MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
In this diversity suit, American Home Assurance Co. and National Union Fire Insurance Co. (collectively, the Insurers) seek a judgment declaring that McLeod USA Inc.’s general liability insurance policies do not require the Insurers to defend McLeod against two class action lawsuits brought under the Telephone Consumer Protection Act (TCPA), 47 U.S.C. § 227 (Count 1). The Insurers also seek a judgment declaring that McLeod is obliged to reimburse them for the fees and expenses they incurred defending McLeod in the TCPA lawsuits (Count 2). In response, McLeod has filed a three-count counterclaim. In Count 1, McLeod seeks a judgment declaring that its insurance policies require the Insurers to defend it against the TCPA lawsuits. In Count 2, McLeod alleges that the Insurers breached the terms of the insurance policy, and in Count 3, McLeod seeks damages for the Insurers’ “vexatious and unreasonable conduct” pursuant to 215 ILCS 5/155.
For reasons explained below, McLeod has filed a renewed motion for partial summary judgment on Count 1 of the Insurers’ amended complaint and Counts 1 and 2 of its counterclaim (Insurers’ duty to defend) and on Count 2 of the Insurers’ amended complaint (reimbursement of defense costs). The Insurers have cross-moved for partial summary judgment on Count 2 of their amended complaint. For the foregoing reasons, the Court grants McLeod’s motion and denies the Insurers’ motion.
Facts
Because there is no reason to reinvent the wheel, the Court quotes from its July 5, 2006 Order in this case:
The facts of this case are nearly identical to the facts in a number of other cases filed around the country. In a nutshell, the dispute concerns whether two insurance companies are required to defend lawsuits alleging that McLeod violated the TCPA by sending junk-faxes. In May 2003, Telecommunications Network Design, Inc. and Jerold Raw-son filed class action lawsuits seeking $500 for each fax sent to thousands of class plaintiffs, who had no prior busi *768 ness relationship with McLeod. After initially defending the lawsuits, the Insurers changed course and refused to continue the defense, claiming that McLeod’s general liability insurance policies did not cover the lawsuit.
The insurance policies at issue contain two clauses that McLeod contends require the Insurers to defend the lawsuits. The first clause requires the Insurers to defend any lawsuit seeking damages for advertising injuries. Advertising injuries are defined as “oral or written publication of material that violates a person’s right to privacy.” The second clause requires the Insurers to defend any lawsuit seeking “property damages,” unless the insured “expected or intended” the property damage to occur.
Am. Home Assurance Co. et al. v. McLeod USA, Inc., et al.,
No. 05 C 5173,
Procedural Background
This is the second time the parties are before the Court on motions for summary judgment. On July 5, 2006, the Court granted in part the Insurers’ motion for summary judgment, finding that they did not have an obligation to defend McLeod in the TCPA lawsuits.
See Am. Home Assurance Co.,
In American States, the Seventh Circuit considered whether an insurer had a duty to defend a junk-fax lawsuit, in a case in which the insurance policy required the insurer to defend suits seeking damages resulting from an “advertising injury.” Id. at 940. As in this case, advertising injury was defined in the policy to include “[o]ral or written publication of material that violates a person’s right of privacy.” Id. The court first noted that under the common law of tort, privacy has two principal meanings: secrecy and seclusion. Id. at 941. The court said that a person asserts secrecy interests when he seeks to conceal private information and asserts seclusion interests when he seeks to prevent people from (for example) ringing his doorbell late at night. Id. The court then examined the relevant definition of “advertising injury” and, recognizing that the language reads like coverage of the tort of invasion of privacy, concluded that it covers only alleged violations of secrecy interests. Id. The court held that the insurer had no duty to defend, because a junk-fax lawsuit only alleges violations of seclusion interests. Id. at 942-43.
The Court was bound to follow
American States
to decide the Insurers’ previous motion for summary judgment because Seventh Circuit rulings on state law are authoritative until a state’s highest court rules otherwise.
See Reiser v. Residential Funding Corp.,
In December 2006, the Illinois Supreme Court issued its decision in
Valley Forge Ins. Co. v. Swiderski Electronics, Inc.,
Discussion
When a district court rules on a motion for summary judgment, “[t]he evidence of the non-movant is to be believed, and all justifiable inferences are to be drawn in his favor.”
Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc.,
When a district court exercises diversity jurisdiction, it must apply state law as the highest court of that state would apply it.
See AAR Aircraft & Engine Group, Inc. v. Edwards,
The Insurers acknowledge that if Illinois law applies to the Court’s interpretation of the McLeod policy, they have a duty to defend the TCPA lawsuits. See Pl.’s Resp. Mem. at 2 (“[i]n the wake of Valley Forge, Insurers agree that their position is no longer supported by Illinois law.”). They argue, however, that Iowa law applies. The Insurers claim that in light of the Illinois Supreme Court’s decision in Valley Forge, Iowa law now conflicts with Illinois law 1 regarding the interpretation of the McLeod policy and, based on the “most significant contacts” test, the Court should apply Iowa law. If the Court applies Iowa law, the Insurers argue, they have no duty to defend. Rather than engage in an unnecessary conflict of laws and significant contacts analysis, the Court will assume for purposes of McLeod’s motion that Iowa law controls and turn to whether the Insurers have a duty to defend.
The Iowa Supreme Court and the Iowa appellate courts have been silent regarding whether an insurer issuing a policy covering “advertising injury” has a duty to defend TCPA lawsuits. This Court must therefore predict what the Iowa Supreme Court would do if presented with this issue.
See Taco Bell Corp. v. Continental Cas. Co.,
The Illinois Supreme Court is the only state supreme court to have addressed whether “advertising injury” potentially covers junk-fax lawsuits.
Valley Forge
is therefore a suitable place to begin our prognostication on Iowa law. In
Valley Forge,
the court began its analysis by setting forth the principles Illinois courts use to construe insurance policies. The court identified several relevant principles: a court’s primary objective in construing policy language is to ascertain and give effect to the intentions of the parties as expressed in the insurance policy; the policy is to be construed as a whole, giving effect to every provision; if the terms are unambiguous, they are to be applied as written; and if the words used are ambiguous, they will be construed against the drafter.
Valley Forge,
*770
The policies in
Valley Forge,
like the McLeod policies, defined “advertising injury” as “written ... publication ... of material that violates a person’s right of privacy.” The Illinois Supreme Court noted that the case law is clear that receipt of an unsolicited fax advertisement implicates a person’s right of privacy by violating his seclusion; such a violation is one of the injuries the TCPA attempts to prevent.
Id.
at
The court then analyzed whether the words in the “advertising injury” provision indicate that the parties intended for the policy to cover the type of injury to privacy at issue in the TCPA suit.
Valley Forge,
at
Having set forth the Illinois Supreme Court’s position on an insurer’s duty to defend TCPA claims under an “advertising injury” provision, the Court must determine whether the Iowa Supreme Court is likely to reach the same conclusion. As it turns out, Iowa and Illinois courts use almost identical methods to interpret insurance policies. Among other things, Iowa and Illinois law treat the interpretation of an insurance policy, and determination of the parties’ rights and duties under the policy, as questions of law that are appropriate for resolution by summary judgment.
Central Ill. Light Co. v. Home Ins. Co.,
The Insurers point to several of Iowa’s rules of policy interpretation that, they claim, support a finding that the Iowa Supreme Court would follow
American States
and not
Valley Forge.
None of these interpretation rules support that result. Under Iowa law, words within a policy provision “must be read together and in the context of the policy to ascertain the correct meaning.”
LeMars Mut. Ins. Co. v. Joffer,
The Insurers point to only one area in which Iowa courts interpret insurance policies differently from their Illinois counterparts. Certain insurance policy exclusions include the phrase “arising out of.” For example, the commercial general liability policies at issue in this case exclude injuries “arising out of’ the discharge of pollution.
See
Pl.’s R. 56 Stat., Ex. D. The Iowa Supreme Court has held that the phrase “arising out of’ in an exclusion means that the excluded risk must be the “sole proximate cause” of the injury. PL’s Resp. at 6 (citing
Grinnell Mut. Reinsurance Co. v. Employers Mut. Casualty Co.,
What matters is whether the Iowa Supreme Court would interpret “advertising injury” to include TCPA junk-fax suits. The Court believes that it would. As discussed above, Iowa and Illinois courts use virtually identical rules to interpret insurance policy provisions. The Insurers cite no Iowa cases that indicate that these interpretation rules would yield a different result in Iowa than they did in Illinois.
The Court also notes that the Illinois Supreme Court’s holding in
Valley Forge
*772
is consistent with the holdings of the majority of other courts that have looked at this issue.
See Park Univ. Enters., Inc.,
In light of Valley Forge, the similarities between Iowa and Illinois policy interpretation rules, and the approach of the vast majority of courts that have looked at this issue, the Court is not persuaded that the Iowa Supreme Court would follow American States as the Insurers suggest. Rather, the Court believes it would apply Valley Forge. Therefore, regardless of whether Illinois or Iowa law applies, the Insurers have a duty to defend and McLeod is entitled to summary judgment.
Because the Court holds that Insurers have a duty to defend McLeod in the TCPA suits, the Insurers are not entitled to reimbursement of their defense costs. Accordingly, the Court denies the Insurers’ motion for partial summary judgment on Count 2.
Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, the Court grants McLeod’s motion for partial summary judgment [docket no. 70] on Counts 1 and 2 of Insurers’ amended complaint and on Counts 1 and 2 of McLeod’s counterclaim. The Court denies the Insurers’ motion for partial summary judgment [docket no. 58]. The case remains set for a status hearing on February 6, 2007 at 9:30 a.m., to discuss how the parties propose to proceed with what remains of the case.
Notes
. Before the
Valley Forge
decision, the Insurers acknowledged that there was no conflict of laws. Therefore, they agreed that the Court should apply Illinois law to their previous motion for summary judgment. See Pl.’s May 4, 2006 Mem. at 11-12. See
also Sterling Fin. Mgmt., L.P. v. UBS Painewebber,
