The City of Jasper, Indiana brought this diversity action against Employers Insurance of Wausau, A Mutual Company for breach of an insurance contract. On October 5, 1990, after both parties filed motions for summary judgment, the district court entered an order granting summary judgment in favor of Wausau. For the following reasons, we affirm.
I. BACKGROUND
In 1981, Employers Insurance of Wausau issued a “comprehensive general liability” insurance policy to the City of Jasper. The policy was in effect from August 1, 1981 through November 1, 1982, and required Wausau to indemnify and defend the City in any suit to recover personal injury or property damages “caused by an occurrence [emphasis in original].” The policy language is standard in the insurance industry, 1 and defines occurrence as follows:
“[Occurrence” means 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 [emphasis in original].
*455 In this appeal, we must decide whether, under the policy, Wausau was legally required to defend a negligence action which arose from the circumstances which we here describe.
Charles Habig sued the City of Jasper claiming that the City Zoning Administrator issued him two building permits which eventually proved invalid. In December 1981, Habig obtained permits for the construction of two duplexes. On January 14, 1982, soon after he broke ground, neighboring landowners filed suit in state court to enjoin the ongoing construction. The City, they argued, had issued the permits in violation of a local zoning ordinance. Although the court dismissed that suit, Ha-big’s neighbors appealed to the Jasper Board of Zoning Appeals. At that point, Habig ceased construction. On February 17, 1982, the Board upheld the permits and Habig’s neighbors again appealed, this time to state court. On March 17, 1982, an Indiana trial court issued a temporary stop-work order. Eventually, after two trials and two appeals in state court, Habig’s neighbors finally prevailed. On June 11, 1984, the Court of Appeals of Indiana affirmed a lower court order that Habig either modify or remove his two duplexes. To comply, Habig demolished one of the units.
On March 14, 1985, Habig filed a tort action against the City of Jasper. Habig sought compensation for property damages he suffered as a result of what he characterized as the City’s negligence. Specifically, he alleged that City officials knew or should have known that the permits were issued in violation of municipal zoning laws. Thus, Habig charged that by issuing, authorizing, and upholding the invalid building permits, the City’s officials negligently performed their ministerial duties. When it received notice of Habig’s suit, the City contacted Wausau to request legal representation and, if necessary, indemnification as provided for in its general liability policy. Wausau refused to defend or indemnify. Because the type of negligence alleged by Habig was not an “occurrence” as defined by the policy, Wausau explained, Habig’s action was not covered. As a result, Jasper—which later successfully defended the Habig suit—brought this action against Wausau to recover its litigation costs.
The district court denied recovery. Although the parties devoted the bulk of their briefings to the issue whether the acts asserted in Habig’s complaint constituted an “occurrence” for purposes of the insurance policy, the court did not address that question except to state that “there is no Indiana law which is clearly dispositive of the matter.”
City of Jasper, Indiana v. Employers Insurance of Wausau, A Mutual Company,
Mem. op. at 4 (S.D.Ihd. Oct. 5, 1990). Instead, the court regarded the timing of the occurrence as dispositive. In Indiana, the court correctly noted, “an occurrence takes place when the injury upon which the suit is based arises.”
Id.
at 10;
see United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co. v. American Insurance Co.,
II. ANALYSIS
We review the district court’s grant of summary judgment
de novo. Travelers Insurance Companies v. Penda Corp.,
Under Indiana law, courts will give plain and unambiguous language in an insurance policy its ordinary meaning.
Tate v. Secura Insurance,
Our logic in deciding this appeal, and what we believe would be the logic of Indiana’s courts, is relatively simple, even though its application has been the source of much litigation and analysis nationwide. We conclude that the facts alleged in the complaint, however characterized by artful pleading, do not set forth an “accident” and, consequently, cannot constitute an “occurrence” for purposes of the general liability policy.
Even given the liberality of interpretation in favor of coverage which applies in Indiana as it does generally throughout the nation,
see, e.g., Auto-Owners (Mutual) Insurance Co. v. Stroud,
The policy defines “occurrence” as “an accident, including injurious exposure to conditions, which results, during the policy term, in bodily injury.” “Occurrence” thus sweeps wider than “accident,” because “occurrence” is defined to include an injurious exposure to continuing conditions as well as a discrete event.... The injurious exposure must, however, itself be accidental in nature.
Id.
An “accident” for our purposes is defined as “an unusual, unexpected, and unforeseen event."
Red Ball Leasing,
In the final analysis, the “accident” which caused Mr. Habig’s injury, in a physical sense, was his own compelled razing of the one duplex in obedience to the ultimate court judgment in the litigation. An extension of the definition of “occurrence” in the policy to cover this type of injury can be justified only by ignoring the limiting language of the definition itself. Wausau was no more obliged to defend the City on the complaint here than to defend the City in inter-governmental litigation arising from the City’s efforts to comply with some federal law. We think no realistic insured city could rationally believe it was covered for the consequences of judgmental decisions it might make in the course of performing its municipal duties — even though these decisions might ultimately be reversed by the state courts. The conduct of the insured, in this sense, was therefore not an accident; rather, it was part of the normal and expected consequences of government. There may be some language or some insurance coverage to protect a governmental entity from this type of result, but the policy in question does not.
Not surprisingly, our holding today is consistent with the decisions of courts that have been faced with the same type of issue,
i.e.,
an insurer’s duty to defend or indemnify municipal entities for damages and causes of action accruing from what is essentially the exercise of deliberative prerogatives. In
City of Wilmington v. Pigott,
The North Carolina Court of Appeals reversed. Focusing on the language of the policy, the court noted that in order for there to have been an “occurrence,” there must necessarily have been an “accident.”
Pigott,
We cannot label Inspector Rowan’s order to the Pigotts to remove their greenhouses an “accident.” The decision did not happen by chance and was not expected, unusual or unforeseen. It was certainly intended by the City that as chief building inspector Rowan would exercise his discretion to make these sorts of decisions as he saw fit. While Rowan may have mistakenly or erroneously interpreted the Wilmington building code, his conduct did not amount to an “accident.”
Id.; cf. Wiggins v. City of Monroe,
In
City of Medina v. Transamerica Insurance Co.,
Admittedly, the foregoing authorities are neither models of judicial clarity nor analysis. Collectively, however, these decisions demonstrate the difficult nature of this conceptual inquiry. Moreover, we think it significant that each of the eases discussed above reach a conclusion consistent with our decision today, namely, that the standard general liability policy does not provide coverage in a case where, absent aggravating circumstances, municipalities request defense and indemnity against what are essentially the results of deliberative *459 decisions for which the governmental entities were in whole, or in part, created.
In reaching this result we do not try to reconcile semantic differences or resolve interpretive ambiguities which characterize legal decisions in other circuits. We deal instead with judgmental decisions of municipal legislative bodies which historically have always been subject to legal challenge. We do not say that a municipal corporation may or may not insulate itself from potential financial loss which others seek to impose upon it where its judgment, political, legal or otherwise, does not prevail. We only say that such conduct under the standard general liability policy is not an “accident” subject to protection by a comprehensive general liability policy such as was issued here. We write carefully to limit the application of Indiana law to the facts of this case because we have no business to go further and content ourselves to conclude that under its law, Indiana’s courts would not, as a matter of law, entertain the City’s complaint. Accordingly, for these reasons and without comment upon the trial judge’s reliance upon technical grounds, we Affirm the judgment of the district court.
Notes
. Since 1940, the insurance industry has used a standard general liability policy. Wausau's definition of occurrence tracked the language provided in the Comprehensive General Liability Policy, as modified in 1972. See John A. Appel-man, 7A Insurance Law and Practice, ¶ 4491 at 3 and ¶ 4492 at 15 (Rev. ed. 1979).
. For other cases allowing certain types of intentional conduct to constitute an “occurrence,”
see State of Vermont v. Glen Falls Insurance Co.,
. We need not speculate as to whether the legal interpretation which prompted the City to grant the permit was correct (in the ultimate sense), or whether if incorrect in its espousal as a legal proposition was so negligent as to expose the City’s attorneys to professional liability. It is enough for our own purposes here to observe that, if what the City did was an "action” it was not an "accident,” and whether the action was negligent or the final decision of Indiana's courts is incorrect is essentially irrelevant to our conclusions here.
.
Western Casualty & Surety Company v. Hays,
Hays contends that the Department’s order resulting in the cessation of irrigation was unexpected and unintended because Hays neither expected nor intended such results. That position, however, is too simplistic to be realistic.... It cannot seriously be contended that the actions of the Department, taken pursuant to the directives of the legislature under the Groundwater Code, were unintended and unexpected. Thus, there was no triggering accident or occurrence under any of the policies in question.
Hays,
