Bell Lumber and Pole Company (Bell Lumber) appeals from final orders entered in the United States District Court
Background
The background of this case is well-stated in the district court’s orders of March 21 and May 26,1994. Bell Lumber I,
Bell Lumber operates a wood treatment facility in New Brighton, Minnesota, where it treats wood poles used for power and telephone lines. The dispute in the present case involves whether or not Bell Lumber is entitled to coverage for pollution-related costs under various policies issued by the carriers. Between December 19, 1971, and January 1, 1975, Centennial provided umbrella excess liability insurance coverage to Bell Lumber. The Centennial policy contained a qualified pollution exclusion. We assume, for purposes of this appeal, that from May 19, 1972, to May 19, 1975, CCC provided CGL coverage to Bell Lumber. However, as explained below, we also conclude that, if such a CCC policy existed, it would have included a standard qualified pollution exclusion. Between May 19, 1975, and November 1, 1987, U.S. Fire provided CGL coverage to Bell Lumber and Westchester provided comprehensive catastrophe (umbrellа) liability coverage to Bell Lumber. The U.S. Fire and Westchester policies each contained a qualified pollution exclusion.
The qualified pollution exclusion was substantially the same for each of the insurance policies at issue in the present case. Under these provisions, coverage would be excluded for property damage arising out of the release or escape of contaminants into the soil or groundwater, with the qualification — or exception — that coverage would be allowed if the release or escape were both “sudden and accidental.”
From the 1920s until the early 1960s, Bell Lumber treated the poles with creosote. Bell Lumber’s creosoting operations produced annually between 5,600 and 8,400 gallons of sludge containing creosote. In the mid-1940s, Bell Lumber began treating the poles with pentachlorophenol (penta). Bell Lumber applied the penta to the poles by placing the poles in treatment tanks and pumping hot and cold oil into the treatment tanks from storage tanks. After the hot and cold oil baths, the oil was removed from the treatment tanks and the poles were allowed to dry in the treatment tanks for several hours before being removed. The poles were inspected and then lifted from the tanks with a crane. On rare occasions, penta solution dripped off the poles during removal from the treatment tanks. Bell Lumber’s penta treatments took place in an area referred to as the process area. The penta treatments created a sludge containing oil and penta emulsion, soil and wood particles, which was hauled from the process area to a separate disposal area.
The surface and subsurface soil near the process area was found to be contaminated ■with penta and creosote. The groundwater under the process area was found to be contaminated with over 200,000 gallons of penta. According to Bell Lumber’s own expert, the fact that a significant amount of contaminated oil was observed to soak into the ground in the process area, such that little could be recovered, suggested that the majority of the spills were not recovered and therefore entered the groundwater and soil beneath the process area. We assume, for purposes of this appeal, that spills were the major source of groundwater and soil contamination at or below the process area.
In February 1984, the Minnesota Pollution Control Agency (MPCA) formally requested that Bell Lumber take specific actions to clean up surface and subsurface contamination. In 1985, pursuant to a consеnt order, Bell Lumber agreed to undertake the cleanup. In 1989, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) notified Bell Lumber that it would bring a claim against Bell Lumber for its investigation and remediation costs associated with surface and subsurface contamination at the New Brighton facility.
Bell Lumber brought this diversity action seeking declaratory judgment holding the carriers liable for cleanup and related past and future costs resulting from the creosote and penta contamination at the New Brighton facility. The carriers moved for summary judgment on grounds that they cannot be held responsible for Bell Lumber’s pollution-related claims because such claims are precluded by the qualified pollution exclusions in their various policies. The district court granted the carriers’ motions for summary judgment holding that Bell Lumber’s claims were excluded as a matter of Minnesota state law based upon certain material facts not genuinely in dispute. Bell Lumber I,
Discussion
The Qualified Pollution Exclusion
In its appeal from the district court’s summary judgment decisions, Bell Lumber argues that the district court erred in its interpretation of the qualified pollution exclusion. More specifically, Bell Lumber argues that the district court erroneously held that there are no genuine issues of material fact, and the carriers are entitled to judgment as a matter of law, on the question of whether Bell Lumber has сoverage in this case by operation of the “sudden and accidental” exception to the pollution exclusion.
We review a grant of summary judgment de novo. The question before the district court, and this court on appeal, is whether the record, when viewed in the light most favorable to the non-moving party, shows 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. Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(c); see, e.g., Celotex Corp. v. Catrett, 477 U.S. 317, 322-23,
For purposes of our review of this issue on appeal, we begin by assuming, without deciding, that Bell Lumber established a prima facie ease of insurance coverage under its CGL and umbrella liability policies issued by the carriers. Thus, the burden shifts to the carriers to prove the applicability of the pollution exclusion. SCSC II,
[T]he plain language of Rule 56(c) mandates the entry of summary judgment, after adequate time for discovery and upon motion, against a party who fails to make a showing sufficient to establish the existence of an element essential to that party’s case, and on which that party will bear the burden of proof at trial. In such a situation, there can bе “no genuine issue as to any material fact,” since a complete failure of proof concerning an essential element of the nonmoving party’s case necessarily renders all other facts immaterial.
Celotex,
The district court held, as a matter of law, that the “sudden and accidental” exception does not apply under the undisputed facts because the term “release” in the qualified pollution exclusion refers “not ... to the spillage or disposal of waste but to the entry of the contaminants into the groundwater.” Bell Lumber I,
Relying primarily on SCSC I, Bell Lumber argues that the district court errеd in its analysis because the term “release,” for pur
In SCSC I, the Minnesota Court of Appeals noted the following on the issue of what constituted a “release” in that case for purposes of applying the “sudden and accidental” exception:
In the trial court, [the insurers] took the position that the relevant “release” was the escape from confinement of the pеrc, rather than the resulting property damage. [One of the insurers] argued that since the present case does not involve a landfill, the relevant discharge of perc was the discharge “from a hose, tank truck or other place of containment.” The trial court agreed. [The insurers] cannot complain that the trial court accepted their argument.
Id. Thus, the precise legal question of whether the trial court erred in failing to interpret the term “release” as “the entry of contaminants into the groundwater” was not properly before the Minnesota Court of Appeals (nor was it before the Minnesota Supreme Court in SCSC II) because there was no controversy over this issue in the trial court. Nevertheless, the Minnesota Court of Appeals went on to discuss this legal issue, in dicta, as follows:
[One of the insurers] relies on several cases involving landfills wherein this court has considered what constitutes the “release” of a substance into the environment- Landfills were built on the assumption that the ground under the waste mass would be able to hold pollutants in suspension above the groundwater.... For this reason, the relevant release was deemed to occur when pollutants leaked out of the soil under a landfill and into the groundwater- These cases are distinguishable. This case does not involve a landfill and SCSC made no attempt to store perc, suspended in the soil, above groundwater.
Id. (citations omitted).
In response, the carriers argue that SCSC I fails to address the “inextricable link” between the injury-in-faet that triggers coverage under a CGL or umbrella liability insurance policy and the relevant release for purposes of applying a qualified pollution exclusion. In Northern States Power Co. v. Fidelity & Casualty Co.,
In SM, questions of state law were certified to the Minnesota Supreme Court by the federal district court, regarding the meaning of the term “damages” in CGL policies, as that term relates to the obligation of CGL insurers to provide coverage for their insureds’ costs in complying with orders of the MPCA and the EPA to clean up groundwater contamination. In rejecting the insurers’ argument that the term “damages” refers only to remedies traditionally recognized at law, as opposed to costs associated with equitable remedies as well, the Minnesota Supreme Court noted that
[a]ll of the elements of a claim for damages are present in the [MPCA’s and the EPA’s] claims against the insureds, i.e., the insureds are under a legal obligation to provide compensation to an injured third party. The insureds in these cases have caused the contamination of groundwater beneath their waste disposal sites. Pollution of the groundwater is damage to public property.... The state on behalf of its citizens has a proprietary interest in the natural resоurces of Minnesota.... The MPCA as an agency of the state is the named trustee of the waters of the state.... Thus, for the purposes of this analysis, the state is the injured third party asserting claims against the insureds.
In the present case, no actual injury occurred until the contaminants in question entered the groundwater and damaged the property of a third party — namely, the State of Minnesota. Therefore, the carriеrs argue, the district court appropriately concluded that the “release,” for purposes of applying the “sudden and accidental” exception, occurred when the contaminants entered the groundwater, not when they spilled out of the storage tanks onto the soil. The carriers argue that to hold otherwise would improperly divorce the interpretation of the qualified pollution exclusion from the concept of liability insurance coverage. We agree.
Having established the “inextricable link” between the actual injury or injury-infaet that triggers coverage under a CGL or umbrella liability insurance policy and the relevant release for purposes of applying a qualified pollution exclusion, the carriers maintain that the language upon which Bell
In the present case, the event triggering liability on the part of SCSC was the entry of perc into the groundwater. The MPCA’s later discovery of the perc in the groundwater did not create liability on the part of SCSC; the liability was created at the time the groundwater was damaged. The trial court properly held that the trigger of liability was the injury in fact, not the later discovery of that injury by the MPCA.
[^Interpretation of the pollution exclusion ... cannot be divorced from the concept of insurance coverage. [Liability] [ijnsurance coverage is triggered only when the property of another is damaged. The injury-in-fact which triggers insurance coverage also invokes consideration of the exclusion clauses. Thus, regardless of the type of pollution case, the relevant release occurs when the pollutants leave the insured’s property and damage a third party’s property.
Bell Lumber II,
The CCC Policy
We next consider whether the district court erred in holding that any CGL policy issued by CCC to Bell Lumber after June 1970 would have included a standard qualified pollution exclusion. See Bell Lumber I,
The burden thus shifts tо CCC to prove the existence and applicability of a policy exclusion. Because CCC did not concede the existence of the alleged CGL policy, it asserted, as a matter of undisputed fact, that if the alleged CGL policy did exist, it would have contained a standard qualified pollution exclusion. CCC submitted an affidavit from a former CCC underwriter, C. Daniel Molloy, who stated that, having reviewed the declarations page relied upon by Bell Lumber, the CGL policy identified therein would have contained the standard CCC qualified pollution exclusion. Molloy stated that the CCC qualified pollution exclusion became effective on June 24, 1970, for use in Minnesota policies. He further stated that the CCC underwriting department would not have approved the issuance of a policy to Bell Lumber in May 1972 unless the qualified pollution exclusion was attached as a separate endorsement to the policy. Appellant’s Appendix at 93-97.
In response, Bell Lumber did not submit any affidavits or other evidence to counter Molloy’s affidavit. Instead, it relied solely upon the fact that the declaratiоns page did not specifically identify the qualified pollution exclusion as an attached endorsement. On appeal, Bell Lumber repeats this argument in asserting that the district court erred in granting summary judgment in favor of CCC.
When a properly supported motion for summary judgment is made, an adverse party may not rest upon the mere allegations or denials of its pleadings, but rather, must set forth specific facts, supported by affidavits or other proper evidence, showing that there is a genuine issue for trial. Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(e). “If the adverse party does not sо respond, summary judgment, if appropriate, shall be entered against the adverse party.” Id.; Celotex,
For the foregoing reasons, the orders of the district court are affirmed.
Notes
. The Honorable David S. Doty, District Judge, United States District Court for thе District of Minnesota.
. The disposal area was located in an area that served as a source of water infiltration to the aquifer below Bell Lumber’s property. Tests showed penta and creosote contamination in the soil and groundwater beneath the disposal area. In 1983, Bell Lumber excavated and backfilled the disposal area.
. Nothing in the Minnesota Supreme Court’s decision in SCSC II addresses this discussion in SCSC I.
. Ironically, it is unlikely that the outcome in SCSC I would have been different had the Minnesota Court of Appeals viewed the relevant release as the entry of the perc into the groundwater, for purposes of applying thе qualified pollution exclusion. In that case, there was overwhelming evidence demonstrating not only that the initial spill was sudden and accidental, but also that the entry of perc into the groundwater was sudden and accidental as well. See
. Our holdings herein are sufficient to dispose of this case. We therefore decline to address the remaining issues presented in this appeal, including the carriers' motion to strike portions of Bell Lumber’s brief.
