TABLE OF CONTENTS
I. Introduction. 1140
A. Background and Procedure. 11.40
B. The Insurance Policies. 1141
1. Aetna’s Comprehensive General Liability Policies. 1141
2. LMI’s Excess and Umbrella Policies . 1142
C. Standard for Summary Judgment. 1143
II. The Expected/Intended Clause. 1143
A. Legal Issues. 1143
1. Burden of Proof .. 1143
2. Objective or Subjective Intent. 1145
B. Aetna’s Motion for Summary Judgment on Its Pre-1961 “Accident”-
Based Policies. 1147
C. The Parties’ Cross-Motions for Summary Judgment on the Expected/Intended Issue.'. 1148
1. Chemical Leaman’s Evidence. 1149
2. Defendants’ Evidence..'. 1149
3. Conclusions. 1150
III. Continuous Trigger Theory. 1152
IV. Pollution Exclusion Clause . 1154
A. The Broadwell Line of Cases. 1154
B. The Ambiguous Meaning of the “Sudden and Accidental” Exception- 1155
C. Contra Proferentum vs. “Sophisticated Insured”. 1155
D. The Parties’ Cross-Motions for Summary Judgment. 1156
V. Owned-Property Exclusion. 1157
VI. Late Notice. 1167
A. Substantial Rights Irretrievably Lost. 1158
B. Likelihood of Success in Defending the Underlying Claim. 1159
VII.Failure to Cooperate.:. 1160
VTII. Aetna’s Duty to Defend. 1160
A. Pre-Notice Defense Costs. 1160
B. Post-Notice Defense Costs. 1161
IX. Conclusion. 1162
OPINION
Presently before the court are the cross-motions for summary judgment of plaintiff Chemical Leaman Tank Lines, Inc. (“Chemical Leaman”), defendant Aetna Casualty and Surety Co. (“Aetna”), and the London market insurers Robin Anthony Gildart Jackson, et al. (“LMI”). The parties raise a plethora *1140 of legal and factual issues for the court’s resolution.
I.Introduction
A. Background and Procedure
In this diversity action, Chemical Leaman seeks a declaratory judgment that defendant Aetna must provide coverage under certain comprehensive general liability (“CGL”) policies and that LMI must provide coverage under certain umbrella and excess liability insurance policies for environmental costs connected to the environmental cleanup of Chemical Leaman’s Bridgeport, New Jersey, facility.
Chemical Leaman is a tank truck company specializing in the transportation of various chemicals and other liquids. Chemical Lea-man used the Bridgeport site from at least 1960 to 1985 to clean trucks. From 1960 to 1969, Chemical Leaman placed contaminated rinsewater at its Bridgeport facility into a wastewater treatment system consisting of unlined ponds and lagoons. In 1969, the New Jersey Department of Health responded to community complaints about bad odors and ordered Chemical Leaman to construct a wastewater treatment and/or disposal plant. Chemical Leaman continued to use the pond and lagoons system until 1975, when it installed a water treatment system. By 1977, Chemical Leaman had drained the ponds and lagoons of liquid, dredged the accumulated sludge out of the lagoons, and filled all the ponds and lagoons with brickbat, sand, and concrete.
In 1981, the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection (“DEP”) ordered Chemical Leaman to investigate the extent and degree of groundwater contamination at and around the Bridgeport site. The investigation revealed that the ponds and lagoons were the primary source of groundwater contamination. In 1984, the federal Environmental Protection Agency (“EPA”) placed the site on the Superfund national priorities list pursuant to section 105 of the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation and Liabilities Act (“CERCLA”). 42 U.S.C. § 9605. The EPA alleged that Chemical Leaman is strictly liable for damages and cleanup costs resulting from the onsite contamination. In July 1985, Chemical Leaman entered into a consent order with the EPA. Chemical Leaman admitted liability under CERCLA and agreed to undertake a Remedial Investigation and Feasibility Study (“RI/FS”) of the groundwater. Chemical Leaman incurred expenses in performing the RI/FS and is further obligated to pay for all costs of removal or remedial action incurred by the United States or the state of New Jersey, as well as for damages for injury to, destruction of, or loss of natural resources.
On or about April 18, 1988, Chemical Lea-man gave notice to Aetna of claims under its applicable CGL policies. On or about March 30, 1989, Chemical Leaman notified LMI. The defendants have refused to defend or indemnify Chemical Leaman for costs already incurred or to be incurred in the future in connection with the cleanup of the Bridgeport site. Chemical Leaman filed the present suit on April 12, 1989. The court understands plaintiffs claims to be limited to coverage for its liabilities resulting from the EPA’s suit under CERCLA.
On March 31, 1992, the court granted partial summary judgment in favor of Chemical Leaman on the following issues:
1. New Jersey law governs the construction and interpretation of all the insurance policies involved in the litigation;
2. The cleanup costs which Chemical Lea-man is obligated to pay pursuant to CERCLA with respect to ground and surface water contamination in the vicinity of, but not at, the Bridgeport site constitute property damages under the insurance policies;
3. The “owned property exclusion” does not apply to Chemical Leaman’s remedial measures that are designed to correct injury or to prevent further injury to the ground and surface waters in the vicinity of the Bridgeport site.
The court also refused to grant summary judgment in favor of defendants on the issue of coverage for contamination occurring after the date Chemical Leaman received notice from the New Jersey DEP of the extent of the groundwater contamination. Chemical *1141 Leaman Tank Lines, Inc. v. Aetna Casualty & Sur. Co., 788 F.Supp. 846 (D.N.J.1992).
Presently before the court are the various motions of the parties for summary judgment. On November 23,1992, the court held oral argument on these motions and reserved its decision. Trial is scheduled to commence on March 15, 1993.
B. The Insurance Policies
1. Aetna’s Comprehensive General Liability Policies
■ Chemical Leaman purchased comprehensive general liability insurance (“CGL”) from Aetna covering successive years, from April 1, 1959 through April 1, 1985. Pl.’s 12G Statement ¶4. 1 These comprehensive liability policies were standard form insurance agreements utilized by Aetna and some other insurance companies throughout the period 1960-1985. Chemical Leaman played no role in drafting or negotiating the terms of these policies. Joint Final Pretrial Order HIV.5.
April 1, 1959 — April 1, 1961 Aetna Policies
From April 1, 1959 through April 1, 1961, Aetna insured Chemical Leaman under its 1955 standard policy form. Pursuant to the terms of the policies in effect- during this period, Aetna agreed to pay on behalf of Chemical Leaman: •
all sums which the Insured shall become legally obligated to pay as damages because of injury to or destruction of property, including the loss of use thereof, caused by accident.
The policy did not define the term “accident.” Pl.’s 12G Statement ¶ 5. The policies obligated Aetna to
defend any suit against the Insured alleging such injury, sickness, disease or destruction and seeking damages on account thereof, even if such suit is groundless, false, or fraudulent.
Pl.’s 12G Statement ¶ 6.
April 1, 1961 — April 1, 1967 Aetna Policies
From April 1, 1961 through April 1, 1967, Aetna continued to insure Chemical Leaman under its 1955 standard policy form. However, these policies substituted the word “occurrence” for the word “accident.” An “occurrence” was defined as:
an event which causes injury during the policy period or a continuous or repeated exposure to conditions which results in injury to persons or tangible property during the policy period, if such injury is neither expected nor intended by the insured.
Pl.’s 12G Statement ¶ 7.
April 1, 1967-April 1, 1973 Aetna Policies
From April 1, 1967 through April 1, 1973, Aetna insured Chemical Leaman under its 1966 standard policy form. Pursuant to the terms of these policies, Aetna agreed to pay on behalf of Chemical Leaman:
all sums which the insured shall become legally obligated to pay as damages because of bodily injury or property damage to which this insurance applies, caused by an occurrence.
The policies defined an “occurrence” as:
an accident, including injurious exposure to conditions, which results, during the policy period, in bodily injury or property damage neither expected nor intended, from the standpoint of the insured.
The policies defined the term “property damage” as “injury to or destruction of tangible property.” PL’s 12G Statement ¶ 9. Pursuant to the terms of these policies, Aetna also agreed to:
defend any suit against the insured seeking damages on account of such bodily injury or property damage, even if any of *1142 the allegations of the suit are groundless, false or fraudulent.
PL’s 12G Statement ¶ 10.
April 1, 1973 — April 1, 1985 Aetna Policies
From April 1, 1973 through April 1, 1985, Aetna insured Chemical Leaman under its 1973 standard policy form. These policies obligated Aetna to pay:
all sums which the insured shall become legally obliged to pay as damages because of bodily injury or property damage to which this insurance applies, caused by an occurrence.
The policies defined an “occurrence” as:
an accident, including continuous or repeated exposure to conditions, which results in bodily injury or property damage neither expected nor intended from the standpoint of the insured.
The term “property damage” was defined in these policies as:
(1) physical injury to or destruction of tangible property which occurs during the policy period, including the loss of use thereof at any time resulting therefrom, or (2) loss of use of tangible property which has not been physically injured or destroyed provided such loss of use is caused by an occurrence during the policy period.
PL’s 12 Statement ¶ 13. Aetna also agreed to:
defend any suit against the insured seeking damages on account of such bodily injury or property damage, even if any of the allegations of the suit are groundless, false or fraudulent.
PL’s 12G Statement ¶ 14.
Pollution Exclusion Clause
From April 1, 1971 through April 1, 1985, Aetna’s policies contained a pollution exclusion clause, which stated:
It is agreed that the insurance does not apply to bodily injury or property damage arising out of the discharge, dispersal, 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 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.
PL’s 12G Statement ¶¶ 11, 15.
Notice of Claim Provisions
Each insurance policy issued by Aetna to Chemical Leaman from April 1,1959 through April 1,1985, provided that in the event of an accident or occurrence, “written notice ... shall be given by or for the insured to the company or any of its authorized agents as soon as practicable.” PL’s 12G Statement ¶ 16. The insurance policies also provided that “[i]f claim is made or suit is brought against the insured, the insured shall immediately forward to the company every demand, notice, summons or other process received by him or his representative.” PL’s 12G Statement ¶ 17.
Cooperation Provisions
Each insurance policy issued by Aetna to Chemical Leaman from April 1, 1959 through April 1, 1985, provided that the insured shall cooperate with Aetna and generally, among other things, assist in making settlements, in the conduct of suits, in securing and giving evidence and in obtaining the attendance of witnesses. PL’s 12G Statement ¶ 18.
2. LMI’s Excess and Umbrella Policies 2
April 1, 1958-April 1, 1985 LMI Excess and Umbrella Policies 3
Pursuant to the terms of each excess insurance policy issued by LMI to Chemical Leaman for the period April 1, 1958 through April 1, 1985, LMI agreed to provide the same basic coverage as issued by Aetna. 4 *1143 The LMI policies also included substantially the same notice and duty to cooperate provisions as found in the policies issued by Aet-na.
April 1, 1971 — April 1, 1985 Pollution Exclusion Clauses
Each LMI insurance policy in effect from April 1, 1971 to April 1, 1985, contain a pollution exclusion clause. The LMI policies in effect from April 1, 1971 to April 1, 1974, and from April 1, 1977 to April 1, 1985, exclude coverage for damage “caused by seepage, pollution or contamination,” unless “such seepage, pollution or contamination is caused by a sudden, unintended and unexpected happening during the period of this insurance.” LMI 12G Counterstatement ¶ 29. The LMI policies in effect from April 1, 1974 to April 1, 1977, contain a pollution exclusion clause identical to the one contained in the relevant Aetna policies.
C. Standard for Summary Judgment
The standard for summary judgment is a stringent one. A court may grant summary judgment only when the materials of record show that no genuine issue exists 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);
Tudor Dev. Group, Inc. v. United States Fidelity & Guar. Co.,
A motion for summary judgment must be granted if the party opposing the motion “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.”
Celotex Corp. v. Catrett,
II. The Expected/Intended Clause
A. Legal Issues
1. Burden of Proof
The parties dispute who bears the burden of proof for establishing whether or not the alleged coverable damages caused by Chemical Leaman were “expected or intended.” The applicable rules of New Jersey law are clear. The party seeking coverage bears the burden of bringing its claim within the basic terms of the insurance policy.
Hartford Accident & Indem. Co. v. Aetna Life & Casualty Ins. Co.,
The New Jersey Supreme Court described the “basic coverage” provided by policies like the ones in the case at bar as the carrier’s obligation to “pay on behalf of the insured all sums which the insured shall become legally obliged to pay as damages because of bodily injury ... to which this insurance applies, caused by an occurrence.”
Hartford v. Aetna,
Plaintiff would have the court sever this definition of occurrence into two parts. The first part would provide the basic grant of coverage for any accident or event which results in property damage. The second part would operate to exclude a certain category of events resulting in property damage, namely those that are expected or intended by the insured. Dividing the definition into two parts like this, however, is not a reasonable or commonsensical reading. The policies clearly and unambiguously indicate that the full sentence comprises the definition of an occurrence. There is no indication from the language of the definition or from the surrounding context that the policy limits either basic coverage or the definition of occurrence to the first part of the sentence only. Moreover, the court is unable to imagine, and plaintiff has failed to suggest, an alternative phrasing that more clearly and unambiguously incorporates the concept of unintended and unexpected damages into the definition of occurrence. 5 The court finds that the only reasonable reading of the policy is that the intended/expected concept is constitutive of the definition of occurrence. Therefore, plaintiff bears the burden of proof on this issue.
Chemical Leaman presents several arguments in support of the proposition that the expected/intended clause is an exclusion. It first points out that the insurance carriers originally drafted the expected/intended clause as an exclusion, but then'decided to incorporate the clause into the definition of an occurrence.
See
PL’s Br. at 12;
see also
Aetna’s Br. at 19 & n. 40. However, New Jersey law provides that “an insurance policy should be interpreted according to its plain and ordinary meaning.”
Voorhees v. Preferred Mut. Ins. Co.,
Plaintiff also cites to cases that describe the expected or intended clause as an “exclusion.”
See J.T. Baker, Inc. v. Aetna Casualty & Sur. Co.,
A final concern informs this court’s holding that the expected/intended clause is constitutive of the basic grant of coverage under defendants’ liability policies. Plaintiff’s proposed reading of the expected/intended clause presupposes that a liability policy may cover not only unintended damages caused by intentional acts but
intended
damages as well. However, just as “[o]ne cannot obtain insurance for a risk that the insured knows has already transpired,”
Gloucester Township v. Maryland Casualty Co.,
2. Objective or Subjective Intent
As ruled above, plaintiff, as part of its ease for proving that its.losses fall within the basic coverage of its insurance policies with defendants, bears the burden of, establishing that Chemical Leaman neither expected nor intended to contaminate the soil and groundwater at the Bridgeport site. The parties, however, disagree, on the standard for evaluating Chemical Leaman’s intentions. Underlying this dispute is the well established distinction between (1) the intent of the insured in performing the acts that cause damage and (2) the intent of the insured in causing the damage itself.
See Voorhees v. Preferred Mut. Ins. Co.,
The parties dispute whether the inquiry into Chemical Leaman’s intent is a subjective or objective one. The New Jersey Supreme Court has recently and clearly addressed this issue. The general rule requires an evaluation of “the insured’s subjective intent to determine intent to injure.”
Voorhees,
Defendants ask this court to invoke the
Voorhees
particularly-reprehensible-act exception and to mandate an objective inquiry. Under this standard, the trier of fact may presume from an insured’s intentional acts which cause damage that the insured intended to cause the particular resulting damage. The Supreme Court in
Voorhees
identified the case of sexual abuse of children in a day-care center as a paradigm example of presuming the insured’s subjective intent to cause a particular kind of damage from the insured’s intent to perform the acts that cause that damage.
Thus, this court must address whether Chemical Leaman’s acts at the Bridgeport site were so reprehensible as to require a presumption that Chemical Leaman expected or intended to cause the groundwater and soil damage. Defendants claim that Chemical Leaman’s “design and implementation of an unlined lagooning system at the Bridgeport Terminal” represent an example of particularly reprehensible and egregious behavior. LMI’s Reply Br. at 8; see also Aetna’s Br. at 15. But the crux of their argument is that “Chemical Leaman knew that their unlined lagoons would cause groundwater contamination.” LMI’s Reply Br. at 14 (emphasis added). While the facts underlying this proposition may succeed in excluding coverage by proving that Chemical Leaman expected or intended to cause groundwater and soil damage, they fail in the present context to establish that Chemical Leaman’s behavior was particularly reprehensible.
The central issue in this litigation is whether Chemical Leaman knew that its Bridgeport rinsewater treatment system was so inadequate that its use would result in harm to the environment. The record, however, contains abundant evidence that Chemical Lea-man designed and built the facility to prevent this result. E.g. McLane Report at 2-3, Pl.’s App.Ex. 17; Elston Dep. at 132, 137, 214; Ford Dep. at 192; Middleton Dep. at 85. In addition, there is testimony that other companies with similar wastewater treatment problems used unlined ponds and lagoons. See Middleton Dep. at 105-06; Ford Dep. at 315. The rinsewater treatment system was more than a “series of holes in the ground.” Rather, it represented Chemical Leaman’s attempt, however flawed, at waste disposal.
This fact distinguishes the present case from
Morton International v. General Accident Ins. Co. of Am.,
No. A-895-89T3,
*1147
Unlike in
Morton International,
the proof in the present case tends only to establish that Chemical Leaman knew that, despite its treatment system, the toxins in the rinsewa-ter were causing damage to the groundwa-' ter.
7
This evidence goes to the central factual issue of whether the expected/intended clause precludes coverage. But it does not rise to so reprehensible a level as to trigger the
Voorhees
exception. The court, therefore, holds that the
Voorhees
particularly-reprehensible-act exception is inapplicable to the present case.
Hatco Corp. v. W.R. Grace & Co.,
B. Aetna’s Motion for Summary Judgment on Its Pre-1961 “Accident”-Based Policies
Aetna asks for summary judgment in its favor on the issue of coverage under its pre-1961 policies. These policies provided coverage for damage resulting from an “accident” rather than from an “occurrence,” as in Aet-na’s post-1961 policies. Aetna makes two arguments. It first contends that these accident-based policies covered only an event, not a process. Since, according to Aetna, there can be no dispute that the groundwater and soil contamination at issue were caused by a long-term process rather than a single, bounded event, summary judgment is appropriate.
The pre-1961 policies did not define the word “accident.” Accordingly, the court’s task is to construe this term. The only New Jersey Appellate Division opinion that has apparently touched upon this issue in the context of environmental pollution is
Diamond Shamrock Chem. v. Aetna Casualty & Sur. Co.,
258 N.J.Super: 167,
New Jersey law provides that the terms of an insurance contract should be understood according to their popular and common meaning.
See Kindervater v. Motorists Casualty Ins. Co.,
In its most commonly accepted meaning, or in its ordinary or popular sense, the word may be defined as meaning a fortuitous circumstance, event, or happening, an event happening without any human agency, or if happening wholly or partly through human agency, an event which under the circumstances is unusual and unexpected by the person to whom it happens ....
Black’s Law Dictionary 30 (4th ed. 1957),
quoted in Moffat v. Metropolitan Casualty Ins. Co. of New York,
Having ruled that an .accident-based policy can cover environmental damage to soil and groundwater over the course of many years, the court must now determine the appropriate intent standard. The New Jersey courts have spoken more clearly on this matter, defining the word “accident,” as an
“ ‘unexpected happening without intention or design.’_ Under this test, a volitional act by the insured nevertheless qualified ■ as an “accident” if the insured did not specifically intend to cause the resulting harm or [was] not substantially certain that such harm w[ould] occur.”
Broadwell Realty Serv. Inc. v. Fidelity & Casualty Co.,
In light of the above analysis, plaintiff at trial will bear the same standard of proof on the pre-1961 accident-based policies as it will on the occurrence-based policies. However-, unlike with the post-1961 policies, Aetna challenges whether any soil or groundwater damage occurred to trigger the pre-1961 policies. The parties stipulated that Chemical Leaman provided tank truck cleaning services “since sometime in 1960.” Joint Final Pretrial Order ¶ IV.30. Indeed, by .March 1961, the record is clear that Chemical Lea-man was using “basins” to collect wastewa-ters after it cleaned the tank trucks. See Letter from William T. Frank, Aetna’s Ex. 8. Plaintiffs expert hydrogeologist states that
Contaminated rinsewater from the three settling ponds started migrating through the soil to underlying ground water almost immediately after the beginning of pond operation in 1960. Contaminated rinsewa-ter from the three settling ponds started migrating through the soil to underlying ground water almost immediately following the beginning of lagoon operation in 1962.
MeLane Report at 12, Pl.’s App.Ex. 18. Aet-na does not challenge this conclusion. In light of this undisputed fact, the court finds that groundwater and soil damage occurred sometime in 1960. Accordingly, the court holds that property damage triggered Aet-na’s April 1, 1960 through April 1, 1961, policy. Chemical Leaman, however, has presented no evidence of damage that could have triggered the April 1, 1959 through April 1, 1960, policy. Accordingly, the court grants summary judgment in Aetna’s favor on this policy. Chemical Leaman may not recover under Aetna’s 1959-1960 policies.
C. The Parties’ Cross-Motions for Summary Judgment on the Expected/Intended Issue
The parties have submitted cross-motions for summary judgment on all policies on the issue of whether Chemical Leaman expected or intended to cause soil and groundwater damage. As ruled above, Chemical Leaman bears the burden of proof of showing that it neither expected nor intended to cause the disputed damages for each of defendants’ policies. In resolving this fact issue, the jury must evaluate Chemical Leaman’s subjective intent to cause the particular damage for *1149 which plaintiff now seeks. indemnification— namely soil and groundwater damage.
1. Chemical Leaman’s Evidence
Plaintiff presents evidence that Chemical Leaman’s rinsewater treatment system was designed to prevent harm to the environment by facilitating the elimination of toxic chemicals through natural processes. The rinse-water from Chemical Leaman’s tank cleaning operations flowed into a series of unlined ponds and lagoons. Chemical Leaman designed this system to enhance the cleansing and removal of chemical constituents from the rinsewater through natural processes, such as phased gravity separation, sedimentation, floatation, microbial biodegradation, aeration, percolation, and evaporation. For example, the design concept limited the depth of the ponds to five feet in order to allow sunlight penetration and enhanced bacteriological degradation. In addition, the system contemplated that rinsewater would percolate down through the soil, and that adsorption, absorption, and attenuation by the soil, as well as microbial biodegradation, would remove chemical contaminants. The system further relied on gravity to separate materials by allowing the heavier materials to settle to the bottom of the pond or lagoon and the lighter materials to float to the top. Chemical Leaman then periodically removed settled particles or floating materials through dredging and skimming. Each pond or lagoon was connected to the next by a “tee” pipe, which, according to plaintiff, permitted only the cleanest rinsewater to pass to the next pond or lagoon. The fourth and fifth lagoons contained aeration devices to increase the oxygen level in the lagoon, thereby enhancing microbial biodegradation. An overflow pipe in the last lagoon operated as a safety valve to prevent a rupture in the lagoon dike.
Plaintiff has submitted evidence that the individuals who designed and oversaw the rinsewater treatment system did not expect or intend to cause soil or groundwater damage. E.g. Elston Aff. ¶¶ 3, 4 (attached as Ex. 3 to Pl.’s App. of Exs.). 8 The.record also contains testimony from individuals familiar with the Bridgeport site, as well as from the insurers’ expert, that the rinsewater treatment system could and did perform some or all of the purifying functions for which it was designed. Ford Dep. at 203-05; Lakhani Dep. at 77-78; Swanson Dep., Vol. II, at 48-50, 56-58. Moreover, the use of unlined lagoons and ponds may have been standard practice in the truck cleaning business as well as in some other industries utilizing wastewater disposal methods. E.g. Middleton Dep. at 105-06; Ford Dep. at 315; Robinson Dep. at 72-73.
2. Defendants’ Evidence
Defendants’ evidence comprises three main categories. First, defendants introduce “state-of-the-art” scientific evidence to show that Chemical Leaman must have known that the Bridgeport rinsewater treatment system would contaminate the soil and groundwater. Second, defendants proffer evidence of investigations into environmental pollution occurring at the Bridgeport site. Third, defendants present evidence of Chemical Lea-man’s knowledge of soil and groundwater contamination at Chemical Leaman truck cleaning sites other than the Bridgeport facility.
State-of-the-Art Scientific Evidence
According to defendants, it was well known at the time the Bridgeport facility opened that unlined lagoons had a propensity to pollute soil and groundwater. For example, one scientific text, published in 1955, states:
Absorption lagoons are specifically designed to permit seepage of liquid into the ground. This seepage ultimately reaches a stream or an underground water stratum; hence absorption lagoons should not be-employed for toxic wastes.
Gurnham, Principles of Industrial Waste Treatment 319 (1955). Similarly, defendants present evidence of rinsewater treatment *1150 techniques used to clean railroad tank cars. Thus, the General American Transportation-Corporation apparently employed a “large, impermeable solar evaporation basin ... coated with an asphaltic concrete mix” to treat rinsewater. LMI Reply Br. at 12. Defendants assert that the designers of Chemical Leaman’s Bridgeport system, as professional sanitary engineers who kept up with current development, necessarily must-have been aware of this scientific information, and therefore must have known that the contaminants would pollute the soil and groundwater. 9
Bridgeport Site Evidence
Defendants submit evidence that Chemical Leaman was aware that its Bridgeport system’ vias causing environmental problems. The record contains reports of individuals and monitoring entities that, at various times, expressed concern that waste material' was flowing directly into a nearby swamp and creek. LMI’s 12G Statement ¶¶ 9; 28, 57, 77, 81, 87. A 1966 petition signed by residents living near the Bridgeport facility complained “that matters and things-emanating from the property of Chemical Leaman Tank Line, Inc., have permeated food stuff and growing things.” Aetna’s Ex. 21. In a 1970 report, the New Jersey DEP stated that Chemical Leaman “is still discharging objectionable materials into the waters of the State.” Aetna’s Ex. 27. Also in 1970, a senior public health engineer in .New Jersey found that the high phenols concentration in the wastewater “may produce toxic conditions in the swamp and stream.” Aetna’s Ex. 34. The record further contains evidence showing that Chemical Leaman was regularly informed that its facility was causing air pollution. See Aetna’s Exs. 8, 44, 69.
Other Chemical Leaman Sites
Finally, defendants present evidence that Chemical Leaman’s problems at other tank cleaning sites gave the company actual knowledge that the use of unlined ponds and lagoons would contaminate the soil and the groundwater. For example, in 1960, West Virginia environmental authorities informed Chemical Leaman that the use of storage ponds in Putnam county had resulted in groundwater pollution. LMI’s 12G Statement ¶ 5. Then in 1969, West Virginia ordered Chemical Leaman to stop the use of these lagoons because contaminated waters were leaching and seeping into the groundwater. LMI 12G Statement ¶ 26. In 1966, a consultant commissioned to investigate a Chemical Leaman site in Pennsylvania stated that “[without a groundwater and substrata study, we cannot be sure that some wastewa-ter infiltration does not occur.” LMI’s 12G Statement ¶ 22. Another consultant' warned that “no microbial degradation” was occurring in the lagoons at Chemical Leaman’s West Cain Township site. The consultant recommended that Chemical Leaman “take steps to insure that so long as dumping is continued into these pits no highly toxic materials will be added to them.” LMI’s 12G Statement ¶20.
3. Conclusions
The court first finds that defendants have presented abundant evidence tending to establish Chemical Leaman’s knowledge of the deleterious effect of its Bridgeport rinse-water treatment system on the soil and groundwater. A reasonable juror may fairly conclude from this material that plaintiff has failed to prove by a preponderance of the evidence that Chemical Leaman neither expected nor intended its system of ponds and lagoons to cause this damage. Accordingly, Chemical Leaman’s motion for summary judgment on the expected/intended requirement is denied.
, The more difficult question is whether the present record requires the court to find that there can be no genuine dispute that Chemical Leaman did intend to pollute the soil and groundwater. The court looks to two recent cases for assistance. In
Diamond Shamrock
*1151
Chemical v. Aetna Casualty & Surety Co.,
The court in
Hatco Corp. v. W.R. Grace & Co.,
The court in Hateo found that the carriers had presented evidence establishing that the insured knew in the 1960s that its waste disposal practices caused extensive surface water and air pollution. Id. at 1376. The carriers also submitted evidence tending to show the insured’s' knowledge in the mid' 1960s of the possibility that effluent pumped into unlined holding ponds could seep into the ground. Id. at 1376. The court, however, refused to presume, as a matter of law, that this evidence amounted to undisputed proof that the insured expected or intended to cause soil and groundwater damage. Accordingly, the carriers’ motions for summary judgment were denied. Id.
The court reads Diamond Shamrock and Hateo to establish the following standards for granting summary judgment in defendants’ favor in the present case. The record must reflect no genuine disputes as to three factual propositions. First, Chemical Lea-man must have known of the environmental hazards of the contaminants it was putting into its ponds and lagoons. Second, Chemical Leaman must have known that the contaminants in the ponds and lagoons were seeping into the soil and groundwater. Third, Chemical Leaman must have known that the contaminants that were seeping into the soil and groundwater were causing permanent damage to the soil and groundwater. If these factual predicates are established on the present record, then the court may rule as a matter of law that Chemical Leaman expected or intended to cause soil and groundwater contamination.
Knowledge of the Environmental Hazards of the Contaminants
The entire thrust of plaintiffs evidence on the expected/intended issue is that Chemical Leaman designed its unlined ponds and lagoons treatment system to remove contaminants from the rinsewater. In light of this argument, plaintiff cannot reasonably contest the fact that it was aware of the environmental hazards of the contaminants it placed into the rinsewater treatment system. The court, *1152 therefore, deems this fact as established. See Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(d). ■
Knowledge That the Contaminants Were Seeping Into the Soil and Groundwater
Analysis of this factual issue must distinguish between soil and groundwater. There can be no dispute that Chemical Leaman knew that the contaminants were seeping into the soil. Chemical Leaman left the ponds and lagoons unlined precisely because one of the goals of the rinsewater treatment system was to utilize the soil in the cleansing process. Accordingly, the court deems this to be an established fact. See Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(d). .
In contrast, the court finds that the state of Chemical Leaman’s knowledge with respect to the seepage of contaminants into the groundwater remains in dispute. Evidence in the record indicates that Chemical Lea-man was at various times informed that contaminants from the rinsewater treatment system could reach or were reaching the groundwater. However, Chemical Leaman is entitled to challenge the relevance, materiality, credibility, and weight that should be given to this material. For example, plaintiff argues, and a jury may reasonably find, that Chemical Leaman understood groundwater contamination at facilities other than the Bridgeport terminal to be site specific.
Cf New Castle County v. Hartford Accident and Indem. Co.,
Knowledge That the Contaminants Were Causing Permanent Damage
The court finds that a genuine dispute exists on whether Chemical Leaman intended that the rinsewater treatment system at its Bridgeport facility result in the contamination of the soil. It is true that Chemical Leaman’s rinsewater treatment system resulted in known contaminants settling in the soil at the bottom of the ponds and lagoons. It is also true that this fact, when combined with the fact established above that Chemical Leaman knew of the deleterious effect on the environment of the contaminants in the rinsewater, would normally lead to the conclusion that Chemical Leaman knew that permanent damage to the soil would result. However, there is evidence that Chemical Leaman may have believed it rid the soil of these contaminants when it periodically dredged the bottom of the ponds and lagoons. Moreover, there is testimony that the designers and operators of the unlined rinsewater treatment system believed that the processes of filtration, biodegradation, and adsorption would remove and breakdown the contaminants, much like a domestic septic system was thought to operate. See El-ston Dep. at 137-38; Ford Dep. at 386-87. A jury may reasonably infer from this evidence that Chemical Leaman neither expected nor intended to contaminate the soil, even though it-placed known pollutants into the soil.
The court also finds that Chemical Lea-man’s knowledge that the seeping contaminants would cause permanent damage to the groundwater is necessarily a disputed issue given that it remains an open factual issue for resolution at trial.
Based on the foregoing analyses, the court denies the defendants’ motions for summary judgment on the expeeted/intended issue.
III. Continuous Trigger Theory
The parties are in agreement that between 1960 and 1975, Chemical Leaman daily placed between 10,000 and 20,000 gallons of contaminated rinsewater into the unlined ponds and lagoons at the Bridgeport site.
See
Aetna’s Br. at 16; Pl.’s Reply Br. at 59; LMI Br. at 4. It therefore appears undisputed that an event resulting in property damage occurred during these years to trigger the policies then in effect. Chemical Leaman, however, is also suing for coverage under defendants’ policies in effect between 1975 and 1985, after the company stopped using the unlined ponds and lagoons treatment system. In order to obtain coverage under these policies, Chemical Leaman argues that New Jersey applies a “continuous trigger” theory to determine the time when property damage occurred within the meaning of defendants’ insurance policies. According to Chemical Leaman, the continuous trigger theory provides that all of defen
*1153
dants’ policies are triggered from 1960 (when Chemical Leaman first began operating the Bridgeport rinsewater treatment system) through 1985 (when Chemical Leaman claims it became fully aware of both the nature and extent of the groundwater contamination and its legal obligation to pay damages resulting from that contamination). The continuous trigger theory would allow Chemical Leaman to recover the full amount under any policy falling within the trigger period.
See Keene Corp. v. Insurance Co. of N. Am.,
This court finds that New Jersey law permits the application of the continuous trigger theory, subject to certain predicate factual findings.
Accord Hatco Corp. v. W.R. Grace & Co.,
Under the continuous trigger theory, all insurance policies activated by an ongoing occurrence “are jointly and severally liable to policy limits for all damages resulting from that occurrence, including damage that occurred before and after the policy period.”
Hatco Corp.,
New Jersey law requires the insured to make two factual showings before imposing joint and several liability under the continuous trigger theory.
10
First, the insured must establish that some kind of property damage occurred during each policy period for which the insured seeks coverage.
Gottlieb,
In sum, if Chemical Leaman estaba lishes these factual predicates it may recover from defendants the full amount of coverage
permitted under each insurance policy
in effect from 1960 until
the manifestation of the soil and groundwater damage.
The court underscores the two phrases in the previous sentence in order to emphasize additional issues that are potentially in dispute. First, defendants may defeat plaintiffs recovery under a policy activated by a continuous trigger if defendants establish that an applicable policy exclusion bars coverage.
Hatco Corp.,
IV. Pollution Exclusion Clause
A. The Broadwell Line of Cases
Defendants’ policies in effect after April 1, 1971 contain pollution exclusion clauses. The parties dispute whether the events causing the soil and groundwater damage fall within the “sudden and accidental” exception to the pollution exclusion provision.
12
This heavily litigated issue turns in the first instance on the meaning of the word “sudden.” Defendants- argue that Chemical Leaman’s placing of pollutants in the ponds and lagoons was not sudden because, temporally, it took place over many years rather than all at once. Plaintiff rejects this proposed definition and asks the court to rely on a line of New Jersey appellate precedent which, beginning with the case of
Broadwell Realty Serv., Inc. v. Fidelity & Casualty Co.,
has defined the word “sudden” without a temporal element, construing the “sudden and accidental” exception to apply to “an ‘unexpected,’ ‘unforeseen’ or ‘fortuitous’ event.”
The court’s task is to interpret the meaning of the pollution exclusion clause under New Jersey law. Although there exists a line of Appellate Division cases, the state
*1155
Supreme Court has not yet directly ruled on the issue.
13
“Where an intermediate appellate state court rests its considered judgment upon the rule of law which it announces, that is a datum for ascertaining state law which is not to be disregarded by a federal court unless it is convinced by other persuasive data that the highest court of the state would decide otherwise.”
West v. A.T. & T.,
Defendants propose two alternative arguments as to why this court should rule that Broadwell and its progeny are wrongly decided. First, they contend that the term “sudden” is clear and unambiguous in its meaning, and includes a temporal element. Second, defendants maintain that, even assuming that the term “sudden” is ambiguous, extrinsic evidence proves that the drafters of the pollution exclusion clause intended for the term to include a temporal dimension. The court addresses each of these arguments in turn.
B. The Ambiguous Meaning of the “Sudden and Accidental” Exception
In
Broadwell,
the Appellate Division, after noting the “extraordinary number of lawsuits” generated by the pollution exclusion, found that the “sudden and accidental” clause was ambiguous because the meaning of the term “sudden” may or may not included a temporal element.
C. Contra Proferentum vs. “Sophisticated Insured”
Defendants’ second argument acknowledges that the word “sudden” is ambiguous under New. Jersey ease law, but relies on extrinsic evidence to prove that the term contains a temporal aspect. The principle implicitly at work in this argument is the standard contract rule that extrinsic evidencé is admissible to explain an ambiguous contract.
The court must reject defendants’ invitation to evaluate the proffered evidence of drafters’ intent. Even assuming that the evidence of the drafter’s intent conclusively 'shows the desired meaning of the word “sudden,” the doctrine of
contra proferentum
— or “against the one who proffers”— precludes this court from considering this evidence. In insurance law, the doctrine of
contra proferentum
provides that where a term in an insurance policy is ambiguous, giving rise to two equally plausible interpretations, the term will be given the meaning that results in coverage.
Mazzilli v. Accident & Casualty Ins. Co. of Winterthur,
*1156
Defendants argue that the strict rale of
contra proferentum
should not be followed in the present case, because Chemical Leaman is a “sophisticated” buyer and user of insurance. This court, however, is convinced that the size or sophistication of the insured is irrelevant under New Jersey law to the application of the rule of
contra proferentum
when the policy in dispute has been drafted solely by the carrier.
14
Hatco Corp. v. W.R. Grace & Co.,
D. The Parties’ Cross-Motions for Summary Judgment
Based on the above reading of the law, Chemical Leaman asks for a ruling that the pollution exclusion does not apply to the present ease. The basis of Chemical Lea-man’s argument is that the pollution exclusion clause, because of the sudden and accidental exception, does no more than restate the scope of coverage under the basic occurrence-based terms of the policy. 16 In other words, the pollution exclusion clause, according to plaintiff, precludes coverage only if Chemical Leaman expected or intended to cause soil and groundwater damage. PL’s Br. at 35.
The problem with plaintiffs proposed reading is that the language of the pollution exclusion focuses not on damage but on “the discharge, dispersal, release or escape” of contaminants or pollutants. It is true that the court in
Broadwell
observed that the pollution exclusion clause was “simply a restatement of the definition of ‘occurrence’ — that is, that the policy will cover claims where the injury was ‘neither expected nor intended.’ ”
The court, however, does grant partial summary judgment to defendants as to soil damage on all policies containing a pollution exclusion. As discussed previously, the record is replete with evidence that Chemical Leaman intended to discharge contaminants into the soil at the Bridgeport site. E.g. Elston Dep. at 137; Middleton Dep. at 125. Indeed, plaintiff admits that Chemical Lea-man contemplated such discharges as part of the design of its rinsewater treatment system with unlined ponds and lagoons. Pl.’s Reply Br. at 18-19. These discharges of contaminants into the soil do not fall within the “sudden and accidental” exception to the pollution exclusion, and Chemical Leaman is therefore barred from recovering from the carriers under the relevant policies for any sums used to remediate soil damage. Whether Chemical Leaman intended to discharge' contaminants into the groundwater remains a genuine issue of dispute. Summary judgment on this issue must, therefore, be denied.
V. Owned-Property Exclusion
In its March 31, 1992 opinion, this court held “that the owned-property exclusion does not apply' to remedial measures taken by Chemical Leaman that are designed to correct injury or to prevent further injury to the ground and surface waters in the vicinity of its Bridgeport facility.”
Chemical Leaman Tank Lines, Inc. v. Aetna,
VI. Late Notice ..
Defendants’ insurance policies required, as a condition precedent to coverage, that the insured provide “as soon as practicable” written notice in the event of an occurrence or accident. Both Aetna and LMI disclaim coverage on the basis of these provisions, asserting that Chemical Leaman failed to give timely notice.
20
Indeed, plaintiff con
*1158
cedes that Chemical Leaman is in breach of the notice clauses. Tr. of Oral Argument at 28-29. However, this admission does not end the inquiry. New Jersey law is clear that an insurer may deny coverage on the basis of; a notice clause only after proving not only that the insured breached but also that the insurer suffered a likelihood of appreciable prejudice as a result.
Cooper v. Government Employees Ins. Co.,
Thus, the court addresses whether Chemical Leaman’s late notice caused defendants to suffer a likelihood of appreciable prejudice. Timely notification pursuant to a notice clause allows an insurer to investigate the merits of both the insured’s claim against the carrier and the underlying claim against the insured that allegedly triggers coverage. In light of these goals, the court in
Morales v. National Grange Mut. Ins. Co.,
The second factor is “the likelihood of success of the insurer in defending against the” underlying claim. This inquiry implicates the notice clause’s function of allowing the carrier to assume the defense of the underlying claim, if it so desires. As the court in Morales noted:
In some cases the liability of the insured and the resulting damages are so clear that it would be unfair to preclude the plaintiff from recovering against the carrier. For that reason the carrier should be required to show the likelihood that it would have had a meritorious defense had it been informed of the accident in a timely fashion.
Id.
at 355-56,
A. Substantial Rights Irretrievably Lost
Defendants present two principal arguments on the irretrievable loss of substantial rights. First, they contend that the death of witnesses and witnesses’ loss of memory resulting from the passage of time have seriously prejudiced their ability to dispute their coverage obligations under the policies. Second, defendants maintain that the 1977 draining and filling of the ponds and lagoons at the Bridgeport site also deprived defendants of evidence that would have enhanced their ability to dispute coverage.
Plaintiff seeks indemnification for its cleanup liabilities and defense costs incurred pursuant to the EPA’s CERCLA claim. It is, therefore, beyond dispute that notice should have been given to defendants, at the earliest, by 1984, when the EPA placed the Bridgeport site on the Superfund national priorities list. The court finds that the evidence in the record fails to establish that defendants suffered a likelihood of appreciable prejudice in their ability to contest coverage. Defendants have not shown that any material witnesses have died since 1984. Nor have they proven that the fading or *1159 failure of witnesses’ memory has irretrievably harmed their ability to advance their case against Chemical Leaman. In addition, the material attached to the current summary judgment motions, culled from the files of Chemical Leaman, the insurers, government agencies, and various other entities, shows that a wealth of relevant’ documentary evidence remains intact. Finally, defendants could not have obtained evidence from the original ponds and lagoons at the Bridgeport site in 1984, with or without timely notice, because the site was drained and backfilled by 1977. In sum, defendants are currently able to mount a strong, well-documented case against coverage, the crux of which is that Chemical Leaman expected or intended from 1960 to 1975 to cause soil and groundwater contamination. The insurers have not submitted proof that they would have been in any better position to make this case beginning in 1984 upon timely notice rather than in 1988 or 1989.
B. Likelihood of Success in Defending the Underlying Claim
The second Morales factor concerns the defendants’ likelihood of success in the underlying claim against Chemical Leaman if they had taken over defense of the claim upon timely notice. Chemical Leaman, as owner and operator of the Bridgeport facility, is strictly liable under CERCLA for damages for injury to, destruction of, or loss of natural resources, as well as for the reasonable costs of assessing such damage to natural resources, and all costs of removal, remediation, or other necessary response costs. Chemical Leaman’s liability for these damages is retroactive, joint, and several, and imposed regardless of fault. Joint Final Pretrial Order ¶ IV.36. Defendants do not contend that a meritorious challenge exists to the findings, made in the 1985 consent .order, that four residences located approximately 100 feet north of the Bridgeport site show contamination in their drinking water wells, and that the drinking water wells of at least three more persons are threatened by the direction and proximity of the contamination. Nor do defendants assert that there is a meritorious defense to the EPA’s allegation that the presence of hazardous substances at the Bridgeport facility and their migration to surrounding soils and groundwater constitute a release within the meaning of section 101(22) of CERCLA, 42 U.S.C. § 9601(22). Accordingly, the court finds that defendants have not shown a likelihood of success in defending ■Chemical Leaman against claims under CERCLA.
Defendants also ask this court to find that timely notice would have resulted in a likelihood that the insurance carriers would have reached a more favorable settlement. However, defendants fail tc demonstrate what better arrangement the insurance carriers would have been able to obtain if they had assumed Chemical Leaman’s defense upon timely notice. Cf Witco Corp. v. Travelers Indem. Co., Civ. No. 86-2907, 1987 U.S.Dist. LEXIS ** 44-45 (D.N.J. May 1, 1987).
Finally, defendants present evidence tending to show that Chemical Leaman’s
implementation
of the cleanup óf the Bridgeport site pursuant to its liability under CERCLA has led to
higher
cleanup costs than would have resulted had the insurance carriers been involved in the case following timely notice. In particular, defendants claim that the work of Environmental Resources Management, Inc., the firm hired by Chemical Leaman to assist in the CERCLA cleanup, was substandard, resulting in increased costs. The court finds that this evidence, while irrelevant to the notice inquiry of whether defendants suffered a likelihood appreciable prejudice, may nevertheless go to the jury for its determination of the amount of the cleanup costs pursuant to CERCLA for which defendants are liable. Defendants’ policies obligate the carriers to indemnify Chemical Leaman. only for “all sums which the insured shall become legally obligated to pay as damages ... caused by an occurrence.” Increased cleanup costs incurred by plaintiff as a result of Chemical Leaman’s or its agent’s substandard work are not
“caused
by an occurrence.” Rather, they are caused by the insured’s allegedly poor handling of its cleanup obligations. These costs are more akin, to business losses than to tort liability. And, as the Appellate Division has- emphasized, liability policies provide coverage for the insured’s “tort lia
*1160
bility for [property] damages to others and not for economic or business losses suffered by the insured.”
Broadwell Realty Serv. Inc. v. Fidelity & Casualty Co.,
In conclusion, the court recognizes that the law should not endure lightly an insured’s failure to make timely notification under a policy. Indeed, a four to five year delay strains the limits of judicial tolerance.
But see Peskin v. Liberty Mut. Ins. Co.,
VII. Failure to Cooperate
New Jersey law provides that an insurance carrier may disclaim coverage pursuant to a cooperation clause only if it proves (1) that the insured breaehed.the cooperation clause and (2) that the carrier suffered a likelihood of appreciable prejudice as a result of this breach.
Solvents Recovery Serv. v. Midland Ins. Co.,
By at least May 23, 1988, and until April 12, 1989, when Chemical Leaman instituted this lawsuit, Aetna investigated Chemical Leaman’s claim. Pursuant to this investigation, Aetna has interviewed four Chemical Leaman personnel and has reviewed Chemical Leaman’s files and records. Chemical Leaman cooperated with this investigation and provided information which Aetna requested until Chemical Lea-man determined that legal action was necessary.
Joint Final Pretrial Order ¶ IV.43. Aetna is bound by this stipulation. Accordingly, the court finds that Chemical Leaman did not breach the cooperation clause in its policies with Aetna.
Chemical Leaman’s motion for summary judgment on the cooperation clause in the LMI policies must also succeed. Chemical Leaman notified LMI of its claim on March 30, 1989. Chemical Leaman filed the present suit against LMI on April 12, 1989. Even assuming that plaintiff failed whatsoever to cooperate with LMI between these two dates, the court must find that LMI suffered no likelihood of appreciable prejudice. LMI has submitted no evidence of witnesses dying or witnesses’ memories fading during this period. Nor has LMI shown that Chemical Leaman altered the Bridgeport site in any way that hampered LMI’s ability to investigate the underlying CERCLA claim against Chemical Leaman or Chemical Leaman’s claim against LMI. Based on these findings, the court grants Chemical Leaman’s motion for summary judgment as against LMI on the cooperation clause issue.
VIII. Aetna’s Duty to Defend
Plaintiff seeks recovery from Aetna for certain costs incurred in connection with the defense of the underlying CERCLA suit. In particular, these costs include: (1) studies and tests made in connection with the preparation of the RI/FS; (2) engineering and other expert fees; (3) attorneys fees associated with the EPA’s administrative process; and (4) administrative and oversight costs reimbursable to the EPA. Pl.’s Br. at 55. Plaintiff also asks for a declaration that Aet-na is presently obligated under its policies to provide Chemical Leaman with a defense. Since being notified on April 18, 1988, Aetna has refused to defend Chemical Leaman.
A. Pre-Notice Defense Costs
A threshold issue involves whether Aetna can be held responsible for the in
*1161
sured’s defense costs incurred before April 18, 1988. The court holds that it cannot. In
SL Industries v. American Motorists Insurance Co.,
the New Jersey Supreme Court ruled “that the duty to defend is triggered by facts
known
to the insurer.”
the insured being sued is responsible for promptly conveying to its insurance company the information that it believes will trigger coverage. If it conveys that information properly and promptly, it will be reimbursed for previously expended defense costs. However, if the insured does not properly forward the information to the insurance company, the insured cannot demand reimbursement from the insurer for defense costs the insurer had no opportunity to control.... [W]hen the insured’s delay in providing relevant information prevents the insurer from assuming control of the defense, the insurance company is liable only for that portion of the defense costs arising after it was informed of the facts triggering the duty to defend.
Id.
at 199-200,
B. Post-Notice Defense Costs
In
Hartford Accident & Indemnity Co. v. Aetna Life & Casualty Inc.,
It is evident on the face of the “duty to defend” clause that the duties to indemnify and to defend áre closely related and that neither duty exists except with respect to occurrences for which the policy provides coverage. It is irrelevant to the duty to defend whether the suit is well founded or
groundless, ... but the duty extends only to claims within the coverage of the policy. Stated another way, the- duty to defend extends only to claims on which there would be a duty to indemnify in the event of a judgment adverse to the insured.
Id.
at 22,
A particular problem arises when the complaint in the underlying litigation does not contain allegations which, if proven at trial, would suffice to establish coverage. The New Jersey Supreme Court addressed this scenario in
Burd v. Sussex Mutual Insurance Co.,
The
Burd
rule, however, does not “free the carrier from its covenant to defend, but rather translate^] its obligation into one to reimburse the insured if it is later adjudged that the claim was one within the policy covenant to pay.”
Id.
at 390,
In the present case, the underlying CERCLA claim is grounded in strict liability. A comparison of the facts necessary to establish liability under the CERCLA complaint with the facts necessary to establish coverage under Aetna’s policies reveals a critical discrepancy on the issue of Chemical Lea-man’s intent. The issue of intent plays no role in establishing CERCLA liability.
Hatco Corp.,
IX. Conclusion
Based on the foregoing analyses, the court grants in part and denies in part the parties’ cross-motions for summary judgment. The parties are also ordered to submit on the day of trial a joint statement of material facts deemed established in this opinion pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 56(d). An appropriate order will be entered.
ORDER
This matter having come before the court on the cross-motions of the parties for summary judgment, as well on the various motions of the parties for leave to file briefs in excess of the established page limits;
The court having heard oral argument on the parties’ cross-motions for summary judgment on November 23,1992 and having carefully considered the submissions of the parties; and
For the reasons stated in the court’s opinion of this date;
IT IS on this 10th day of March 1993 hereby
ORDERED that the motion of plaintiff Chemical Leaman Tank Lines, Inc. (“Chemical Leaman”), for summary judgment is GRANTED in part and DENIED in part, in that:
(a) There remain genuine issues of material fact on whether Chemical Leaman expected and intended to cause soil and ground water damage; and
(b) There remain genuine issues of material fact on whether the continuous trigger theory is applicable to the present case; and
(c) Chemical Leaman may not recover for soil contamination on any of defendants’ policies that contain a pollution exclusion; and
(d) There remain genuine issues of material fact on whether Chemical Leaman may recover for groundwater contamination on any of defendants’ policies that contain a pollution exclusion; and
(e) Chemical Leaman is not barred from coverage under defendants’ policies by the policies’ notice clauses; and
(f) Chemical Leaman is not barred from coverage under defendants’ policies by the defense of laches; and
(g) Chemical Leaman is not barred from coverage under defendants’ policies by the policies’ cooperation clauses; and
(h) Chemical Leaman is not barred from coverage under defendants’ policies by the defense of estoppel; and
*1163 (i) Chemical Leaman may not recover from Aetna Casualty and Surety Co. (“Aet-na”) reimbursements for defense costs incurred by Chemical Leaman prior to April 18, 1988; and
(j) Aetna’ duty to defend Chemical Lea-man is not presently triggered, but rather must await the outcome of the present trial of Aetna’s duty to indemnify; and
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that the cross-motion of defendant Aetna is GRANTED in part and DENIED in part, in that:
(a) There has occurred property damage to trigger Aetna’s policy in effect from April 1, 1960 to April 1, 1961; and
(b) Chemical Leaman may not recover under Aetna’s policies in effect prior to April 1, 1960; and
(c) There remain genuine issues of material fact on whether Chemical Leaman expected and intended to cause soil and groundwater damage; and
(d) There remain genuine issues of material fact on whether the continuous trigger theory is applicable to the present case; and
(e) Chemical Leaman may not recover for soil contamination on any of Aetna’s policies that contain a pollution exclusion; and
(f) There remain genuine issues of material fact of whether Chemical Leaman may recover for groundwater contamination on any of Aetna’s policies that contain a pollution exclusion; and
(g) Chemical Leaman is not barred from coverage under Aetna’s policies by the policies’ notice clauses; and
(h) Chemical Leaman is not barred from coverage under Aetna’s policies by the policies’ cooperation clauses; and
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that the cross-motion of defendants Robin Anthony Gildart Jackson, an Underwriter at Lloyds, London, et al. (“LMI”), is GRANTED in part and DENIED in part, in that:
(a) Chemical Leaman’s 12G Statement of Material Facts Not In Dispute will not be stricken; and
(b) Chemical Leaman bears the burden of proof for establishing that it neither expected nor intended to cause soil and groundwater damage; and
(c) There remain genuine issues of material fact on whether Chemical Leaman expected and intended to cause soil and groundwater damage; and
(d) Chemical Leaman may not recover for soil contamination on any of LMI’s policies that contain a pollution exclusion; and
(e) There remain genuine issues of material fact on whether Chemical Leaman may recover for groundwater contamination on any of LMI’s policies that contain a pollution exclusion; and
(f) Reconsideration of this court’s previous ruling on the owned-property exclusion is not warranted; and
(g) Chemical Leaman is not barred from coverage under LMI’s policies by the policies’ notice clauses; and
(h) Chemical Leaman is not barred from coverage under LMI’s policies by the defense of laches; and
(i) Chemical Leaman is not barred from coverage under LMI’s policies for pre-no-tice costs; and
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that the parties shall submit to the court on March 15, 1993, a statement of material facts deemed established pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 56(d) by the court’s opinion of this date; and
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that LMI’s cross-motion for summary judgment that the absolute pollution exclusion in all the post-April 1,1985 policies is DENIED as moot, in that Chemical Leaman has withdrawn all claims as against LMI under these policies; and
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that Aet-na’s motion for leave to file a summary judgment brief exceeding 40 pages in GRANTED; and
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that LMI’s motion for leave to file a summary judgment brief exceeding 40 pages in GRANTED; and
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that plaintiffs motion for leave to file a reply and *1164 opposition brief exceeding forty pages is GRANTED; and
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that Aet-na’s motion for leave to file a reply and opposition brief in excess of 40 pages is GRANTED; and
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that LMI’s motion for leave to file a reply and opposition brief in excess of 15 pages is GRANTED.
No costs.
Notes
. LMI moves to strike Chemical Leaman's summary judgment motion on the ground that plaintiff’s 12G Statement of Material Facts Not in Dispute is devoid of references to the record. While the court certainly prefers that a 12G Statement contain citations to the record, nothing in Local Rule 12G requires it. LMI’s motion is therefore denied.
.For a discussion of how the London insurance market operates, see
Diamond Shamrock Chemicals v. Aetna Casualty & Sur. Co.,
.At oral argument, Chemical Leaman dismissed any claims it had against LMI on the policy running from April 1, 1985 to April 1, 1986. Tr. of Oral Argument at 27.
.Chemical Leaman states in its 12G Statement *1143 that LMI’s policies essentially “followed form” to Aetna’s primary policy. LMI makes a point of disagreeing with this statement, and sets out all the relevant policy terms of LMI’s excess and umbrella policies from 1958.to 1985. However, with the exception of its pollution exclusion clauses, LMI does not argue anywhere in its briefs that this court should interpret the basic coverage and exclusions under the LMI policies differently from those under Aetna's policies. In the absence of such an argument, and upon review of the LMI policy terms, the court finds that coverage under LMI’s and Aetna's policies is identical for the purposes of the legal issues addressed in this opinion, unless otherwise noted.
. ■ For example, the policy could have defined an occurrence as "an accident or event which results in unintended and unexpected property damage from the standpoint of the insured.” But the meaning of this language is virtually indistinguishable from the actual policy language. Both versions use the expected/intended concept to define the kind of damages that are covered'. The difference is one of syntax, not meaning. ' A reasonable person would find no difference 'between the two sentences.
: It is, of course, true that the meaning of "expected and intended” in an insurance policy depends in the first instance on the language of the policy and principles of contract interpretation. There are, however, important reasons for construing the intent required to preclude coverage as the intent to cause damage rather than intent to perform the acts that cause damage. As the court in J.T. Baker v. Aetna Casualty and Sur. Co. observed:
Insurance is purchased and premiums are paid to indemnify the insured for damages caused by accidents, that is, for conduct not meant to cause harm but which goes awry. The insured may be negligent, indeed, in failing to take precautions or to foresee the possibility of harm, yet insurance coverage protects the insured from his own lack of due care. If the policy holder were to be told that the words of the "occurrence” definition excluding coverage for "expected or intended” damages actually mean that coverage is also lost for damage which a prudent person "should have” foreseen, there would be no point to purchasing a policy of liability insurance.
. The court notes that there is evidence in the record that material from the Bridgeport facility discharged directly into a nearby swamp. See LMI's 12 Statement ¶¶ 57, 77, 87. Further evidence suggests that drums containing solid waste leaked directly onto the ground. See id. ¶91. The court finds that this evidence does not suffice to show that it was Chemical Leaman’s intention for contaminated material to end up in the nearby swamp. However, this evidence, if believed by a jury to establish that Chemical Leaman knew or expected that its waste water would flow into the swamp, may support a finding of no coverage.
. LMI challenges the Elston Affidavit as untimely for use in support of Chemical Leaman’s motion for summary judgment. LMI’s Reply Br. at 8-9. The court does not address LMI’s challenge because it does not grant Chemical Leaman summary judgment on the expected and intended issue.
. According to defendants, the principal engineer in charge of designing the rinsewater treatment system was Edwin Wagner. Because Mr. Wagner is dead, it is difficult to establish the breadth of his knowledge at the time the Bridgeport facility was built. There is, however, testimony from other individuals on Mr. Wagner’s actions and knowledge. See Elston Dep.; Holman Dep. And it is permissible for a jury, if it so chooses, to infer from Mr. Wagner's professional standing as a sanitary engineer that he had actual knowledge of state-of-the-art scientific knowledge.
. The insured must establish that a policy is triggered in order to obtain coverage, and therefore must bear the burden of proof.
Diamond Shamrock Chemicals v. Aetna Casualty & Sur. Co.,
. The court notes that the “Other Insurance” clauses found in certain of defendants’ policies - only affect the rights of the insurers among themselves. They do not implicate Chemical Lea-man’s right to full recovery under each triggered policy.
Starks v. Hosp. Serv. Plan of N.J., Inc.,
. LMI’s pollution exclusion clause for its policies in effect from April 1, 1971, to April 1, 1974, and for April 1, 1977, to April 1, 1985, contain an exception for a “sudden, unintended, and unexpected happening.” The court’s analysis on whether the term "sudden" contains a temporal element is controlling for these policies. And, because the court finds that "accidental” means unintended and unexpected, there is no reason to construe "sudden, unintended, and unexpected” any differently than “sudden and accidental." Indeed, neither LMI nor Chemical Leaman makes any argument to the contrary.
. The court notes that the New Jersey Supreme Court has granted certification on the pollution exclusion clause issue in
Morton Int’l, Inc. v. General Acc. Ins. Co. of Am.,
. Aetna also argues that the doctrine of "the reasonable expectations of the insured” requires the court to consider evidence of Chemical Lea-man's knowledge and insurance matters. See Aetna’s Br. at 28-39. The court rejects this line of argument. The reasonable expectation of the insured doctrine is best understood as a justification for applying the rule of contra proferentum when a policy term is ambiguous. If a term is susceptible to two meanings, one precluding and one supporting coverage, then it is proper to assume that the insured will reasonably understand the terms to provide coverage. In this way, contra proferentum fulfills the insured’s reasonable expectations.
. Aetna has stipulated to this fact. See Joint Final Pretrial Order ¶¶ IV.5, 6. LMI, while refusing to stipulate to this fact, offers no evidence to dispute its truth.
. The court does not address plaintiff’s argument that the insurers’ official representations to state insurance commissions estop them from now advancing a more restrictive interpretation of the pollution exclusion clause. See Pl.’s Reply Br. at 38-41. This separate ground for summary judgment was first raised only in plaintiff’s reply brief and will therefore not be considered. The court will construe the pollution exclusion clause according to New Jersey law.
. The pollution exclusion clauses in LMI’s policies in effect from April 1, 1971 to April 1, 1974, and from April 1, 1977 to April 1, 1985 applied to "seepage, pollution or contamination” rather than "discharge, dispersal, release or escape." The court finds that the former language does not lead to any different result on the issues currently before it. Nor do the parties make any such argument.
.In
Hateo Corp.,
the court held that New Jersey law does not require the "insured to be aware of the harmful nature of the pollutants when they were discharged or released” in order for the pollution exclusion to apply.
. LMI concedes that no apportionment of costs for groundwater contamination cleanup is required. LMI’s Reply Br. at 24.
. Defendants also seek to avoid coverage on the basis of the equitable defenses of laches and estoppel. New Jersey law considers laches to be identical to the late notice defense.
Allstate Ins. Co. v. Howard Sav. Inst.,
. The court follows the lead of two other district courts in applying
Morales'
analysis of the law of appreciable prejudice to an environmental insurance case.
See Hatco Corp. v. W.R. Grace & Co.,
