Opinion
In this appeal, we are asked to review the trial court’s interpretation of an environmental indemnity agreement (indemnity agreement) and a subsequent reaffirmation of the indemnity agreement executed by a lender and borrower as security for a loan and later loan modification. The trial court determined that the reaffirmation of the indemnity agreement did not incorporate the indemnity agreement’s durational provisions, but instead supplanted them so that foreclosure of the mortgaged parcel of commercial property used as security for both loans extinguished the borrowers’ obligation to pay remediation costs and attorney’s fees incurred by the lender due to the environmental contamination of that property. The plaintiff, Allstate Life Insurance Company, the lender, appeals from the trial court’s granting of summary judgment in favor of
The record reveals the following undisputed facts and procedural history. In January, 1991, the plaintiff loaned the defendants $8.2 million and the defendants executed a promissory note secured by a mortgage deed on a parcel of commercial property in Bristol (property). As a loan condition, the plaintiff also required the defendants to execute an indemnity agreement entitled “Environmental Indemnity Agreement” “in order to induce [the plaintiff] to accept the Property as security for the Loan and to enter into the Loan and to disburse the proceeds of the Loan . . . .” Under the indemnity agreement, the defendants were required “to unconditionally indemnify, defend, and hold [the plaintiff] harmless against any loss, liability, damage, expense or claim arising under any Hazardous Material Law . . . [or] . . . resulting from the presence of Hazardous Material on the Property . . . .” Paragraph four of the indemnity agreement provided
In 1998, the plaintiff agreed to advance up to $2 million in additional funds to the defendants and to extend the maturity date of the loan. “As a condition precedent to entering into the [loan] restructuring,” the plaintiff required the defendants to execute the reaffirmation of the indemnity agreement on April 22, 1998. The reaffirmation of the indemnity agreement provided, inter alia, that “in order to induce [the plaintiff] to enter into the Second Modification Agreement, and in consideration therefor . . . [the defendants] . . . hereby ratify and confirm the provisions, representations, warranties, covenants, obligations and conditions of the Original Environmental Indemnity [Agreement], which shall remain in full force and effect until the full and indefeasible payment of the Notes.”
The defendants subsequently defaulted by failing to make payments on the loan, and the plaintiff commenced a foreclosure action on the property. The parties entered into a stipulated judgment of strict foreclosure, and the plaintiff obtained title to the property on January 3, 2002. The plaintiff did not move for a deficiency judgment.
We begin with well established principles that govern our review of this appeal. “Practice Book § 17-49 provides that summary judgment shall be rendered forthwith if the pleadings, affidavits and any other proof submitted show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. In deciding a motion for summary judgment, the trial court must view the evidence in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party. . . . The party moving for summary judgment has the burden of showing the absence of any genuine issue of material fact and that the party is, therefore, entitled to judgment as a matter of law. . . . The test is whether the party moving for summary judgment would be entitled to a directed verdict on the same facts. . . . Our review of the trial court’s decision to grant the [defendants’] motion for summary judgment is plenary.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.)
Provencher
v.
Enfield,
“A contract is ambiguous if the intent of the parties is not clear and certain from the language of the contract itself. . . . Accordingly, any ambiguity in a contract must emanate from the language used in the contract rather than from one party’s subjective perception of the terms”; (internal quotation marks omitted)
Ramirez
v.
Health Net of the Northeast, Inc.,
supra,
In the present case, we conclude that the language of both agreements is clear and definitive. Moreover, the parties agree in their respective briefs to this court that this appeal presents a question of law.
6
Accordingly, our review is plenary; see id.;
State
v.
Philip Morris, Inc.,
In this case, in order to know which terms to consider, we first must interpret the language of the reaffirmation of the indemnity agreement to determine whether it incorporated the indemnity agreement, and, if so, to what extent. See
Wilson
v.
Wilson,
“Where . . . the signatories execute a contract which refers to another instrument in such a manner as to establish that they intended to make the terms and conditions of that other instrument a part of their understanding, the two may be interpreted together as the agreement of the parties.” (Internal quotation marks
omitted.) E & F Construction Co.
v.
Rissil Construction Associates, Inc.,
In the present case, the language of the reaffirmation of the indemnity agreement clearly and unambiguously incorporates the indemnity agreement. Specifically, the reaffirmation of the indemnity agreement states that the parties “ratify and confirm the provisions, representations, warranties, covenants, obligations and condi
We begin our analysis with the language of the two agreements. As previously noted, paragraph four of the indemnity agreement states that the defendants’ indemnification obligation was “indefinite unless (a) in the case of payment of the Note, [the defendants deliver] to [the plaintiff], after payment of the principal, interest and all other amounts due under the Note, an environmental report in form and substance acceptable to [the plaintiff] from an environmental consultant acceptable to [the plaintiff] showing no violation of Hazardous Material Laws or the presence of any Hazardous Materials on the Property or (b) in the case of a foreclosure or deed-in-lieu of foreclosure, no notice of any violation of the Hazardous Material Laws or the presence of any Hazardous Materials on the Property has been received by the [defendants] from [the plaintiff] within five years after such foreclosure or transfer . . . .”
The indemnity agreement very clearly distinguishes between payment of the note as opposed to foreclosure and provides for different durational obligations accordingly. In the event of payment of the note, the plaintiff sought to protect itself by continuing the defendants’ indemnification obligation until the defendants provided a clean environmental assessment report showing that the property had not been contaminated. In the event of foreclosure of the mortgage on the property, however, the plaintiff protected itself by requiring the defendants’ indemnification obligation to continue until five years had passed with no notice of the property’s contamination.
In determining the extent to which the parties intended to incorporate the indemnity agreement into the reaffirmation of the indemnity agreement, we must first determine what the parties intended by that incorporation. If the parties incorporated the indemnity agreement for a specific purpose, it is part of the reaffirmation agreement for that purpose only. See
Cruthers
v.
Donahue,
Indeed, it would have been irrational for the plaintiff to lessen its indemnification protection in this context. The defendants’ interpretation of the reaffirmation of
In sum, we conclude that, because the parties intended to reaffirm the indemnity agreement by incorporating it in its entirety, and because the indemnity agreement’s foreclosure provision is not inconsistent with the reaffirmation of the indemnity agreement’s
The judgment is reversed and the case is remanded for further proceedings according to law.
In this opinion the other justices concurred.
Notes
The defendants include: BFA Limited Partnership, formerly known as State Street Cornerstone Associates Limited Partnership (BFA); The Cornerstone Companies, the successor in interest to BFA; and its principals, Bruce A. Fischman and David G. Sandberg.
The plaintiff has asked this court not only to reverse the judgment of the trial court, but also to remand the case with direction to the court to render summary judgment in favor of the plaintiff. Because the plaintiff did not move for summary judgment before the trial court and raises this claim for the first time on appeal, this issue has not been preserved for appellate review. See Practice Book § 60-5. Additionally, we cannot eliminate, with absolute certainty, the possibility that the defendants could demonstrate to the trial court that there is a genuine issue of material fact or some other reason that the plaintiff is not entitled to summary judgment as a matter of law. Cf. Practice Book § 17-49.
Specifically, the trial court found that “[i]f the plaintiff had exercised its right to a deficiency judgment within thirty days, it could then have continued the motion for deficiency judgment in order to obtain an estimate of the costs of the environmental assessment and remediation, which could have been used to reduce the appraised value of the subject premises. That would have increased the deficiency judgment by that amount.” The plaintiff challenges this holding and argues that the trial court improperly applied the law governing deficiency judgments. Because we conclude for the reasons stated herein that the foreclosure did not extinguish the defendants’ indemnification obligation, however, we need not address this issue.
We conclude, and the parties agree, that the trial court improperly applied the doctrine of contra proferentum, under which ambiguity in a document is construed against the drafter, in its alternate holding because the agreements are not ambiguous. See
Metropolitan Life Ins. Co.
v.
Aetna Casualty & Surety Co.,
The plaintiff appealed to the Appellate Court from the judgment of the trial court, and we transferred the appeal to this court pursuant to General Statutes § 51-199 (c) and Practice Book § 65-1.
Although the parties disagree as to the extent that the reaffirmation of the indemnity agreement incorporated the durational provisions of the indemnity agreement, their disagreement does not necessarily compel a conclusion that the agreement is ambiguous. See
Alstom Power, Inc.
v.
Balcke-Durr, Inc.,
supra,
During the proceedings before Judge Rittenband, the parties did not offer extrinsic evidence of the formation of the agreements. The trial court’s determination of the duration of the defendants’ indemnification obligation, therefore, was based solely on the language of the two agreements. See
State
v.
Rivers,
supra,
The defendants argue that the reaffirmation of the indemnity agreement’s reference to “full and indefeasible payment” took precedence over
both
durational provisions in the indemnity agreement. They contend that their indemnification obligation would have extinguished upon payment
or
foreclosure without their having to provide, or wait five years for, an environmental assessment report showing that the property had not been contaminated. The plaintiff, on the other hand, argues that the reaffirmation of the indemnity agreement either incorporated
both
of the indemnity agreement’s dura
In
Wilson,
the question before the Illinois Appellate Court was identical to the question in the case at hand, namely, whether a prior agreement was incorporated by reference into a subsequent agreement, and, if so, whether the durational terms of the prior agreement also were incorporated or whether they were inconsistent with the subsequent agreement.
Wilson
v.
Wilson,
supra,
