Liability Coverage.
Leased Premises
Exclusion
Thus, by
(k)
clear
bars the
Contractual Liability Coverage in relation to an "inci-
dental contract."
We
therefore conclude, as did the district court, that
14
the property damage
coverage described in these
liability poli-
cies imposed no duty upon the defendant insurers to defend Dryden
in the
Worcester Trust action.
indemnify is narrower
Furthermore, since the
than the duty to defend
duty to
under the primary
liability policies, Waltham Indus. Labs. Corp., 883 F.2d at 1099,
__________________________
the district court
correctly ruled
insurers were under no duty
as well
that the
defendant
to indemnify Dryden for any property
damage recoveries by Worcester Trust.7
B.
B.
Personal Injury Liability Coverage
Personal Injury Liability Coverage
__________________________________
Under
the Broad Form
CGL Endorsement, the
insurer is
obligated to defend its insured, and to indemnify for any amounts
its insured becomes
legally obligated to pay, in
"damages because of
personal injury . . . to
________ ______
applies, sustained
any action for
which [the policy]
by any person or organization and arising out
of the conduct of [n]amed [i]nsured's business . . . ." (Emphasis
added.)
The term "personal injury" is defined as
(1) false arrest, detention, imprisonment, or
malicious prosecution;
(2) wrongful entry or eviction or other invasion of the right of private occupancy;
(3) a publication or utterance
(a) of a libel
or slander or other
defamatory or
despairing material,
or
(b) in violation of an individual's
____________________
7We
Worcester
caution, however, that
Trust action
these liability policies.
the
the ultimate resolution
may affect
the duty to
of the
indemnify under
That is to say, should the evidence in
underlying Worcester Trust action against Dryden reveal that
there was
a covered occurrence,
and should
Worcester Trust
be
allowed to
amend
its complaint,
indemnification for the
costs of its defense.
Dryden
would be
entitled
to
damages recovered against it and for the
See
___
Terrio v. McDonough, 450 N.E.2d
______
_________
190,
194 (Mass. App. Ct.), rev. denied, 453 N.E.2d 1231 (Mass. 1983).
___________
15
right of privacy;
except
publications
course of
or
or related to
utterances
in
the
advertising, broad-
casting, publishing or telecasting activities
conducted
by or
on
behalf
of the
[i]nsured shall not be deemed personal
ry.
[n]amed
inju-
This personal injury coverage
does not apply, however, "to
lia-
bility assumed by the [i]nsured under any contract or agreement."
The
district court ruled
that Dryden had
not alleged
claims within the personal injury coverage for "wrongful entry or
eviction or other
invasion of the
right of private
since "the wrongful eviction/personal
applicable insurance
kind of indirect
interests from
invasion provisions of the
could not have
been intended to
and incremental harm
pollution."
92-40135, slip op. at 12
tal Ins. Co., 634
_____________
court further noted
occupancy,"
that results to
cover the
property
Dryden Oil Co. of New England, No.
_______________________________
(citing County of Columbia v. Continen__________________
_________
N.E.2d 946, 950
(N.Y. 1994)).
the apparent incongruity which
The district
would obtain
if
pollution liability coverage
injury"
were found under
the "personal
clause despite the fact that "property damage" liability
coverage is expressly barred by the Absolute Pollution Exclusion.
Id.
___
Although
the
the Supreme Judicial Court has yet to address
matter, the Massachusetts
injury
Appeals Court has
definition
of personal
limited."
_______
LaFrance v. Travelers Ins. Co., 594 N.E.2d
________
___________________
(Mass. App. Ct.), rev. denied,
____ ______
on
the
held that "the
[Endorsement]
is
very
____
550, 551
598 N.E.2d 1133 (Mass. 1992) (the
identically-defined term "personal injury" does not
16
even include
"bodily injury") (emphasis
personal
injury
indemnify
liability
added).
Moreover, as
coverage obligates
we have noted,
the
insurer
to
for liability incurred for certain intentional acts by
___________
the insured, including:
Group A
false arrest, detention or impris-
onment, or malicious prosecution;
Group B
a
the
publication or utterance of
libel or slander or of other defamatory or
disparaging
utterance
material,
in
or a
violation of
publication
an
or
individual's
right of privacy . . . ;
Group C
wrongful entry
other invasion of the
or eviction
or
right of private occu-
pancy[.]
Continental Cas. Co.
____________________
v. Canadian Universal Ins. Co., 924
_____________________________
F.2d
370, 373 (1st Cir. 1991) (alteration in original).
In Titan Holdings Syndicate, Inc. v.
________________________________
N.H., 898 F.2d
____
265, 267 (1st Cir. 1990)
Titan Holdings
Assurance Company
Syndicate, Inc.
("Great Global")
City of Keene,
_______________
("Titan"), the insurers
_____
("Titan")
and Great
contended
Global
there was
no
duty to defend against claims "characterized as pleas of trespass
and nuisance"
brought by
homeowners
who alleged
"continuous[]
bombard[ment] by and expos[ure] to" noxious fumes, loud noise and
bright light emanating
abutting their
land.8
____________________
from the insured's sewer
The
insured
argued that
treatment plant
its
"plant's
8The Seventh Circuit has decided, under Illinois and Missouri law,
that "personal injury"
clause which
"applies only to
bodily injury
provisions."
coverage is not restricted
the policy's property
by a
damage and
Pipefitters Welfare Educ. Fund
_______________________________
Westchester Fire Ins. Co., 976 F.2d 1037, 1042
__________________________
v.
(7th Cir. 1992).
"[The insurer's] attempts to circumvent the plain language of the
pollution exclusion in its policy are disingenuous and misleading
indeed, they
are nearly sanctionable
warrant any discussion."
under Wisconsin law.
Id.
___
It
came to a
and as such
similar conclusion
Scottish Guar. Ins. Co. v.
_______________________
17
do not
Dwyer, 19 F.3d
_____
fumes,
noise and
eviction from,
hence
came
light"
constituted a
the abutting
within
the
coverages for "wrongful
wrongful
homeowners' property,
insurers'
personal
entry of,
id. at
___
injury
entry" or "wrongful eviction."
or
272,
liability
Finding
no case law defining "wrongful entry," the Titan panel analogized
_____
to an action for trespass
under New Hampshire law which requires
an
Id. (citing Moulton v. Groveton Papers
___
_______
_______________
intentional invasion.
Co., 289 A.2d 68, 72 (N.H.
___
intentional invasion of the
1972)).
As the complaint alleged
no
abutting landowners' property, Titan
_____
found no actionable wrongful entry claim under New Hampshire law.
Id.
___
The
Titan panel also questioned
_____
though it did not decide
"whether the alleged spreading of fumes, noise and light falls
within the ordinary meaning of
at 272 n.7.
wrongful entry of property."
Id.
___
Thus, as the Fifth Circuit has noted, Titan "did not
_____
hold that the
wrongful entry
migration of fumes, noise and
. . . ."
Gregory
_______
948 F.2d 203, 209 (5th Cir. 1991).
a wrongful eviction
light constituted a
v. Tennessee Gas Pipeline Co.,
__________________________
Finally, after observing that
presupposes a landlord-tenant
relationship,
Titan, 898 F.2d at 272 (citing 52 C.J.S. Landlord & Tenant
_____
_________________
455
____________________
307, 309 (7th Cir. 1994) ("[C]overage for personal . . . injuries
. . . is not subject to the pollution exclusion.").
Circuit also
exclusion
injury
has concluded that
clause does not
endorsement
. .
Agricultural Ins. Co.,
_______________________
(Florida law).
"[b]y its terms,
apply to coverage
. ."
85 F.3d
The Eleventh
the pollution
under the personal
City of Delray Beach, Fla. v.
____________________________
1527,
1533
(11th
Cir. 1996)
The Sixth Circuit, on the other hand, has come to
the opposite conclusion under Michigan law.
Harrow Prods., Inc.
___________________
v. Liberty Mut. Ins. Co., 64 F.3d 1015,
_____________________
We need
not consider
whether the
1021-25 (6th Cir. 1995).
absolute pollution
exclusion
applies to the personal injury liability coverage under Massachusetts law, since we conclude
that the complaint alleges no claim
within the "personal injury" coverage under these policies.
18
& 460(1)),
the Titan
_____
panel concluded
liability
coverage
under
"wrongful
entry into,
the Titan
or eviction
that the
policy
of
was
a person
personal injury
restricted to
from, a
room,
dwelling or premises that the person occupies."
Dryden
pass is not
law.
urges the same
Id. at 271-72.
___
analogy, especially since tres-
necessarily an intentional tort
under Massachusetts
See Sheppard Envelope Co. v. Arcade Malleable Iron Co., 138
___ _____________________
_________________________
N.E.2d 777 (Mass. 1956) (airborne
emissions of cinders and other
gritty materials, negligent or otherwise, constitute a continuing
trespass).
Its
analogy simply does not
fit.
Not only
decided that the
wrongful conduct comprehended by
injury" coverage
afforded under
amounts
to
an
intentional tort
policies like
under
have we
the "personal
the present
Massachusetts
one
law, see
___
Continental Cas. Co. v. Canadian Universal Ins. Co., 924 F.2d at
____________________
____________________________
373, but the Massachusetts tort of
wrongful entry has yet to
be
extended beyond trespasses by landlords upon the leased premises.
See Gidwani v. Wasserman, 365 N.E.2d 827 (Mass. 1977); Tinkham v.
___ _______
_________
_______
Wind, 65 N.E.2d 14 (Mass. 1946).9
____
____________________
9Dryden relies on Scottish Guar. Ins. Co. v. Dwyer, 19 F.3d
________________________
_____
307,
311 (7th Cir. 1994),
holding
Wisconsin
that
"wrongful
entry" equates
law, which, like
that an actionable
the
which cites Titan
_____
Dwyer panel
_____
as support for the
with
"trespass"
Massachusetts law, does
trespass have been intentional.
did
not
take issue
with
under
not require
Even though
the insurer's
"as-
sert[ion] that the term `wrongful entry' has been used by Wisconsin courts in only one context
lord onto the
that
leased property
"nothing
[in the
suggests that the
of a tenant,"
Wisconsin
cases cited
id., it
___
by
tort [of wrongful entry] should
landlord-tenant disputes."
"When faced with
the improper entry by a
Id.
___
a similar lack
land-
reasoned
the insurer]
be limited to
The Dwyer panel went on
_____
to say:
of controlling authority
under
New Hampshire law, [the First Circuit] concluded that the tort of
wrongful entry `most closely resembles
that of trespass.'"
Id.
___
19
Although there
existed a
landlord-tenant relationship
between Worcester Trust and Dryden, the Worcester Trust complaint
alleges
claims by Worcester Trust, the landlord, against Dryden,
the tenant.
that a tenant
Dryden offers
no authority for its unstated premise
in possession under a valid lease may be liable to
its landlord for
Massachusetts law.
unlawful entry upon
the leased premises
under
Since wrongful eviction likewise contemplates
wrongful conduct by a landlord
McCarrick,
_________
Trust
588 N.E.2d
claims
against its tenant, see Squeri v.
___ ______
22 (Mass. App.
against Dryden
personal injury coverage
plainly
Ct. 1992),
do
the Worcester
not come
for "wrongful entry or
within
the
eviction" under
Massachusetts law.
____________________
(quoting
Titan, 898 F.2d
_____
at 272).
In
doing so, Dwyer extended
_____
Titan beyond its rationale.
_____
Titan equated the tort of wrongful entry with trespass under
_____
New Hampshire law
New Hampshire cases
only because the panel was "unable to find any
___
defining a tort of wrongful
898 F.2d at 272 (emphasis added).
entry."
Titan,
_____
Whereas Massachusetts case law
has defined the tort of wrongful entry
only in the context of an
intrusion by the landlord upon the premises leased by its tenant.
Against
this
inapposite
decline to broaden the scope
ful
entry absent
a clear
decisional
backdrop,
therefore,
we
of the Massachusetts tort of wrongsignal from the
Commonwealth courts,
especially
in the instant
definition
for "personal
context where the
injury" liability
insurance contract
is "very
limited."
LaFrance, 594 N.E.2d at 551.
________
Absent
some
authoritative signal
legislature or
the courts
from
the
of Massachusetts,
we see no basis for even considering the pros
and cons of
innovative theories . . .
must apply the law
of the forum as we
We
infer
it presently to
be, not as it
might come to
be.
Massachusetts
authority
Although
is
sparse, we see no basis for applying any rule
other than the traditional one.
Dayton v. Peck, Stow and Wilcox Co. (Pexto), 739 F.2d 690, 694-95
______
_________________________________
(1st Cir. 1984).
20
Dryden
claims are
nonetheless argues
embraced by the
invasion[s] of the
that these
personal injury
Worcester Trust
coverage as
right of private occupancy."
"other
Titan addressed
_____
the scope of liability coverage afforded by this clause under New
Hampshire
Titan, the
law.10
There, in
City had a
addition to
the policy
liability policy issued by
issued by
Great Global,
which afforded "personal injury" coverage for "`wrongful entry or
eviction or other
__ _____
invasion of the right
___________ ___ _____
of private occupancy.'"
__ _______ _________
Titan, 898 F.2d at 272 (emphasis in original).
_____
The Titan panel first observed that "an invasion of the
_____
right
of private occupancy need not
tangible interference with
involve `an appreciable and
the physical property itself.'"
(quoting Town of Goshen v. Grange Mut. Ins. Co., 424
_______________
_____________________
824
(N.H. 1980)).11
Given
Id.
___
A.2d 822,
this "broad[]" construction
of the
____________________
10Prior
to
determined,
"other
the
under
1990)
the
ejusdem generis
_______ _______
exclusively
conversion of a
Seventh
rubric,
Indem. Co. v.
__________
Indiana law).
vehicle.
invasion of the
See also
___ ____
Krekeler, 491 F.2d 884 (8th
________
coverage for
"wrongful
right of
entry
Circuit had
that
to invasions
or
the term
upon
real
Red Ball Leasing,
__________________
Hartford Accident & Indem. Co., 915 F.2d
_______________________________
(applying
injury"
the
invasion" referred
property, not to a
Inc. v.
____
Titan decision,
_____
306 (7th Cir.
Hartford Accident &
____________________
Cir. 1974) ("personal
eviction,
private occupancy,"
or
other
embraces tort
of
trespass under Missouri law).
11The
Titan panel
_____
noted that
in
Town of Goshen the
_______________
New
Hampshire Supreme Court held that a sufficient claim for invasion
of the right of private occupancy had been stated
tion that "the
grant
Town and its officials had
property
causing him economic
owner permission
to
by the allega-
wrongfully refused to
develop
a subdivision,
hardships and monetary losses,
and denying
him the right of free enjoyment of his property . . . ."
898 F.2d
at 272.
The New
Hampshire Supreme
ruled in Town of Goshen that
_______________
claims,
as distinguished
Court accordingly
the insurance coverage for
from common-law
claims,
21
1983
was unclear,
then went on to construe the policy against the insurer.
Goshen, 424 A.2d at 824-25.
______
Titan,
_____
Town of
_______
clause
"other invasion
of
the
right
of
private
occupancy,"
Gardner v. Romano, 688 F. Supp. 489, 492 (E.D. Wis. 1988) (citing
_______
______
Town of Goshen),
______________
the Titan panel
_____
shire law,
"the [homeowners'
that
invasion, and
898 F.2d
so is covered
at 273.
The
concluded, applying New
suit] alleges
just such
by Great Global's policy."
panel went on to observe
might [have
been] left
there," id.,
__
fairness it
permitted "Great Global,
but out
Hamp-
an
Titan,
_____
that the matter
of a concern
on remand, to
for
produce the
type of evidence relied on in Town of Epping, if it exists," id.,
______________
___
to demonstrate that the parties to the insurance contract had not
intended that the clause cover such an invasion.12
As
clause
the Massachusetts courts
"other invasion of
the right of
have yet to
construe the
private occupancy," the
only reliable
ment
by
interpretive guides available to us are the state-
the Massachusetts
Appeals Court:
personal injury is very limited[,]"
"the
definition of
LaFrance, 594 N.E.2d at 551;
________
see also Losacco v. F.D. Rich Constr. Co., 992 F.2d 382, 384 (1st
___ ____ _______
_____________________
Cir.)
(intermediate
state appellate
court
opinion
may afford
reliable guidance in "ascertaining state law"), cert. denied, 114
____ ______
____________________
12Titan
_____
noted that
Marine Ins. Co.,
_______________
shire] Supreme
in Town of Epping
_______________
v. St. Paul Fire &
________________
444 A.2d 496, 498 (N.H. 1982),
Court agreed that
the "[New Hamp-
the clause `other
invasion of
the right of private occupancy' lacks precise definition," Titan,
_____
898 F.2d at 272, with respect to the coverage for
ty,
as distinguished
liability.
to be
from coverage
for
1983 liabili-
common-law tort
claim
"Explaining that the rule requiring ambiguous clauses
construed in favor
of the
insured is only
a presumption
which can be defeated by evidence that the parties did not intend
to provide for coverage for [civil rights and official liability]
claims,
[the New
Hampshire Supreme
of
the
Court
parties'
adverted to]
extraneous
evidence
intentions
coverage."
Id. (citing Town of Epping, 444 A.2d at 499).
__
______________
. .
regarding
22
S. Ct.
holds
324 (1993), and
that "`general
limited]
to matters
the principle of ejusdem
_______
terms
which
similar to
follow
generis, which
_______
specific
those specified.'"
ones
[are
Powers v.
______
Freetown-Lakeville Regional Sch. Dist. Comm., 467 N.E.2d 203, 207
____________________________________________
n.8 (Mass. 1984)
(quoting United States v. Powell,
_____________
______
91 (1975)); see also Berniger v.
___ ____ ________
423 U.S. 87,
Meadow Green-Wildcat Corp., 945
__________________________
F.2d 4, 8 (1st Cir. 1991).
Under Massachusetts
sion of the
sion
of the
law, then, the phrase "other inva-
right of private occupancy" would
[tenant's] right
of private
mean "other inva-
occupancy," since
an
actionable "wrongful entry or eviction" claim under Massachusetts
law may be
Gidwani, 365
_______
brought only by a
N.E.2d at 830;
588 N.E.2d at 24.
ing
tenant against its landlord.
See
___
Tinkham, 65 N.E.2d at
_______
162; Squeri,
______
Moreover, it is significant that
this narrow-
construction nonetheless leaves
meaning to the
invasion," see United States v. Tortora, 922 F.2d
___ ______________
_______
term "other
880, 887 (1st
Cir. 1990) (doctrine of ejusdem
_______
generis applies if "the specific
_______
terms of an enumeration suggest a class which is not exhausted by
the enumeration"), in that it would afford coverage for "personal
injury"
or liability
landlords, claims
claims brought
"that are
similar to
`wrongful entry or eviction.'"
19
F.3d 1456,
private
1458 (D.C.
landlord against
invasion").
Co., 781 F.
___
by
tenants against
their
but not encompassed
by
Bernstein v. North East Ins. Co.,
_________
___________________
Cir. 1994) (racial
prospective tenant
discrimination by
is
not an
"other
See also Boston Hous. Auth. v. Atlanta Int'l Ins.
___ ____ ___________________
___________________
Supp. 80, 84 (D. Mass.
23
1992) (racial discrimination
by public housing landlord against tenants not an "other invasion
of the right of private occupancy").
conclude that
the clause
invasion of the right of
________ __ ___ _____ __
these
Worcester Trust
We
"wrongful entry
we hold
or eviction or
private occupancy" does not
_______ _________
claims,
which
do
conduct by a landlord against its tenant.
district court,
accordingly
that the
liability coverage imposed no duty
not
other
_____
comprehend
allege
wrongful
Therefore, as did
applicable "personal
the
injury"
to defend or indemnify Dryden
against the Worcester Trust claims.
C.
C.
But cf. note 7 supra.
___ __
_____
The "All Risks" Property Insurance Policy
The "All Risks" Property Insurance Policy
_________________________________________
The Travelers
"Building
property
and Personal Property
insurance
policy
Special Form"
included
("Special Form")
that "insures against all risks of direct physical loss or damage
except as otherwise provided in this form and other provisions of
the
policy
Travelers
which apply."
must defend
______
The Dryden
Dryden
in
the
complaint
Worcester
alleges that
Trust
action
because the "damages sought therein constitute and concern `risks
of
direct physical
Boulevard."
loss
It further
or
damage'
alleges that
to 150
Worcester
Travelers must
Dryden "for all sums which [Dryden] may become
Center
indemnify
_________
legally obligated
to pay as damages on account of any and
physical loss or
damage' to the property known
Center Boulevard."
gates
Travelers to
complained of
`all risks of direct and
Dryden
contends that the Special Form
defend and
by [Worcester
as 150 Worcester
indemnify
because "the
Trust] are clearly
obli-
damages
covered by
the
policy" and "a consequent risk of any such damage is a lawsuit by
____
24
[Worcester Trust], as Dryden's landlord,
such damage[]" from Dryden, its tenant.
to recover the costs of
We do not agree.
The Travelers property insurance policy imposes no duty
to defend
______
though the
insured,
Dryden in
suits for "physical
policy affords
Dryden
does
Travelers the
not contend
that
loss or damage."
Al-
option
______
its
the
to defend
option to
______ __
defend
______
constituted the requisite agreement, see Aetna Cas. & Sur. Co. v.
___ _____________________
Sullivan, 597
________
N.E.2d 62,
63 (Mass. App.
might be predicated a duty to defend.
____
Ct. 1992),
upon which
Nor has Dryden demonstrat-
ed reason, see
___
Dayton v. Peck, Stow and Wilcox Co. (Pexto), 739
______
__________________________________
F.2d 690,
(1st
694
Cir.
1984) (court
reluctant,
sitting
in
diversity action, to extend state law), or authority for implying
such a
duty under
Massachusetts law.
Winterthur Swiss Ins. Co., 15 Cal.
__________________________
App. 1993) (no
Cf.
__
Shell Oil Co.
______________
Rptr. 2d 815, 848
implied duty to defend under
v.
(Cal. Ct.
"all risks" policy)
(California law).
We
though
therefore
for different
under the property
tion with the
duty to defend
no
duty
to
as did
reasons, that
the
Travelers
insurance policy to defend
Worcester Trust action.
Since
district
assumed no
court,
duty
Dryden in connec-
defendants have no
under their liability policies, and Travelers has
defend
policy, we affirm
motion
conclude,
for partial
under its
"all
risks"
property insurance
the district court rulings
rejecting Dryden's
summary judgment,
and granting
defendants'
cross-motion
for summary judgment,
all the defendants' policies.
on the duty
The
to defend under
district
court
25
concluded that the property
neither to
alleges
itself.
defend nor
that all
insurance policy required
indemnify Dryden,
damage to
the Property
Travelers
since Worcester
was caused
Trust
by Dryden
[The
property
insurance]
policy
insured
Dryden Oil "against all risks of direct physical loss or damage" to buildings and personal property owned or
occupied by Dryden Oil.
This policy provides first-party coverage for
claims by Dryden
had
been damaged by
claims
that it had
property. .
that the
Oil
Oil that
. .
suffers
a third party,
The
not for
___
simple conclusion
policy in question
damage
Dryden Oil
as a result
erty) and not for
property
damaged a third person's
protection for
(i.e.,
____
its own
is
afforded Dryden
to its
property
is covered for
losses it
of damage to
its prop-
damage [Dryden] caused
to
the Property.
Dryden Oil Co. of New England, No. 92-40135, slip op. at 14.
_____________________________
Dryden contends, however, that the "all risks" property
insurance coverage does not depend
the Property.
upon who caused the damage to
Moreover, neither Travelers nor the district court
identifies policy language
limiting the "all risks"
coverage to
damage caused by third parties.13
have we
risks"
found, an
property
damage to
tenant.
Finally, no one has cited, nor
unambiguous provision
insurance
the Property
policy
caused by
in the
excluding
are unable
coverage
for any
Dryden, the policyholder
See High Voltage Eng'g Corp., 981
___ ________________________
quently, we
Travelers "all
to discern a
F.2d at 600.
supportable basis
and
Conse-
for the
____________________
13The
("IELA")
Insurance
Environmental
maintains in its
incorrectly
limited the
property insurance
Litigation
amicus brief that
coverage afforded
policy to property
party.
26
Association
the district court
under
the Travelers
damage caused by
a third
district court holding.14
We
do not mean to suggest
prevail
on its claim for
policy.
The difficulties impeding
that Dryden necessarily can
indemnity under the property insurance
indemnity coverage determina-
tions involving latent perils, such as accumulations of waste and
hazardous
materials,
abstract setting
nature
become
preceding a
and extent of
generally, Dale
_________
may
unmanageable
judicial determination
any damage,
L. Kingman,
almost
its causes
in
the
as to
the
and timing.
See
___
First Party Property Policies and
___________________________________
Pollution Coverage, 28 Gonz. L. Rev. 449, 471-72 (1993).
Be that
__________________
as
it may, the declaratory ruling
indemnify
_________
for
that Travelers had no duty to
Dryden under the "all risks" property insurance policy
any damage
discernible
Dryden may
have
record support.15
caused to
the Property
lacks
Therefore, we vacate that portion
of the declaratory judgment and remand
for such further proceed-
____________________
14The only authority cited by
Edward J. Gerrits, Inc.
_________________________
Pittsburgh, Pa., 634
________________
(stating
that an
v.
So.
Travelers is inapposite.
See
___
National Union Fire Ins. Co. of
__________________________________
2d
712, 713
"all risk[s]"
(Fla.
Dist. Ct.
policy "is a
App.)
first-party claim
policy which insures [Gerrits] against physical damage or loss to
the property brought about by
some external cause other than the
insured.") (per curiam), rev. denied, 645 So. 2d 452 (Fla. 1994).
___ ______
Unlike
the "all
risks"
property
Travelers, however,
coverage under
pressly
"damage
limited to
to the
insurance
policy
the Gerrits
_______
property
issued
by
policy was
ex-
insured from
any
external cause . . . ."
Id.
__
15Travelers represents
in its
appellate brief
that "[t]he
duty to defend [is] the issue primarily briefed by the parties to
date" and
lished
"the duty to indemnify,
only
by
further
Defendants-Appellees'
focused advocacy, in
have enabled a
if one exists, can
[factfinding]
Brief
at
36
proceedings
n.18.
the district court and on
be estab.
. .
Regrettably,
."
more
appeal, may well
definitive resolution of this claim
in the first
instance.
27
ings, consistent
with this opinion
and 28 U.S.C.
2201(a), as
the district court in its sound discretion deems appropriate.
III
III
CONCLUSION
CONCLUSION
__________
Under their liability policies, Travelers and
Mutual have
claims
no duty to
asserted in
defend and indemnify Dryden
the Worcester
"property damage" coverage under
the Worcester Trust
by
the
There is
the liability policies
Exclusion
There is
against the
action.
claims are expressly excepted
Absolute Pollution
Premises Exclusion.
Trust
American
or
because
from coverage
the Owned
no coverage
no
or
under the
Leased
liability
policies for "wrongful entry or eviction or other invasion of the
right
of private
coverage,
for the
occupancy,"
and
Worcester Trust
thus
claims
no
"personal
injury"
against its
tenant,
Dryden,
because wrongful
invasion[s]
wrongful
of
the
conduct by
coverage may
entry, wrongful
right of
a landlord
as a
against its
contemplate
tenant.
Whatever
risks" property insur-
obligation to defend Dryden in the
Trust action, only an option
matter of
and "other
occupancy,"
be available under its "all
ance policy, Travelers has no
Worcester
private
eviction,
law, defendants
to defend.
Accordingly,
neither breached a
contractual
duty to defend Dryden under any of their policies, nor a
indemnify Dryden under their liability policies.16
duty to
Consequently,
____________________
16After ruling that defendants were under no duty
or indemnify
court
Dryden under
any of their
granted summary judgment
breach-of-contract claim
policies, the
for defendants on
as well.
Dryden
to defend
district
the dependent
makes no
contention
that its breach-of-contract claim does not depend on the declara-
28
Dryden's claims under Mass. Gen.
L. chapter 93A and chapter 176D
fail as well.17
Finally, we are
unable to discern a
supportable basis
for the district court ruling that there was no duty to indemnify
Dryden
under the Travelers "all risks" property insurance policy
since Dryden itself caused the damage for which it seeks indemni-
fication.
Consequently,
we vacate the declaratory ruling
as to
the duty
to indemnify
well
its denial
as
dependent on
these
under the
of
the breach-of-contract
the unsupported
remanded for such
consistent with this opinion
as the district court in its sound
policy, as
claim
declaratory ruling.
interdependent claims are
ceedings,
property insurance
which is
Accordingly,
further pro-
and 28 U.S.C.
2201(a),
discretion deems appropriate.
Affirmed, in part, and reversed and remanded, in part;
Affirmed, in part, and reversed and remanded, in part;
_______________________________________________________
the parties shall bear their own costs.
the parties shall bear their own costs.
______________________________________
SO ORDERED.
SO ORDERED.
__________
____________________
tory rulings
relating
to the
duty to
indemnify under defendants' policies.
defend and
the duty
to
17Dryden argues
Dryden's
respect
that defendants'
"delays in
requests for coverage and their changing positions with
to their
viable claims
reasons
for denying
for relief under
We do not
agree.
lish both
____
that an
coverage"
Mass. Gen. L. ch.
Under these statutes,
unfair trade practice
unfair trade practice resulted
(1st Cir. 1994).
gave rise
to
93A and 176D.
"a claimant must estaboccurred and
___
that the
in a loss to the claimant."
Corp. v. International Surplus Lines Ins. Co., 22
_____
_____________________________________
tions
responding to
Even assuming the alleged
Alan
____
F.3d 339, 343
delays and vacilla-
by defendants amounted to unfair trade practices, a matter
we need not address, Dryden has not established that it sustained
a loss as a result of
the alleged unfair trade practices,
defendants were under no duty to defend.
29
since