Nicor, Inc. v. Associated Electric and Gas Insurance

CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 30, 2006
Docket101844 Rel
StatusPublished

This text of Nicor, Inc. v. Associated Electric and Gas Insurance (Nicor, Inc. v. Associated Electric and Gas Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nicor, Inc. v. Associated Electric and Gas Insurance, (Ill. 2006).

Opinion

Docket No. 101844.

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS

NICOR, INC., et al., Appellants, v. ASSOCIATED ELECTRIC AND GAS INSURANCE SERVICES LIMITED et al. (Certain Underwriters at Lloyd’s of London et al., Appellees).

Opinion filed November 30, 2006.

JUSTICE KARMEIER delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion. Chief Justice Thomas and Justices Freeman, Fitzgerald, Kilbride, and Garman concurred in the judgment and opinion. Justice Burke took no part in the decision.

OPINION

Nicor, Inc., and Northern Illinois Gas Company, doing business as Nicor Gas Company (hereinafter referred to collectively as Nicor), are in the business of supplying natural gas to homes and businesses throughout northern Illinois. The litigation before us today concerns the obligation of certain of Nicor’s liability insurance carriers to indemnify the company for sums it expended in connection with the remediation of mercury contamination caused by the removal of gas meter regulators from the homes of its residential customers between 1961 and 1978. During the course of the litigation, which spanned a four-year period between 2000 and 2004, some of the defendant insurance carriers settled. The defendants designated by the parties as “certain underwriters at Lloyd’s of London and certain London market insurance companies” (the London Insurers) did not. In late 2004, the circuit court entered judgment in favor of Nicor and against the London Insurers in the amount of $10,281,703.46. The London Insurers appealed. The appellate court reversed and remanded for further proceedings on the sole ground that the circuit court had misapplied the terms of the applicable insurance policies. 362 Ill. App. 3d 745. We granted Nicor’s petition for leave to appeal. 177 Ill. 2d R. 315. For the reasons that follow, we now affirm the appellate court’s judgment.

BACKGROUND Nicor installs meters at the homes of its residential customers to measure the amount of natural gas the customers consume. Each meter contains a regulator which controls the flow of natural gas into the residence. The regulators decrease the high pressure used to transport natural gas through the delivery system to the lower pressures utilized within customers’ homes. As a safety feature, the regulators include a relief valve that opens if the pressure of the gas being supplied to a customer’s home is excessive. Until 1961, Nicor utilized gas meters whose regulators included relief valves containing the metallic element mercury. The quantity of mercury in a given unit ranged from 1½ to 4 ounces. The mercury, which remained liquid at room temperature, served as a “cap” on the relief valve. If the gas pressure in the system was too high, it would force the mercury “cap” aside, enabling the gas to pass through a vent and escape safely to the outside of the home. Beginning in 1961, Nicor initiated a systemwide program to remove regulators containing mercury from inside their customers’ homes and to replace them with new regulators utilizing a spring- activated relief mechanism. The new regulators with spring-activated relief valves were part of temperature-compensating meter sets that could be installed on the outside of customers’ homes. No mercury was used in any part of these replacement meter sets. In implementing its replacement program during this period, Nicor did not dispatch crews specifically to exchange meters. New

-2- meters were installed only if an old-style meter was discovered by a Nicor service crew sent to the area for some other reason, such as to perform maintenance or repair work at a customer’s home or to upgrade a neighborhood’s natural gas service. Whenever a Nicor crew found that a customer’s meter set was located in the house, it would remove that meter set and install one of the new temperature- compensating meters outside the residence. As part of this process, the Nicor crew would replace the old regulator containing a mercury relief valve with one of the new regulators equipped with a spring- activated relief valve. The replacement process was normally safe and unremarkable. In a very small number of cases, however, regulators were tilted or tipped in a way that allowed mercury to spill out and contaminate the customer’s home. The problem of contamination surfaced during the summer of 2000, when Nicor learned that a contractor it had hired had spilled mercury in a customer’s home while removing one of the old regulators. The initial contamination report was followed by revelations that additional mercury spills had occurred in the homes of other Nicor customers. Class actions seeking damages for personal injury and property damage were soon instituted against the company on behalf of all those who had been affected by the mercury spills resulting from the replacement of the old-style regulators. The Illinois Attorney General, joined by the State’s Attorneys of Cook, Du Page and Will Counties, also brought a separate suit against Nicor in the circuit court of Cook County. The Attorney General’s action demanded, inter alia, that Nicor be required to investigate the extent of mercury contamination caused by replacement of its natural gas regulators, to clean up the contamination, and to assist all potentially affected individuals in determining whether they had suffered any mercury exposure. Nicor was able to reach a settlement with the Attorney General’s office shortly after it filed its action. The class actions were consolidated and settled as well. Under the terms of the settlement in the Attorney General’s action, Nicor was required to identify all homes within its service area that may have been contaminated by mercury from an old-style regulator and to undertake appropriate measures to clean up any contamination that was detected. Nicor

-3- subsequently ascertained that over 300,000 of its customers’ homes may have had regulators with relief valves containing mercury. Approximately one third of those homes were determined to have been constructed after the period when the old-style relief valves were no longer being installed in new construction and were therefore not at risk for mercury contamination. The remaining 200,000 homes were physically inspected. Of those, 1,070, or approximately one-half of 1%, were found to contain impermissibly high levels of mercury. For the purposes of this litigation, the parties have stipulated that the mercury found in those 1,070 homes “was more likely than not due to the removal of mercury-containing regulators from inside the homes.” The process of investigating, identifying and remediating the mercury contamination in its customers’ homes cost Nicor approximately $90 million. Nicor turned to its insurers to obtain indemnification for those expenses. When the insurers refused to pay Nicor’s claims, the company brought this action against them in the circuit court of Cook County. Nicor’s suit sought declaratory relief and damages based on breach of contract and anticipatory breach of contract. All of the defendant insurance carriers that were still solvent agreed to a settlement with Nicor, with the exception of the London Insurers. Nicor had purchased polices from the London Insurers between 1961 and 1978.

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Nicor, Inc. v. Associated Electric and Gas Insurance, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nicor-inc-v-associated-electric-and-gas-insurance-ill-2006.