Peabody Essex Museum, Inc. v. United States Fire Insurance

802 F.3d 39, 2015 U.S. App. LEXIS 15858
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedSeptember 4, 2015
Docket13-1528, 13-1602
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 802 F.3d 39 (Peabody Essex Museum, Inc. v. United States Fire Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Peabody Essex Museum, Inc. v. United States Fire Insurance, 802 F.3d 39, 2015 U.S. App. LEXIS 15858 (1st Cir. 2015).

Opinion

HOWARD, Chief Judge.

Some decades ago, a substantial oil spill occurred on the Salem, Massachusetts property of plaintiff Peabody Essex Museum (“the Museum”). That pollution eventually migrated to the land of a down gradient neighbor, Heritage Plaza, which discovered the subsurface contamination in 2003. Heritage Plaza notified the Museum in late 2003, and the Museum gave prompt notice to both the state environmental authorities and its insurer, defendant United States Fire Insurance Company (“U.S. Fire”). In 2006, the Museum filed a coverage suit against U.S. Fire and eventually secured a sizable judgment in 2013. The parties now challenge numerous district court rulings, and several of the insurance issues are governed by state law under Boston Gas Co. v. Century Indemnity Co., 454 Mass. 337, 910 N.E.2d 290 (2009), a decision which rejected joint and several liability in progressive pollution cases in favor of pro rata allocation of indemnity, including for self-insured years on the risk.

After careful review, we affirm the challenged rulings related to insurance coverage but reverse a finding of Chapter 93A *42 liability against U.S. Fire under Massachusetts law.

I.

The surrounding facts are well-rehearsed in the district court orders below. See, e.g., Peabody Essex Museum, Inc. v. U.S. Fire Ins. Co., 623 F.Supp.2d 98 (D.Mass.2009); Peabody Essex Museum, Inc. v. U.S. Fire Ins. Co., No. 06-11209-NMG, 2012 WL 2952770, at *1 (D.Mass. July 18, 2012). A brief synopsis is enough to set the stage.

The principal parties share a contractual relationship under a comprehensive general liability policy which, as pertinent here, had a policy period that extended from December 19, 1983 to December 19, 1985. Generally speaking, the policy covered property damage occurring during that two-year period as long as the damage arose out of a sudden and accidental discharge of pollutants. 1 Under the policy, U.S. Fire also promised to defend the Museum from any suit seeking damages against it on account of any covered property damage and to investigate any claim as it deemed expedient.

Once the Museum received notice of the pollution damage from Heritage Plaza in 2003 (“the private demand”), it retained the Ropes & Gray law firm as legal counsel and ENSR International as an environmental consultant. The Museum confirmed the existence of subsurface oil pollution on its property and immediately notified the Massachusetts Department of Environmental Protection of the pollution. The Department, in turn, issued the Museum a Notice of Responsibility in early 2004 (“the public claim”), and ENSR continued its site investigation work throughout 2004. In its Initial Site Investigation Report completed that November, ENSR identified several isolated spills that had occurred on the Museum’s property over the years. ENSR concluded, however, that the likely cause of the pollution involved one or more of three oil storage tanks or their pipelines previously buried on the Museum’s property: a 10,-000-gallon tank had been installed in the early 1960s and removed in 1973, and two 10,000-gallon tanks had been installed in 1973 and removed in June 1986.

Meanwhile, the Museum notified U.S. Fire of both the private demand, in October 2003, and the public claim, in February 2004. U.S. Fire denied a duty to defend for the private demand but accepted defense for the public claim with a reservation of rights. Despite tendering both legal and environmental consultant bills to U.S. Fire in April 2005, the Museum received no payment for the defense of the public claim — the one that U.S. Fire had agreed to defend. In June 2006, the Museum filed a four-count complaint against U.S. Fire in state court, alleging that U.S. Fire had breached its contractual duties to investigate the pollution claims and to defend and indemnify the Museum in connection with both the private demand and the public claim (counts I and II). The Museum also alleged that U.S. Fire had violated state consumer protection laws, Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 93A, § 2, and certain common law duties owed to its insured (counts III and IV). At the behest of U.S. Fire, the case was removed to federal court where it filed a third-party complaint for equitable contribution against another of the Museum’s insurers, ACE Property & Casualty Insurance.

*43 The extensive, multi-phase litigation included several rounds of summary judgment proceedings and a jury trial resolving indemnity issues. About midway through the litigation, the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court (“SJC”) decided Boston Gas Co., 910 N.E.2d 290, to which the district court moored its decision on allocation of liability between U.S. Fire and the Museum as self-insured on the risk after December 19, 1985. 2 In the end, the district court’s 2013 judgment required U.S. Fire to pay the Museum over $1.5 million, including punitive damages under Chapter 93A, attorney’s fees, costs, and statutory interest.

Our review of the various rulings on appeal is largely de novo, and we abide by the well-established summary judgment standards. Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(c); see Celotex Corp. v. Catrett, 477 U.S. 317, 322-23, 106 S.Ct. 2548, 91 L.Ed.2d 265 (1986). We are not restricted by the district court’s analy-ses and may affirm on any independent ground made manifest in the record. See Jones v. Secord, 684 F.3d 1, 5 (1st Cir.2012). Where appropriate, we identify other review standards along the way.

II.

U.S. Fire first appeals the district court’s 2007 order that it breached its duty to defend against the public claim, and thus state law required it to bear the trial burden of proving no coverage. See Polaroid Corp. v. Travelers Indem. Co., 414 Mass. 747, 610 N.E.2d 912, 922 & n. 22 (1993) (“[A]n insurer that wrongfully declines to defend a claim [must bear] the .burden of proving that the claim was not within its policy’s coverage” including, in pollution cases, “the existence or nonexistence of a sudden and accidental discharge.”). Following this Polaroid burden-shifting rule, the district court set forth the anticipated trial procedure in which the Museum was expected to produce credible evidence demonstrating that an occurrence took place during the term of the insurance policy, and then U.S. Fire would bear the burden of proving no coverage. Electronic Order (Gertner, J., Dec. 19, 2007); see Peabody Essex Museum, 623 F.Supp.2d at 106-10 (clarifying how the Polaroid burden-shifting rule applies in the summary judgment context). 3

U.S. Fire attacks this summary judgment order on several fronts, all aimed at foreclosing application of the Polaroid burden-shifting rule.

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802 F.3d 39, 2015 U.S. App. LEXIS 15858, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peabody-essex-museum-inc-v-united-states-fire-insurance-ca1-2015.