Kimmins Industrial Service Corporation v. Reliance Insurance Company, National Casualty Company, Landmark Insurance Company

19 F.3d 78, 1994 U.S. App. LEXIS 4464
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedMarch 10, 1994
Docket455, Docket 93-7481
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 19 F.3d 78 (Kimmins Industrial Service Corporation v. Reliance Insurance Company, National Casualty Company, Landmark Insurance Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kimmins Industrial Service Corporation v. Reliance Insurance Company, National Casualty Company, Landmark Insurance Company, 19 F.3d 78, 1994 U.S. App. LEXIS 4464 (2d Cir. 1994).

Opinion

KEARSE, Circuit Judge:

Defendant Landmark Insurance Company (“Landmark”) appeals from so much of a judgment of the United States District Court for the Western District of New York, Edmund F. Maxwell, Magistrate Judge, entered pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 686(c) (1988), as declares that Landmark is required to indemnify its insured, plaintiff Kimmins Industrial Services Corporation (“Kimmins”), for losses Kimmins may incur in connection with certain claims relating to injuries of workers who were engaged in the removal of asbestos.. The magistrate judge ruled that because the injuries were only incidentally related to the removal of the asbestos, the claims were not within the insurance policy's exclusion for claims arising out of the remov: al of that substance. Landmark challenges this ruling on appeal. For the reasons below, we disagree and affirm the decision of the district court.

I. BACKGROUND

The background of this litigation is not in dispute. Kimmins is engaged in the business of performing clean-ups of industrial sites. In February 1990, Kimmins was engaged by Bethlehem Steel Corporation (“Bethlehem”) to dismantle certain equipment and structures at one of Bethlehem’s New York plants. Their agreement provided that Kim-mins would indemnify Bethlehem against all liability for any injuries suffered “by reason of any act or omission, whether negligent or otherwise, on the part of any of the Bethlehem Companies” during the work covered by the contract. Kimmins subcontracted the asbestos removal part of the project to Kim-mins Abatement Corporation.

Working on the Bethlehem clean-up project in June 1990, Kimmins Abatement Corporation employees William Bailey and Steven Samson were at the top of a “quench tower,” removing equipment and picking up loose asbestos that had previously been removed from the tower walls. A quench tower is a device used to cool railcar loads of hot coke, a coal derivativé, by dousing the loads *80 with water as they pass beneath the tower; the process generates a large quantity of steam. While Bailey and Samson were working, a load of coke was doused inadvertently, and Bailey and Samson suffered serious burns from the rising cloud of hot steam. Attempting to escape the steam, they suffered additional injuries when they fell from the tower.

Bailey and Samson brought suits in New York state court against Bethlehem, alleging that Bethlehem’s allowing the coke to be doused while work was in progress on the tower constituted actionable negligence. Bethlehem removed these suits to the United States District Court for the Western District of New York and served third-party complaints against Kimmins for indemnification and contribution.

Kimmins had purchased three pertinent insurance policies covering periods that included June 1990: (1) a Commercial General Liability policy from defendant Reliance Insurance Company (“Reliance”), (2) an Umbrella Liability Policy from defendant National Casualty Company (“National”), and (3) an Excess Umbrella Liability policy from Landmark. The Landmark policy bore an endorsement that excluded coverage for certain asbestos-related injuries:

ASBESTOS EXCLUSION
In consideration of the premium paid and notwithstanding anything contained in this policy to the contrary, it is agreed as follows:
The coverage afforded by this policy does not apply to bodily injury, personal injury or property damage arising out of:
1) Inhaling, ingesting or prolonged physical exposure to asbestos or goods or products containing asbestos; or
2) The use of asbestos in constructing or manufacturing any good, product, or structure; or
3) The removal of asbestos from any good, product, or structure; or
4) The manufacture, transportation, storage or disposal of asbestos or goods or products containing asbestos.

(Emphasis added.) The National and Reliance policies contained virtually identical asbestos exclusions. Kimmins asked Reliance to defend Kimmins against Bethlehem’s claims for indemnification and contribution and notified all three insurers that it would seek indemnification from them if it were held liable on the Bethlehem claims. Reliance declined to defend Kimmins, contending that the asbestos exclusion applied.

Kimmins commenced the present action against Reliance, National, and Landmark, seeking a judgment declaring that Reliance is required to defend the claims asserted by Bethlehem and that all three insurers are required to indemnify Kimmins for any judgment against it in those actions. All parties moved for summary judgment. In a Decision and Order dated March 19, 1993 (“Decision”), the magistrate judge, before whom the parties had consented to proceed, denied defendants’ motions and granted that of Kimmins. The magistrate judge noted that, though both Bailey and Samson were removing asbestos at the time of their injuries,

[t]he source of the injuries suffered by both was the rail ear operated by Bethlehem. The coke it contained, the water poured on it and the resulting steam were in no way connected to the asbestos removal, or to asbestos at all.

Decision at 4. Observing that “[t]he injury would have happened to anyone standing on the tower, whether or not they were involved in asbestos removal,” id. at 5, the magistrate judge found that

the asbestos removal was incidental to the injury. While it is true that Mr. Samson and Mr. Bailey would not have been on that platform had they not been removing asbestos, the asbestos was not the proximate cause of their injury. The operation of the railroad car, having nothing to do with asbestos, was the cause.

Id. at 6. The magistrate judge concluded that the injuries therefore did not “aris[e] out of’ the removal of asbestos, and the asbestos exclusion was inapplicable.

Accordingly, the magistrate judge ordered that judgment be entered declaring that Reliance is obligated to defend Kimmins against the Bethlehem claims and declaring that all *81 three defendants are obligated to indemnify Kimmins “for all sums it may become obligated to pay as damages, costs and expenses as a result of the claims alleged in the lawsuits, as provided in the terms of their respective insurance policies.” Id. at 8.

Landmark has appealed, and the parties have agreed that the outcome of this appeal will also determine the obligation's of National. Reliance has not appealed.

II. DISCUSSION

On appeal, Landmark argues principally that the exclusion for injury “arising out of’ asbestos removal should be read to exclude from coverage any injury occurring while the injured person was engaged in removing asbestos. Under New York law, which the parties agree governs this diversity case, we disagree.

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Bluebook (online)
19 F.3d 78, 1994 U.S. App. LEXIS 4464, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kimmins-industrial-service-corporation-v-reliance-insurance-company-ca2-1994.