The City of Johnstown, New York (the “City”) appeals from an order of the United States District Court for the Northern District of New York (Cholakis, Judge), granting summary judgment to appellees Bankers Standard Insurance Company and Pacific Employers Insurance Company. The City was originally sued by the State of New York in the federal district court under (1) the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act of 1980 (“CERCLA”) (codified as amended in scattered sections of 26, 33, 42 & 49 U.S.C.), and (2) the state law of public nuisance and restitution, for the costs of studying and cleaning up certain wastes that are allegedly seeping from a City landfill into surrounding groundwaters. The City gave notice of the suit to appellees, their insurers. Appellees claimed that the City’s comprehensive general liability policies did not cover any such liability, whereupon the City brought this action in the federal district court, seeking a declaration that the insurers should defend and indemnify the City in the suit brought by the State. The insurers successfully moved for summary judgment based on the argument that, because the City had notice of the contamination, the pollution damages alleged in the State’s complaint against the City were not covered by the City’s insurance policies. On appeal, the City challenges the district court’s grant of summary judgment. We reverse the grant of summary judgment.
BACKGROUND
For purposes of our review, the basic facts are undisputed. Since 1947, the City of Johnstown, Fulton County, New York has owned and operated a landfill. The landfill now receives only general household refuse, but until 1979 the landfill also received various industrial wastes, and from 1973-1979 sewage sludge was dumped at the site. Over the last fifteen years, evidence has emerged that indicates that certain wastes leaking from the dump may have polluted the surrounding ground-waters. As a result, in June 1987, the State of New York brought an action in the federal district court against the City and various generators and a transporter of wastes (the “CERCLA action”). The complaint in that action charged that each defendant was jointly and severally strictly liable for the costs of studying and remedying the environmental problems created by the landfill. See State of New York v. City of Johnstown, et al., No. 87-CV-636 (N.D.N.Y. filed June 5, 1987).
The City gave due notice of the CERCLA action to its insurers, including appellees. According to the district court, Bankers Standard Insurance Company had issued a comprehensive liability insurance policy to the City for the period from April 1, 1983 to April 1, 1984, and Pacific Employers Insurance Company had issued a similar policy for the period from April 1, 1984 to December 31, 1985. In addition, Pacific Employers had provided the City with excess liability coverage for at least part of that 33-month period.
The insurance companies disclaimed coverage, arguing that the potential liability at issue fell within various exclusions in the City’s policies. The insurers therefore disavowed any obligation either to defend the City in the lawsuit, or to indemnify the City should there ultimately be a judgment entered against the City. The City thereafter brought this diversity action in the district court, seeking a declaration that the insurers must defend and indemnify the City in the underlying CERCLA action.
In lieu of answering, the insurers moved to dismiss or, in the alternative, for summary judgment. The insurers’ oral argument on the motion was based on two different, but not unrelated, grounds. First, the insurance companies pointed out that the policies specifically excluded losses or damages “expected” or “intended” by the City. The insurers argued that, in light of the earlier warnings of contamination, the alleged environmental damage that underlay the CERCLA suit was certainly expected by the City, and thus was not covered by the insurers’ policies. Second, they argued that the City knew of the contamination before the inception of the relevant *1148 policies, and that therefore the contamination was a “known risk,” and that thus the policies did not cover any liability resulting from that contamination. In their memorandum in support of the motion, however, the insurers essentially conflated the two arguments, asserting that because the pollution damage alleged in the CERCLA complaint was a “known risk,” it was “expected” by the City and therefore was not covered under the City’s policies with ap-pellees.
At the conclusion of argument held on November 4, 1988, Judge Cholakis granted the insurers’ motion for summary judgment. The district court ruled, in pertinent part, as follows:
There has been material produced before this Court which would indicate that the City of Johnstown was aware of conditions from which it could expect the release and subsequent damage alleged in the CERCLA complaint.
The [City] has not come forward with anything to rebut the information submitted to the Court by the [insurers].
In this Court’s judgment there has been an affirmative showing that the allegations contained within the CERCLA complaint occurred in such a fashion that the occurrences listed in the policy did not occur or the occurrences defined in the policy did not occur within the policy term of either the Bankers Standard Insurance Company or the Pacific Employers Insurance Company.
Therefore, the [insurers’] motion ... is granted.
It is difficult to determine from the transcript of that hearing which of the two arguments proffered by the insurers was relied upon by the district court. On appeal the insurers press their “known risk” argument and urge that the district court’s decision was not based upon the “expect” or “intend” language of exclusion in the City’s policies. However, as was earlier noted, in their submissions on the summary judgment motion the insurers conflated the two arguments. Thus, the district court’s opinion could have been based upon either the “known risk” theory or the “expect”/“intend” language in the relevant policies. As the discussion below reveals, however, summary judgment was improper on either ground.
DISCUSSION
The City’s complaint herein sought a declaration from the district court requiring the insurers to both defend and indemnify the City in the underlying CERCLA action. Under New York law, the duty to defend and the duty to indemnify are separate and distinct.
E.g., Niagara County v. Utica Mut. Ins. Co.,
The district court properly held that the CERCLA complaint “does allege claims which would come within the meaning of the policy or policies issued by the defendants to the City of Johnstown,” and that therefore the insurers’ duty to defend was implicated by the underlying CERCLA action. The question is whether the insurers met their burden of showing that they were relieved of that duty by virtue of the terms of the policies.
*1149
New York courts have consistently held that, as noted, an insurer seeking to avoid its duty to defend bears a heavy burden. That burden, in practice, is seldom met.
See Technicon Elecs.,
For the reasons stated below, we hold that the insurers did not meet their burden of showing that they had no duty to defend the City in the CERCLA action. This is so whether that duty is measured against the underlying CERCLA complaint alone,
see, e.g., Zurich-American Ins. Cos. v. Atlantic Mut. Ins. Cos.,
I. Damages “Expected" or “Intended” by the Insured
Appellees’ urged in support of their motion for summary judgment that the City’s insurance policies did not extend coverage to risks that were “expected” or “intended” by the insured. The City’s policies with Bankers Standard and Pacific Employers stated that the insurers would defend and indemnify the City only if the liability at issue arose out of an “occurrence,” as defined by the policies. Each policy defined “occurrence” in substantially the same way, as follows:
An accident, including continuous or repeated exposure to the same event, that results, during the policy period, in loss or damage to your property or in bodily injury, personal injury, or property damage. Such injury or damage must be neither expected nor intended by the insured.
E.g., App. at 64. On their motion for summary judgment, appellees argued that because the City had notice that the landfill was believed to be leaking into the surrounding groundwaters, the pollution damages that underlay the subsequent CERC-LA action were neither unexpected nor unintended by the City. Thus, argued the insurers, they had no duty to defend or indemnify the City in the CERCLA action.
The provision in these policies that excludes damages or injuries expected or intended by the insured from coverage is one that has commonly appeared in comprehensive general liability policies since 1966.
See
Chesler, Rodburg
&
Smith,
Patterns of Judicial Interpretation of Insurance Coverage for Hazardous Waste Site Liability,
9 Rutgers L.J. 9, 15-16 (1986); Note,
The Pollution Exclusion in the Comprehensive General Liability Insurance Policy,
1986 U.Ill.L.Rev. 897, 903-04; Annotation,
Construction and Application of Provision of Inability Insurance Policy Expressly Excluding Injuries Intended or Expected by Insured,
The New York courts have generally read “expect or intend” provisions to exclude only those losses or damages that are not accidental.
See Barry v. Romanosky,
In attempting to define what events are “accidental,” the New York courts have focused on the nexus between an intentional act and the resulting damage. As this court has observed, the distinction is drawn between
“damages which flow directly and immediately from an intended act, thereby precluding coverage, and damages which accidentally arise out of a chain of unintended though expected or foreseeable events that occurred after an intentional act. Ordinary negligence does not constitute an intention to cause damage; neither does a calculated risk amount to an expectation of damage....”
Brooklyn Law School v. Aetna Casualty & Sur. Co.,
In general, what make injuries or damages expected or intended rather than accidental are the knowledge and intent of the insured.
See Munzer,
Applying these principles of New York law to the facts of this case, it is apparent that the insurers, at least at this stage of this litigation, have failed to show that the extensive environmental damages alleged in the underlying CERCLA action were not accidental.
The complaint in the CERCLA action alleges that the City, during the forty-odd years it operated the landfill, allowed others to dump hazardous wastes therein. Although the State’s complaint charges that the City was negligent in its operation of the dump, nowhere does the complaint allege that the City intended the environmental damages charged in the complaint, or that the City knew that those damages would flow directly and immediately from its intentional acts.
Nor did the documents relied upon by appellees on their motion for summary judgment demonstrate that the damages alleged in the CERCLA complaint were “expected” or “intended” by the City. Although appellees originally submitted a mass of documents in support of their motion, because the City objected to the admissibility and probative value of many of those documents, the insurers made clear in oral argument before the district court that their motion rested on three key, “uncontested” documents. Of those three, the earliest was a November 29, 1977 letter and accompanying report from the United States Environmental Protection Agency. In its report, the Agency noted that the sewage sludge that was being dumped at the landfill posed a “potential environmental hazard.” The Agency reported that some groundwater contamination had been found, but that there had “been no reported health problems or accidents related to the disposal of wastewater treatment sludge at this site.”
The second document, an April 10, 1978 letter and report from the New York Department of Environmental Conservation, warned the City of the environmental hazard. However, this second document was nevertheless insufficient to show for summary judgment purposes that, as a matter of law, the City “expected” or “intended” the damages alleged in the CERCLA action. The letter warned the City that apparently “the landfill ha[d] impacted the groundwaters near the landfill,” and the accompanying report, though noting that *1152 its results were “not conclusive,” said that the landfill was the “most probabl[e]” source of groundwater contamination. The report did not urge that the landfill be closed. Instead, the Department recommended that additional studies should be conducted and certain remedial steps should be taken to slow the spread of pollutants.
The third piece of evidence relied upon by appellees was of very little probative value. The appellees offered a copy of a 1981 newspaper article, which described a suit brought against the City by a family whose well had reportedly been contaminated by the landfill. The record indicates, however, that the suit was settled by the City before any finding of liability was made.
For purposes of a summary judgment motion, these three documents, whether taken singly or together, were not sufficient to show that the substantial environmental damage and resulting costs alleged in the CERCLA complaint were not accidental, i.e., that they were “expected” or “intended” by the City. The evidence demonstrated that the City was warned that the landfill apparently was contaminating the local groundwaters. As we have noted, however, proof of warnings of possible physical damages is not enough to show that as a matter of law the damages ultimately incurred were expected or intended.
In opting to keep the landfill in operation, the City took a calculated risk, much as the insured did in
McGroarty v. Great American Insurance Company.
In
McGroarty,
the insured’s construction work had caused a great weight of rocks and water to shift against a neighboring property owner’s garage wall. The irate property owner had complained to the insured, and had even pointed out cracks developing iñ the garage wall. The New York Court of Appeals, however, held that, despite these warnings, the damages that subsequently occurred still could be found to have been accidental.
McGroarty,
Here, by analogy, the record suggests that the City was aware of potential contamination, but not that the City
intended
the resulting damage, nor that the City, intending harm,
knew
that the extensive damages alleged in the CERCLA complaint would flow directly and immediately from the City’s intentional acts. The evidence relied upon on appellees’ motion for summary judgment thus failed to show that “as a matter of law that there is no possible factual or legal basis on which [the insurer] might eventually be held to be obligated to indemnify” the insured.
E.g., Spoor-Lasher,
II. The “Known Risk” Argument
On appeal, the insurers and amicus curiae argue that the district court’s decision was based upon a “known risk” doctrine in insurance law. They point out that insurance covers risks, not certainties; thus, they argue, if the City had notice of the contamination before the inception of the policies, the contamination was a “known risk,” and there was no coverage for liability arising from that contamination.
Appellees have not cited any New York case discussing the doctrine of “known risk,” nor have we, in our review of New York law, been able to discern such a doctrine. We do not agree that the cases offered by appellees stand for the proposition that knowledge of a risk makes that risk uninsurable. As we perceive it, some of the cases cited stand for the principle that insurance cannot be purchased for damage deliberately done before the inception of insurance,
see Bartholomew v. Appalachian Ins. Co.,
We recognize that, as a basic rule, recovery cannot be had on property that the insured knew was already destroyed at the inception of insurance.
See Hanover Fire Ins. Co. v. Morse Dry Dock & Repair Co.,
However, the instant case is not one where any such fraudulent misrepresentation or concealment has been charged. On their motion for summary judgment, the insurers did not attempt to avoid coverage on the ground that the policies, by their own terms, were void because the City had fraudulently misrepresented or concealed a material fact at the inception of the contract of insurance. Instead, the insurers argued that the damages alleged in the CERCLA action were a “known risk,” and that hence the City was entitled to no coverage. However, appellees have failed to cite support in New York law for this broader proposition that a risk, once “known,” is uninsurable; nor have we found any such caselaw. In the absence of any support in New York law, we decline, in this diversity case, to announce a novel “known risk” doctrine in New York’s insurance law. Our role as a federal court sitting in diversity is to construe and apply state law as we believe the state’s highest court would,
e.g., Cunninghame v. Equitable Life Assurance Soc’y,
CONCLUSION
We emphasize that this decision is limited to the insurers’ duty of defense, and we make no determination as to whether the insurers may ultimately be required to indemnify the City; any such ruling at this point would be premature and must await the resolution of the underlying claims.
See In re Town of Huntington v. Hartford Ins. Group,
For the reasons stated above, the decision of the district court granting appellees summary judgment is reversed, and the case is remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
Notes
. In a decision rendered subsequent to oral argument in this case,
County of Broome v. Aetna Casualty & Surety Co.,
If the Third Department’s interpretation of the "expect or intend” exclusion does indeed broaden that exclusion to cover any damage that was, objectively speaking, substantially probable, that interpretation appears to conflict with the New York cases discussed in the text, including
McGroarty
and its progeny.
See, e.g., Munzer v. St. Paul Fire & Marine Ins.,
