Polaroid Corp. v. the Travelers Indemnity Co.

610 N.E.2d 912, 414 Mass. 747, 36 ERC (BNA) 2045, 1993 Mass. LEXIS 181
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedApril 7, 1993
StatusPublished
Cited by219 cases

This text of 610 N.E.2d 912 (Polaroid Corp. v. the Travelers Indemnity Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Polaroid Corp. v. the Travelers Indemnity Co., 610 N.E.2d 912, 414 Mass. 747, 36 ERC (BNA) 2045, 1993 Mass. LEXIS 181 (Mass. 1993).

Opinion

Wilkins, J.

Polaroid Corporation brought this action against its comprehensive general liability insurers seeking recovery of defense and settlement costs that Polaroid incurred in the defense and settlement of claims against it arising from the discharge of pollutants by Cannons Engineering Corporation (Cannons), Polaroid’s former waste processor. Claims against Polaroid were asserted in 1986 by the Massachusetts Department of Environmental Quality Engineering, the New Hampshire Environmental Protection Bureau, and the United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) (under the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act, 42 U.S.C. §§ 9601 et seq. [1988] [CERCLA]), with respect to sites, operated by Cannons in Bridgewater and Plymouth, Massachusetts, and in Nashua and Londonderry, New Hampshire. 2 Polaroid’s general liability carriers declined to defend or to indemnify Polaroid for the Cannons claims. In response to the Cannons claims, Polaroid and others agreed to undertake certain removal actions, and on July 6, 1988, Polaroid entered into a partial consent decree with the EPA. 3 On August 26, 1988, Polaroid commenced this action. Polaroid asserted that its insurers had a duty to defend and to indemnify it as to the Cannons claims and that the carriers’ conduct violated G. L. c. 93A (1990 ed.) and G. L. c. 176D (1990 ed.).

Numerous questions of law were considered in the Superior Court on motions for partial summary judgment. Ulti *750 mately, in April, 1992, a final judgment was entered declaring that Polaroid’s primary carriers had a duty to defend Polaroid with respect to the Cannons claims. 4 That obligation to defend was limited to the period prior to September 28, 1990, the date on which a partial summary judgment had been allowed, in favor of the insurers, determining that the insurers had no duty to indemnify Polaroid with respect to any aspect of the Cannons claims. The final judgment declared that Polaroid’s primary insurers had no additional obligation to Polaroid concerning the Cannons claims; that there was no violation of G. L. c. 93A and G. L. c. 176D; and that none of Polaroid’s umbrella and excess insurers had any duty to indemnify it with respect to the Cannons claims. That final judgment, pursuant to an earlier partial summary judgment, also allowed Lexington Insurance Company to reform four policies that it had issued to Polaroid so as “to contain ‘sudden and accidental’ pollution exclusions.” We granted an application for direct appellate review of Polaroid’s appeal.

Polaroid appeals asserting that the final judgment is in error. It claims that (1) the determination that its insurers have no duty to indemnify Polaroid is based on an erroneous interpretation of the pollution exclusion and on an erroneous interpretation of the summary judgment record; (2) the dismissal of its G. L. c. 93A and G. L. c. 176D claims was error; (3) the Lexington Insurance Company policies should not have been reformed to include pollution exclusions; and (4) the insurers who had a duty to defend the Cannons claims and violated that duty are liable for Polaroid’s settlement costs even if the Cannons claims are not within the coverage of the policies issued to Polaroid. Additional facts bearing on the various issues will be presented where appropriate. We affirm the judgment.

1. The pollution exclusion. Polaroid challenges the summary judgment determination that property damage caused *751 by the releases at the Cannons sites is not covered under the various comprehensive general liability policies. That determination was based on the language of the pollution exclusion which, with one exception, eliminates coverage of claims for “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 watercourse, or body of water.” The one exception provides that the “exclusion does not apply if any such discharge, dispersal, release or escape is sudden and accidental.”

This court considered the “sudden and accidental” language in the pollution exclusion in Goodman v. Aetna Casualty & Sur. Co., 412 Mass. 807 (1992); Liberty Mut. Ins. Co. v. SCA Servs., Inc., 412 Mass. 330 (1992); Lumbermens Mut. Casualty Co. v. Belleville Indus., Inc., 407 Mass. 675 (1990); and Hazen Paper Co. v. United States Fidelity & Guar. Co., 407 Mass. 689 (1990). We adhere to what we said in those cases. Polaroid argues that, on the summary judgment record, there is a dispute of material fact on the question whether the discharges at the Cannons sites were sudden and accidental. We disagree.

The record establishes that the releases of pollutants were not sudden and accidental. The motion judge who passed on the coverage question stated that “Polaroid has conceded that the release of the toxic chemicals by Cannons was not sudden and accidental.” Nowhere in its discussion of this issue in its brief and in its reply brief does Polaroid deny the accuracy of the judge’s statement. 5 Moreover, the uncontroverted affidavit of an hydrogeologist, based on his review of numerous reports, evaluations, and other data, states that at each of the Cannons sites “the discharge of pollutants into the environment happened gradually, over a lengthy period *752 of time.” He added that he found “no evidence of a sudden (abrupt) discharge of pollutants at any of the four sites.” 6

Polaroid argues that, in determining whether a discharge of a pollutant was sudden and accidental within the meaning of those words in the pollution exclusion, the perspective of the insured is controlling. Polaroid did not intend the discharge of pollutants, and we may assume, without deciding, that from its point of view those discharges were sudden and accidental. The question for us is whether there is any dispute of material fact on the question whether the discharges were sudden and accidental. If a discharge was intentional or not sudden, the pollution exclusion denies coverage. The policy language does not call for the assessment of “accidental” or “sudden” from the insured’s perspective. Policy language does, however, define an “occurrence” by referring to “property damage neither expected nor intended from the standpoint of the insured” (emphasis supplied). The distinctive absence from the pollution exclusion of the words “from the standpoint of the insured” is significant for our purposes. See Lumbermens Mut. Casualty Co. v. Belleville Indus., Inc., supra at 679. If a third person who discharged a pollutant did so intentionally, the pollution exclusion denies coverage, even to an innocent insured, for any resulting property damage. The point of view of the insured is immaterial. See A. Johnson & Co.

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Bluebook (online)
610 N.E.2d 912, 414 Mass. 747, 36 ERC (BNA) 2045, 1993 Mass. LEXIS 181, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/polaroid-corp-v-the-travelers-indemnity-co-mass-1993.