MEMORANDUM
I have before me the parties’ motions 1 for summary judgment in this action for a declaratory judgment. This case involves a dispute over an insurer’s duty to defend and indemnify its insured.
I. Factual Background
The facts that follow are not in dispute. 2 Plaintiff Centennial Insurance Company (Centennial) is an insurance company which is incorporated in the State of New York, and which has its principal place of business in New York, New York. Plaintiff Jordan Chemical Company (Jordan) is a Pennsylvania Corporation with its principal place of business in Folcroft, Pennsylvania. Defendant Lumbermens Mutual Casualty Company (Lumbermens) is an insurance company organized and existing under the laws of the State of Illinois with its principal place of business located in Long Grove, Illinois.
Both Centennial and Lumbermens insured Jordan under comprehensive general liability insurance policies. The policies were very similar in terms but they covered different time periods. Lumbermens insured Jordan from August 15, 1976 to August 15, 1977. Centennial insured Jordan from August 15, 1977 to August 15, 1978.
As a by product of its normal course of business, Jordan generates industrial waste that it generally deposits into the local sewage treatment authority’s sewage system. On two separate occasions, in November 1976 and May 1977, the local sewage treatment authority refused to accept Jordan’s waste for a short period of time. Jordan contacted a waste hauler known as ABM Disposal Service Company (ABM) and arranged for ABM to dispose of the waste that Jordan had accumulated while it was *344 not depositing the waste in the local authority’s sewage system.
During the period from November 12, 1976 to December 21, 1977, ABM disposed of industrial wastes by transporting the wastes in 55 gallon metal drums or simply by tanker truckloads. 3 One of the main dumping sites utilized by ABM was an area located at 1 Flower Street, Chester, Pennsylvania that will be referred to as the Wade site. Wastes brought to the Wade site were frequently dumped directly onto the soil from either the 55 gallon barrels or the tanker trucks. On February 2, 1978 a fire occurred at the Wade site. The fire lead to an investigation of the Wade site and ultimately to an action 4 brought by the United States government under the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation and Liability Act (CERCLA). 5
On or about July 11, 1983, Jordan was severed with an amended third party complaint joining them in the Wade CERCLA action. The amended third party complaint, which incorporated the terms of the third amended complaint in the action, alleged that Jordan endangered health and environment at the Wade site as a result of the depositing of its industrial waste at the site.
Subsequent to its joinder in the Wade CERCLA action, Jordan presented a claim to Lumbermens on July 19, 1983. In a letter dated August 22, 1983, Lumbermens informed Jordan that it was reserving its rights under the insurance policy pending an investigation of the case. 6 By letter dated December 28, 1983 Lumbermens advised Jordan that it was disclaiming coverage.
Jordan also presented a claim to defend and indemnify to Centennial. Centennial responded to the claim by defending the *345 action and ultimately settling all claims against Jordan. The settlement required Jordan to pay $94,000.00 to the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania.
Centennial and Jordan brought this declaratory judgment action requesting that the Court declare that Lumbermens was obligated to defend and indemnify Jordan against the claims raised in the Wade CERCLA action. 7
II. Standard for Summary Judgment
A trial court may enter summary judgment if, after a review of all evidentiary material in the record, there is no genuine issue as to any material facts, and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.
Bank of America Nat. Trust and Sav. Ass’n v. Hotel Rittenhouse Associates,
The moving party must initially show an absence of a genuine issue concerning any material fact.
Adickes v. S.H. Kress & Co.,
398 U.S 144, 159,
In this case, both parties have filed motions for summary judgment. Because I find that genuine issues of material fact do not exist in this case, summary judgment is appropriate where Lumbermens is entitled to recover as a matter of law. 8
III. Discussion
Centennial and Jordan ask this Court to declare that Lumbermens had a duty to defend and indemnify Jordan in the
Wade
CERCLA action.
9
An insurer must defend an insured whenever the complaint filed by the injured party
potentially
states a claim within the policy’s coverage.
Pacific Indemnity Company v. Linn,
The allegations in the third party complaint against Jordan incorporated the allegations made against the defendants/third party plaintiffs in the government’s third amended complaint in the Wade CERCLA action. To determine whether the allegations potentially state a claim within the insurance policy coverage, various questions of insurance contract interpretation must be resolved.
A. An Occurrence Within the Policy
Lumbermens argues that it was not required to defend or indemnify Jordan be *346 cause property damage was not caused by an occurrence within the policy period of August 15, 1976 to August 15, 1977. Lum-bermens, instead, asserts that the occurrence that caused the underlying CERCLA claim was the February 2, 1978 fire that sparked the investigation into the Wade site.
The Lumbermens insurance policy states as follows:
“Occurrence” means an accident, including continuous or repeated exposure to conditions, which results in bodily injury or property damage neither expected or intended from the standpoint of the insured.
It seems unquestionable that an occurrence within the policy took place.
11
The general rule requires the Court to determine an occurrence by the cause or causes of the resulting injury.
Appalachian Insurance Company v. Liberty Mutual Insurance Company,
The more difficult question that must be resolved in determining potential insurance coverage is when the occurrence arose triggering coverage. The rule in this Circuit is clear. “[T]he determination of when an occurrence happens must be made by reference to the time when the injurious effects of the occurrence take place.”
Appalachian Insurance Company,
Centennial and Jordan argue that an occurrence arose each time the toxic waste was dumped onto the Wade site. 13 Centennial and Jordan claim that on sixteen (16) separate occasions, between November 12, 1976 and December 21, 1977, 14 toxic wastes were released onto the Wade site causing property damage.
I agree with Centennial and Jordan. An occurrence arose each instance the wastes were released onto the Wade site. This is the time that the injurious effect took place because this is the time that the property was actually damaged. Appalachian and Riehl do not require a contrary result. These cases involved facts where the injurious effects were difficult to identify specifically in time. Appalachian involved a discriminatory 1965 employment policy in which the injurious effects began immediately upon its adoption in 1965 and continued until sometime in 1971. Riehl involved a toxic waste site where the record did not *347 disclose when the dumping commenced, occurred or when the pollution was discovered. 15 The case at bar is clearly distinguishable. The dates of the pollution releases are reasonably identifiable. Each release caused property damage and each release, consequently, constitutes an occurrence as of the date of the release and the simultaneous damage.
Both state and federal courts have recently recognized this “actual damage” approach to the trigger of coverage analysis of an occurrence-type insurance policy.
Continental Insurance Companies,
I, therefore, hold that occurrences did arise within Lumbermens’ policy.
B. The Pollution Exclusion
Lumbermens asserts that the pollution exclusion in its policy bars coverage even if the Court finds that an occurrence arose during its policy period. The language of the policy states,
[i]t is agreed that such insurance as is afforded by this policy shall not apply to ... property damage arising out of the discharge, dispersal, release or escape of smoke, vapors, soot, fumes, acids, alkal-is, toxic chemicals, waste materials or other irritants contaminants or pollutants into or upon land, the atmosphere or any watercourse or body of water; but this exclusion does not apply if such discharge, dispersal, release or escape is sudden and accidental.
Lumbermens argues that the continuous release of Jordan’s waste onto the Wade site for a period of thirteen (13) months precludes a finding that the release was sudden and accidental within the exception to the pollution exclusion. 17
Although the law regarding the interpretation of pollution exclusion clauses is less than clear in many other jurisdictions,
18
the law in Pennsylvania is well established. In
Techalloy Company, Inc. v. Reliance Insurance Company,
*348
The interpretation of the pollution exclusion clause utilized in
Techalloy
has consistently been followed by the district courts in both the eastern and western districts of Pennsylvania. In
Fischer & Porter Company v. Liberty Mutual Insurance Company,
Similarly, Judge Ziegler of the western district held that a similar pollution exclusion clause barred insurance coverage in
American Mutual Liability Insurance Company v. Neville Chemical Company,
From these cases I conclude that the Lumbermens insurance policy does not provide coverage for the release of Jordan’s industrial waste onto the Wade site unless the release was sudden and accidental. The toxic releases onto the Wade site could be considered accidental if viewed from the standpoint of the insured. This perspective is arguably required to keep the definition of accident consistent within the policy provisions defining an occurrence and the pollution exclusion. 20 Jordan claims that it did not expect or intend that its waste would be illegally dumped by ABM at the Wade site. Since the determination of an accident is made from the insured’s perspective, the dumping can be considered an accident within the pollution exclusion.
The record does not reveal any facts, however, that would indicate that the discharge of Jordan’s waste onto the
Wade
site was sudden.
Techalloy, Fischer, American Mutual
and
American Motorists Insurance Company v. General Host Corporation,
Centennial and Jordan contend that each release of the waste onto the Wade site was sudden from their point of view, and therefore the pollution exclusion should not bar coverage. This argument equates the meaning of the term accidental with the *349 definition of the term sudden. I reject this interpretation as contradictory to the plain and ordinary meaning of these terms. 22 Under the specific facts of this case, where ABM as a middleman disposed of Jordan’s wastes illegally, the disposal could be accidental from Jordan’s perspective, but I can not find that the release was sudden due to its continuous nature. This interpretation prevents companies, whose wastes are regularly disposed of improperly, from hiding behind their ignorance and seeking insurance for damages caused by pollution that occurs in the regular course of business. Companies should avoid improper toxic waste disposal rather than blindly accept it as a cost of doing business.
I therefore hold that the continuous nature of the toxic waste disposal precludes coverage under the Lumbermens policy because the pollution was not sudden within the exception to the pollution exclusion in the policy.
C. Damages or Equitable Relief
Finally, Lumbermens contends that its policy does not provide coverage in the present case because the underlying CERC-LA action sought equitable relief rather than legal damages. The policy provides that “the company will pay on behalf of the insured all sums which the insured becomes legally obligated to pay as damages ... because of bodily injury or property damage....”
Courts that have considered this issue have come to contradictory conclusions. The United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit, in
The Maryland Casualty Company v. Armco, Inc.,
On the other hand, most of the courts that have considered this issue have held that “damages” include the costs of cleaning up environmental contamination.
See Continental Insurance Companies v. Northeastern Pharmaceutical and Chemical,
The cases allowing environmental clean up costs as damages within insurance policies recognize that the government frequently has a choice whether to seek an injunction ordering a party to clean up a *350 contaminated site or to clean up the site itself and subsequently sue for the costs expended in toxic waste cases. 23 In United States Aviex, the Court of Appeals of Michigan held that “damages” includes clean up costs whether they are directly sought or pursued by an injunction. The Court stated,
It is merely fortuitous ... that the state has chosen to have plaintiff remedy the contamination problem, rather than choosing to incur the costs of clean-up itself and then suing plaintiff to recover those costs.
Id.
at 590,
This reasoning was adopted in
Township of Gloucester
and
Fireman’s Fund
as well. When such an option exists, coverage should not hinge on the form of action taken or the nature of the relief sought. Coverage should be triggered when an actual or threatened use of the legal process coerces payment or clean up conduct by a policyholder.
Fireman’s Fund,
Lumbermens refers the Court to U.S.
v. Price,
I therefore hold that the Lumbermens policy would provide coverage for the clean up costs sought in the underlying Wade CERCLA action if the coverage was not barred by the pollution exclusion.
IV. Conclusion
I have found that the facts are not disputed in this case. The only questions of law involve insurance contract interpretation. This case is therefore appropriate for summary judgment. Although I found “occurrences” during the Lumbermens policy period which resulted in “damages” recoverable under the policy, judgment will be entered in favor of Lumbermens in this case because the pollution exclusion clause in its policy bars coverage for continuous toxic waste disposal.
An appropriate Order follows.
ORDER
AND NOW, this 17th day of November, 1987, it is hereby Ordered, in accordance with the foregoing memorandum, that judgment is entered in defendant Lumber-mens Mutual Casualty Company’s favor *351 and judgment is entered against plaintiffs Centennial Insurance Company and Jordan Chemical Company.
AND IT IS SO ORDERED.
Notes
. The motions under consideration in this decision consist of the following: Centennial’s motion for summary judgment; Lumbermens’ first motion for summary judgment; Lumbermens’ second motion for summary judgment; Lum-bermens’ third motion for summary judgment.
. Defendant Lumbermens argues that plaintiff Centennial cannot rely on depositions taken in the underlying action,
United States v. Melvin R. Wade, et al.,
.It appears that AMB picked up waste from Jordan on the following dates and in the following amounts:
DATE AMOUNT DATE AMOUNT
6/3/77 6000 gallons 11/12/76 193 drums (10,615 gallons)
6/10/77 6/28/77 6000 gallons 86 drums (4730 gallons) 2/3/77 56 drums (3080 gallons)
7/19/77 80 drums (4400 gallons) 2/16/77 76 drums (4180 gallons)
7/20/77 67 drums 5/31/77 6000 gallons
(3685 gallons) 6/1/77 5000 gallons
10/26/77 4000 gallons 6/2/77 6000 gallons
11/9/77 4000 gallons 6/2/77 6000 gallons
12/21/77 6000 gallons
TOTAL: 79,690 gallons
See Affidavit of Franklin P. Tyson, President of ABM Disposal Service Company, dated August 9, 1983.
.
United States of America v. Melvin R. Wade,
. 42 U.S.C. § 9601, et seq.
. Lumbermens stated that it reserved its rights for the following reasons:
1. The loss date does not appear to fall within the policy dates.
2. Allegations in the complaint do not appear to fall within the meaning of occurrence as defined in the policy.
3. Exclusion "f" would appear to apply in this instance. Exclusion "f' states in part: to bodily injury or property damage arising out of the discharge, disposal, release or escape of smoke, vapors, soot, fumes, acids, alkalis, toxic chemicals, liquids or gases, waste materials or other irritants, contaminants or pollutants into or upon [sic] land, the atmosphere or any water course or body of water, but this exclusion does not apply if such discharge, dispersal, release or escape is sudden or accidental. 4. We will not assume the defense or contribute to the costs of the defense, until our *345 investigation as to coverage has been concluded.
. Centennial and Jordan seek an apportionment of the insurance coverage pursuant to the "other insurance” clauses of both the Lumbermens and Centennial policies.
. "Determination of the proper coverage of an insurance contract when the facts are not in dispute is a question of law.”
Pacific Indemnity Company v. Linn,
.
. Because I do not find a duty to defend in this case, I will not consider the duty to indemnify.
.
But see American States Insurance Company v. Maryland Casualty Co.,
.
See also, Riehl v. Travelers Insurance Company,
. Centennial and Jordan assert that the dumping dates may be inferred from the waste pick up dates listed in note 3, supra. This is a reasonable inference that will be drawn in their favor for the purpose of these summary judgment motions.
. The following pick up/dump dates occurred during Lumbermens policy: 11/12/76; 2/3/77; 2/16/77; 5/31/77; 6/1/77; 6/2/77; 6/3/77; 6/10/77; 6/28/77; 7/19/77; 7/20/77.
.
See also Mraz
v.
Canadian Universal Insurance Company, Limited,
. See
Industrial Steel Container Company,
. The Governments’ Third Amended Complaint alleges that continuous dumping occurred at the Wade site. See Third Amended Complaint, pp. 5-7. In addition, Jordan’s proof of loss, or accident notice, filed with Lumbermens, alleged eleven (11) separate occurrences arising between November 12, 1976 to July 20, 1977. See Plaintiffs Exhibit "V”.
. See Note, The Pollution Exclusion Clause through the Looking Glass, 74 Geo.L.J. 1237 (1986) (providing an excellent analysis on the history, development and current status of the pollution exclusion clause).
. It should be noted that the trial court granted summary judgment for the insurer after it found the pollution exclusion precluded coverage in both
Fischer,
. The policy defines an occurrence as an accident while it also excludes from coverage pollution releases that are accidental and sudden.
.The Court in
American Motorists
utilized interesting interpretations of accidental and sudden. The court stated that even if the definition of accidental is subjective, thus requiring that the determination be made from the standpoint of the insured, the definition of sudden is objective. The court further stated "no use of the word ‘sudden’ or ‘suddenly’ could be consistent with an event which happened gradually or over an extended time, nor could it be consistent with an event which was anticipated or predictable.”
.
I refuse to ignore the conjunctive “and” between sudden
and
accidental in the pollution exclusion clause as many courts have done.
See Pepper’s Steel & Alloys, Inc.
v.
United States Fidelity and Guaranty Company,
. The language of section 107 of CERCLA provides:
(4) any person who accepts or accepted any hazardous substances for transport to disposal or treatment facilities or site selected by such person, from which there is a release, or a threatened release which causes the incur-rence of response costs, of a hazardous substance, shall be liable for—
(A)all costs of removal or remedial action incurred by the United States Government or a State not inconsistent with the national contingency plan;
(B) any other necessary costs of response incurred by any other person consistent with the national contingency plan; and
(C) damages for injury to destruction of, or loss of natural resources, including the reasonable costs of assessing such injury, destruction, or loss resulting from such a release.
42 U.S.C. § 9607(a)(4).
