MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
I
Thе Colonial Gas Company is a Massachusetts public utility; Aetna Casualty & Surety Company, a Connecticut corporation, is Colonial’s general liability insurance carrier. When Aetna denied coverage of a $600,000 claim made by Colonial, Colonial filed this breach of contract action.
In 1987, Colonial paid $600,000 to a trust fund (“UFFI Trust”) administered by the Massachusetts Department of Public Health. The UFFI Trust, established by statute, is intended to compensate owners of urea-formaldehyde foam insulated homes. M.G.L. c. Ill, § 5; Stat.1985, c. 728. Colonial had sold about 390 of its customers UFFI insulation until thе state’s Commissioner of Public Health banned UFFI in 1979, and promulgated “repurchase” regulations, requiring sellers and installers of UFFI to remove it at their own cost. By contributing to the UFFI Trust, Colonial extinguished certain liabilities to those 390 homeowners, including liabilities under the mandatory repurchase requirements.
Colonial moves for summary judgment, arguing that its Aetna policies covered liabilities under the repurchase regulations; therefore, Aetna must also cover its reasonable settlement of those claims. Aetna makes a cross-motion for summary judgment, alleging that Colоnial did no more than make a voluntary $600,000 contribution to the UFFI Trust, a donation for which there is no insurance coverage.
II
In assessing the parties’ motions for summary judgment, I must view the record in the light most favorable to the non-moving party and indulge all inferences favorable to that party.
Villanueva v. Wellesley College,
In 1979, the Commissioner of Public Health banned all uses of UFFI. In 1984, in amendments to regulations first established in 1980, the Commissioner required dealers, installers, manufacturers, and distributors, on demand, to remove UFFI from buildings in which it had been placed, fully to restore those buildings, and to refund the buyers’ insulation purchase price. 105 Code Mass. Regs. § 650.222 (“repurchase regulations”). “The commissioner’s regulations were based on his findings that formaldehyde and UFFI were toxic, irritant, hazardous substances and that the potential for release of formaldehyde from UFFI into the indoor environments of buildings in which it is used as insulation justified its ban.”
Borden, Inc. v. Commissioner of Public Health,
More than 100 homeowners who had paid Colonial for UFFI installation filed repurchase requests under the Department of Public Health regulations. Further, a group of Colonial’s UFFI customers filed a class action suit, which a Massachusetts judge refused to certify, leaving the plaintiffs to pursue individual actions for recovery.
Fletcher v. Cape Cod Gas Co.,
In 1985, the Massachusetts legislature passed the UFFI Act (St.1985, e. 728), authorizing the Dеpartment of Public Health to establish a UFFI Trust Fund to meet the costs of formaldehyde testing in residences, and, when required, the costs of UFFI removal. In late 1985, the Department of Public Health requested a $950,000 contribution from Colonial to the UFFI Trust. Colonial wrote Aetna, asserting this was a covered liability under its insurance policies; Aetna disclaimed coverage. In December, 1987, after negotiations, Colonial paid $600,000 to the UFFI Trust. 1 Under the rules establishing the Trust, that payment by Colonial ended its liability under the repurchase regulations. Further, any homeowner claiming benefits undеr the UFFI Trust, including formaldehyde testing, must forego all tort claims against contributing industry members, except for damages for bodily injury not reasonably discoverable at the time of the claim. Stat.1985, c. 728(5)..
Ill
Colonial maintains that “[t]he essential question presented is whether the Aetna policies covered claims against Colonial under the UFFI repurchase regulations, and must therefore[ ] be found to cover Colonial’s settlement payment to the UFFI Trust Fund.” Colonial’s Memorandum in Support of Summary Judgment at 7. Aetna answers that Colonial’s Trust Fund payment was voluntary, that it was not comрensation for damages from bodily injury, and that “[tjhere simply is no rationale linking the donation to any type of physical harm during any policy period.” Aetna’s Opposition to Summary Judgment at 3. Thus Aetna wishes to focus on Colonial’s allegedly “voluntary” payment into the Trust, while Colonial emphasizes that its payment, even if voluntary in the
Colonial bears the burden of proving that its $600,000 payment, given the purpose for which it was made, is among the risks covered by Aetna’s рolicy.
Markline Co. v. Travelers Ins. Co.,
-A-
On the issue of voluntariness and prematurity, Aetna relies chiefly on two cases,
Marvel Heat Corp. v. Travelers Indemnity Co.,
In
Marvel Heat,
the policy holder notified its insurer of a claim, аnd the insurer disclaimed liability on the policy. The insured hired a lawyer, settled the claim, and sued the insurer to recover its costs. Because the customer had not yet brought an action against the insured, the SJC declined to “interpret the defendant’s action as a denial of liability in any event, or as the equivalent of a refusal to defend an action.” 325 Mass, at 685,
Aetna summarizes
Augat,
the second pillar of its argument, as follows: “the insured Voluntarily’ entered into an agreement with the Commonwealth to decontaminate a hazardous waste site. The insured’s policy contained the same ‘voluntary payment’ provision as in Colonial’s policies. The
Augat
court held that the insured’s breach of the ‘voluntary payment’ provision undermined the insurer’s opportunity to protect its interests,” and held the voluntary payment was not a covered liability. Aetna’s Memorandum in Support of its Cross-Motion for Summary Judgment at 15. However, Augat’s settlement was voluntary for policy purposes because the insured neglected to request its insurer to defend it and to pay for damages.
Unlike both
Augat
and
Marvel Heat,
the 100 homeowners who made requests for removal of UFFI installed by Colonial to the Massachusetts Department of Public Health had, under the regulations, instituted administrative proceedings. 105 CMR § 650.-622(1) — (9). Such administrative proceedings constitute suits of which Aetna had notice.
Cf. Hazen Paper Co. v. United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co.,
-B-
Generally, insurers which make “unjustified disclaimer decisions” are “liable for the reasonable costs of both defense and settlement.”
Camp, Dresser,
30 Mass.App. Ct. at 326,
Colonial’s general liability policies, purchased from Aetna in 1977, 1978, and 1979, provide that Aetna shall, consistent with coverage limits, pay
all sums which the insured shall beсome legally obligated to pay as damages because of bodily injury or property damage to which this insurance applies, caused by an occurrence.
An “occurrence” is a defined term, meaning:
an accident, including a continuous or repeated exposure to conditions, which results in bodily injury or property damage neither expected nor intended from the standpoint of the insured.
“Bodily injury” is “bodily injury, sickness or disease”; “property damage” is:
(1) physical injury to or destruction of tangible property which occurs during the policy period, including the loss of use thereof аt 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.
Colonial’s Statement of Material Facts, ¶¶ 7-9. Further, under the policies, Colonial could not, “except at its own cost, voluntarily make any payment, assume any obligation, or incur any expense.” 2 Aetna’s Statement of Material Facts, ¶ 7.
I will assume, without deciding, that Aetna is correct in asserting that the nature and extent of any resident’s physical injury from Colonial’s installation of UFFI is either prospеctive or unproven, or at least was so at the time of Colonial’s $600,000 payment into the UFFI Trust. The Commissioner’s repurchase regulations were promulgated under G.L. c. 94B, §§ 1-2, permitting the ban of “any substance or mixture of substances which is toxic, corrosive, an irritant, a strong sensitizer, ... if such substance or mixture
“UFFI releases formaldehyde,” first while it is curing and then in varying amounts over the course of years, depending on temperature and humidity, and the quality of installation, among other factors; “UFFI cannot be avoided without abandoning the house itself. UFFI once installed becomes indistinguishable from the home.”
Commissioner’s Summary of the Evidence and Findings and Conclusions Concerning Formaldehyde and UFFI
at 37, 27 and n. 3, 36, 100; Colonial’s Appendix to Statement of Material Facts, Vol. 1 at 170, 160, 169, 236. Property damage is done when UFFI is installed in a home: the residence is “ ‘doomed immediately’ upon incorporation.”
Baugh Constr. Co. v. Mission Ins. Co.,
In
Hazen,
407 Mass, at 695,
UFFI is classified as a toxic аnd hazardous substance, and its sale and distribution in the Commonwealth is completely forbidden. 105 CMR § 650.020. UFFI is not merely banned when it is releasing measurable quantities of formaldehyde. It is banned altogether. Thus the installation of UFFI in a home has in effect been legislatively determined to be the release of a hazardous substance between the walls of a dwelling. As soon as UFFI has been installed, by definition a hazardous substance has been released into the home. Under the repurchase regulations, the homeowner need not inquire into the formaldehyde level in his residence; he has an absolute right to demand repurchase (including removal costs, such as repairing the walls of his house). So too the EPA did not need to prove that Hazen’s releases of hazardous substances contaminated groundwater; the mere release of hazardous substances was enough to make out a claim for physical injury.
4
Hazen,
407 Mass, at 698,
In the language of Aetna’s general liability coverage, Colonial was “legally obligated to pay as damages because of ...
-C-
Courts have found determining when an “occurrence” occurred, that is, when the actual damage took place, to be a vexed problem.
See In re Acushnet River & New Bedford Harbor,
However, because of the technical requirements of the policies, treating deductibles and retrospective rating formulas, more precision in defining occurrence is necessary. Therefore, as is required by the reasons I have set forth more fully above (including the diminution of value of the property; the presence of a hаzardous substance, UFFI, in the home; and the commencement of the release of formaldehyde), I find that under the repurchase regulations, and Colonial’s settlement therefor, property damage occurred when Colonial had UFFI installed in its customers homes. 7
Massachusetts' courts have not addressed the question of whether, in this kind of case, each installation of UFFI into a home would comprise a single occurrence, or whether Colonial’s entire 400 home UFFI program is a single occurrence.
8
Determining the application of Aetnа’s policy language to these facts is a question of law, and “any doubts as to the meaning of words must be resolved against the insurance company that employed them and in favor of the insured.”
Cody v. Connecticut General Life Ins. Co.,
I find, consistent with the rule in the majority of states, that the number of occurrences turns on the underlying cause of the property damage, and where, as here, there is a single cause — Colonial’s use of UFFI in its insulation program — there is a single occurrence.
See generally, Chemstar, Inc. v. Liberty Mutual Insurance Co.,
-IV-
For the reasons more fully set forth above, I conclude that Colonial’s $600,000 contribution to the UFFI Trust Fund was settlement for a single occurrence — Colonial’s UFFI installation program in 400 homes — and that the covéred damages, for. which Aetna is required to indemnify Colonial, occurred within the policy period, 1977 to 1979. Colonial’s motion for summary, judgment as to Count I of its complaint is granted; and Aetna’s cross-motion for summary judgment on its counterclaim is denied.- 9 The clerk shall enter final judgment accordingly.
FINAL JUDGMENT
In accordance with this Court’s Memorandum and Order issued on May 21, 1993, allowing the plaintiffs motion for summary judgment as to Count I of its complaint and denying the defendant’s cross-motion for summary judgment on its counterclaim, it is hereby ORDERED
Judgment for the plaintiff against the defendant on Count I of its complaint.
Notes
. Aetna does not dispute that Colonial’s $600,000 payment to the UFFI Trust was reasonable. The Department of Public Hеalth estimates that removing UFFI from a single home costs on average $15,000. Colonial’s Statement of Material Facts, ¶ 40. The cost of removal for the more than 100 homeowners who made repurchase requests would thus exceed $1,500,000. Aetna does, however, question one aspect of the use to which the settlement monies are to be put. See note 5 infra.
. Aetna asserts several other clauses of the insurance contracts are relevant to this dispute. The policies do not apply (a) "to property damage to Colonial’s products arising out of such products or any part of such product,” or (b) "to property damage to work performed by or on behalf of Colonial arising out of the work or any portion thereof, or out of materials, parts of equipment furnished in connection therewith." Aetna's Statement of Material Facts, ¶¶ 7-9. As to exception (a), neither party alleges that the installed UFFI has sustained any damage. Rather, the claim is that UFFI may have damaged dwellings or injured their inhabitants. Thus, this exception is not pertinent. See
Aetna Casualty & Surety Co. v. PPG Industries, Inc.,
. The installation of UFFI in a home is a release of hazardous material; on installation, UFFI's emission of formaldehyde is also a release.
. Colonial argues, persuasively, that the incorporation of formaldehyde-based insulation into a building constitutes physical damage in the same way that incorporating asbestos into a building does. "[I]t makes sense to view the incorporation of [asbestos insulation] as a physical injury. Once installed, [asbestos insulation] is physically present in the buildings and affects them in a physical way, as opposed to an intangible, nonphysical manner,”
Coordination Proceeding Asbestos Coverage Cases,
slip op. at 12-13; property damage includes "incorporation of an allegedly toxic substance in ... building [which] has physically altered it in a manner which makes it harmful ..., and ... the physical damage to the property may be measured by the cost of repairing the walls to make them safe,”
Shooshanian v. Wagner,
. Aetna alleges that because some UFFI Trust funds gо to formaldehyde testing, and because such testing is not covered under Colonial's general liability policy, the settlement is not a covered loss. That argument is meritless. If Colonial's settlement with the Department of Health is fair and reasonable, and amounts to just damages given a disputed claim, that is the end of the matter. Those entitled to recovery can spend the sums recovered on whatever they wish. Moreover, testing expenses here seem especially appropriate for purposes of insuring that the settlement monies are fairly and efficiently applied to the damages.
. The Massachusetts Appeals Court in a recent decision seems to construe the holding of the Supreme Judicial Court in
Continental Cas. Co. v. Gilbane Bldg. Co.,
. This is consistent with the First Circuit’s construction of the meaning of "physical injury to tangible property" clauses. "... [Although a number of courts have held that intangible losses, such as loss of use or diminution of value, are 'property damage’ [citations omitted], all such decisions had interpreted policy language defining property damage as 'injury to tangible property’ rather than
'physical
injury to tangible property.’ In cases in which courts have interpreted more recent policies in which property damage is defined as 'physical' injury to tangible property, such courts have held that intangible damages, such as diminution in value, are not considered property damage.”
American Home Assur. Co. v. Libbey-Owens-Ford Co.,
The Seventh Circuit has criticized the traditional distinction between physical and economic loss as "a poor choice of words — all the losses for which tort victims sue arе economic," and has held broadly:
the drafting history of the property-damage clause, and the probable understanding of the parties to liability insurance contracts, persuade us that the incorporation of a defective product into another product inflicts physical injury in the relevant sense on the latter at the moment of incorporation.
Eljer Manufacturing, Incorporated v. Liberty Mutual Insurance Company,
.
Worcester Insurance Co. v. Fells Acres Day School, Inc.,
. The parties have stipulated to the dismissal of Counts II and III. Count IV is Colonial's request for a declaratory judgment on the meaning of "occurrence” in Aetna's policies. That matter is resolved by the present order.
