Rohm & Haas Co. v. Continental Casualty Co.

732 A.2d 1236
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 6, 1999
StatusPublished
Cited by48 cases

This text of 732 A.2d 1236 (Rohm & Haas Co. v. Continental Casualty Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rohm & Haas Co. v. Continental Casualty Co., 732 A.2d 1236 (Pa. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

CAVANAUGH, J.:

¶ 1 This appeal involves insurance coverage for the clean-up of a serious environmental pollution problem in the soil, groundwater and surface water upon and in the area of a manufacturing site formerly owned and operated by appellees, Rohm and Haas Company and Rohm and Haas, Delaware Valley, Inc. (hereinafter Rohm & Haas). Rohm & Haas’ strict liability under federal law for the environmental damage at the site was not in dispute. The question to be decided at the trial of this action was whether Rohm & Haas’ various insurers, appellants herein, were under a duty to indemnify Rohm & Haas for the costs associated with clean-up of the site under excess liability policies the insurers issued which were in force during the years Rohm & Haas owned and operated the facility. It was the insurers’ position at trial that the policies at issue were void ab initio because Rohm & Haas allegedly procured them fraudulently. After a lengthy trial, the jury determined, inter alia, that Rohm & Haas failed to disclose material information to its insurers regarding the existing contamination when it applied for the excess liability policies in question and, accordingly, that the insurers were under no duty to indemnify Rohm & Haas for payment of the sums necessary to rid the site of contaminants.

¶ 2 Post trial, Rohm & Haas’ request for judgment non obstante veredicto (JNOV) was granted by the court, which, of course, negated the jury’s verdict. The case proceeded to a non-jury damages trial, at the conclusion of which the court entered judgment in favor of Rohm & Haas and against the insurers in the aggregate amount of $21,031,352.00. The insurers’ consolidated appeals therefrom are now before us and require us to determine, among other things, whether the court erred when it granted Rohm & Haas’ motion for JNOV. After careful review, we are persuaded that the court improperly granted the motion. 1 Thus, we vacate the court’s order of JNOV, reinstate the jury’s verdict and remand for entry of judgment on the verdict.

¶ 3 The facts, as gleaned from the record, reveal that on June 30, 1964, Whit-moyer Laboratories, Inc., a veterinary feedstock and pharmaceutical company located in Myerstown, Lebanon County, Pennsylvania, was purchased by and thereafter operated as a going concern by Rohm & Haas. Very shortly after acquiring Whitmoyer, Rohm & Haas became aware that Whitmoyer posed a serious environmental pollution problem. Specifically, within weeks after purchase, Rohm & Haas learned that huge amounts of arsenic waste generated by Whitmoyer had been dumped on-site since 1957, resulting in a serious contamination of the surrounding soil and groundwater as well as the waters of nearby Tulpehocken Creek.

¶ 4 Tests conducted by Rohm & Haas in September of 1964 on water samples collected from five separate wells on the Whitmoyer site revealed respective arsenic levels of 11,100 parts per million (ppm); 10,600 ppm; 9,400 ppm; 8,500 ppm; and 4,500 ppm. 2 By October 16,1964, Rohm & Haas became concerned about the possible arsenic contamination of water in off-site wells located in the vicinity of Whitmoyer. Thus, on November 2,1964, Rohm & Haas took a water sample from a neighboring family’s well. When the test showed a concentration of arsenic greater than 10,- *1244 000 ppm, Rohm & Haas advised the family to inactivate their well and secure it against use until further notice. Because several members of the neighboring family had recently fallen ill, Rohm & Haas paid their medical bills in “full settlement all claims in connection with the contamination of your well water and illness which may have resulted therefrom.” In all, by early 1965, some 30 private wells in the vicinity of Whitmoyer were determined to be contaminated with arsenic and Rohm & Haas began supplying bottled water to the well owners. In sum, the pollution problem at Whitmoyer was serious and pervasive, a fact which must have been known to the management of Rohm & Haas in 1964.

¶ 5 On December 28, 1964, Rohm & Haas added the Whitmoyer site under three existing excess liability policies it had with the appellant London Insurers. 3 The site was added to the existing policies retroactive to the date Rohm & Haas acquired Whitmoyer, i.e., June 30, 1964. The London Insurers’ underwriters noted “no known losses up to 19 November[, 1964],” on the endorsement which added Whitmoyer to the existing policies.-

¶ 6 In cooperation with the Pennsylvania Department of Health (PaDOH) and, later, the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Resources (PaDER), Rohm & Haas initiated an extensive clean-up effort in January of 1965, which continued until 1971. The effort was discontinued at that time, reportedly because a point of diminishing returns had been reached. That is, although the overall level of arsenic contamination had been decreased, further treatment of the residual level of pollution would yield no better results than no treatment at all. Nonetheless, with the exception of a three month period at the beginning of 1965, during the entire period Rohm & Haas owned and operated Whit-moyer (1964 through 1978), Rohm & Haas continued to generate and dump arsenic waste as a result of its manufacturing process and in 1978, bottled water was still being provided to 10 neighboring residences.

¶ 7 During the period of time when Rohm & Haas’ remedial efforts were underway and its awareness of the scope of the contamination continued to increase, Rohm & Haas periodically purchased further excess liability insurance from the London Insurers and other appellant insurance companies herein without informing the various insurers that the site posed a serious environmental pollution problem. Each of the excess policies contained a “notice” provision requiring Rohm & Haas to immediately notify the insurer of any loss, occurrence or claim against the policy. Although Rohm & Haas continued to “pump and treat” its arsenical waste generated at the Whitmoyer site, and although the management at Rohm & Haas was apparently concerned, as evidenced by internal memoranda produced at trial, about its potential legal liability regarding the site, it appears that no claims under the excess liability policies were made during the time Rohm & Haas owned Whitmoyer. In 1978, Rohm & Haas sold Whitmoyer to Smith-Kline Beecham.

¶ 8 In 1980, Congress enacted the Comprehensive Environmental Response and Liability Act (CERCLA) which imposes strict liability for the clean-up costs of hazardous substances upon the owner or operator of any facility which disposes of such substances. In 1986, Rohm & Haas was advised that it was potentially liable for costs associated with further clean-up of Whitmoyer under the new, more stringent environmental standards set forth by CERCLA. Subsequently, the EPA determined that Rohm & Haas was, in fact, strictly liable for further clean-up costs.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
732 A.2d 1236, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rohm-haas-co-v-continental-casualty-co-pasuperct-1999.