Tennessee Corp. v. Hartford Accident & Indemnity Co.

326 F. Supp. 520, 1971 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 13492
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Georgia
DecidedApril 30, 1971
DocketCiv. A. No. 12698
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 326 F. Supp. 520 (Tennessee Corp. v. Hartford Accident & Indemnity Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tennessee Corp. v. Hartford Accident & Indemnity Co., 326 F. Supp. 520, 1971 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 13492 (N.D. Ga. 1971).

Opinion

[521]*521OPINION

MOYE, District Judge.

This is a suit upon an insurance policy or policies issued by defendant to plaintiff wherein defendant undertook to pay sums which the plaintiff insured might be required to pay by reason of its legal obligation for bodily injury, sickness, or disease, including death, and for damages due to injury to or destruction of, property, caused by accident, and to defend suits alleging such injury or damage. This suit involves defendant’s refusal to defend a lawsuit brought against plaintiff by the City of East Point, Georgia, with respect to certain alleged property damage, or to reimburse plaintiff the amounts expended by plaintiff in executing a settlement of that litigation.

This case was tried without a jury on January 27 and January 28,1971.

The plaintiff is a Delaware corporation which, at all times pertinent to this case, operated a plant located in East Point, Fulton County, Georgia, for the manufacturer of fertilizer and related products.

The defendant is a Connecticut insurance corporation, doing business in Georgia.

The matter in controversy exceeds the sum of $10,000, and the Court has jurisdiction of this litigation under Title 28 § 1332 U.S.C.

The plaintiff purchased from the defendant four successive comprehensive general liability insurance policies together covering the period from July 1, 1961 to January 1, 1966. Each of the policies contained the following insuring clause:

“Coverage D — Property Damage Liability — Except Automobile: To pay on behalf of the insured all sums which the insured shall become legally obligated to pay as damages because of injury to or destruction of property, including the loss of use thereof, caused by accident.”

Each policy also contained the following provision:

“With respect to such insurance as is afforded by this policy, the company shall * * * defend any suit against the insured alleging such injury * * * or destruction and seeking damages on account thereof, even if such suit is groundless, false or fraudulent.”

Each policy also specified and declared that the business of the named insured, the plaintiff, is “fertilizer manufacturing.”

All premiums required by said policies were paid and said policies were in full force and effect during the period from July 1, 1961, to January 1, 1966. .

On or about March 17, 1967, a complaint was filed in this Court by the City of East Point against the plaintiff and also Allied Chemical Corporation, as defendants, seeking damages in the sum of $175,000. The complaint alleged that in 1963 the City of East Point constructed a drainage system into which the plaintiff emptied its waste products. The complaint further alleged that because of the continuous discharge by plaintiff of acids, sulphates, and other waste products into that drainage system, the metal pipes of said system were corroded and undermined, and in July, 1965, portions of one of the streets above said system collapsed.

Upon receipt of the complaint in the lawsuit above identified, plaintiff called upon defendant to defend the said action on its behalf and assume any liability of the plaintiff by reason thereof, but by letter of March 31, 1967, the defendant denied coverage under its policies and declined to “assume any defense or handling of the case.”

Plaintiff thereupon undertook, through its own attorneys, the defense of said suit. In the preparation of that defense, plaintiff’s counsel employed various experts and undertook to establish that the principal cause of the damage to the City of East Point’s drainage [522]*522system, and the collapse of its street, was the faulty construction of such drainage system, rather than the discharge into it of the waste products generated by the plaintiff’s manufacturing operations. The case ultimately was settled by the payment to the City of East Point of $30,000 of which plaintiff contributed $20,000.

In connection with the defense and settlement of the action brought by the City of East Point, plaintiff incurred expenses in the amount of $13,095.27, of which $5,095.27 was paid to various engineers, court reporters, and for miscellaneous expenses including court costs, the remainder being paid to attorneys employed by the plaintiff.

The parties have stipulated, and the Court finds, that the above expenditures were reasonable and necessarily incurred by the plaintiff in the defense and disposition of the suit brought against it by the City of East Point. However, the defendant has not, by entering into such stipulation, acknowledged any liability to the plaintiff in connection with the above settlement and expenses incurred in connection therewith.

Thereafter, plaintiff filed this suit seeking to recover the principal sum of $33,095.27 ($20,000 settlement; $13,095.-27 expenses) expended by it in the defense and disposition of the suit brought by the City of East Point. Pursuant to the provisions of Georgia Code § 56-1206, 60 days prior to the filing of the complaint in this action, plaintiff made demand upon defendant for the payment of the above sums, and sues in this action for an additional sum equal to 25 percent of the principal sum sued for, together with reasonable attorney’s fees for the prosecution of this action.

In its answer, the defendant admits that it was called upon to defend, upon behalf of the plaintiff, the suit brought by the City of East Point, but denies that it had any obligation to defend that action or assume any liability in connection therewith, claiming that there was no coverage afforded by it to the plaintiff against the claim of the City of East Point.

The evidence is undisputed that prior to the construction of Norman Berry Drive (a street in the City of East Point, portions of which collapsed as set forth above), and the drainage system thereunder, the area in question was uninhabited woods through which flowed a stream known as South River. Prior to the acquisition of the land in question by the City of East Point, under threat of condemnation, around 1959 or 1960, that land was owned by plaintiff. In the course of its manufacturing operations and for a period of more than 40 years prior to 1961, plaintiff, along with other manufacturing concerns in the area, allowed its waste products to drain into South River, and there is no evidence of record to suggest that, on the average, the effluents discharged by plaintiff into South River subsequent to 1961 were more or less acid or alkaline than during the previous 40 years except for the fact that, by reason of one or more incidents involving the discharge of such effluents, and inspections by appropriate health officials, the plaintiff may have made somewhat more diligent efforts to neutralize the effluents subsequent to June 1962 when it was brought to the plaintiff’s attention that a small child had become ill by reason of eating a plum which he had washed in one of the settling lagoons maintained by plaintiff.

There was testimony that the Georgia Department of Public Health considered a pH factor of between 5 and 9 satisfactory (a pH factor of 7 is neutral), and the plaintiff apparently attempted to keep the pH factor of its effluent within these extremes.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
326 F. Supp. 520, 1971 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 13492, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tennessee-corp-v-hartford-accident-indemnity-co-gand-1971.