COMMERCIAL UNION INSURANCE CO., Plaintiff,
Counter-claim-Defendant, Appellant,
v.
SEPCO CORP., Defendant, Counter-claim-Plaintiff, Third-Party
Plaintiff, Appellee,
v.
UNITED NATIONAL INSURANCE CO., et al., Third-Party
Defendants, Appellees.
No. 84-7523.
United States Court of Appeals,
Eleventh Circuit.
July 23, 1985.
Jack B. Hall, Connie Ray Stockham, McDaniel, Hall, Parsons, Conerly & Lusk, Birmingham, Ala., for Commercial Union Ins. Co.
Jack E. Held, Sirote, Permutt, Friend, Friedman, Held & Apolinsky, Susan Mitchell, Birmingham, Ala., for Sepco.
Huie, Fernambucq & Stewart, John S. Civils, Jr., Eugene D. Martenson, Birmingham, Ala., for The Home Ins. Co.
C. William Gladden, Jr., Balch, Bingham, Baker, Hawthorne, Birmingham, Ala., for Canadian Universal Ins. Co.
Frank M. Young, III, North, Haskell, Slaughter, Young & Lewis, James L. Richey, Jonathan H. Waller, Birmingham, Ala., for Mission Ins. Co.
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Alabama.
Before VANCE and JOHNSON, Circuit Judges, and MORGAN, Senior Circuit Judge.
LEWIS R. MORGAN, Senior Circuit Judge:
Sepco Corporation, an Alabama company, manufactured asbestos insulation products between 1970 and 1979. Its general liability insurance coverage during that time and until the filing of this suit consisted of a series of successive policies, each of which was issued by one of several carriers. A defendant in hundreds of recent lawsuits seeking recovery for asbestos-related illnesses, Sepco has called upon these carriers to defend the suits and to pay any resulting liabilities. One of those insurers, Commercial Union Insurance Company, filed this suit, seeking a declaration that it is not obligated to defend or pay any claim based upon an asbestos-related illness that failed to become manifest while a Commercial Union policy was in effect. See Eagle-Picher Industries, Inc. v. Liberty Mutual Insurance Co.,
On Sepco's motion for partial summary judgment, the district court held that Porter, as binding precedent (see Bonner v. City of Prichard, Alabama,
The district court found that all of the policies have the following general coverage provisions in virtually the same or identical language:
The Company will pay on behalf of the insured all sums which the insured shall become legally obligated to pay as damages because of
(A) Bodily Injury or,
(B) Property Damage
to which this insurance applies, caused by an occurrence and the Company shall have the right and duty 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....
The policies define the key terms as follows:
"bodily injury" means bodily injury, sickness or disease sustained by any person which occurs during the policy period, including death at any time resulting therefrom;
* * *
"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.
Unfortunately, these provisions are not dispositive of the case before us. See Keene,
The language of each policy at issue in this case clearly provides that an "injury," and not the "occurrence" that causes the injury, must fall within a policy period for it to be covered by the policy. Most suits brought under this type of policy involve an injury and an occurrence that transpired simultaneously, or, at least, in close temporal proximity to one another. In cases involving asbestos-related disease, however, inhalation--the "occurrence" that causes the injury--takes place substantially before the manifestation of the ultimate injury--asbestosis, mesothelioma, or lung cancer. Furthermore, although it is not known how little exposure is required to cause disease, inhalation may occur over a long period of time. As a result, inhalation may continue through numerous policy periods, the disease may develop during subsequent policy periods, and manifestation may occur in yet another policy period. For an insured such as Keene, different insurers are likely to be on the risk at different points in the development of each plaintiff's disease. Moreover, part of the development may occur at a time when no insurer was on the risk. Asbestos-related diseases, which are certainly covered by the policies, therefore differ from most injuries and hence present a difficult problem of contractual interpretation.
Id. at 1040. The task before is therefore to determine the point at which a victim of an asbestos-related illness suffers "bodily injury." Cf. United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co. v. Warwick Development Co.,
Commercial Union attempts to distinguish Porter first by arguing that because it was a diversity case in which Louisiana law controlled, it cannot be binding here, where the parties agree that Alabama law controls. The Porter panel assumed for purposes of its decision, however, that the insurance contracts before it were made in Louisiana "or in a state where the law would be the same as that of Louisiana." Porter,
Commercial Union next contends that the medical evidence in this case, unlike that in Porter, contradicts the essential tenet of the exposure theory, which Commercial Union states to be that "each inhalation of asbestos fibers results in bodily injury." It proffers in support of this contention expert testimony to the effect that not everyone exposed to asbestos contracts an asbestos-related disease such as asbestosis and that exposure to asbestos does not produce instantaneous sub-clinical cellular changes in the lungs. We believe that the exposure theory is more accurately analyzed as positing not that each inhalation of asbestos fibers results in bodily injury, but rather that every asbestos-related injury results from inhalation of asbestos fibers. Because such inhalation can occur only upon exposure to asbestos, and because it is impossible practically to determine the point at which the fibers actually imbed themselves in the victim's lungs, to equate exposure to asbestos with "bodily injury" caused by the inhalation of the asbestos is the "superior interpretation of the contract provisions." Forty-Eight Insulations,
Finally, Commercial Union argues that the medical evidence at least establishes questions of fact that preclude summary judgment. We agree with the district court that the relevant facts pertaining to asbestos-related disease are not in dispute and that the law to be applied to those facts may be determined on summary judgment.
Sepco, although it agrees that Porter is binding, argues that the district court erred in holding that Porter precludes the adoption in this case of the theory established by the District of Columbia Circuit in Keene. The court in that case held that inhalation exposure, exposure in residence, and manifestation all trigger coverage under insurance policies such as those now before us. Keene,
AFFIRMED.
