Opinion
The appeal by plaintiff Burke Concrete Accessories, Inc. (hereafter Burke) is taken from a summary judgment construing certain language of an insurance policy.
The parties stipulated to the facts upon which the judgment was based. They may briefly be stated as follows.
In building construction metal “snap ties” are sometimes used to maintain proper distances between the inner sides of concrete forms during the pouring of concrete. When the concrete has set and the forms are being *240 removed the ends of the snap ties are twisted and snapped off, leaving their center portions within the concrete. At each end there remains a conical hole in the concrete. Burke manufactured, sold and supplied precast cork-shaped “snap plugs” which, with application of an adhesive substance, were designed to fill up the holes and provide a smooth outer surface.
On two construction projects Burke furnished defective snap plugs which deteriorated, causing damage to the structures. It was “necessary to remove them by drilling and hammering them out of the concrete walls.” This enlarged and completely altered the shape of the original conical holes of the concrete; snap plugs could no longer be used. To comply with the construction contracts’ specifications, it became necessary to fifi the holes with a cement mixture and to resurface the walls. Burke was legally liable to the building contractors for the cost of this work in the amount of $23,822.82.
Burke held an insurance policy on which defendants were liable as the insurer. The policy contained a provision which insured Burke against losses it might “sustain or incur by reason or in consequence of:
“Any and all liability imposed by law against the Assured for loss of or damage to or destruction of property of others (including but not limited to, . . . all other indirect and consequential damage ... to or destruction of property of others) . . . arising from any cause whatsoever out of the . . . activities, work and/or business of the Assured . . . .’’(Italics added.)
The policy also contained the following provision:
“Exclusions. This Certificate Does Not Cover Liability: .... (D) For claims made against the Assured:
“For repairing or replacing any defective product, or products manufactured, sold or supplied by the Assured or any defective part or parts thereof nor for the cost of such repair or replacement, or . . . .”
Burke made claim under the policy for $23,822.82, the amount of its. liability to the building contractors. Defendants paid the sum of $8,501.21 representing the cost of filling the holes left by the removal of the snap plugs and the cost of refinishing the walls. They refused to pay the remaining $15,321.61, the “cost of drilling and hammering into the walls and removing the defective snap plugs.”
The narrowed single contention of defendants is that the drilling and *241 hammering of the walls in removing the defective snap plugs was a “replacing” of Burke’s defective products. 1
In our resolution of this problem we are bound by the rales of construction reiterated in
Continental Cas. Co.
v.
Phoenix Constr. Co.,
“It is elementary in insurance law that any ambiguity or uncertainty in an insurance policy is to be resolved against the insurer. ... If semantically permissible, the contract will be given such construction as will fairly achieve its object of securing indemnity to the insured for the losses to which the insurance relates. ... If the insurer uses language which is uncertain any reasonable doubt will be resolved against it; if the doubt relates to the extent or fact of coverage, whether as to peril insured against ... the amount of liability ... or the person or persons protected . . . , the language will be understood in its most inclusive sense, for the benefit of the insured.”
It has repeatedly been emphasized that: “The rale is that the exclusions and exceptions are construed strictly against the insurer and liberally in favor of the insured . . . .”
(Cannizzo
v.
Guarantee Ins. Co.,
And absent “circumstances indicating a contrary intention, words in an insurance policy are to be used in their plain, ordinary and popular sense. . . .” (Civ. Code, § 1644;
Jarrett
v.
Allstate Ins. Co.,
As indicated, defendants concede that the snap plugs were not “repaired”-, they expressly place no reliance upon that language of the exclusion clause. They further concede that filling up the jagged holes left in the concrete with a cement mixture was not a “replacement” of Burke’s defective product, for they have admitted liability for that part of the work operation.
We proceed to our resolution of the issue presented to us.
*242 I. We observe that the policy’s exclusion clause purports to exclude liability for the cost of repairing or replacing Burke’s “defective product,” i.e., the snap plugs. It cannot reasonably be construed as vitiating the insurer’s liability for the cost of repairing the damaged walls, which was the very sort of risk for which the policy was written and its premium was paid.
II. Giving the critical words of Burke’s insurance policy their “plain, ordinary, and popular sense,” we conclude that removal of the defective snap plugs by drilling and hammering, did not constitute the “replacement” of those snap plugs.
Although in some contexts the terms “replacing” and “replacement” may cover substitution of an entirely different product or thing, another reasonable and accepted meaning is to restore the items in question
(here the snap
plugs) to “substantially the same condition” they were in before the damage occurred. (See
Northwestern National Insurance Company
v.
Cope
(Tex.Civ.App.)
It may reasonably be said that hammering and drilling out the defective snap plugs and filling up the enlarged holes of the damaged concrete walls with cement, was not a replacement of the snap plugs. Since this is so, we are bound under the authority we have referred to ante, to so construe the exclusion clause of defendants’ insurance policy.
III. The policy insured Burke against liability for all direct, “and all other indirect and consequential damage to . . . property of others” in the
*243
course of its business. Our interpretation of the exclusion clause gives effect to the previously mentioned mandate of
Continental Cas. Co.
v.
Phoenix Constr. Co., supra,
IV.
Hauenstein
v.
Saint Paul-Mercury Indem. Co.,
Geddes & Smith, Inc.
v.
St. Paul Mercury Indemnity Co.,
*244 V. Defendants rely heavily on two cases which involved the identical policy provisions with which we are here concerned. But we find these cases to be wholly consistent with the conclusions we here reach.
The first,
Eichler Homes, Inc.
v.
Underwriters at Lloyd’s, London,
The second case is
Blackfield
v.
Underwriters at Lloyd’s, London,
Other cases cited by defendants are based upon policy provisions wholly inapplicable here; they lend no aid to their contention.
For the reasons stated the summary judgment must be reversed.
*245 Reversed. The superior court will enter judgment for plaintiff Burke Concrete Accessories, Inc., as prayed.
Molinari, P. J., and Kongsgaard, J., * concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied September 11, 1972.
Notes
Parenthetically, the contention seems to make a precarious distinction. The premise is that the removal of the defective snap plugs in some way amounted to their replacement, but that the filling of the holes from which they were removed, did not. It would seem that opposite theories might be the more plausible, or at least that both or neither of such work operations would more likely amount to such a replacement.
Assigned b s Chairman of the Judicial Council.
