Cascade Corp. v. American Home Assurance Co.

135 P.3d 450, 206 Or. App. 1, 2006 Ore. App. LEXIS 660
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedMay 17, 2006
Docket9205-03083; A118185
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 135 P.3d 450 (Cascade Corp. v. American Home Assurance Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cascade Corp. v. American Home Assurance Co., 135 P.3d 450, 206 Or. App. 1, 2006 Ore. App. LEXIS 660 (Or. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

*4 BREWER, C. J.

Plaintiff Cascade Corporation (Cascade) appeals from the judgment that the trial court entered on its claims against defendant Employers Reinsurance Corp. (ERC) for coverage under a commercial liability insurance policy that ERC issued to Cascade. Cascade sought coverage both for its expenses in defending administrative and judicial actions seeking to hold it liable for contamination to groundwater under and near its business property and for the expenses of remediating the contamination that was legally its responsibility. ERC provided excess coverage. Cascade has settled its claims against its primary insurers and against its excess insurers other than ERC.

The jury’s verdict was for the full amount that Cascade sought for its past expenses that it had not recovered from the primary insurers. However, the trial court entered judgment for only a small percentage of that verdict, and it declared that ERC is liable only for the same small percentage of Cascade’s future expenses. On appeal, Cascade asserts that those actions were erroneous. It also raises issues concerning prejudgment interest and attorney fees. In its cross-appeal, ERC argues that the trial court erred by entering judgment for Cascade in any amount and also raises an evidentiary issue. On appeal, we reverse and remand for entry of judgment in the full amount of the unrecovered expenses, for reconsideration of the amount of the award of attorney fees, and for an additional award of prejudgment interest; we affirm on the cross-appeal.

The underlying facts are not in dispute. We take them primarily from the trial court’s opinion. Since the mid-1950s, Cascade has manufactured attachments for lift trucks at a location in Gresham. From 1961 to 1975 it used chlorinated solvents to clean metal as part of its manufacturing process. Those solvents have made their way into the soils and contaminated the groundwater under and near Cascade’s plant, a result that, the jury found, Cascade did not expect. In the mid-1980s, various government agencies began investigating the groundwater contamination. In 1992, the Boeing Corporation, which has a manufacturing *5 plant that borders Cascade’s, sued Cascade in federal court to recover the expenses for which Boeing was liable in cleaning up groundwater contamination on its property. The federal court determined that Cascade was responsible for 70 percent of Boeing’s costs. Boeing Co. v. Cascade Corp., 920 F Supp 1121 (D Or 1996), aff'd in part, rem’d in part, 207 F3d 1177 (9th Cir 2000). 1 That responsibility was in addition to Cascade’s obligation to remedy the groundwater contamination on its own property.

Cascade incurred substantial expenses in order to defend the administrative and judicial actions and to remedy the contamination, and it will continue to incur additional expenses for some time to come. To recover those expenses, it made claims against all insurers that it could identify as having issued primary or excess liability policies that might cover Cascade’s liability for the groundwater contamination. In 1992, after the insurers failed to resolve those claims to Cascade’s satisfaction, it filed this action against the insurers, seeking both to recover its past expenses for defense and remediation and to obtain a declaration of their obligations for future expenses. 2 The case finally went to trial beginning June 30,1997. Before trial, the parties agreed to use March 1, 1997, as the date for distinguishing between past and future expenses. All amounts that Cascade incurred before that date were past expenses that Cascade would seek from the jury, and all expenses after that date were future expenses that would be the subject of the declaratory judgment. Immediately before the trial began, Cascade settled its claims against all but one of the primary insurers for a total payment of $9,750,000. 3 It then reduced its claim for past *6 expenses incurred against the remaining primary and excess insurer to $3,846,682 to reflect the amount of the settlement. The trial court treated that reduction as a judicial admission that the settlement with the primary insurers was for past rather than future expenses, a conclusion that the parties do not challenge on appeal.

As a result of the settlement, the defendants at the trial were, with one exception, excess insurers. Before closing arguments, Cascade settled its claim against most of those insurers (the AIG defendants) for $14 million. The settlement agreement expressly provided that the settlement was solely for future expenses. The jury found by a special verdict that there was continuing damage to the groundwater between February 1961 and July 1970, that it was unexpected, and that it was the result of an occurrence during each of the relevant policy periods. In its verdict, the jury established Cascade’s unpaid expenses in the amount that Cascade had requested and, in an extensive appendix to the verdict, determined which expenses were expenses of defense and which were expenses of remediation. 4 The next day the remaining primary insurer, a syndicate at Lloyd’s of London, paid Cascade the $50,000 limits of its policy, reducing the amount owed under the verdict to $3,796,682. Thus, the court’s judgment applied only to the two remaining excess insurers, ERC and the same syndicate at Lloyd’s.

In entering judgment, the trial court relied on its understanding of Lamb-Weston et al v. Ore. Auto. Ins. Co., 219 Or 110, 341 P2d 110 (1959), and concluded that the excess carriers who were not part of the settlement with the AIG defendants were liable only for the percentage of the remaining past expenses that the limits of their liability bore to the total limits of all of the excess liability insurers. Because the limits of all of the excess policies total $160,750,000, while the limit of ERC’s policy is $5 million, that conclusion meant that ERC was liable for only 3.1104 percent of the jury’s verdict, or $118,092. The court therefore entered judgment against ERC for past expenses of $118,092 and, in its declaratory judgment, declared that ERC is liable *7 for 3.1104 percent of Cascade’s future expenses until its policy limits are exhausted. The court retained jurisdiction to allocate the future expenses as the facts developed. It also awarded attorneys fees to Cascade only for work done after the settlement with the primary insurers, further reducing that amount to reflect the relatively small judgment that Cascade obtained. Finally, it refused to award prejudgment interest. 5

Cascade first assigns error to the trial court’s decision to apply the Lamb-Weston doctrine in entering judgment against ERC, a decision that led to a judgment that is only a minor portion of the insured unpaid past expenses that the jury found that Cascade had sustained. We agree with Cascade that the Lamb-Weston

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Bluebook (online)
135 P.3d 450, 206 Or. App. 1, 2006 Ore. App. LEXIS 660, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cascade-corp-v-american-home-assurance-co-orctapp-2006.