MEMORANDUM.
This case is before the Court on the defendant’s motion for summary judgment, which will be granted. The matter has been fully briefed, and there is no need for an oral hearing. Local Rule 105.6, D.Md.
This is a declaratory judgment action, in which the plaintiff seeks a declaration that it is covered under an excess insurance
*1547
certificate issued by defendant California Union Insurance Company (Cal Union) for the period January 1, 1980 to January 1, 1981. Coverage is sought for acts by Alco-lac which led to a substantial award of damages against it in litigation recently concluded in the Missouri state courts. The opinion of the Missouri appellate court in the matter occuрies over two hundred pages in a recent volume of the Southwestern Reports.
Elam v. Alcolac, Inc.,
The parties seem to agree that the substantive law of Maryland should apply to interpretation of the insurance policies directly pertinent to the instant case. Maryland law, unlike that of many other jurisdictions, is not hostile to insurers in the initial judicial construction оf policy provisions. Rather, the courts in Maryland are instructed to construe the policy so as to ascertain the intent of the contracting parties,
Mateer v. Reliance Insurance Co.,
With these premises in mind, the Court determines that there is no genuine issue of material fact in dispute and that the defendant is clearly entitled to summary judgment. Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(c).
See Celotex Corp. v. Catrett,
There is, in this Court’s judgment, no ambiguity at all in the Cal Union policy’s reference to the Canadian Universal policy as the principal insurance which the Cal Union policy follows. (It is the Canadian Universal policy which actually embodies the absolute pollution exclusion relied upon by Cal Union in this lawsuit.) The рlaintiff’s position on the claimed ambiguity seems to be generated by the fact that the Canadian Universal policy was not a basic casualty/liability policy, but was, itself, an excess policy, like the Cal Union policy in suit here. There is no reason, as a matter of law, why one excess policy cannot refer to another excess policy as the principal insurance for the purpose of incorpоrating the terms, nor is there any reason why a second-tier excess policy cannot refer to another excess policy as the principal insurance for the purpose of incorporating its tеrms and conditions, and other policy provisions, of the first excess policy as the terms, conditions, and provisions the second will follow. Indeed, just such a situation was present in a case recently decided in this Cоurt.
See Highlands Insurance Co. v. Gerber Products Co.,
The next question is whether the absolute pollution exclusion endorsement in the Canadian Universal policy is void for want of a separate signature on the endorsement. Given that it was the duty of the insured to provide the terms of the underlying policy to Cal Union, making Al-colac the source of the endorsement copy accompanying the defendant’s present motion, coupled with the undisputed fact that the endorsement was incorpоrated in the underlying Canadian Universal policy when issued, the Court is of the opinion that the separate signature requirement on the face of the endorsement is not an impediment to the effectiveness of thаt part of the Canadian Universal policy, either on its own or as incorporated in the Cal Union coverage. Although there is apparently no Maryland case on this point, cases from other jurisdictions have recognized the general rule that, when the master policy is properly delivered incorporating all endorsements, the endorsements need not have been separately signed by the insurer.
See Greenway v. North Carolina Farm Bureau Mu
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tual Insurance Co.,
Finally, the-only remaining question is whether the absolute pollution exclusion ought to be given a reading that gives it effect so as to deny coverage for the
Elam
damages. The Court is of the opinion that it should. There is no ambiguity in the clause, it is clear on its face, and the damages in the underlying litigation unquestionably flowed from events within its ambit. This pollution exclusion is just what it purports to be — absolute—and the Court perceives no rеason why Cal Union should be denied the benefit of its bargain with Alcolac, as reflected in the insurance contract.
See Guilford Industries, Inc. v. Liberty Mutual Insurance Co.,
In short, this Court is convinced that no amount of further discovery or parsing of the insurance policies at issue will illuminate thе fundamental issues relevant to this case, which are plain and clearly ripe for decision, and which result in this Court being of the opinion that the defendant’s motion for summary judgment should be granted. Accordingly, an order will be entered separately. *
*1550 APPENDIX A
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Notes
. Because there are common legal issues concerning the absolute pollution exclusion in this case and in
Alcolac v. St. Paul Fire & Marine Insurance Co.,
. Although perhaps relevant in the other declaratory judgment litigation brought by Alcolac, see supra note 1, the question of whether the Elam plaintiffs’ damаges were "accidental” in origin is irrelevant as regards the present case because of the absolute nature of the pollution exclusion at issue here; other policies had only a qualified pollution exclusion.
.The effect of the
Elam
judgment is derived from Missouri law. 28 U.S.C. § 1738 (1982);
Allen v. McCurry,
. Contrary to the plaintiffs position (Opposition Memorandum at 6), the Court is convinced that the affidavit and papers submitted by Cal Union accompanying its motion are proper supporting materials under Fed.RXiv.P. 56(e).
As a wholly separate and independent reason for its decision in favor of the defendant herein, the Court notes that neither the basic liability policy (St. Paul) nor the other excess policy (Canadian Universal) provides coverage for the damages in
Elam,
for reasons set forth in this Court’s Memorandum Opinion in
Alcolac v. St. Paul Fire & Marine Insurance Co.,
