Rubenstein v. Liberty Mutual Insurance

4 Mass. L. Rptr. 272
CourtMassachusetts Superior Court
DecidedAugust 23, 1995
DocketNo. 901687B
StatusPublished

This text of 4 Mass. L. Rptr. 272 (Rubenstein v. Liberty Mutual Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rubenstein v. Liberty Mutual Insurance, 4 Mass. L. Rptr. 272 (Mass. Ct. App. 1995).

Opinion

Botsford, J.

Introduction

We are at the final phase of this very long declaratory judgment action. The case encompasses the effort to obtain liability insurance coverage by the plaintiffs (the Trustees) who are trustees of a trust which for many years owned real property in Newton, Massachusetts (the Property). In particular, the Trustees have sought to establish that they were entitled to defense and indemnity coverage from five different insurance companies which the Trustees believed had insured the Property at various points during the 1960’s, 1970’s and 1980’s. The coverage sought related to a lawsuit brought against the Trustees in 1989 by the purchasers of the Property; that lawsuit, which raised claims of environmental contamination, was settled in June 1991 for $425,000.

After summary judgment motions in this case on the defendant insurers’ duty to defend and related matters, all the defendants except Royal Insurance Company of America (Royal) have now settled all claims with the Trustees. With respect to Royal, a jury-waived trial was held before me in late 1993 on the issue of whether two of its predecessor companies had issued policies for the Trust (the lost policies trial). In a memorandum of decision issued in the spring of 1994, I concluded that Royal’s predecessors had issued to the other Trustees or their trust four different policies which collectively covered the period from October 30, 1969 through October 4, 1977.

In November 1994, a trial was held before a jury to determine factual issues that would govern resolution of the question whether Royal was responsible for indemnifying the Trustees in connection with the settlement of the purchaser’s underlying lawsuit. The jury in that case answered special questions which were intended to encompass the factual issues in dispute. Finally, in December of 1994, a jury waived trial was held before me on the Trustees’ claim to recover $17,886.70 in unreimbursed defense costs (the fees trial).

In this memorandum of decision, I address the question whether, on the basis of the jury’s answers, the Trustees are entitled to a declaratory judgment in their favor on the indemnification question, and, if so, the amount of indemnity Royal is obligated to provide. I also consider Royal’s liability to reimburse the Trustees for the contested defense costs. For the reasons discussed below, I conclude that the Trustees are entitled to indemnity coverage from Royal, but with offsets for the settlements received from other insurers; and that Royal is responsible for reimbursing the Trustees $15,067.70 in unpaid defense costs.

Background

The record of this case reveals the following undisputed facts, to many of which the Trustees and Royal have stipulated. The Trustees served as trustees of the Security Mills Realty Trust (the Trust). From 1922 to 1985, the Trust owned the Property. From 1922 until late 1968 or early 1969, the Trust leased the Property to a related family corporation which used the Property for the manufacture of textiles. In the 1930’s, the corporation installed two underground oil storage tanks at the Property, including a 15,000 gallon tank to store Bunker C oil (also known as No. 6 fuel oil). This tank was in use continuously at the Property from the date of installation until sometime in the first half of 1969, and it was filled at least on a weekly basis. The textile manufacturing operations at the Property-required large scale pumping of water, and as a result, the groundwater table around the tanks was approximately 20 feet lower than its natural elevation at least until the manufacturing operations stopped.

In 1985, the Trustees sold the Property to Sandy Bloomberg, Leo Kahn and Paul K. Daley, who took title in the name of Security Mills Limited Partnership (SMALP). In 1988, SMALP demolished the existing textile mill building on the Property in the process of redeveloping the Property as residential condominiums. In the course of the demolition, SMALP discovered the existence of the underground oil storage tanks and oil contamination in the soil surrounding the tanks, and, in addition, the existence of asbestos on the Property.

Most of the oil that caused the contamination was released before late 1968 or early 1969. The release(s) took place before the textile mill at the Property stopped pumping large quantities of ground water.

In March 1989, SMALP, as the then owners of the Property, submitted a waiver application, preliminary assessment report and interim site classification form to the Massachusetts Department of Environmental Quality Engineering, now known as the Department of Environmental Protection (DEP). The remedial action plan was prepared by McPhail Associates, Inc., an environmental engineering and consulting firm hired by SMALP to assess the extent of the contamination. On May 4, 1989, DEP approved SMALP’s waiver application. Approximately 150 tons of oil-contaminated soil was excavated and removed from the Property-under the supervision of McPhail Associates, Inc.

SMALP brought a civil action against the Trustees in April 1989 in the Middlesex Superior Court. In its complaint, SMALP alleged that it had incurred substantial expenses in assessing the nature and extent of damage to the Property, to surrounding properties and to the groundwater; in containing and removing [274]*274the oil and asbestos; and by virtue of the decrease in value of the Property resulting from the contamination. SMALP sought recovery for these damages under G.L.c. 21E, §§4 and 5, and G.L.c. 93A, §11.

The Trustees notified the various insurance companies which they believed had issued, over the years, liability policies to the Trust that would apply to the SMALP suit. Each of the companies refused to defend the Trustees in the SMALP suit except Wausau Underwriters Insurance Company (Wausau). Wausau denied it had an obligation to defend, but nonetheless agreed to advance to the Trustees their legal fees and expenses in defending the SMALP suit up to a maximum of $150 per hour. The Trustees retained three attorneys at three different firms to represent their respective interests.

In June 1991, the Trustees settled the underlying SMALP action for $425,000. By the time of settlement, Wausau had paid $261,902.84 in legal fees and expenses in defending the Trustees in the SMALP suit. The Trustees themselves paid $ 17,886.70 in legal fees and expenses, representing the excess charged to the Trustees over the $150 per hour paid by Wausau.

The Trustees brought the present declaratory judgment action against the five insurance companies they believed were responsible, in whole or in part, to provide coverage for the SMALP litigation. The issues in this case have been resolved in phases. In brief summary, in October 1991, I determined that the Trustees were entitled to partial summary judgment against the defendant Lumbermens Mutual Casualty Company on its duty to defend the Trustees in the SMALP case. Summary judgment was denied as to all other defendant insurers, including Royal, because none of the other insurers’ policies had been located. By December 1993, only Royal contested the existence of insurance policies, and the lost policies trial took place, jury waived, as described in the introduction above. In October 1994, having earlier concluded Royal had issued policies to the Trust or Trustees, I ruled that the Trustees were entitled to partial summary judgment against Royal on the duty to defend in the SMALP action.

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Bluebook (online)
4 Mass. L. Rptr. 272, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rubenstein-v-liberty-mutual-insurance-masssuperct-1995.