ASSOCIATED INDEMNITY CORPORATION, Plaintiff,
v.
FAIRCHILD INDUSTRIES, INC., Defendant-Appellant,
First State Insurance Company; Allstate Insurance Company,
(as successor to Northbrook Excess and Surplus
Insurance Company), Defendants,
Highlands Insurance Company, Defendant-Appellee.
No. 916, Docket 91-9137.
United States Court of Appeals,
Second Circuit.
Argued Jan. 30, 1992.
Decided April 3, 1992.
Rоbert M. Rader, Washington, D.C. (Richard C. Browne, Tracy M. Getz, Winston & Strawn, Washington, D.C., James I. Serota, Michael Guararra, Huber, Lawrence & Abell, New York City, of counsel), for defendant-appellant.
Marian S. Hertz, New York City (Sheft & Sheft, of counsel), for defendant-appellee.
Before: VAN GRAAFEILAND, WALKER and McLAUGHLIN, Circuit Judges.
McLAUGHLIN, Circuit Judge:
Fairchild Industries brought a declaratory judgment action in the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York (Michael B. Mukasey, Judge ) to determine whether it was covered under several insurance policies for certain environmental liabilities. An excess insurer, Highlands Insurance Company, asked Fairchild to consent to a voluntary dismissal of Highlands from the action, without prejudice, because its coverage could not conceivably be triggered by Fairchild's environmental liabilities. When Fairchild refused, Highlands moved to dismiss. Additionally, Highlands requested the imposition оf sanctions under Fed.R.Civ.P. 11 based on its view that Fairchild's refusal to consent to Highlands' dismissal was unreasonable. The parties then settled before the district court could rule on Highlands' motion to dismiss. Highlands' Rule 11 motion, however, was pursued and the district court awarded Highlands $42,000. Fairchild now appeals, arguing that the district court's imposition of sanctions was an abuse of discretion. We agree and therefore reverse.
BACKGROUND
We assume familiarity with the facts set forth in the district court's opiniоn, Associated Indem. Corp. v. Fairchild Indus.,
Fairchild owned a Maryland factory that generated hazardous waste. In the early 1980's, Fairchild contracted with Diggs Sanitatiоn, Inc., then a licensed hazardous waste hauler, to cart Fairchild's hazardous waste to a licensed facility in Pennsylvania, and to dispose of it there. Diggs, however, dumped the waste on its own Maryland property as well as on adjacent land owned by the Cumberland Cement & Supply Company, an innocent third party. The Environmental Protection Agency ("EPA"), which intervened in 1982, now refers to these polluted properties collectively as the Limestone Road Site.
By thе time EPA became involved, the environmental damage was already done, and the basic problem at the Limestone Road Site is how it will be cleaned up, how much it will cost and who will pay for it. As is the unhappy custom in these casеs, a firestorm of litigation, but precious little clean-up--"site remediation" in the fashionable argot of the environmental Bar--followed. Cumberland Cement fired the first salvo in 1984, suing both Fairchild and Diggs in Maryland state court for seven million dollars.
In 1986, the EPA completed a standard Remedial Investigation/Feasibility Study (the "Study") of the Limestone Road Site, and it notified Fairchild that it considered the company a "potentially responsible party" under the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act ("CERCLA"), 42 U.S.C. § 9601 et seq. (1988). Thus, the EPA considered Fairchild to be jointly and severally liable for clean-up of the Limestone Road Site. See id. § 9607. The Study concluded "that a threat of direct contact to the public health and environment exists from the chemicals at the Limestone Road Site."
The Study also examined five alternatives for remedying contamination of the site. The most comprehensive remedial plan proposed by the EPA cаlled for extensive soil excavation and thorough site remediation at a total estimated cost of $15,385,300. This estimate was said by EPA to be accurate within +50% to -30%. After the Study, the parties could not agree on an appropriatе remedial plan. EPA then sued Fairchild and Cumberland Cement in Maryland federal court under CERCLA. Ultimately, EPA, Fairchild and Cumberland Cement entered a partial consent decree obligating Fairchild and Cumberland Cement to finance both interim remediаl measures and a supplementary study of the contaminated property.
Confronted with millions of dollars in potential liability, Fairchild now looked to its insurers. It carried policies with a primary insurer, Associated Indemnity Corp., and severаl excess insurers, including Highlands. Excess insurers become liable to reimburse an insured only after insurable liabilities exceed certain contractually agreed amounts. Fairchild had four "layers" of excess coverage, each kiсking in at successively higher levels, as Fairchild's liabilities grew. For example, Allstate Insurance Company insured Fairchild for losses between $15 and $25 million. Highlands' coverage was not triggered until Fairchild's insurable liabilities exceeded $25 million.
In December 1988, Fairchild sued all its insurers in the Northern District of California for a declaratory judgment determining its insurance coverage for all its liabilities arising out of the Limestone Road Site. Fairchild's primary insurer countered by bringing an identical declaratory judgment action in the Southern District of New York and both actions were eventually consolidated before Judge Mukasey.
As already noted, Highlands requested that Fairchild consent to its dismissal from the action without prejudice pursuant tо Fed.R.Civ.P. 41(a)(1)(ii). When Fairchild refused, Highlands moved to dismiss pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(1) and (6), and for sanctions against Fairchild for having refused to consent to the dismissal. Highlands' position was simple: under no circumstances could Fairchild's liability for the Limestone Road Site exceed $25 million, the amount necessary to trigger Highlands' coverage. Thus, Highlands contended, there was no actual controversy between it and Fairchild and Fairchild's refusal to accept this reality was sanctionable.
The parties settled Highlands' motion to dismiss but not its sanctions motion. Judge Mukasey then granted the sanctions motion and awarded Highlands' $42,000 for costs incurred after Fairchild filed its papers in opposition to Highlands' motion to dismiss.
DISCUSSION
Rule 11 "is targeted at situations 'whеre it is patently clear that a claim has absolutely no chance of success under the existing precedents, and where no reasonable argument can be advanced to extend, modify or reverse the law as it stands.' " Stern v. Leucadia Nat'l Corp.,
Like any other action brought in federal court, a declaratory judgment is available to resolve a " 'real question of confliсting legal interests.' " Berni v. International Gourmet Restaurants of Am., Inc.,
The contingency in this case is whether Fairchild's liabilities for the Limestone Road Site will exceed $25 million. It is undisputed that no one knows for certain what the final tab will be for the Limestone Road Site. The district court's imposition of sanctions, however, was predicated on its judgment that Fairchild could not have reasonably believed thаt its liabilities for the Limestone Road Site would approach $25 million. This conclusion is belied by the district court's own findings.
The district court explicitly credited Fairchild's contention that it "reasonably could have anticipated future demands [fоr site remediation] by the EPA ... [up to] the $15 million required by the most comprehensive remedial alternative considered by the EPA."
Finally, it has not escaped our notice that, in its answer to Associated Indemnity's complaint seeking a declaratory judgment, Highlands has set forth 36 separate affirmative dеfenses, all interposed in an action to declare whether and to what extent Fairchild is insured. Some of these defenses are more ingenious than ingenuous and compel us to caution that defendants who live in glass pleadings ought not to throw Rule 11 stones.2
CONCLUSION
Accordingly, we reverse the order of the district court awarding Highlands Rule 11 sanctions.
Notes
This conclusion obviates the need for us to pass on Fairchild's alternative argument that Highlands' coverage could have been triggered at $15 million under a so-called "drop-down" theory. See
In the same vein, Highlands seemingly wanted dismissal from the action and a chance to relitigate issues decided in its absence: pressed by Judge Van Graafeiland at oral argumеnt, Highlands' counsel conceded that it would not agree to be bound by any determinations the district court made in its absence, notwithstanding that Judge Smith of the Northern District of California had already warned the parties to avoid piecemeal litigation
