OPINION
Appellant disputes the trial court’s declaratory judgment that coverage for her bodily injury claim is precluded by a so-called “absolute pollution exclusion” for injuries arising out of dispersal of pollutants. We affirm.
FACTS
Appellant, Samantha Hanson, was an infant during the time from November 1993 through July 1994 when her fаmily lived at rental property owned by the O’Neill Trust (defendant Cynthia Kelley O’Neill Trust 1954 Trust No. 1). She alleged in her complaint in the underlying action that she suffered severe health problems as a result of ingestion and absorption of lead in paint at the property. Specifically, sill and frame window pieces containing lead paint dislodged when the windows were opened and closed, and it was alleged that she ate some of these pieces. Defendants tendered defense of the action to respondent Auto-Owners Insurance Company. Respondent denied coverage оn the basis of the “absolute pollution exclusions.” 1
The commercial umbrella policy for defendant O’Neill Trust for the period April 1, 1994, through April 1, 1995, contained an exclusion for injuries and damage resulting from “discharge, release, escape, seepage, migration or dispersal of pollutаnts” “at or from any premises” owned by an insured. The policy defined pollutant as “any solid, liquid, gaseous or thermal irritant or contaminant, including smoke, vapor, soot, fumes, acids, alkalis, chemicals, liquids, gases and waste.” 2
The trial court found that the exclusion applied, stating that “[bjecause of its irritant effects on the human body, lead is an ‘irritant or contaminant, including * * * chemicals * * * and waste.’ ” The court added: “Ms. Hanson alleges that the paint was chipping or flaking. This could also constitute a discharge, release or migration.”
ISSUE
Does the so-called “absolute pollution exclusion” clausе in the polices preclude appellant’s bodily injury claim?
*779 ANALYSIS
The interpretation of an insurance contract is a question of law as applied to the facts presented.
Iowa Kemper Ins. Co. v. Stone,
1.
Initially we must determine whether lead in paint in a home is a pollutant within the meaning of the policy’s pollution exclusion. Our analysis is governed by
Board of Regents v. Royal Ins. Co.,
Following
Royal
and applying a nontechnical approach to the exclusion at issue, we find that lead in paint falls within the policy’s definition of pollutant.
See United States Liab. Ins. Co. v. Bourbeau,
Applying an ordinary meaning approach to the pollution exclusion also coincides with Minnesota’s general rule for insurance policy interpretation.
See Farmers Home Mut. Ins. Co. v. Lili,
Jurisdictions that follow the ordinary-meaning approach reach thе conclusion that lead in paint is a pollutant under the policy’s definition.
See Shalimar Contractors v. American States Ins. Co.,
We also observe that the additional holding in
Royal,
that the definition of pollutant is determined with careful reference to the policy’s description of the object polluted, mandates our determination that lead in paint in a home qualifies as a pollutant under the exclusion at issue.
Royal
involved the interpretation of two policies. In one, the exclusion precluded coverage for damage arising out of contamination into or upon land, “the atmosphere,” or any water course or body of water.
The “absolute pollution exclusion” clause at issue eliminates all language limiting coverage by describing the objects to be affected by the pollutants. The policy only states that the “dispersal,” etс. must occur “at or from” the insured premises. Because the scope of what qualifies as a pollutant has been controlled to a considerable extent by the policy language describing the objects polluted, when there is no such language, the scope of the exclusion is in its brоadest form, and in this ease it encompasses lead paint in a house.
The observation that the omission of the “into or upon the land, atmosphere, or any water course or body of water” clause significantly broadens the scope of the exclusion is corroborated by courts in other jurisdictions that have addressed the issue.
See Shalimar,
We observe that in applications of
Royal
there must be a limit to the construction of what constitutes an irritant or contaminant, or the exclusion renders the policy illusory. The argument has been made that virtually any substance can be an “irritant” or a “waste product” under certain circumstances, including for example scalding water coming out of a faucet, spoiled food, and trash on a stairway.
Oates,
It has also been observed that the insurer could have specifically excluded lead paint from coverage.
See Sphere,
2.
Having determined that lead in paint is a pollutant within the policy’s definition, we also examine whether the alleged bodily injury “resulted from the actual or threatened discharge, release, escape, seepage, migration, or dispersal of’ the lead in the paint chips. The cases specifically addressing whether injury from lead in paint falls under the “absolute pollution exclusion” rarely address this question separately from what qualifies as a pollutant. Those that do are primarily the cases that interpret the exclusion from a technical, “terms of art” in environmental law рoint of view.
See Sphere,
Assuming that we should address the issue separately, we conclude that under the ordinary meaning of the terms, the chipping and flaking of lead paint qualifies as a “discharge,” “dispersal,” or “release.”
See Chubb,
Nor do we attach significance to the fact that lead in paint affixed to the wall and not released might not be harmful and thus not considered a pollutant.
See Peace,
Some observe that there must be consistency, such that if lead in paint is not a pollutant in its stationary form, then it cannot be a pollutant when it is released or digested.
See Bemrbeau,
DECISION
Bodily injury caused by ingestion of lead from paint appliеd in a residence falls within the policies’ so-called “absolute pollution exclusions.” The trial court did not err in granting respondent’s motion for a deelarato-ry judgment.
Affirmed.
Notes
. The exclusions at issue are known as "absolute pollution exclusions” to differentiate them from the earlier widely used pollutiоn exclusions that limited the definition of pollutants to those that contaminated the "land, atmosphere, or any water course or body of water,” and did not apply if the contamination was "sudden and accidental.”
. The language of the O'Neill Trust's partially applicable 1993-94 policy cоntained an identical definition of pollution, with a simpler exclusionary clause that was principally the same but did not contain the "at or from any premises” language. The other defendant, Kelley O'Neill, the farm operator and lessor of the premises, had a farm policy with an exclusion almost identical to that of the O’Neill Trust’s 1994-95 policy.
. In addition to rejecting the "terms of art” approach to interpreting the exclusion,
Royal
also refutes the view of the court in
Lefrak Org., Inc. v. Chubb Custom Ins. Co.,
.
Royal
also refutes a Wisconsin Court of Appeals evaluation of whether lead in paint in a home qualifies as a pollutant.
See Peace
v.
Northwestern Nat’l Ins. Co.,
. To the extent that Royal defines pollutant in part by the policy’s description of the object polluted, it refutes appellant's argument that the issue is resolved by looking to the dictionary and thereby concluding that the substance in question must contaminate the soil, air, or water— objects the dictionary identifies as entities acted upon by pollutants — to qualify as a pollutant.
