Cordy, J.
After the plaintiff Allmerica Financial Corporation, along with its affiliated companies (together, Allmerica), settled a class action lawsuit alleging, inter alla, improper practices in the sale of its life insurance policies, it sought indemnification from its insurers. Allmerica’s primary insurer had participated in the settlement negotiations and agreed to pay its policy’s limit into the settlement fund. Allmerica also held an excess insurance policy written by the defendants, who are certain underwriters at Lloyd’s, London (underwriters). That policy was a so-called “follow form” policy, meaning that its terms, conditions, and exclusions were the same as those in the primary policy. When Allmerica sought indemnification for the settlement beyond the primary policy’s limits, the underwriters denied coverage. Allmerica then filed suit seeking a declaration of coverage. Both parties moved for summary judgment. A judge in the Superior Court granted the motion in favor of the underwriters. Allmerica appealed, and we transferred the case here from the Appeals Court on our own motion.
Whether a follow form excess insurer is bound by the decision of a primary insurer to settle a claim is an issue of first impression in the Commonwealth. We conclude, as did the motion judge, that an excess insurer is not bound by settlement decisions made by a primary insurer. We also conclude, however, that factual questions remain on the applicability of the policy’s exclusions. Accordingly, we reverse and remand for further proceedings.3
1. Background. We recount the facts as described in the [623]*623judge’s memorandum, supplemented by the record, reserving for discussion the language of the insurance contracts at issue.
Allmerica is a Massachusetts corporation engaged primarily in the business of life insurance. From July 1, 1997, through July 1, 1998, Allmerica held a primary liability policy written by Columbia Casualty Company (Columbia Casualty).4 56The policy included an “Insurance Company Professional Services Liability” provision, which covered wrongful acts committed by Allmerica and its agents.5,6 Allmerica also held an excess follow form policy issued by the underwriters and effective over the same term.7 The follow form language in the underwriters’ policy provided that, “[tjhis Policy is subject to the same conditions, limitations and other terms ... as are contained in or may be added to the Policy(ies) of the Primary Insurer(s).” The underwriters’ policy had a liability limit of $10 million, which “shall attach only when the Underlying Insurer [Columbia [624]*624Casualty] shall have paid or have been held hable to pay, the full amount of the Underlying Limit(s).” The underlying limit on the Columbia Casualty policy was $20 million, payable after a self-insured retention amount of $2.5 million. Thus the underwriters’ obligation to pay a covered loss would attach after All-merica had paid its retention amount and Columbia Casualty had paid its $20 million policy limit.
On July 31, 1997, Victor Bussie filed an action against All-merica in the District Court for Jefferson Parish, Louisiana. That action was voluntarily dismissed. A class action complaint was subsequently filed in the United States District Court for the District of Massachusetts on October 17, 1997 (Bussie class action). The final amended complaint alleged that Allmerica, directly and through its agents, engaged in improper practices by making misleading sales presentations using the “vanishing premium” concept, by inducing the systematic and unnecessary purchase of insurance policies using cash value in earlier policies (known as “churning”), by improperly marketing its policies as a savings or investment vehicle, and by using policy illustrations and other sales materials that promised that policies would have a certain cash value after a period of time.8 Bussie v. Allmerica Fin. Corp., 50 F. Supp. 2d 59, 65 (D. Mass. 1999) (Bussie). The parties eventually reached a settlement, and by memorandum and order dated May 19, 1999, a Federal District Court judge certified a settlement class, approved the settlement agreement, and dismissed the Bussie class action. Id. at 78-81.
The Bussie class action settlement agreement did not provide for the payment of a fixed amount. Rather, the amount owed was to be calculated after an individual review of class members’ claims.9 This involved class members’ choosing between two optional methods of relief. Under the first method, class members had the opportunity to submit their claims for review by a panel of neutral adjudicators. To do this, they would submit a claim form describing “the circumstances under which the policies [625]*625were purchased,” along with supporting documentation and any relevant personal declarations. Bussie, supra at 73. The agent who sold the policy would complete a similar form describing the sale. The adjudicators would then review each claim individually, assigning it a rehef-determining score based on objective criteria. Relief could range from nothing to “an award of relief designed to provide the Claimant with the benefit of his or her bargain or appropriate rescissory relief.” Id. In approving this method, the judge noted that “Claimants will be able to obtain relief even where they otherwise would not be able to prove each element of a particular legal theory or where that claim might otherwise be barred by a dispositive legal defense.” Id. Alternatively, class members could elect a second method known as “General Policy Relief.” This method “offers each Class member who chooses not to submit a claim to the [neutral adjudicators] an opportunity to obtain — without a showing of fault or damages — an array of relief options,” including enhanced policy and annuity benefits. Id. at 74. The total cost of the Bussie class action and settlement was $39.4 million, including attorney’s fees, relief management, and relief payments to class members.10
When the Bussie class action was filed, Allmerica gave notice to Columbia Casualty. In the meetings and correspondence that followed, Columbia Casualty discussed the details of possible settlements with Allmerica while repeatedly asserting that it did so under reservation of rights; it also advanced funds to cover Allmerica’s defense costs. On October 20, 1998, Columbia Casualty wrote to Allmerica indicating its consent to settling the case, and its expectation that it would make an indemnity payment as a result. Columbia Casualty did not, however, admit coverage or liability, “reserv[ing] its rights until such time as we have been able to review the factual data” about the settlement. Thereafter, Allmerica and Columbia Casualty continued to discuss the settlement and related coverage issues. Finally, on August 27, 2001, Allmerica and Columbia Casualty executed a “Settlement Agreement and Release” (agreement) in which Columbia Casualty agreed to pay its policy’s limit ($20 million) toward [626]*626funding the Bussie class action settlement. The agreement included a full release of claims against each other and acknowledged that the “release shall not include any rights or claims for coverage under any excess insurance policies,” including the policy issued by the underwriters. The agreement also included a “No Admissions” clause, which provided: “The parties understand and agree that nothing in this Agreement shall be construed or taken as an admission of liability on the part of any of the Parties with respect to the allegations and claims asserted in the [Bussie class action], or an admission of coverage or lack of coverage for the claim for coverage submitted by Allmerica under the Policy.”
During the pendency of the Bussie class action, the underwriters were also in contact with Allmerica. Although not direct participants in the settlement negotiations, the underwriters were apparently provided with periodic reports on their progress. The underwriters at all times reserved their rights as to coverage. By November, 1998, the Bussie class action settlement talks were nearing a conclusion. In a letter dated November 4, 1998, the underwriters indicated to Allmerica that they lacked sufficient information to make a coverage determination before a court imposed settlement deadline. To help expedite the settlement, however, the underwriters agreed not to assert Allmerica’s failure to obtain their advanced written consent to the settlement as a defense against any claim Allmerica might make.11
On January 20, 2000, eight months after the order approving [627]*627the settlement of the Bussie class action had entered, the underwriters sent a letter to Allmerica outlining their position on coverage. The underwriters generally disclaimed coverage for any loss encompassed by the settlement, citing particularly (but without limitation) the policy’s exclusion for wrongful acts alleged in claims prior to the effective date of coverage (exclusion HI.b) and its exclusion for claims based upon promises of future performance (exclusion m.g).
Allmerica filed suit against the underwriters on September 30, 2002, in the Superior Court. The complaint sought a declaration of coverage and judgment against the underwriters for breach of contract. In their answer, the underwriters denied Allmerica’s claims, raised affirmative defenses, and counterclaimed, seeking a declaration of noncoverage. After a period of discovery, the parties filed cross motions for summary judgment. On September 30, 2004, the judge granted summary judgement in favor of the underwriters. In his decision, the judge first concluded that the underwriters were not bound by any actual or implied coverage decision made by Columbia Casualty with respect to the Bussie class action settlement. He then turned to the exclusions relied on by the underwriters in denying coverage. While finding that the undisputed material facts were insufficient for summary judgment on the exclusion for promises of future performance, the judge concluded that the underwriters had established that the Bussie class action involved wrongful acts alleged in claims made prior to the effective date of the policy. He also found that coverage for the settlement was excluded under the so-called “known loss doctrine,” which excludes coverage for losses or probable losses already known by the insured at the time the policy is purchased. See SCA Servs., Inc. v. Transportation Ins. Co., 419 Mass. 528, 532-533 (1995). Final judgment entered in the underwriters’ favor on February 11, 2005.
2. Standard of review. “The standard of review of a grant of summary judgment is whether, viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party, all material facts have been established and the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law.” Augat, Inc. v. Liberty Mut. Ins. Co., 410 [628]*628Mass. 117, 120 (1991), citing Mass. R. Civ. P. 56 (c), 365 Mass. 824 (1974). “An order granting or denying summary judgment will be upheld if the trial judge ruled on undisputed material facts and his ruling was correct as a matter of law.” Commonwealth v. One 1987 Mercury Cougar Auto., 413 Mass. 534, 536 (1992), citing Community Nat’l Bank v. Dawes, 369 Mass. 550, 556 (1976). The moving party bears the burden of affirmatively demonstrating the absence of a triable issue. Pederson v. Time, Inc., 404 Mass. 14, 16-17 (1989). Doubts as to the existence of a genuine issue of material fact are to be resolved against the party moving for summary judgment. Attorney Gen. v. Bailey, 386 Mass. 367, 371, cert. denied, 459 U.S. 970 (1982). Accordingly, we construe any factual disputes or ambiguities in favor of Allmerica.
The primary issues in this case involve the interpretation of an insurance contract, which is a question of law. Wilkinson v. Citation Ins. Co., 447 Mass. 663, 667 (2006), citing Cody v. Connecticut Gen. Life Ins. Co., 387 Mass. 142, 146 (1982). An insurance contract is to be interpreted “according to the fair and reasonable meaning of the words in which the agreement of the parties is expressed.” Cody v. Connecticut Gen. Life Ins. Co., supra, quoting MacArthur v. Massachusetts Hosp. Serv., Inc., 343 Mass. 670, 672 (1962). Every word in an insurance contract “must be presumed to have been employed with a purpose and must be given meaning and effect whenever practicable.” Jacobs v. United States Fid. & Guar. Co., 417 Mass. 75, 77 (1994), quoting Wrobel v. General Acc. Fire & Life Assur. Corp., 288 Mass. 206, 209-210 (1934). Any ambiguities in the language of an insurance contract are interpreted against the insurer who used them and in favor of the insured. Cody v. Connecticut Gen. Life Ins. Co., supra. “This rule of construction applies with particular force to exclusionary provisions.” Hakim v. Massachusetts Insurers’ Insolvency Fund, 424 Mass. 275, 282 (1997). An insured generally bears the burden of proving that a particular claim falls within a policy’s coverage, Markline Co. v. Travelers Ins. Co., 384 Mass. 139, 140 (1981), while an insurer has the burden of proving the applicability of a particular exclusion. Hanover Ins. Co. v. Talhouni, 413 Mass. 781, 785 (1992).
[629]*6293. Effect of settlement on the underwriters’ obligations. We first consider whether the underwriters, as excess follow form insurers, were bound by the primary insurer’s decision to settle Allmerica’s claim for indemnification based on the Bussie class action. If they were, we need not reach the underwriters’ claim that the settlement was not covered by the policy.
Although the question is one of first impression, this is not the first occasion the court has had to consider elements of the relationship between a primary and an excess insurance policy. In Vickodil v. Lexington Ins. Co., 412 Mass. 132 (1992) (Vickodil), the insured (who was injured in an accident) had primary coverage of $100,000 and a first-level excess policy with a limit of $1 million. A second-level excess insurer provided coverage of up to $5 million after the first-level excess insurance limit had been exhausted. When the first-level excess insurer became insolvent and could not pay the $1 million, the plaintiffs sued the second-level excess insurer, arguing that, on the insolvency of the former, the insurance limits of the latter should “drop down” to fill the resulting gap.12 Id. at 132-133. We concluded that, absent specific contractual language providing for such a “drop down,” the insolvency or other failure to pay of a lower-level insurer would not result in a lowering of the underlying limits of the excess policy. Id. at 138. Thus, the plaintiffs in Vickodil were left with a gap in insurance coverage. Similar facts and contractual language yielded the same result in another “drop down” case, Massachusetts Bay Transp. Auth. v. Allianz Ins. Co., 413 Mass. 473, 474-477 (1992) (Allianz).
The “drop down” cases demonstrate a basic point about excess insurance policies: they are separate and distinct contracts from the primary policy. An insurance program involving a primary [630]*630policy and one or more excess policies divides risk into distinct units and insures each unit individually. The individual insurers do not (absent a specific provision) act as coinsurers of the entirety of the risk. Rather, each insurer contracts with the insured individually to cover a particular portion of the risk. Use of a follow form clause is advantageous in crafting such an insurance program because it makes an excess policy a carbon copy of the primary policy, with the only differences being the names of the parties and the coverage limitations. Follow form language thus allows an insured to have coverage for the same set of potential losses (and with the same set of exceptions) in each layer of the insurance program. The language does not, however, bind the various insurers to a form of joint liability should coverage at a prior layer fail. The layer of risk each insurer covers is defined and distinct.13
As Vickodil and Allianz demonstrate, requiring an excess insurer’s coverage to “drop down” would effectively make it a party to the prior layer’s contract. This is not what an excess insurer agrees to even when it uses a follow form clause. Allmerica admits as much by calling the underwriters “strangers” to the primary policy. The term “strangers” implies that primary and excess insurers act independently of each other with respect to decisions about their policies, including coverage determinations and settlements.14 Such independence is reflected in the opinions of courts that have adjudicated disputes involving an excess [631]*631insurer’s objections to a settlement reached by a primary (or a prior excess) insurer. In Allstate Ins. Co. v. Dana Corp., 759 N.E.2d 1049 (Ind. 2001) (Allstate), an automotive parts manufacturer was subject to several environmental cleanup actions. Ultimately the manufacturer settled with all of its insurers except Allstate Insurance Company (Allstate), which had written an excess policy applicable beyond the aggregate limits of a primary policy. Id. at 1052. Allstate disputed the extent of its liability by arguing that the settlement had misconstrued the aggregate limit provisions in the primary policy. Id. at 1058. The primary insurer intervened, complaining that Allstate, as an excess follow form insurer, “has no business disputing the understanding of the parties [to the primary insurance contract] as to the meaning of the document.” Id. at 1060. The Supreme Court of Indiana rejected that argument. “Allstate,” it wrote, “as an excess carrier, is entitled to rely on the underlying policies in evaluating its risks.” Id. The primary insurer’s decision to settle did not, in other words, bind Allstate, even though the settlement implied a particular construction of the aggregate limits provision.
The United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit reached a similar conclusion in Keystone Shipping Co. v. Home Ins. Co., 840 F.2d 181 (3d Cir. 1988) (Keystone Shipping). In Keystone Shipping, a group of insurers settled a substantial claim resulting from a shipping accident on the Delaware River. The group included a primary insurer and four layers of excess insurers. The Home Insurance Company (Home Insurance) had underwritten twenty per cent of the third excess level and the entire fourth excess level. When the other insurers agreed to settle all claims for a total of $30 million, Home Insurance refused to make any payments on the ground that any settlement over $24.8 million was too high. Id. at 183. The other insurers executed the settlement in spite of Home Insurance’s objections and paid their proportionate shares according to the amounts and layering of their policies. The shipping company then sued Home Insurance for its portion of the settlement. Id. The court rejected the shipping company’s argument that Home Insurance was obliged to participate if the insured could “establish that it was potentially hable and the amount of the settlement was reasonable.” Id. at 184. Home Insurance, it concluded, was free not to join the settle[632]*632ment “so long as its own evaluation [of the policy and any proposed settlement] is not unreasonably low and it has acted in good faith in advancing and adhering to that evaluation in the absence of a contract which can be construed to impose such an obligation.” Id. at 182-183.15
The Allstate and Keystone Shipping decisions are consonant with our conclusion in the “drop down” cases, all of which respect the right of an insurer to make coverage and settlement decisions independent of third parties, including other insurers.16 Coupled with this right is the risk that the nonsettling insurer might ultimately face greater liability. As the Keystone Shipping court wrote, “by incurring the greater initial risk of not settling and so putting [the insured] to the test of establishing its full claim, Home [Insurance] itself incurred the risk of having to pay all of [the insured’s] recovery over and above the settlement Home’s co-insurers proposed.” Id. at 185-186.17
Allmerica urges a different approach to the question. It does not argue that its policies with Columbia Casualty and the underwriters are not independent contracts. Rather, it premises the underwriters’ obligation to cover the Bussie class action [633]*633settlement on the “follow form” clause. Allmerica argues that the underwriters, by using such a clause, adopted not only the language used by Columbia Casualty to describe the coverage and exclusions in the contract, but also the “intent of the parties to the primary policy.” Consequently, Allmerica contends, the underwriters intended to be bound by Columbia Casualty’s interpretations of the policy, including any decisions Columbia Casualty might make about coverage and settlement.
This conclusion does not follow from the premise. An excess carrier’s intent to incorporate the same words used in a separate agreement between the primary insurer and the insured does not imply an intent by the excess carrier to accept decisions made by the primary carrier about the extent of its obligations under its own agreement. By adopting the form of words used by Columbia Casualty, the underwriters did not also cede to it the right to make decisions about the underwriters’ obligation to perform in various circumstances. To conclude otherwise would undermine the distinct and separate nature of each insurer’s contract with Allmerica.
Allmerica’s argument about the “intent of the parties” arises from a misreading of cases in which a follow form excess insurer has disputed a change in the primary contract made after the effective date of the policy. For example, Allmerica relies on L.E. Myers Co. v. Harbor Ins. Co., 77 Ill. 2d 4 (1979) (L.E. Myers), a case in which a mutual mistake of fact resulted in the reformation of the policy issued by a primary insurer. The defendant, a follow form insurer, had issued its policy without reading or inspecting the original policy that had included the error. The reformation modified an exclusion, resulting in the claimed loss being covered. The primary insurer settled, but the defendant disclaimed coverage, citing the exclusion as originally written. Id. at 6-9. The Supreme Court of Illinois held that the excess insurer was bound to the reformation.18 Id. at 12. It grounded this conclusion in the “[follow form insurer’s] lack of concern with the definition of coverage in the primary policy, as evidenced by [its] willingness to issue its own policy without even reading the underlying policy.” Id. at 9-10.
[634]*634The L.E. Myers case never uses the phrase “intent of the parties.” Insofar as it concerns “intent,” the case deals with the parties’ intent with respect to whether particular words were to have been included in the contract. This is related to, but distinct from, what the parties may have intended regarding the meaning of those words. The meaning of words in an insurance contract, that is, the interpretation of the contract, is a question of law resting ultimately with the court, not the parties. What the parties intended the words to mean becomes relevant only when an ambiguity in the contractual language is apparent. L.E. Myers, supra, involved no such ambiguity.19
In sum, absent an explicit contractual commitment to do so, an insurer is not bound by the settlement another insurer makes for the same claim, even if the language of the nonsettling policy follows the form of the settling policy. The underwriters were entitled to make a determination concerning the merits of the Bussie class action settlement and coverage under its policy independent of that made by Columbia Casualty.20
4. Coverage under the policy. Having concluded that the underwriters are not bound by the primary insurer’s decision to settle with Allmerica, we consider whether the underwriters are entitled to a summary judgment of noncoverage. The parties focus on the prior claims exclusion (exclusion Ill.b) and its common-law corollary, the known loss doctrine, and on the exclusion for claims based on promises of future performance (exclusion IILg). The exclusions are found in the insurance company professional services liability portion of the Columbia [635]*635Casualty policy, and were adopted by the underwriters through the follow form clause.
a. Prior claims exclusion. The prior claims exclusion bars coverage for claims that allege the same or related conduct as a claim made prior to the original effective date of the policy.21 In 1992, one D.P. lowers commenced an action (lowers action) in the Circuit Court for Montgomery County, Alabama. He alleged that an agent of Allmerica had made misrepresentations about the value of his policy (including a “vanishing premium” representation) and that Allmerica had negligently failed to supervise the agent. The underwriters argue that the lowers action and the Bussie class action assert similar allegations constituting “Interrelated Wrongful Acts”22 that are excluded from coverage.
The underwriters, however, have failed to establish, for purposes of summary judgment, that the lowers action and the Bussie class action were “logically or causally connected” as meant by this exception. The lowers action complaint alleged misrepresentations by a particular agent, and accused Allmerica of negligent failure to supervise that agent. In contrast, the Bussie class action alleged a scheme of misrepresentations perpetrated by Allmerica through its agents. Bussie, supra at 65. While these two cases do share a similarity, in that both allege misrepresentations about the future cash value of the policies sold, that similarity is not sufficient to establish that these cases involved a “common fact, circumstance, situation, transaction or event” as required under the policy exclusion. Commonality is a more [636]*636demanding requirement than similarity. As Allmerica notes, the alleged wrongdoing in lowers and Bussie “took place at different times and locations, and involved different policyholders, different sales agents, and separate transactions.” While we cannot say that the underwriters will be unable to show that the claims were “interrelated” in any circumstances, they have not done so on the record before us. Summary judgment for underwriters on this ground should have been denied.
b. Known loss doctrine. We also reject the underwriters’ argument that coverage of the Bussie class action is barred by the known loss doctrine.23 In SCA Servs., Inc. v. Transportation Ins. Co., 419 Mass. 528 (1995) (SCA Servs.), we noted that “the basic purpose of insurance is to protect against fortuitous events and not against known certainties. Parties wager against the occurrence or nonoccurrence of a specified event; the carrier insures against a risk, not a certainty.” Id. at 532, citing Bartholomew v. Appalachian Ins. Co., 655 F.2d 27, 29 (1st Cir. 1981). Under the known loss doctrine, “the insurable risk is eliminated where an insured knows, when it purchases a policy, that there is a substantial probability that it will suffer or has already suffered a loss. At that point, the risk ceases to be contingent and becomes a probable or known loss.” SCA Servs., supra at 532-533. Thus in SCA Servs., we affirmed summary judgment of noncoverage where the insured “had full knowledge of the probable loss for which it later sought a defense and indemnification.” Id. at 533-534.
The underwriters argue that the known loss doctrine applies because “Allmerica knew of hundreds of ‘Bussie type’ vanishing premium losses prior to the inception of coverage.” The record, however, does not support this contention. Although All-merica knew when it purchased the excess policy that it faced multiple individual vanishing premium claims, and as part of its policy application disclosed both the specific claims against it [637]*637and the fact that “vanishing premium” claims were being litigated against others in the industry, Allmerica had not admitted to or been adjudicated to have made “vanishing premium” misrepresentations. In other words, Allmerica had knowledge of possible and actual claims (which it disclosed), but not probable or actual losses. Further, its general awareness of “vanishing premium” lawsuits would not be sufficient to give Allmerica actual or constructive knowledge that the Bussie class action in particular (which had not been filed) constituted a likely loss. While most sophisticated insureds will have some idea of the sorts of claims they may face, that is not the same as knowing of the existence or merits of a particular claim.
Were we to accept the underwriters’ argument, we would be applying the known loss doctrine more expansively than the narrow interpretation suggested by the facts in SCA Sews, supra. In that case, a nuisance claim by local residents resulted in findings that a waste disposal operation had caused extensive contamination of groundwater and other environmental pollution. A court ordered the site closed. Id. at 529-530. Two years after that order (but before it was affirmed on appeal) the operator purchased a liability insurance policy. Id. at 532. After local residents later brought suit for damages, we concluded, based on the known loss doctrine, that the insurer had no duty to indemnify. Id. at 533-534. We noted that the operator’s “knowledge [went] beyond simply knowing that there was environmental contamination and that its landfill was the probable source of this contamination. [The operator] knew that the residents . . . were damaged by the operation of the site. Therefore, the nuisance for which [the operator] sought personal injury coverage was not only a known but an adjudicated fact at the time [the operator] purchased the insurance and thus was uninsurable.” Id. at 534.
In contrast, the underwriters’ policy was in effect before the Bussie class action was filed. Unlike those in SCA Sews., the claims in Bussie were not known, much less adjudicated, at the time Allmerica purchased its policy. While a prior adjudication may not be necessary to implicate the known loss doctrine, its centrality to our analysis in SCA Sews, suggests a greater degree of certainty of loss than the underwriters argue is required. The [638]*638United States Court of Appeals for the First Circuit took a similar view of SCA Servs. in United States Liab. Ins. Co. v. Selman, 70 F.3d 684, 691 (1st Cir. 1995) (Selman), holding that, under Massachusetts law, “the known loss doctrine only applies when the insured actually knows on or before the effective date of the policy either that a loss has occurred or that one is substantially certain to occur.” Selman is consistent with our view of the proper narrow construction of the known loss doctrine. Considered through this lens, the undisputed fact that Allmerica faced “vanishing premium” lawsuits was not sufficient to convert any particular case (including the Bussie class action) from a risk of loss to a probable or a certain one.24 The summary judgment record does not support denial of coverage based on the known loss doctrine.
c. Promises of future performance exclusion. The professional services liability provision of the policy covers the acts of All-merica’s agents in rendering professional services. See note 5, supra. The exclusion for promises of future performance bars coverage of any claim involving a representation about the past performance or future value of an insurance product.25 This exclusion has an important exception for actions of agents “acting independent of the Allmerica Financial Insureds,” meaning that the exclusion does not apply to claims based on unauthorized representations made by agents “in conjunction with [All-merica’s] authorized marketing materials.”26 Allmerica’s liability to the members of the class, however, is not dependent [639]*639on whether its agents were acting independent of Allmerica in making representations about the past performance or future value of its policies, or at its direction. Shumway v. Home Fire & Marine Ins. Co., 301 Mass. 391, 393-394 (1938) (insurer liable for agents acting with its apparent authority). It is the underwriters’ obligation to indemnify Allmerica that turns on this distinction.
The underwriters contend that the exception does not apply because the Bussie class action “involved an alleged company-wide scheme perpetrated by Allmerica on its Policyholders rather than a case about individual agent misconduct.” Consequently, it can be presumed that claims settled in the Bussie class action involved representations properly attributable to All-merica under the policy, and not to agents acting independently of it. The order of the Federal court approving the Bussie class action settlement did not, however, make any factual or legal conclusions about the validity of the allegations in the complaint. Rather, it provided that nothing in the order or the settlement “may be construed as, or may be used as an admission or concession by or against Allmerica ... of the validity of any claim or any actual or potential fault, wrongdoing or liability whatsoever.” Bussie, supra at 81. In other words, in agreeing to settle, Allmerica was not stipulating to the truth of the allegations. The settlement order therefore does not prevent Allmerica from contending in an action for indemnification that any improper representations were made by agents acting independent of Allmerica and not at its direction.27 In other words, the Bussie complaint and the settlement order do not resolve the question of the applicability of the exception and the consequent duty of the underwriters to indemnify. Travelers Ins. [640]*640Co. v. Waltham Indus. Labs. Corp., 883 F.2d 1092, 1099 (1st Cir. 1989), citing Newell-Blais Post # 443, Veterans of Foreign Wars of the U.S., Inc. v. Shelby Mut. Ins. Co., 396 Mass. 633 (1986) (facts, not allegations in complaint, control duty to indemnify).
We agree with the motion judge that the “ultimate issue of whether these representations by AUmerica’s sales agents were authorized by AUmerica is a material question of fact that remains unanswered” in the summary judgment record. Consequently, summary judgment was properly denied for both parties on this issue.
5. Conclusion. The denial of AUmerica’s motion for summary judgment is affirmed. Summary judgment for the underwriters is reversed. The case is remanded to the Superior Court for further proceedings in accordance with this opinion.
So ordered.