Paul Patz v. St. Paul Fire & Marine Insurance Company

15 F.3d 699, 1994 WL 27280
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedMarch 17, 1994
Docket93-2135
StatusPublished
Cited by90 cases

This text of 15 F.3d 699 (Paul Patz v. St. Paul Fire & Marine Insurance Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Paul Patz v. St. Paul Fire & Marine Insurance Company, 15 F.3d 699, 1994 WL 27280 (7th Cir. 1994).

Opinion

POSNER, Chief Judge.

St. Paul Fire & Marine Insurance Company appeals from a judgment in favor of its insureds (the Patz family and their corporation), rendered after a jury trial. The appeal requires us to interpret a pollution-exclusion clause found in many liability insurance policies. Federal jurisdiction is based on diversity of citizenship, and the substantive issues are governed by the law of Wisconsin.

In the northern Wisconsin town of Pound, the family Patz has a substantial although not sophisticated business of manufacturing farm equipment. Founded by a Patz whose formal education had ended in the third grade, the business is now managed by his three sons and one son-in-law, none of whom — as their counsel has emphasized to us — has a college education. No employees of the business are college-educated, either. In 1971, the Patzes decided that before selling the farm equipment they manufacture they would paint it. Two consulting firms, paid “alot of bucks” by the Patzes for their expertise in the paint business, not only set up a production line for painting the equipment but also advised the Patzes on how to dispose of the wastes generated as a byproduct of the painting. One of these wastes is water contaminated by phosphate. The consultants suggested that the Patzes dig an open pit for the water. The idea, well accepted in the waste-disposal community at the time, was that the water would evaporate, leaving a deposit of phosphate solids that would rest at the bottom of the pit and could be easily removed and used as fertiliz *702 er. Because the soil where the pit was to be dug was highly compacted clay soil, the water was expected to evaporate before it could permeate the soil, and so the soil beneath the pit would not be contaminated. Another waste by-product of the painting process, paint sludge, the consultants advised the Patzes to shovel into barrels which could be carted off to the town dump to be burned or buried there.

All this was done as recommended by the consultants until 1980, when Wisconsin’s Department of Natural Resources began nosing around the Patzes’ operation. The Department advised the Patzes that although the barrels of sludge were not hazardous to the environment, the town dump was not licensed to receive them. The Department told them to remove the barrels, 27 in number, that the dump had not as yet either buried or burned. Rather than taking the barrels to a licensed dump, as the Department suggested but did not order, the Patzes took the barrels back to their property, buried them, and paved them over to make an extension of the factory’s parking lot. As additional sludge accumulated, the Patzes burned them on their premises. Although the Department’s focus was on the barrels, not the evaporation pit, the Patzes discontinued the use of the pit in 1980 and filled it in the following year.

The Patzes’ homes are located on the same premises as their factory, and to the south of the pit and the parking lot. Water in the area runs from north to south.

In 1986 the Department returned and conducted an environmental audit which discovered groundwater contamination from the pit and soil contamination from the buried barrel's, though in neither case had the contamination spread beyond the Patzes’ premises. The Department ordered the removal of the barrels together with some of the soil beneath it, and the removal of a good deal of soil beneath the pit. It cost the Patzes $400,-000 to clean up the two sites, and that is the amount they sought to recover from the insurance company.

St. Paul resisted on the basis of two clauses in the liability insurance policy. The first, the pollution-exclusion clause, excludes coverage for “bodily injury or property damage arising out of the discharge, dispersal, release or escape of smoke, vapors, soot, fumes, acids, alkalis, toxic chemicals, liquids or gases, waste materials or other irritants, contaminants, or pollutants into or upon land, the atmosphere, or any water course or body of water; but this exclusion does not apply if such discharge, dispersal, release or escape is sudden and accidental.” St. Paul’s position is that the deposit of the phosphate-contaminated water in the evaporation pit, and of the barrels of paint sludge in the ground beneath the parking lot, constituted a “discharge” of waste materials into the land. This discharge, though not the resulting contamination, was intentional, not accidental, and therefore does not come within the exclusion from the exclusion. The Patzes counter that all that is excluded from the exclusion is discharges by which the insured intends to cause damage, in this case damage in the form of pollution or contamination of soil and groundwater. They add that St. Paul should be “judicially estopped” to contest this interpretation because at trial the insurance company tried to prove that the insureds had known that their methods of disposing of the waste by-products of their painting activities were contaminating the land. In rejecting this theory of the defense, the jury may have been impressed by the Patzes’ lack of higher education and the implausibility of their deliberately contaminating their own land. We do not know the source of their drinking water, but we do know that they have two ponds on their land from which they like to fish.

The Patzes’ invocation of the doctrine of judicial estoppel, on which see our recent discussion in Chaveriat v. Williams Pipe Line Co., 11 F.3d 1420, 1427-28 (7th Cir.1993), is futile. The doctrine presupposes a judgment (or its administrative equivalent), for all it does is forbid a person who has won a judgment on one ground to repudiate that ground in a subsequent litigation in an effort to obtain a second judgment. It is thus about abandoning winning, not losing, grounds. St. Paul won nothing by attempting to prove that the Patzes knew that their method of disposing of paint wastes would *703 damage the land. The attempt was an alternative to the grounds that St. Paul continues to press in this court, and the abandonment of the attempt on appeal was a laudable effort to narrow the issues and should not redound to the company’s harm. Of course, had the insurance company failed to present in the district court the grounds it is pressing on appeal, the abandonment of a ground that it had pressed would spell finis to the appeal; it would have abandoned its only nonwaived ground. That is not what happened.

By their mention of judicial estoppel the Patzes may have been groping for a related but separate doctrine, that of “mend the hold,” which limits the right of a defendant in a breach of contract suit to change the ground of his defense midway through the lawsuit. Harbor Ins. Co. v. Continental Bank Corp., 922 F.2d 357, 362-65 (7th Cir.1990). That doctrine, unlike judicial estoppel, does not require a judgment. But a vague allusion is not enough to preserve an issue for review, DDI Seamless Cylinder Int’l Inc. v. General Fire Extinguisher Corp., 14 F.3d 1163

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Bluebook (online)
15 F.3d 699, 1994 WL 27280, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/paul-patz-v-st-paul-fire-marine-insurance-company-ca7-1994.