E.I. duPont De Nemours & Co. v. Allstate Insurance

879 A.2d 929
CourtSuperior Court of Delaware
DecidedAugust 31, 2004
DocketC.A. 99C-12-253 JTV
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 879 A.2d 929 (E.I. duPont De Nemours & Co. v. Allstate Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
E.I. duPont De Nemours & Co. v. Allstate Insurance, 879 A.2d 929 (Del. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

OPINION

VAUGHN, Resident Judge.

In this civil action the plaintiff, E.I. du Pont de Nemours & Company (“Dupont”), seeks declaratory relief and money damages against numerous insurance companies from which it purchased excess umbrella liability insurance policies prior to March 1, 1986. Dupont alleges that the defendants are jointly and severally obligated, pursuant to the terms of their respective policies, to indemnify it for liabilities arising from the sale of a product known as Delrin. Delrin was produced by Dupont and used by other companies to make acetal fittings for polybutylene pipe plumbing systems (“PB systems”). As a result of alleged defects in Delrin, Dupont has been subjected to many thousands of claims for damages from owners of residential housing units which were equipped with PB systems.

A number of motions are currently before the Court. In this opinion, I address the following:

1. Dupont’s Motion for Summary Judgment on Phase One Issues Directed to 1983-Year Insurers. 1

2. Certain Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment on the Number of Occurrences. 2

3. Certain Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment Concerning Certain Phase One Issues. 3

*933 The facts, which are taken largely from Dupont’s brief in support of its motion and its presentation at oral argument, are as follows.

FACTS

In 1988 Dupont began manufacturing and selling an acetal resin plastic material known as “Delrin,” which was purchased and used by other companies to mold fittings for polybutylene pipe plumbing systems, which were installed in residential housing units. PB systems were developed by Shell Chemical Company (“Shell”), which made the polybutylene material and sold it to various manufacturing companies that made the plumbing pipes. These companies also manufactured pipe fittings made with acetal plastic material rather than polybutylene. The original manufacturer of acetal plastic material was Hoechst-Celanese Corporation (“Celanese”), which called its product “Cel-con.” Between 1978 and 1983, Celanese supplied all of the acetal plastic material for the manufacture of fittings for PB plumbing systems. In 1983, Dupont entered the market with its product, Delrin. Beginning in that year, both Dupont and Celanese sold acetal plastic material to the fitting manufacturers, and both Dupont’s Delrin and Celanese’s Celcon were used to make fittings that were incorporated into PB systems installed across the country. Dupont manufactured and sold Delrin until 1989. In all, it is estimated that beginning in 1978 and continuing until 1989, PB systems with acetal fittings were installed in millions of homes across the United States and Canada.

In 1987, Dupont received service of its first lawsuit filed on behalf of homeowners seeking damages on account of property damage allegedly caused by defective PB systems. This lawsuit alleged that Du-pont, along with Shell, Celanese, and other entities, was liable for damages because PB systems, including their acetal fittings, were inherently defective and caused property damage and loss of use of property. As a result of this lawsuit and several others, Dupont stopped selling Delrin to manufacturers of PB system fittings.

In the ensuing years, Dupont, Shell and Celanese were faced with many lawsuits filed on behalf of homeowners with PB systems. The suits sought compensation for the cost of repair and replacement of the PB plumbing systems, the cost of repairing water damage to homes caused by leaks in PB plumbing systems, and damages for other problems which the homeowners’ allegedly experienced as a result of the failure of PB systems.

When used in PB plumbing applications, the acetal material from which the fittings were made experienced degradation. Both Delrin and Celcon acetal fittings are susceptible to chemical attack by elements found in typical household water supplies, such as chlorine, unfavorable pH, and soluble metals.

Thus, when acetal fittings are placed into service in household PB systems and come into contact with water, they begin to degrade. Ultimately, the fittings lose their strength and can no longer contain the water flowing through them — thereby resulting in pipe bursts and leaks.

Since 1989, Dupont has entered into settlements of approximately 200 lawsuits filed by individual plaintiffs or groups of plaintiffs. These settlements include settlements of lawsuits brought by property owners, as well as settlements of actions *934 brought by fitting manufacturers, such as Brass-Craft, which were themselves the subject of homeowner claims. Some PB system lawsuits against Dupont are still pending.

In addition, in response to the many homeowner claims in the late 1980’s and early 1990’s, Shell, Celanese and Dupont established a facility in Plano, Texas, known as the Plumbing Claims Group (“PCG”) to address claims without the need for the homeowner to resort to litigation. Through this facility, Shell, Celanese and Dupont have jointly funded the repair and replacement of approximately 167,000 damaged PB systems.

In the mid-1990’s Dupont, Shell and Ce-lanese entered into negotiations with various claimants’ counsel for a national class-action settlement of all PB claims. Dupont reached such a class-action settlement in an Alabama class-action lawsuit captioned Garria Spencer v. Shell Oil Co. 4 (“Spencer”). This settlement, which was approved in November 1995, provided that Dupont would pay a flat 10% share of the costs borne by homeowners with PB systems with acetal fittings who had replaced their systems.

Shortly after the Spencer settlement, Shell and Celanese entered into another national class-action settlement in a Tennessee case captioned Cox v. Shell Oil Co. 5 (“Cox”). Under the Cox settlement, which was approved by the court in 1995, Shell and Celanese agreed to pay for the replacement of PB systems of homeowners who qualified for relief.

Following the Spencer and Cox national class-action settlements, Dupont, Shell and Celanese entered into an agreement, dated November 17, 1995 (the “1995 Three-Party Agreement”), under which they agreed to settle the claims asserted against each other relating to their past costs, and they agreed on funding and payment mechanisms for the national class-action settlements on a going-forward basis.

Under the Agreement, Dupont agreed to pay the 10% share to which it committed itself in Spencer on claims involving PB systems with acetal fittings which Shell and Celanese were settling in Cox, through the Cox class-action claims facility, which was known as the Consumer Plumbing Recovery Center (“CPRC”).

Under the Spencer

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Bluebook (online)
879 A.2d 929, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ei-dupont-de-nemours-co-v-allstate-insurance-delsuperct-2004.