PA Natl Mut Casualty v. St. John, J., Aplts

CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedDecember 15, 2014
Docket86 MAP 2012
StatusPublished

This text of PA Natl Mut Casualty v. St. John, J., Aplts (PA Natl Mut Casualty v. St. John, J., Aplts) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
PA Natl Mut Casualty v. St. John, J., Aplts, (Pa. 2014).

Opinion

[J-37-2013][M.O. – Baer, J.] IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA MIDDLE DISTRICT

PENNSYLVANIA NATIONAL MUTUAL : No. 86 MAP 2012 CASUALTY INSURANCE COMPANY : : Appeal from the Order of the Superior : Court at No. 277 EDA 2011 dated V. : 11/28/11 affirming the order of the : Chester County Court of Common : Pleas, Civil Division, at No. 09-6388 JOHN D. ST. JOHN AND KATHY M. ST. : dated 12/20/10 JOHN, INDIVIDUALLY AND D/B/A : THUNDER VALLEY FARM AND LPH : PLUMBING AND HEATING, LLC AND : ARGUED: May 7, 2013 STOLTZFUS WELDING AND REPAIR : : : APPEAL OF: JOHN D. ST. JOHN AND : KATHY M. ST. JOHN :

DISSENTING OPINION

MR. JUSTICE SAYLOR DECIDED: December 15, 2014

I would dismiss this appeal as having been improvidently granted. My reasoning

follows.

In some lines of insurance law decisions, it is difficult to discern the degree to

which the courts are applying conventional principles of contract construction or layering

doctrinal innovations over salient policy terms based upon practical or equitable

considerations. See, e.g., J.H. France Refractories Co. v. Allstate Ins. Co., 534 Pa. 29,

38, 626 A.2d 502, 507 (1993) (holding that exposure to asbestos, as well as all phases

of an ensuing disease, independently trigger coverage). From my own point of view, I

believe that it is important to be clear about which of these approaches is being applied

in the course of judicial review and, if it is the latter, to provide an appropriate justification for any departures from policy provisions and/or ordinary rules of

construction. In all events, as the majority notes, the analysis should at least begin with

the insurance policy in issue. See Majority Opinion, slip op. at 24 (“The goal in

construing and applying the language of an insurance contract is to effectuate the intent

of the parties as manifested by the language of the specific policy.”).

In the present matter, however, the appellants’ argumentation does not hew to

the policy language. For example, as a main premise within their arguments,

Appellants take the position that the “occurrence,” for purposes of the Penn National

commercial general liability policies, was a discrete one in the form of LPH Plumbing’s

negligent installation of the gray water collection and drinking water systems at Thunder

Valley Farm in early 2003. See Brief for Appellants at 18; see also Majority Opinion,

slip op. at 16. The policies, however, define “occurrence” to include “continuous or

repeated exposure to substantially the same general harmful conditions.” Majority

Opinion, slip op. at 6 (citation omitted). Thus, facially, the ongoing poisoning of a dairy

herd qualifies as a continuing “occurrence” under the policies, contrary to Appellants’

present depiction of a discrete occurrence. I believe that this sort of incongruity, when

attached to a critical premise, impacts this Court’s ability to fashion an opinion which

would offer meaningful guidance beyond the idiosyncratic parameters set by the

arguments.

A similar concern arises in relation to Appellants’ approach to a coverage-

triggering “manifestation” in their treatment of the first two issues accepted for review.

In this regard, their arguments appear to assume that coverage is triggered only by a

“first manifestation,” an assumption which does not appear to be borne out specifically

in terms of the Penn National policies. See, e.g., Brief for Appellants at 17 (“The

dispositive issue with respect to the first two questions . . . is: [w]hen did the effects of

[J-37-2013][M.O. – Baer, J.] - 2 [the underlying negligence] first manifest in a way that would put a reasonable person

on notice of injury?” (emphasis added, internal quotation marks omitted)). Under

Section I(1)(b)(2) of the policies, coverage applies generally to property damage that

occurs during the policy period. See R.R. 387a, 405a. Significantly, there is no

specifically articulated basis to exclude coverage if similar property damage took place

during a previous policy period – unless LPH had knowledge of an occurrence or claim,

which it did not before 2006.1 Since Penn National stipulated that property damage

took place during each of the three policy periods, see Stipulation at 2 ¶14, R.R. 166a, I

am unable to discern an explicit reason deriving from unambiguous policy language

brought into issue in this appeal why coverage should not obtain under each such

period.2

I also have reservations concerning the majority’s analysis. For example, the

majority opinion often recognizes the conceptual difference between an “occurrence”

and a “trigger” of coverage (such as first manifestation). Compare, e.g., Majority

Opinion, slip op. at 6 (defining “occurrence” for purposes of the Penn National policies),

with id. at 23 (providing a different definition for “trigger of coverage”). Nevertheless, the

1 Indeed, as further discussed below, the majority is able to discern such a limitation only by postulating about the “reasonable expectations” of the insurer and policyholder, an analysis which I believe is substantially problematic in its own right. See infra.

2 To the degree that Appellants’ arguments accept a limiting principle deriving from pre- existing impairment of property, it may also be observed that Appellants’ herd was subject to change: during the 2003-2006 timeframe, new cows were rotated into the herd and experienced adverse effects due to their exposure to contaminated water, see N.T., June 10, 2010, at 74-75, and calves were born with deformities and complications requiring surgery to the maternity cow. See id. at 35-36, 52-54, 77-78. Under these circumstances, to the degree to which the herd is being conceptualized as a single unit of property, this would seem to me to represent an abstraction from the facts that appears problematic relative to any present undertaking to clarify Pennsylvania insurance law.

[J-37-2013][M.O. – Baer, J.] - 3 majority cites affirmatively to cases which conflate these insurance-law concepts. See,

e.g., id. at 28-29 (relying upon D’Auria v. Zurich Insurance Co., 352 Pa. Super. 231,

507 A.2d 857 (1986), for the proposition that “[a]n occurrence happens when the

injurious effects of the negligent act first manifest themselves in a way that would put a

reasonable person on notice of injury” (emphasis in original)). Of course, occurrence

and manifestation for purposes of the present case must be different, because the

parties have accepted that the salient “occurrence” was the negligent systems

installation, and the manifestation relates to the later-ensuing impairments to Appellants’

dairy herd.

More broadly, given the constraints arising from the manner in which this appeal

has been presented, the majority opinion should not be read for the proposition that the

policy language in issue actually must be taken as either establishing a first-

manifestation rule or a multiple trigger regime within the purview of the J.H. France

decision. Those are merely the two alternatives presented to the Court, neither of

which, I believe, necessarily tracks the language of the insurance policies or flows from

an appropriate construction of ambiguous policy language per application of

conventional principles of contract law.

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