R.T. Vanderbilt v. Continental Cas., No. Cv 97-0151482-S (Aug. 16, 2002)

2002 Conn. Super. Ct. 10424
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedAugust 16, 2002
DocketNo. (X02) CV 97-0151482-S
StatusUnpublished

This text of 2002 Conn. Super. Ct. 10424 (R.T. Vanderbilt v. Continental Cas., No. Cv 97-0151482-S (Aug. 16, 2002)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
R.T. Vanderbilt v. Continental Cas., No. Cv 97-0151482-S (Aug. 16, 2002), 2002 Conn. Super. Ct. 10424 (Colo. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.]

MEMORANDUM OF DECISION ON CNA'S CLAIM OF RELEASE, AS ASERTED IN OPPOSITION TO VANDERBILT'S MOTION FOR PARTIAL SUMMARY JUDGMENT AND IN SUPPORT OF ITS OWN CROSS MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT
In this case, plaintiff R.T. Vanderbilt Company, Inc. ("Vanderbilt"), a New York corporation engaged in the chemical manufacturing business, has brought suit against defendant Continental Casualty Company ("CNA"), an CT Page 10425 Illinois insurance company affiliated with the CNA Insurance Companies of Chicago, Illinois which sold primary comprehensive general liability and excess umbrella liability insurance policies to it during the period from January 1, 1956 until March 3, 1977, to obtain a declaratory judgment that CNA must defend and indemnify it, under certain of its CNA insurance policies ("the Policies"),1 in connection with several administrative actions ("the Underlying Actions") brought against it by the United States Environmental Protection Agency ("EPA"). The Underlying Actions all concern the disposal of industrial wastes from Vanderbilt's Bethel, Connecticut facility ("the Bethel Site") at different landfills or other disposal sites in Connecticut and Rhode Island, including the Solvents Recovery Source of New England ("SRSNE") site and the Old Southington Landfill ("OSL") site in Southington, Connecticut. In each such Action, the EPA claims that Vanderbilt is or may be responsible for property damage due to environmental hazards resulting from the disposal of its wastes at the affected site. On that basis, it seeks order requiring Vanderbilt to contribute to the cleanup of each site.

In its Second Amended Complaint dated April 19, 1999, Vanderbilt asserts that each claim made against it in the Underlying Actions is covered by the Policies at issue in this case. It thus contends that CNA has a contractual duty under each such Policy to defend it in the Underlying Actions and to indemnify it for all sums it becomes obligated to pay as cleanup costs, by judgment or settlement, in those Actions.

CNA has denied that it has a duty under any of its Policies to defend or indemnify Vanderbilt in connection with the Underlying Actions. Seegenerally Answer and Special Defenses to Second Amended Complaint, pp. 3-98. In addition, it has interposed thirty-nine special defenses to Vanderbilt's claims for coverage, including the following:

As And For A Third Special Defense:

370. The obligations of CNA to plaintiff, if any obligations exist, are defined by, limited by and controlled by the policy of insurance Vanderbilt purchased from CNA, including the coverages defined in such policy, the exclusions set forth in such policy, and the deductibles and limits set forth in such policy.

* * * *

As And For A Fifteenth Special Defense:

382. Vanderbilt's claims are barred in whole or in part by CT Page 10426 the limits of liability, endorsements, and other terms, conditions, limitations and exclusions contained in or incorporated by reference, expressly or implicitly, in or by the policies issued by CNA to Vanderbilt.

As And For A Thirty-Ninth Special Defense:

406. Vanderbilt has already released CNA from any obligation in regards to some or all of the claims asserted by Vanderbilt in the Complaint.

Id., pp. 99, 102, 106.

On July 7, 1998, Vanderbilt moved this Court for partial summary judgment as to CNA's alleged duties to defend and indemnify it under two of its Policies, the 1965 CNA Policy and the 1968 CNA Policy, in connection with two of the EPA's Underlying Actions against it, the SRSNE Action and the OSL Action. The grounds for that Motion were as follows.

As for CNA's alleged duty to defend it under the Policies in question in the SRSNE and OSL Actions, Vanderbilt argues: (1) that a liability insurer must defend its insured in any action where any allegation in the complaint "`falls even possibly within the coverage' provided by its policies"; Memorandum of Law (7/7/98), pp. 17-18 (quoting City of WestHaven v. Commercial). Union Ins. Co., 894 F.2d 540, 544 (2d Cir. 1990) (applying Connecticut law) (emphasis in original)); (2) that the allegations made against it in the SRSNE and OSL Actions raise the possibility of coverage under both Policies because each Action constitutes a "suit" to recover "damages" for "property damage" that may have occurred within the policy periods; id., pp. 19-37; and (3) that no exclusion in either Policy eliminates the possibility of coverage thereunder. Id., pp. 37-38.

As for CNA's alleged duty to indemnify Vanderbilt for all sums it may become obligated to pay as cleanup costs, by judgment or settlement in the SRSNE and OSL Actions, Vanderbilt argues: (1) that any insurer that wrongfully refuses to defend its insured in any suit to recover damages for a covered claim must pay its insured, in the absence of fraud or collusion, the total amount of any judgment obtained against it or reasonable settlement it negotiates in that suit, up to the limit of liability fixed by the policy in question; and (2) that here, CNA's refusal to defend it has been and continues to be wrongful. Id. at 40-41. Vanderbilt supported its Motion with the affidavit of its Vice-President-Treasurer and Chief Financial Officer, Joseph Denaro, and CT Page 10427 several attached exhibits.

CNA responded to Vanderbilt's Motion For Partial Summary Judgment by filing its own Cross Motion For Summary Judgment dated November 12, 1998, together with a memorandum of law stating its positions on both Motions and an affidavit from one of its attorneys, James M. Adrian, with several attached exhibits.

In its Memorandum of Law dated November 12, 1998, CNA made three basic arguments why Vanderbilt's Motion For Partial Summary Judgment should be denied and its own Cross Motion For Summary Judgment should be granted. First and foremost, it argued that it had been released from any obligation to defend or indemnify Vanderbilt in connection with the SRSNE and OSL Actions under the terms of its 1989 agreement with Vanderbilt ("Settlement Agreement") to settle an earlier lawsuit between them in the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York. The other lawsuit, entitled R.T. Vanderbilt Company, Inc. v. ContinentalCasualty Company, Civ. Action No. 88-2239 (MJL) (the "Bethel Action"), concerned the availability of insurance coverage for the cleanup of environmental contamination at Vanderbilt's Bethel facility. According to CNA, the Settlement Agreement released it from all liability for any claim "in any way relating" to the Bethel facility, including any claim for costs to clean up environmental contamination elsewhere, resulting from the off-site disposal of Bethel wastes.

CNA's second argument in opposition to Vanderbilt's Motion and in support of its own Cross Motion For Summary Judgment was that the limits of coverage under Vanderbilt's 1965 and 1968 CNA Policies were exhausted by its payment of $1.3 million to Vanderbilt, under those and other CNA Policies, pursuant to the 1989 Settlement Agreement. Memorandum of Law (11/12/98), p. 9.

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Bluebook (online)
2002 Conn. Super. Ct. 10424, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rt-vanderbilt-v-continental-cas-no-cv-97-0151482-s-aug-16-2002-connsuperct-2002.