EnergyNorth v. American Home Assur.

2003 DNH 120
CourtDistrict Court, D. New Hampshire
DecidedJuly 16, 2003
DocketCV-99-502-JD
StatusPublished

This text of 2003 DNH 120 (EnergyNorth v. American Home Assur.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
EnergyNorth v. American Home Assur., 2003 DNH 120 (D.N.H. 2003).

Opinion

EnergyNorth v . American Home Assur. CV-99-502-JD 07/16/03 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF NEW HAMPSHIRE

EnergyNorth Natural Gas, Inc.

v. Civil N o . 99-502-JD Opinion N o . 2003 DNH 120 American Home Assurance Co., et a l .

O R D E R

The plaintiff, EnergyNorth Natural Gas, Inc. (“ENGI”), seeks a declaratory judgment and alleges breach of contract with respect to insurance policies issued by the defendants. In particular, ENGI contends that the defendants are obligated to provide a defense and indemnification for ENGI’s expenses incurred in responding to a directive of the New Hampshire Department of Environmental Services (“NHDES”) for identification and remediation of contamination, which originated at a site in Dover where ENGI’s predecessor in interest operated a manufactured gas plant. Defendants, London Market Insurers (“LMI”), joined by Century Indemnity Company and Northern Assurance Company of America, move for summary judgment on the grounds that certain provisions in the applicable policies bar coverage.

Background

A manufactured gas plant operated in Dover from 1850 until

1956. ENGI’s predecessor, Gas Services, Inc. (“GSI”), owned and operated the plant from 1945 to 1955. In 1955, GSI transferred

the plant to Allied New Hampshire Gas Company, and the plant

ceased operations in 1956 when natural gas became available.

ENGI no longer owns the plant site.

In addition to the plant in Dover, ENGI, through its

predecessors, owned and operated plants at several different

locations in New Hampshire, including Concord, Laconia, and Nashua. As a former owner of the sites, ENGI is obligated to

address the contamination and environmental problems caused by

plant operations. The expenses of responding to the

contamination and environmental problems have generated years of

disputes and legal action between ENGI and its liability insurers

in state and federal courts.

ENGI litigated a coverage issue with its liability insurer,

Continental Insurance Company, pertaining to the meaning of

“accident” in the policies applicable to ENGI’s claims

originating from the Concord plant site. EnergyNorth Natural Gas

v . Cont’l Ins. Co., 146 N.H. 156, 158 (2001) (“Continental”).

Two similar suits involving different manufactured gas plant

sites are proceeding in this court. See, e.g., EnergyNorth

Natural Gas, Inc. v . Underwriters at Lloyd’s, 97-064-M;

EnergyNorth Natural Gas, Inc. v . Utica Mut. Ins. Co., 99-049-M;

see also Energy North Natural Gas Inc. v . AEGIS, 95-591-B (D.N.H.

June 5 , 2002) (dismissing coverage claims for Concord plant

site). A question may be certified to the New Hampshire Supreme

2 Court in EnergyNorth, 97-064-M and 99-049-M to determine what trigger-of-coverage standard should be applied under the applicable insurance policies. This case is stayed with respect to the trigger-of-coverage issue, pending resolution of the issue in that case.

The Dover plant site is located on Portland and Cocheco Streets, just north of the Cocheco River. In its one hundred years of operation, the plant manufactured gas through a coal process, an oil process, and a carbureted water process. During the manufacturing process, gas was held in tanks -- a relief gasholder of 12,000 cubic feet, which held gas before it went to the purifiers, and a gasholder of 130,000 cubic feet, which stored gas before distribution. The gasholder tanks were underground. Tars and oils settled at the bottom of the tanks. Water that was used to seal the gas in the tanks also mixed with oil and tar at the bottom. The manufacturing process occurred in a boiler house which had boilers, fuel tanks, and tar storage.

The gas manufacturing process generated waste and byproducts including tar, oil, used purification products, ash, coal slag, and clinker. Tar produced by the Dover plant was reused as fuel for the boilers and was sold to an outside contractor. Unlike some of the other manufactured gas plant sites in New Hampshire, the Dover site did not have a waste or discharge collection “pond.” Because of the plant’s location next to the river, some wastes may have been discharged into the river, although there is

3 no direct evidence of such discharges. Purifier box wastes, consisting of wood chips, sulfur, and ferric ferrocyanide, were found buried near the plant site. The plant’s structures have been demolished or buried. Little documentary information is available about the plant and its operations. Only one former employee at the plant, James McAdams, has been located and deposed. McAdams was manager of the plant from 1945 to 1954. He was not aware of any discharges of wastes or byproducts directly into the river. Tar was stored in a tank until it was hauled away by the outside contractor. McAdams remembered that tar sales were important to the plant’s business, and he was not aware that the plant produced any tar that it did not sell. McAdams did remember that drip oils were pumped from the distribution system and were dumped near the river.

The majority of the contamination at the Dover site originated from the locations or “footprints” of the two gasholders and the boiler house. D r . Neil S . Shifrin, ENGI’s expert witness, concluded that the Dover plant was designed and operated in a manner that was consistent with the industry in general. Leaks and spills were unintentional and, if known, were cleaned or fixed by the operators. D r . Shifrin has concluded that the contamination of soil and groundwater at the Dover plant came primarily from inadvertent leaks and spills in and around the two underground gasholders and from inadvertent leaks in the

4 fuel handling equipment in the boiler house. A typical leak from

the gasholders would be underground, from the bottom of the tank.

Dr. Shifrin’s map of the area indicates that contamination from

the plant site has spread and continues to spread into the

groundwater at the plant site, into the surface water, and into

the river and river sediment.

The NHDES directive, dated April 2 1 , 1999, which is the basis for ENGI’s liability arising from the Dover plant site and

for its claim for insurance coverage, is appended to the original

complaint. The directive states that “there has been a release

of contaminants at the [Dover] site from a former manufactured

gas plant operation,” and references “the Final Site Inspection

Prioritization Report for the Dover Gas Plant property completed

by Weston/ARCS on December 9, 1994.” The directive asks ENGI to

“participate in the development of a Site Investigation Report

(SIR) in accordance with the requirements outlined in Env-Wm

1403.” The parties apparently agree that at present no

remediation plan has been developed so that it is not now

possible to predict the nature, extent, or cost of any

investigation or remediation efforts that may be required.

ENGI claims coverage under excess liability policies issued

to GSI by Century Indemnity Company, Lloyd’s (Underwriters

London), and Northern Assurance Company of America. ENGI seeks a

declaratory judgment under both the federal and state declaratory

judgment statutes. See 28 U.S.C. § 2201; N.H. Rev. Stat. Ann.

5 (“RSA”) 491:22. ENGI also alleges that the defendants have

breached their insurance contracts by failing to provide a

defense and indemnification for the costs of ENGI’s response to

the NHDES directive.

Similar claims pertaining to different manufactured gas

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2003 DNH 120, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/energynorth-v-american-home-assur-nhd-2003.