OPINION AND ORDER
In this divеrsity action, Emhart Industries, Inc. (“Emhart”) seeks a defense and indemnity from several of its insurance carriers related to the remediation of environmental contamination at the Centredale Manor Superfund Site (the “Superfund Site” or “Site”) in North Providence, Rhode Island. All six insurers named in this action have at some point refused to defend or indemnify Emhart under one or more applicable insurance policies. Three of them, Home Insurance Company, Liberty Mutual Insurance Company, and United States Fire Company, were dismissed before trial for one reason or another. The other three, Century Indemnity Company (“Century”), 1 OneBeacon America Insurance Company (“OneBeacon”), and North River Insurance Company (“North River”), proceeded to trial, ultimately obtaining a favorable jury verdict on their respective duties to indemnify. The principal players at this stage of the proceedings are Emhart and Century; OneBeacon and North River play only minor roles in this insurance drama. This opinion addresses various pre- and post-trial motions involving primarily the carriers’ obligation to defend Emhart under three “occurrence” policies issued to Emhart’s predecessor in the late 1960s. Together, these policies provide three layers of coverage for the period in question, ranging from general liability to excess umbrella, with a limit of $5.1 million.
For all the reasons that follow, Emhart’s Renewed Motion for Judgment as a Matter of Law Regarding the Duty to Defend under the Century Primary Policy (the latest embodiment of an argument Emhart has been making for some time) is GRANTED; this ruling applies to the Century Excess Policy as well, but not the OneBeacon Umbrella Policy (or, because of Emhart’s decision not to pursue the matter, the North River Policy). The Court also finds that Century breached its duty to defend Emhart under both of its policies, and fixes damages in the manner prescribed below. All of Emhart’s remaining motions are DENIED.
1. BACKGROUND 2
The Superfund Site, which totals approximately ten acres, occupies two parcels of land on Smith Street in North Providence. On the western boundary, the Woonasquatucket River flows and extends south to a ten-year floodplain and, ultimately, the Allendale Dam. On the eastern boundary, there is a drainage swa-le (or “tailrace”) that empties into a wooded wetland to the south. From an altitude, these watery boundaries resemble a Mason’s compass, giving the southern portion of the Site a wider base. Presently, the Site boasts two residential buildings; for many years, however, it was dedicated to the manufacture of industrial chemicals, particularly, hexachlorophene, an antiseptic agent used in soaps. As will be explained in greater detail below, Emhart is the corporate successor to the chemical companies that operated at the Site at the time in question.
In 1998, the United States Environmental Protection Agency (“EPA”) detected elevated levels of 2, 3, 7, 8-Tetracholordi-benzo-p-Dioxin (“dioxin”) in soil and sedi *231 ments at the Site, as well as in the further reaches of the Woonasquatucket River. 3 Even at very low levels, Dioxin poses significant risks to human and ecological health. On June 17, 1999, the EPA issued a request for information to Emhart’s parent corporation, Black & Decker, pursuant to Section 104(e) of the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act of 1980 (“CERCLA”). See 42 U.S.C. §§ 9601-9675. Emhart responded with information about its relationship to several chemical companies formerly operating at the Site, including Crown Metro, Inc. (“Crown Metro”). Based in part on this information, the EPA sent Emhart a Notice of Potential Liability (the “PRP Letter”) on February 28, 2000. The PRP Letter informed Emhart that, under CERCLA § 107(a), it was a potentially responsible party (“PRP”) based on its status as “a successor to the liability of a chemical company which operated at the Site.” The PRP Letter also invited Emhart to participate in the clean-up activities at the Site. 4 Shortly thereafter, on April 12, 2000, the EPA issued a Unilateral Administrative Order for Removal Action (the “First Administrative Order”), which identified certain time-critical removal actions that Emhart was required to undertake. 5 Among other things, the First Administrative Order made a finding of fact that “[hjazardous substances [ie., dioxin] were disposed of at the Site as part of the former operations of several chemical companies,” and observed that “Emhart is ... a successor to liability of several chemical companies which operated at the Site from approximately 1943 to approximately 1971.”
Almost immediately, Emhart began a dialog with the carriers that, as far as it could ascertain, had provided insurance coverage to one or more of its predecessor chemical companies. Although the full extent of that dialog is unclear, it appears that Emhart did not have a great deal of success convincing them to takе up the defense. For example, Emhart’s investigation into the extent of its insurance coverage revealed an Excess Blanket Catastrophe Liability Policy XBC 46961 (the “Excess Policy”) that INA (now Century) issued to Crown Metro (now Emhart) at some point in the late 1960s. The Excess Policy provided coverage from December 1, 1968, to February 15, 1970, with a $1 million limit of liability and a deductible equal to the (unidentified) “Underlying In *232 surance.” Emhart forwarded Century the Excess Policy as an attachment to a November 22, 2000 letter, along with the PRP Letter and the First Administrative Order. In the letter, Emhart demanded that Century provide it with a defense in the administrative action and pay the EPA (or indemnify Emhart) for remediation activities. Also, Emhart asked Century to “immediately conduct a review of your records regarding this confirmed coverage and any additional insurance coverage INA provided to [Crown Metro],” with the understanding that its demand for a defense/coverage would extend to “any other policies your investigation identifies.”
Century’s claims representative, Alexandra Zajac, responded to Emhart’s demand on December 12, 2000. In her letter, Zajac advised Emhart that the Excess Policy did not provide coverage for its claim because Emhart was neither a named insured nor a corporate successor to Crown Metro. Emhart replied on January 3, 2001, urging Century to reconsider its position on successorship and reminding Century that, in the November 22, 2000 letter, it had requested an investigation into the “ ‘confirmed coverage and any additional insurance coverage’ INA provided to Crown Metro.” (Emphasis in original.) On January 11, 2001, Zajac told Emhart that, upon reevaluation, Century agreed that Emhart may have succeeded to Crown Metro’s insurance policies, but that the Excess Policy
provides coverage for liabilities in excess of primary and/or underlying limits of liability. If you wish to pursue coverage under this policy, you must provide proof that all applicable primary and/or underlying limits have been completely and properly exhausted. At this time, we have no information to indicate that underlying coverage has been exhausted or that this claim will reach our layer of insurance. Therefore, notwithstanding the pollution exclusion in the policy, we are not presently obligated either to provide a defense or to indemnify Em-hart in this matter.
Although not referenced in the January 11, 2001 letter, the record reveals that Century had initiated a search for additional Crown Metro policies, but had failed to find any.
On January 25, 2002, Emhart brought the instant action against Century and the other named defendants. For reasons that are not entirely clear, on August 29, 2002, Zajac requested a second search for additional policies that INA had issued to Crown Metro. Four months later, the search generated a General Liability-Automobile Policy GAL 36597 (the “Primary Policy”) with a coverage period from February 15, 1969, to February 15, 1970, 6 and a $100,000 limit of liability. Although there is no record of transmittal, it appears that the Primary Policy was forwarded (to Zajac, presumably) on January 7, 2003. However, Zajac did not see the Primary Policy until July 2, 2003, when she happened upon it while reviewing the case file. Zajac immediately faxed a copy of the Primary Policy to Century’s outside counsel, who, eight days later, forwarded it to Emhart. Several months later, after Emhart reminded Century that claims under “any other policies your investigation identifies” were still outstanding, Century denied coverage under the Primary Policy. The basis for the denial, as Zajae’s January 29, 2004 letter makes clear, was a *233 familiar one: Emhart was not a named insured and had not proven successorship. 7 On February 25, 2004, Century filed a counterclaim against Emhart, seeking a declaratory judgment that it did not have a duty to defend or indemnify Emhart under the Primary Policy. Thereafter, Emhart filed a response and a counterclaim-in-reply, which sought to establish those duties and to show that they had been breached.
On October 19, 2006, after a six-week jury trial on the issue of indemnity, the jury found in favor of Century and the remaining insurers. Specifically, the jury found, in response to a special interrogatory, that dioxin contamination was not reasonably discoverable during the applicable policy periods. On May 1, 2007, the Court, dealing with old business, issued an order finding, among other things, that Century had a duty to defend Emhart under both the Primary Policy and the Excess Policy. 8 An evidentiary hearing was held in June and July 2007 to determine whether Century had breached that duty and, if so, to ascertain the extent of damages. This opinion provides the reasoning behind the May 1, 2007 order, rules on the issues presented in the evidentiary hearing, addresses Emhart’s post-trial motions on indemnity, and enters judgment accordingly. 9
II. DISCUSSION
This discussion is divided into three parts, corresponding with distinct phases of this litigation. Concepts rather than chronology determine priority.
A. The Duty to Defend
1.
Corporate Successorship.
For this threshold issue, Emhart contends that, through a long and complicated transactional history (the great majority of which need not be recounted here), it succeeded to Crown Metro’s insurance policies. Century does not dispute Emhart’s timeline, or the general proposition that a successor corporation inherits the rights and benefits of a predecessor corporation’s “occurrence” policies.
See, e.g., Imperial Enters., Inc. v. Fireman’s Fund Ins. Co.,
However, Century, putting a new twist on an old argument, posits that Emhart did not inherit the insurance policies at issue in this case. Century observes that, in 1976, Crown Metro — at that point a subsidiary of USM Corporation (“USM”), which eventually merged into modern-day Emhart — changed its name to Bostik South, Inc. (“Bostik South”). A year later, Bostik South was liquidated and all of its assets and liabilities were distributed to its parent, USM. Then, in 1980, USM sold certain of Bostik South’s former assets to Bengal Corporation (“Bengal”), which, Century claims, succeeded to Crown Metro’s insurance policies. To support its transactional rendition, Century points to § 3(2) of the Purchase and Sale Agreement (the “Agreement”) between USM and Bengal. Section 3(2), which describes the assets being transferred, includes “ex-ecutory contracts.” Century argues that, because insurance policies are executory in nature, the term “executory contracts” in § 3(2) includes the insurance policies issued to Crown Metro, and, therefore, USM ceded those policies to Bengal in 1980. Subsequent language in the Agreement supports this interpretation, Century continues, particularly § 7(B)(3), which provides that USM (and thus Emhart) would retain liability associated with “[a]ny violation of laws, rules or regulations including, without limitation, EPA and OSHA regulations (and any other governmental agency) to the extent that such violations relate only to the time prior to [1980],” while Bengal would assume liability for “any violations occurring after [1980] or based on facts or condition which existed prior to [1980] but which continue thereafter.”
Under Rhode Island law, which governs the Century and OneBeaeon insurance policies, “the insured seeking to establish coverage bears the burden of proving a prima facie case, including but not limited to the existence and validity of a policy.”
Gen. Accident Ins. Co. of Am. v. Am. Nat’l Fireproofing, Inc.,
Century’s strained interpretation of the Agreement does not disturb Emhart’s supportable account of the meanderings of Crown Metro’s occurrence policies. As a preliminary matter, it is doubtful that an occurrence policy is “executory” in the sense advocated by Century simply because an insurer is subject to long-term “tail” exposure after the policy period has expired.
See, e.g., Textron, Inc. v. Liberty Mut. Ins. Co.,
In any event, Century’s argument is beside the point. Viеwing the Agreement in its entirety,
Haydon v. Stamas,
2. The Primary Policy. Turning to center stage, Emhart observes that, under Rhode Island law, an insurer has a duty to defend when the charging documents make allegations that would “potentially” require the insurer to provide for coverage. According to Emhart, because these documents “at least suggest[ ], through implication, that certain contamination at the Centredale Site was discoverable during the policy period,” Century must defend under the Primary Policy. Century argues that the complaining documents do not allege affirmatively that dioxin was discoverable during the policy period, only that “contamination” — not necessarily dioxin — occurred at some point between 1943 and 1971. The implication that dioxin was discoverable in the approximately eleven-month policy period, Century claims, is not a “reasonable possibility.”
As a preliminary matter, Century misconstrues the appropriate standard. Rhode Island, like the great majority of jurisdictions, applies the “pleadings test,”
Progressive Cas. Ins. Co. v. Narragansett Auto Sales,
The “reasonable possibility” standard that Century trumpets likely comes from confounding language in
Nortek, Inc. v. Liberty Mut. Ins. Co.,
The relevant question then is whether the allegations in the charging documents are potentially within the Primary Policy’s risk of coverage.
The charging documents are four separate instruments delivered to Emhart (and then promptly forwarded to Century and company) over a span of months. Two of them have been identified already. The PRP letter claims that Emhart is “a successor to the liability of a chemical company which operated at the Site,” and thus a party potentially responsible for the remedial costs associated with the “release or threat of release” of a cornucopia of hazardous substances, including dioxin. The First Administrative Order makes a finding of fact that “[h]azardous substances [ie., dioxin] were disposed of at the Site as part of the former operations of several chemical companies,” observes that “Em-hart is ... a successor to liability of several chemical companies which operated at the Site from approximately 1943 to approximately 1971,” and directs Emhart to perform certain remedial tasks. The two remaining instruments supplemented the First Administrative Order, but do not disclose much if any novel information. The Second Administrative Order for Removal Action (the “Second Administrative Order”), issued on March 26, 2001, focuses mainly on downstream remedial activities. In pertinent part, it states that “[ejvidence suggests that the operations of the chemical companies and the drum reconditioning facility at the Site resulted in releases or threats of releases of hazardous substances at the Site,” and concludes that Emhart “is a liable party” under CERC-LA. The Third Administrative Order for Removal Action (the “Third Administrative Order”), issued over two years later, addresses remediation at the tailrace. Its relevant sections simply reiterate the findings and conclusions of the Second Administrative Order.
*238
The Primary Policy provides coverage for an “occurrence,” which is defined as “an accident, including injurious exposure to conditions, which results,
during the policy period,
in property damage
neither expected nor intended
from the standpoint of the insured.” (Emphasis supplied.) The latter underscored phrase precludes coverage for property damage that Em-hart intended to cause or expected to be caused; in other words, environmental contamination that Emhart knew about and that was not accidental.
14
The former underscored phrase, by operation of Rhode Island law, precludes coverage for property damage, even if accidental, that was not discovered, did not manifest itself, or was not discoverable in the exercise of reasonable diligence during the policy period; here, between February 15, 1969 and January 1,1970.
See Textron-Wheatfield,
Of course, as Century points out, the charging documents are silent with respect to whether dioxin was discoverable at the Site in 1969; it is, therefore, unclеar from the face of the documents whether the alleged contamination was caused by an “occurrence.” But under Rhode Island law, neutral or ambiguous allegations do not foreclose an insurer’s duty to defend. In
Flori,
the Rhode Island Supreme Court considered whether an insurer had a duty to defend its insured even though the complaint failed to allege facts necessary to determine whether a policy exclusion applied.
Flori,
That Emhart has shown a potential for coverage in this case is most convincingly demonstrated by Century’s failure to establish the absence of any such potential.
See Montrose Chem. Corp. v. Superior Court,
Century responds, and Emhart vehemently denies, that the Court should consult “extrinsic facts” before it decides Century’s defense obligations. Century notes that other jurisdictions have allowed for such consultation when it is not entirely clear from the charging documents whether a particular policy would provide coverage, and when the underlying litigation would not resolve the coverage dispute. These requirements are satisfied in the present case, Century explains, because, under CERCLA, Emhart (as the successor to a chemical company that operated on the Site) is strictly liable for the contamination on the Site and the costs associated with cleaning it up. See 42 U.S.C. § 9607(a)(2). As a consequence of CERC-LA’s strict liability regime, the EPA need not allege in the charging documents or prove in an underlying administrative action that dioxin was discoverable at the Site during the policy period. Thus, Century concludes that extrinsic evidence must be considered in order to have a full and accurate picture of whether it must defend Emhart.
Without having addressed this precise issue, Rhode Island courts generally (with one narrow exception) condemn the use of extrinsic facts in determining the scope of
*240
an insurer’s duty to defend.
15
See, e.g., Beals,
In so holding, the court propounded three principles to govern an insurer’s duty to defend in Rhode Island. First, “the duty to defend is broader in its scope than the duty of an insurer to indemnify.”
Id.
at 403;
see also Mellow,
The authority Century offers as evidence to support the abrogation of these principles is unpersuasive. Not one of Century’s cases involve an insurer’s duty to defend an administrative action under CERCLA, or even a claim in a more traditional proceeding with comparable attributes (i.e., strict liability).
See Delta Airlines v. State Farm Fire & Cas. Co.,
Century’s reliance on
Burd
is similarly misplaced. The insurance dispute in
Burd
had its genesis in a shooting incident that led to the conviction of the insured for assault and battery.
Burd,
Although otherwise sound,
Burd
strikes a discordant tone with
Beals.
Both cases addressed similar situations, but competing ideas about an insurer’s duty to defend led to significantly different results.
Burd
understood the duty to defend to be coextensive with the duty to indemnify (at least in the critical respect discussed).
See Burd,
From a policy perspective, Century’s call for the use of extrinsic facts appears to be a sensible response to laconic CERCLA complaints and inordinately high costs of defending CERCLA actions.
See Hecla Mining Co. v. N.H. Ins. Co.,
3.
The Excess Policy.
The inquiry turns to the Excess Policy, which, although similar to the Primary Policy in scope of coverage, calls for separate analysis because of certain provisions that Century claims anticipate its duty to defend. Century observes that the indemnity obligations of the Excess Policy trigger when Emhart becomes legally obligated to pay damages because of property damage caused by an occurrence
and
when either (1) a claim falls within the terms of coverage of the Excess Policy but not the Primary Policy
or
(2) the Primary Policy’s limit of liability is exhausted because of property damage during the policy period. Pointing to the latter requirement, Century argues that Emhart has not proven exhaustion and that a defense under the Excess Policy does not lie until Emhart does so.
See, e.g., United States Fidelity & Guar. Co. v. Federated Rural Elec. Ins. Corp.,
Emhart, who has the burden to establish exhaustion,
see Ins. Co. of N. Am. v. Kayser-Roth, Corp.,
In the absence of specific instructions in the insurance contract, the requirements for exhaustion are, as the authority above suggests, unsettled. Here, the question is almost entirely academic. Any doubt that the possible extent of Emhart’s liability would exceed $100,000 has long since vanished. Prior to trial the parties stipulated that “[tjhrough June 2006, Emhart has incurred costs in the amount of $711,732.00 for performing the work required by the three orders issued by the EPA.” How Century could agree to this stipulation and yet contest exhaustion is beyond comprehension. The obvious implication of the stipulation is that the Primary Policy’s limit of liability was exhausted long ago. In fact, a review of the record reveals that Emhart’s indemnification expenses exceeded $100,000 in October 2001, three months before this lawsuit was filed. See supra Part II.C.2 (discussing the rather unique *244 time line in this case). Accordingly, Century was obliged to defend Emhart under the Excess Policy unless it can show that a limitation or exclusion applied.
Century’s argument that Emhart cannot prove exhaustion because Century “has not paid anything to Emhart under the Primary Policy for the underlying claim” is likewise unavailing. In critical respect, the Excess Policy conditions coverage on the event that the “limits of liability of the underlying insurance are exhausted because of ... property damage.” Like the Primary Policy, Century’s duty to defend triggers under the Excess Policy in the event of “any suit against [Emhart] seeking damages on account of ... property damage.” As this language makes plain, the only qualification for exhaustion is “property damage,” which the Excess Policy defines as “injury to or destruction of tangible property.” No reasonable construction of the Excess Policy would require payment from Century’s coffers as a prerequisite for exhaustion.
See Am. Commerce Ins. Co. v. Porto,
In a final attempt to avoid its duty to defend under the Excess Policy, Century points to the Exclusion of Waste Products Endorsement, which excludes “[i]njury to or destruction of property caused by intentional or willful introduction of waste products, fluids or materials ... irrespective of whether the insured [possessed] knowledge of the harmful effects of such acts.” According to Century, the charging documents allege that Metro-Atlantic caused the contamination at the Site by intentionally introducing waste products. Because the waste-product exclusion explicitly states that the Excess Policy does not apply to such activity, Century contends that it need not provide Emhart with a defense under the Excess Policy.
Century has the burden to prove that the waste-product exclusion applies.
See Children’s Friend & Serv. v. St. Paul Fire & Marine Ins. Co.,
Laying the charging documents alongside the circumscribed language of the waste-product exclusion as the pleadings
*245
test requires, it becomes apparent that Century has failed to satisfy its burden. The closest language in the charging documents helpful to Century’s position is as follows. The PRP Letter states that the EPA “has documented the release or threatened release of hazardous substances or pollutant or contaminants at the Site.” The First Administrative Order alleges that “[t]he chemical companies [] buried drums and other containers at the Site,” and that “[t]he chemicals manufactured by these companies included hexachlorophene.” The Second and Third Administrative Orders state, in identical language, that “[e]videnee suggests that the operations of the chemical companies and the drum reconditioning facility at the Site resulted in releases and threats of releases of hazardous substances at the Site.” None of these documents allege the
intentional
or
willful
introduction of waste products at the Site,
see Porto,
The Interim Final Remedial Investigation (the “Remedial Investigation”), which Century touts in a supplemental memorandum, contains the same neutral allegations that saturate the charging documents. 19 For example, § 7.1.1, entitled “Primary Sources of Contamination,” is entirely equivocal:
Trichlorophenols were shipped to the site, where it is believed that hexachlo-rophene was manufactured in approximately 1965. [Hexachloroxanthene] and dioxin were byproducts of this process. The building where this process is believed to have taken place was located on the east bank of the Woonasquatuck-et River.... Other chemical processes also occurred and could be the source of other contaminants at the site.
The following section, entitled “Primary Release and Transport Mechanisms,” is equally speculative:
Chemicals were apparently released directly to the ground, buried, and possibly discharged directly to the Woonas-quatucket River.... Discharge of chemicals directly into the river, overland flow of chemicals, and erosion and transport of contaminated source area soils by surface runoff resulted in contamination of surface water and sediment in the adjacent river and ponds and tailrace on the east side of the site. The spatial distributions and concentrations of dioxin (primarily 2, 3, 7, 8-TCDD) and [Hexachloroxanthene] in soil and sediment suggest that these contaminants may have been released to *246 the Woonasquatucket River via the direct discharge of dioxin-bearing waste. Dioxins/furans, PCBs, pesticides and other chemicals also probably migrated to the river and Allendale Pond via surface runoff and erosion of contaminated soils from the source area.
An earlier section, purporting to analyze the results of a “forensic review,” conveys the following “conceptual model”:
Dioxins (primarily 2, 3, 7, 8-TCDD), fu-rans, and [Hexachloroxanthene] were generated as hexachlorophene byproducts that were discharged directly into the Woonasquatucket River. 2, 3, 7, 8-TCDD and [Hexachloroxanthene] ratios are not constant because of variations in the hexochlorophene production process; however, the co-occurrence of [Hexachloroxanthene] and 2, 3, 7, 8-TCDD above background levels in sediments from Allendale Pond to downstream of Mantón Dam indicates that the contaminants came from the manufacture of hexachlorophene on the [ ] site.
These conjectural statements fail even to identify Emhart’s predecessor, let alone accuse it of the intentional or willful introduction of waste products.
The application of the pleadings test here may seem unduly burdensome on Century, but Rhode Island precedents are clear. Of course, INA could have chosen to exclude the introduction of waste products generally without qualification. It did not. (In fact, the record shows that INA modified the Excess Policy to incorporate the more narrow waste-product exclusion (Endorsement 6) in place of an absolute pollution exclusion (Endorsement 5) that, all parties agree, would have barred Em-hart’s claims in this case.) As written, the waste-product exclusion does not negate the potential for coverage in this case; Century therefore cannot rely on it to avoid its duty to defend.
4. The Umbrella Policy. Notwithstanding Century’s defense obligations under the Excess Policy, OneBeacon argues that an absolute pollution exclusion obviates its duty to defend Emhart under the Excess Umbrella Policy No. S-16-07084 (the “Umbrella Policy”). First, OneBeacon calls for the reformation of the Umbrella Policy based on a so-called scrivener’s error. The Umbrella Policy provides that it is “subject to all the terms and conditions of Policy No. XBC64674.” As it turns out, Policy XBC 64674 is an expired excess insurance policy that Century issued to Crown Chemical Co. (“Crown Chemical”), Crown Metro’s immediate predecessor. OneBeacon maintains that its underwriter mistakenly identified the expired XBC 64674 policy, and that the parties really intended that the Umbrella Policy would “follow form” to the superceding Excess Policy (XBC 46961, discussed at length above) then in effect. This distinction is important because the expired XBC 64674 policy has no pollution exclusion of any kind; the Excess Policy does. Second, OneBeacon argues that, properly reformed, the Umbrella Policy incorporates an absolute pollution exclusion that unequivocally precludes coverage in this case. OneBeacon observes that, at the time the Umbrella Policy was issued, the Excess Policy contained an absolute pollution exclusion (Endorsement 5); 20 later, the Excess Policy was amended by Endorsement 6, which superceded Endorsement 5 and added a narrower pollution exclusion: the now-familiar waste- *247 product exclusion. However, according to OneBeacon, after the Umbrella Policy issued, it could be modified only by an endorsement to the Umbrella Policy itself, not simply by an endorsement to the Excess Policy. Thus, because Endorsement 6 did not purport to modify the Umbrella Policy, OneBeacon contends that the absolute pollution exclusion of Endorsement 5 applies to bar Emhart’s claims.
Generally, to reform a contract, “it must appear by reason of mutual mistake that the parties’ agreement fails in some material respect to reflect correctly their prior understanding.”
Yates v. Hill,
In recent years, reformation based on a scrivener’s error has not received a great deal of attention in Rhode Island courts, and this writer’s research has revealed no case in this jurisdiction, however outmoded, that has addressed the issue head-on.
See Patterson v. Atkinson,
Emhart uses this dearth of authority as a basis for its argument that there can be no reformation, regardless of OneBeacon’s intentions, without clear and convincing evidence that the insured (as well as the insurer by way of its underwriter’s error) intended for the Umbrella Policy to follow form to the Excess Policy. OneBeacon responds that mutuality of mistake is not necessary where, as here, the mistake is due to the clerical error of the scrivener. The rationale for this departure essentially is that the mistake is mutual in the sense that the scrivener did not properly memorialize or transcribe what either party actually intended. 2
Couch on Insurance
§ 27:28 (Lee R. Russ, et al. eds., 3d ed.1995);
see Nash Finch Co. v. Rubloff Hastings, L.L.C.,
At first blush, OneBeacon’s call for reformation is compelling. But, in the end, reformation would be a pointless remedy under the circumstances of this case. Were the Umbrella Policy to be reformed as requested, OneBeaeon could succeed only if the Court agreed that it should have its cake and eat it too. OneBeaeon argues that Endorsement 6 did not modify the (properly reformed) Umbrella Policy because OneBeaeon did not explicitly consent to it. Here, Onebeacon cannot succeed. If OneBeaeon intended for the Umbrella Policy to follow form to the Excess Policy, it must have been aware that the terms of that policy were subject to change. The applicable provision in the Excess Policy provides that “the terms of this policy [shall not] be waived or changed, except by endorsement issued to form a part of this policy.” The Umbrella Policy could have provided a separate means of modification. For example, a section entitled “Exceptions” states that “[t]his insurance differs from the Policy which it follows in the following particulars,” and goes on to set a different limit of liability and premium. A subcategory entitled “Other” provides an ideal space where OneBeaeon could have addressed its modification concerns. The category is conspicuously left blank.
21
The conclusion to draw from this omission is that OneBeacon set a premium that reflected the risk that an endorsement to the Excess Policy might amplify its scope of coverage (as Endorsement 6 certainly did). The upshot is that, by claiming that the Umbrella Policy followed form to the Excess Policy, OneBeaeon effectively consented to the incorporation of Endorsement 6.
See GenCorp, Inc. v. Am. Int’l Underwriters,
In the last act, however, OneBeacon is saved from Century’s fate by a
deus ex machina
of sorts: the Umbrella Policy’s exhaustion requirement and the timing of the jury verdict. OneBeaeon’s duty to defend Emhart under the Umbrella Policy is subject to the exhaustion of the Excess Policy’s $1 million limit of liability (the threshold is $1.1 million with the addition of the Primary Policy’s limit).
Cf. Liberty Mut. Ins. Co. v. Harbor Ins. Co.,
Attempting to avoid this result, Emhart argues that OneBeacon was required to “drop down” and defend Emhart under the Umbrella Policy after Century wrongfully refused to provide a defense.
See
14
Couch on Insurance
§ 200:46 (“If a primary insurer denies coverage, the excess insurer would be obligated to defend.”). However, this argument ignores OneBea-con’s status as a true excess insurer,
see Liberty Mut. Ins. Co.,
The difficulty for Emhart at this juncture is that the jury verdict created a clear end-date for any defense obligation that may have existed (and for Century, did in fact exist) up to that point. Before then, the exhaustion of the Umbrella Policy was simply a condition that presumably would have been satisfied at some time in the future, and did not then affect Emhart’s call for declaratory relief. But when the jury found no coverage, exhaustion became a present and yet-unrealized requirement without which OneBeacon’s duty to defend could not trigger. Hindsight reveals that Emhart bears some measure of responsibility: had it waited to file suit until exhaustion had run its course, today’s outcome may very well have been different. As circumstances unraveled, however, On-eBeacon’s gamble in refusing to defend Emhart paid off; for Century, it did not.
B. Breach of the Duty to Defend
Because Century had a duty to defend Emhart, but failed to do so, the inquiry turns to damages, the proper measure of which is the subject of some dispute.
1.
Defense Costs as a Measure of Damages.
Century’s primary argument here is that the defense costs that Emhart had incurred as of October 19, 2006 ($4,740,617.92) were unreasonable, and that it is entitled to a discount for all unreasonable expenditures. Century takes particular issue with Emhart’s attorneys’ fees ($4,408,958.80 or 93% of the total defense costs). First, Century argues that it is not responsible for costs generated before Emhart’s tender of defense under the Excess Policy (November 22, 2000).
23
Second, Century challenges four discrete pursuits that it claims were not reasonably related to Emhart’s defense because they had little to no chance of success: (1) asserting
a
non-successor-ship defense; (2) challenging the proposed consent decrees of two other PRPs,
United States v. Brook Village Assocs.,
No. 05-195,
Emhart responds essentially with an es-toppel argument. It argues that Century should not be allowed to contest the reasonableness of the fees it was forced to shoulder as a result of Century’s breach. To support this hypothesis, Emhart touts
Taco Bell Corp. v. Cont’l Cas. Co.,
although Zurich’s policy entitled it to assume Taco Bell’s defense, in which event Zurich would have selected, supervised, and paid the lawyers for Taco Bell in the Wrench litigation, it declined to do so — gambling that it would be exonerated from a duty to defend — with the result that Taco Bell selected the lawyers. Had Zurich mistrusted Taco Bell’s incentive or ability to economize on its legal costs, it could, while reserving its defense that it had no duty to defend, have assumed the defense and selected and supervised and paid for the lawyers defending Taco Bell in the Wrench litigation, and could later have sought reimbursement if it proved that it had indeed had no duty to defend Taco Bell. So presumably it had some confidence in Taco Bell’s incentive and ability to minimize legal expenses.
Id. at 1076-77 (citation omitted). Based on this theory of economization, the court rejected Zurich’s challenge as a matter of law.
There is little data to suggest that the Rhode Island Supreme Court would adopt such an approach. Emhart points to language in
Kayser-Roth
where the court remarks: “First State has missed its opportunity to defend Kayser-Roth against the EPA and cannot now stand back and quibble with the job Kayser-Roth has done in defending itself.”
Kayser-Roth,
Rather, the general rule in these situations is that the initial burden is on the insured to prove that its fees were reasonable (not on the insurer to prove the negative).
E.g. Liberty Mut. Ins. Co. v. Cont'l Cas. Co.,
Under Rhode Island law, which governs this question,
see Blanchette v. Cataldo,
[w]hat is fair and reasonable depends, of course, on the facts and circumstances of each case. We consider the amount in issue, the questions of law involved and whether they are unique or novel, the hours worked and the diligence displayed, the result obtained, and the experience, standing and ability of the attorney who rendered the services. Each of these factors is important, but no one is controlling.
Palumbo v. U.S. Rubber Co.,
After reviewing these factors, the Court finds that, based on the circumstances of this case, Emhart has satisfied its burden to prove that its attorneys’ fees were reasonable. Although the amount of fees is *253 quite high (about $4.3 million without pretender fees), Emhart’s potential liability is exponentially higher. When all is said and done, EPA oversight costs and natural resource damages are likely to exceed $100 million. This alone justified, if it did not demand, a vigorous and multifarious defense. At the same time, the issues involved in defending the underlying action were extremely complex, making it more difficult to predict the likelihood of success on a particular issue. The successorship issue, for example, required a deep understanding of a corporate paper trail that spanned decades; in addition, many of the necessary documents were hard to find or lost. Emhart ultimately abandoned the defense, but the initial pursuit was hardly unreasonable, especially considering that success would have shielded Emhart from liability altogether. 26 The Buonanno litigation and the bankruptcy claim fall into similar categories. The fact that Emhart did not have a great deal of success in these areas says very little. Superfund practice is generally about minimizing damages; eliminating them entirely, as Century’s own expert witness testified, is rare if not unheard of. Viewed in this light, Emhart obtained some measure of success in at least one area identified by Century: by intervening to challenge two proposed consent decrees, Emhart ensured that the settlement funds were placed in escrow for future remediation efforts (the fear was that the EPA would use these funds to satisfy past obligations instead of letting them accumulate interest that Emhart could use to offset future costs).
Turning to its global challenges, Century requests that the overall award be reduced by 25% because Emhart chose a large Washington, D.C. firm instead of a boutique or medium-size environmental law firm in Providence or Hartford. That request is denied. The going rate for a particular legal service in Rhode Island is a factor, but it is only one factor among many.
See Palumbo,
Century also requests a 10% reduction for what it thinks was an excessive number of timekeepers, a general lack of billing oversight, the use of quarter-hour billing increments, and vague entries. There is something off-putting about this request. After all, it was Century who wrongfully refused to defend Emhart in the first place. If it had defended Emhart (under a reservation of rights, for example), Century would have been in a position to monitor and perhaps prevent the time-management and billing practices it now decries (and when defense costs approached $1.1 million, it could have paid the policy limits and saved millions). Busy judges should not be expected to assume that function
ex post
on account of an insurer’s ill-considered refusal to defend (made in good faith or bad).
See, e.g., Etchell v. Royal Ins. Co.,
One seemingly complicated issue remains before moving on to the more interesting discussion of punitive damages. Century argues that, where a claim raises the potential for coverage in multiple periods, an insurer is only responsible for a “pro rata share” of the underlying defense costs.
See, e.g., Sec. Ins. Co. of Hartford v. Lumbermens Mut. Cas. Co.,
*255
This argument is without merit for many, but primarily two, reasons. The first is that proration (often called the “time-on-the-risk” method of allocation) is inconsistent with the plain language of the policies. The Primary Policy says that Century “will pay on behalf of the Insured
all sums
which the Insured ... shall become legally obligated to pay as damages because of ... property damage” and “shall have the right and duty to defend any suit against the Insured seeking damages on account of such ... property damage.” (Emphasis supplied.) Similarly, the Excess Policy states that, upon the exhaustion of underlying insurance, Century “will indemnify the Insured for
ultimate net loss
in excess of the retained limit ... which the Insured shall become legally obligated to pay as damages because of ... property damage,” and “will have the right and duty to defend any suit against the Insured seeking damages on account of such ... property damage.” (Emphasis supplied.) Nothing in this language limits Century’s defense obligation to a portion of the amount that Emhart has reasonably incurred in the defense of a “suit ... seeking damages on account of such ... property damage.” Under long-settled Rhode Island law, “when the terms of an insurance policy are found to be clear and unambiguous, judicial construction is at an end. The contract terms must be applied as written and the parties are bound by them.”
Amica Mut. Ins. Co. v. Streicker,
Although not in direct terms, the Rhode Island Supreme Court endorsed the so-called “all sums” method (sometimes sardonically referred to as the “pick-and-choose” method) in
Kayser-Roth.
There, Chief Justice Williams, writing for a unanimous court, looked to the “contract principles” applied in
Koppers Co. v. Aetna Cas. & Sur. Co.,
The other fly in the ointment is that time-on-the-risk allocation is most commonly associated with the continuous-trigger theory. This theory, which had its genesis in the asbestos context, charges a loss to policies in effect from the time of exposure to manifestation. Because the period between exposure and manifestation is typically quite long, these cases generally involve numerous policies. Courts charged with allocating damages among these policies have, as a matter of efficiency more than anything else, opted for an equally dispersive allocation method. This correlation is evident in the very cases Century cites.
See, e.g., Security Ins. Co.,
However, Cеntury is entitled to a setoff equal to the amount of settlement funds allocated to the defense of the underlying action ($250,000)
28
that Emhart received
*257
from another carrier.
29
See Kayser-Roth,
All told, Century must pay defense costs as follows:
Incurred Defense Costs_$4,740,617.92_
Pre-Tender Credit_- $151,713.91_
3% Atty Fee Discount - $127,717.35 _($4,257,244.89 ».03)
Settlement Offset_- $250,000.00_
Amount Century Must Pay_— $4,211,186.66 30
2.
Indemnity Costs as a Measure of Damages.
As an addendum to its earlier estoppel argument, Emhart argues that Century, having breached its duty to defend, cannot contest its duty to indemnify. Emhart relies on
Conanicut Marine Servs., Inc. v. Ins. Co. of N. Am.,
We hold that where an insurer refuses to defend an insured pursuant to a general-liability policy, the insurer will be obligated to pay, in addition to the costs of defense and attorneys’ fees, the award of damages or settlement assessed against the insured. Therefore, *258 as a result of the defendant’s breach of its duty to defend the plaintiff, it is obligated to pay the $18,000 settlement award plus any interest thereon, in addition to the costs of defense.
Id. at 971. According to Emhart, this rule requires Century to pay indemnity costs in spite of the jury’s finding that Century’s policies did not provide coverage.
However, Century observes that, in
Comment,
the court identified two mechanisms by which a skeptical insurer might insulate itself from the application of this penalty: (1) defend the insured under a reservation of rights; or (2) seek a declaratory judgment against the insured on the issue of coverage.
Id.
at 971 n. 10;
see also Rumford Prop. & Liab. Ins. Co. v. Carbone,
These arguments have varying degrees of plausibility, but all must be rejected in the end. Century’s claim that an insurer cannot breach its duty to defend without
expressly
refusing to do so is a variation of an argument rejected earlier.
See supra
Part II.A.3 (payment from insurer as prerequisite for exhaustion). As a preliminary matter, Century overlooks Zajac’s January 11, 2002 letter, where she concluded that Century was “not presently obligated either to provide a
defense
or to indemnify Emhart in this matter.” (Emphasis supplied.) But Century’s argument would be meritless even if Zajac had not been so forthright. Yes, there is some authority that conditions breach on an express denial, but only in situations where an insurer has not yet been presented with a complaint or equivalent.
See, e.g., Manny v. Anderson’s Estate,
Century’s next argument is hollow and a little hypocritical. It is true that, in October 2001, Emhart did not disclose the fact that indemnification costs had exceeded $100,000. But such a disclosure would have been odd; more importantly, Century would have greeted it with perplexity. At that time, neither Emhart nor Century knew that the Primary Policy existed. They therefore could not have known, as they do now, that the Excess Policy’s exhaustion requirement had been fulfilled in October 2001. Nevertheless, in a typical case, Emhart would be charged with the
*259
delay, for it is the insured and not the insurer who must prove the existence of a particular policy.
See Gen. Accident Ins.,
Century’s third and final argument, although perhaps the most appealing, is without merit for many of the same reasons discussed above. Giving an insurer the option to seek a declaratory judgment in this type of situation provides the parties with a determination of their obligations
ex ante. Cf. Fireman’s Fund Ins. Co. v. E.W. Burman, Inc.,
This leaves Century standing on a precipice. The mechanical application of
Co-nanicut
to these facts would impose an astronomical penalty on Century. In addition to defense costs, Century would be obligated to pay the full extent of indemnity costs assessed against Emhart,
34
see Conanicut,
If this Court were merely a reflexive appendage of the State, it might well be inclined to follow Emhart’s advice and push Century from the ledge. But a federal judge is not a ventriloquist dummy;
38
*261
his or her “prediction cannot be the product of a mere recitation of previously decided cases.”
McKenna v. Ortho Pharm. Corp.,
Unless a federal court is allowed this much freedom and flexibility, the Erie doctrine simply would have substituted one kind of forum-shopping for another. The lawyer whose case was dependent on an ancient or shaky state court decision that might no longer be followed within the state would have a strong incentive to bring the suit in or remove it to federal court, hoping that the state decision could not be impeached under the mechanical application of existing precedents that the Erie doctrine once was thought to require. Moreover, to give state court decisions more binding effect than they would have in the state court system would undermine the ability of the federal courts to ensure that the outcome of the litigation be substantially the same as it would be if tried in a state court and subjected to that system’s appellate process.
19
Federal Practice and Procedure
§ 4507 at 140-41. For this reason, a federal court may, in a sense, “overrule” an outmoded decision by predicting that the state’s highest court would, if presented with the opportunity, do the same.
See, e.g., Quint v. A.E. Staley Mfg. Co.,
There are several compelling grounds for doing so here.
Conanicut’s
estoppel rationalе has been rejected by numerous jurisdictions.
See, e.g., Elliott,
Moreover,
Conanicut
has been undermined by several recent pronouncements of Rhode Island’s highest court. On at least five occasions since
Conanicut
(and without referencing it), the court has held that estoppel could
not
be invoked to expand the scope of coverage of an insurance policy.
Zarrella v. Minn. Mut. Life Ins. Co.,
It is also difficult to ignore the fact that no Rhode Island court has applied
Conanicut
in its twenty-year tenure. Emhart observes that Magistrate Judge Lovegreen applied
Conanicut
in
Michaud v. Merrimack Mut. Fire Ins. Co.,
These data strongly suggest that
Conanicut
has lost its persuasive force. But as tempting as it may be to predict
Conanicut’s
fate, the issue in this case can be resolved without taking that step. In
Robertson Stephens, Inc. v. Chubb Corp.,
Like the insured in
Robertson,
Emhart points to no persuasive authority that would suggest a future extension of
Conanicut’s
holding beyond the ubiquitous facts of that case. Only a single trial justice has even mentioned
Conanicut
(without applying it) in the Superfund context.
Kayser-Roth,
Superfund cases typically involve millions of dollars (here, perhaps over $100 million) of liability, which is joint and several and strict. If the Rhode Island Supreme Court wishes to impose such a drastic penalty on breaching insurers as a mechanism to police the
limites
of the duty to defend, it could, of course, do so in this or any other context. But federal courts are not sounding boards for avantgarde theories of insurance law.
See Robertson,
This conclusion would seem to leave a vacuum, and, as a result, the need for further prophesy. However, the framework for decision is already constructed. In Rhode Island, as in other jurisdictions, the proper measure of damages for breach of contract is that which the injured party can tie to the breach itself.
40
George v. George F. Berkander, Inc.,
C. The Duty to Indemnify
Emhart’s motions for renewed judgment as a matter of law, new trial, and certification remain. They raise a total of ten issues among them. One issue (breach of the duty to defend) has been addressed above, see supra Part II.B.2, and requires no further discussion. The rest (some of which have been discussed at least in part on previous occasions) will be -addressed below, following the applicable standards of review.
In prototypical circumstances, “[a] motion for judgment as a matter of law only may be granted when, after examining the evidence of record and drawing all reasonable inferences in favor of the nonmoving party, the record reveals no sufficient evidentiary basis for the verdict.”
Zimmerman v. Direct Fed. Credit Union,
The standard is more exacting, however, when the moving party bears the burden of proof of the issue in question.
Marrero v. Goya of P.R., Inc.,
it requires the judge to test the body of evidence not for its insufficiency to support a finding, but rather for its overwhelming effect. He must be able to say not only that there is sufficient evidence to support the finding, even though other evidence could support as well a contrary finding, but additionally that there is insufficient evidence for permitting any different finding. The ultimate conclusion that there is no genuine issue of fact depends not on a failure to prove at least enough so that the controverted fact can be inferred, but rather depends on making impossible any other equally strong inferences once the fact in issue is at least inferable.
*264
Mihalchak v. Am. Dredging Co.,
The standard for a new trial is similarly burdensome. “A verdict may be set aside and new trial ordered when the verdict is against the clear weight of the evidence, or is based upon evidence which is false, or will result in a clear miscarriage of justice.”
Fonten Corp. v. Ocean Spray Cranberries, Inc.,
Finally, a district court may, in its discretion, and if authorized by local procedure, certify important but difficult and unclear issues of applicable state law to a state’s highest court.
41
19
Federal Practice and Procedure
§ 4507 at 169-79;
see Horn v. S. Union Co.,
This Court must address one threshold matter before moving on to the merits. Emhart casts eight of its ten issues as grounds for renewed judgment as a matter of law under Fed.R.Civ.P. 50(b) (“RJML”) against either Century and OneBeacon or North River. Of thosе issues, Emhart re-designates only two as grounds for new trial under Fed.R.Civ.P. 59 (continuous-trigger and initial-release instructions). To these two issues, Emhart adds the two not designated as grounds for RJML (exclusion of Calabrese testimony and newspaper articles). The problem with this rather odd approach is that all but one of the issues that Emhart has designated for RJML exclusively are more appropriately heard as grounds for new trial, attacking, as they do, aspects of the jury instructions.
See Goodman v. Bowdoin Coll.,
That said, the Court will construe these orphan arguments, with the exception of the discoverability issue, 43 as arguments for new trial.
*265
1.
Continuous-Trigger Instruction.
This issue has already been discussed (and essentially rejected) in the context of allocation.
See supra
Part II.B.l. For over a decade, Rhode Island courts have used the discovery/manifestation/discoverability trigger announced in
CPC,
For the same reason, Emhart’s alternate request to certify this issue to the Rhode Island Supreme Court is denied.
See Croteau v. Olin Corp.,
2.
Objective-Standard Instruction.
Emhart claims that the Court’s discovera-bility instruction should have incorporated an objective rather than a subjective standard. Emhart misconstrues the instruction given. The Court said, at least twice, that discoverability depended on the exercise of
reasonable diligence,
not the diligence that Crown Metro would have exercised in some subjective sense. The use of Crown Metro’s name within the elements of discoverability
(e.g.,
“did Crown Metro have a reason to test for dioxin contamination at the site”) was a tool to help the jury understand its task. It did not trick the jury into applying a more burdensome standard, as Emhart suggests.
See Brown v. Trs. of Boston Univ.,
3.Leaks-and-Spills Instruction.
Em-hart also claims that the Court should have instructed the jury that “leaks and spills of chemicals suffice to create a reason to test.” To support this instruction, Emhart relies on
Textron-Gastonia.
There, Em-hart observes, the court found that testimony of leaks and spills could have given the insured a reason to test for contamination.
Textron-Gastonia,
4.Exclusion of Calabrese Testimony.
Dr. Edward Calabrese is a toxicologist that North River designated as an expert prior to trial. When North River decided during the course of trial not to call him as a witness, Emhart served Dr. Calabrese with a subpoena to testify on its behalf. North River, in response, successfully moved to quash the subpoena. Emhart argues that it should have been allowed to call Dr. Calabrese, and that, because it was not, a new trial is required. This argument is without merit. During voir dire, North River identified Dr. Calabrese as a witness that it would call at trial — a fact the jury was likely to remember. If
Em-hart
had called and questioned Dr. Calabrese instead, the jury might have inferred that North River was trying to silence his opinion by not seeking it. As a consequence of this inference, the jury might have afforded unique and undue weight to Dr. Calabrese’s opinion simply because he was called by North River’s adversary.
See
8
Federal Practice and Procedure
§ 2032 at 447. Sometimes that risk of prejudice cannot be avoided, of course.
See, e.g., House v. Combined Ins. Co. of Am.,
5.
Choice of Law for the North River Policy.
In the mid-1980s, North River issued a Commercial Comprehensive Catastrophe Liability Policy No. 5233131099 (the “North River Policy”) to Emhart Corporation (a latter-day predecessor of Em-hart Industries, Inc.). The North River Policy provides coverage between January 1, 1984, and January 1, 1985, with a $15 million limit of liability, and, like the Century and OneBeacon policies, contains no choice-of-law provision. In early 2004, Magistrate Judge Lovegreen issued a thorough report (which this Court accepted,
see
Dkt. Entry # 238) recommending, among other things, the application of New York law to the North River Policy. Dkt. Entry # 220, Report and Recommendation,
Emhart v. Home Ins. Co.,
No. 02-53 at *33-*39 (D.R.I. Feb. 15, 2004) (discussing and applying
DeCesare v. Lincoln Benefit Life Co.,
6. Initial-Release Instruction. An exclusion in the North River Policy (the so-called and litigious sudden-and-accidental exclusion) provides no coverage
*267 to liability 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 water course or body of water, but this exclusion does not apply if such discharge, dispersal, release or escape is sudden and accidental.
Emhart argues that the Court’s discovera-bility instruction overlooked the word “dispersal” above by focusing exclusively on the
initial
release of contaminants, and not their subsequent dissemination. The argument draws from a command of the English language, and an infirm decision of New York’s appellate division.
See Farm Family Mut. Ins. Co. v. Bagley,
However compelling in the abstract, Emhart’s argument is squarely at odds with more recent pronouncements of New York law.
See, e.g., Northville Indus. Corp. v. Nat'l Union Fire Ins. Co.,
Emhart says that
Northville’s
reference to “dispersal” is
dictum,
and that the appellate division is divided on the issue. Both contentions are probably not correct, but there is little need to quibble: even as
dictum,
this Court would apply
Northville
and reject Emhart’s argument.
See
19
Federal Practice and Procedure
§ 4507 at 166-67 (“[A] carefully considered statement by the state court, even though technically dictum, certainly is persuasive evidence of how the state court might decide the point, and, in the absence of any conflicting indication of the law of the state, even may be regarded as conclusive.”);
cf. United States v. Santana,
7.
Response to the Jury’s Question.
During its deliberations, the jury asked the following question: “[Cjould a series of small, sudden and accidental events, which may have caused a small percentage of the overall property damage be enough to satisfy the ‘sudden and accidental’ provision[?]” (Trial Tr. 6, Oct. 19, 2006.) In response, the Court explained that more than one release could satisfy the exclusion’s exception, but that each release must be significant enough to have some potentially damaging environmental effect. (Trial Tr. 8, Oct. 19, 2006.) Emhart argues that the Court should have simply answered the jury’s question in the affirmative. By not doing so, the argument goes, the Court failed to respond to the jury’s source of confusion and, moreover,
*268
signaled a disbelief that the releases were sudden and accidental. Emhart has it backwards. A simple affirmative response from the Court might have signaled a
belief
in Emhart’s position on the issue, inappropriately influencing the jury’s fact finding.
Arizona v. Johnson,
8.
Exclusion of Newspaper Articles.
Emhart’s final argument centers upon the exclusion of seven newspaper articles that it claims were admissible as “ancient documents” under Fed.R.Evid. 803(16).
44
Although these articles are over twenty years old, and thus “ancient” under Rule 803(16)’s definition of it, they are littered with admissibility issues. The articles describe fires, floods, or like biblical events that consumed or otherwise affected parts of the Site. But none of them talks about or insinuates the release of dioxin, the only contaminant capable of causing a sufficient amount of environmental damage to qualify for coverage under the North River Policy. One article reports flooding without even mentioning the Woonasquatucket River.
See Many Forced to Evacuate Homes By Rain-Caused Floods in State,
The Providence Journal, March 19, 1968, at 1. Four of them have sensationalistic headlines.
See Tank Explosion Hurls Chemicals,
The Providence Journal, Jan. 10, 1968, at 1;
Explosions Punctuate Blaze,
The Providence Journal, Aug. 29, 1972, at 23;
Explosion and Fire Light Up Centredale,
The Evening Bulletin, Aug. 29, 1972, at 1;
Emergency declared in R.I. After Once-hv-Century Deluge,
The Providence Journal, June 8, 1982, at Bl. And all of them (the two that remain are:
Broken Valve Frees Steam At Centredale Chemical Co.,
The Providence Journal, Oct. 11, 1961, at 25;
Vacant Plant Ruined by Fire in Centredale,
The Evening Bulletin, July 10, 1972, at 21) contain an additional layer of hearsay (witness accounts) that Emhart does not address.
See United States v. Hajda,
III. CONCLUSION
For all of these reasons:
(1) Emhart’s Renewed Motion for Judgment as a Matter of Law Regarding the Duty to Defend under the Pri *269 mary Policy is GRANTED; this ruling applies to the Excess Policy as well, but not to the Umbrella Policy or the North River Policy;
(2) Emhart’s Renewed Motion for Judgment as a Matter of Law or, in the Alternative, for a New Trial Regarding its Claims against Century and OneBeacon is DENIED;
(3) Emhart’s Renewed Motion for Judgment as a Matter of Law or, in the Alternative, for a New Trial Regarding its Claims against North River is DENIED;
(4) Emhart’s Motion for Certification of Questions of Law to the Rhode Island Supreme Court is DENIED;
(5) Century’s Motion to Admit Documents is GRANTED as to defense exhibits 241, 246, 295, 298, 300, 304, 378, and 396, but DENIED as to Exhibit I (Resp. of PI. to Def.’s First Set of Interrogs. and App.) because it is irrelevant;
(6) Century’s Motion to Admit defense exhibit 498 (the settlement agreement) is GRANTED; the document shall be placed under seal.
Accordingly, judgment shall enter for Emhart against Century in the amount of $4,211,186.66 plus prejudgment interest pursuant to R.I. Gen. Laws § 9-21-10.
See Buckley v. Brown Plastics Mach., LLC,
It is so ordered.
Notes
. Century is the successor to the Insurance Company of North America (''INA”), a named defendant.
. These facts derive from stipulation, trial testimony, or the post-trial evidentiary hearing.
. Dioxin is the common name for a group of compounds classified as polychlorinated dibenzodioxins, of which 2, 3, 7, 8-Tetracholor-dibenzo-p-Dioxin is the most toxic member (it has gained notoriety as a contaminant of Agent Orange, a herbicide used in the Vietnam War). While referring to 2, 3, 7, 8-Tetracholordibenzo-p-Dioxin as "dioxin” is over-inclusive, it is an adequate label for purposes of this case.
. Such an invitation is not easily declined. As the PRP Letter observes, the failure to accept responsibility may result in a fine of $27,500 per day, CERCLA § 106(b), or damages well in excess of the ultimate costs of remediation. See CERCLA § 107(c)(3) (authorizing the imposition of treble damages).
.Ideally, the costs of these removal actions would be divided among the various PRPs; they are, in the order introduced in the First Administrative Order: Brook Village Associates ("Brook Village”), Centredale Manor Associates ("Centredale Manor”) (the entities that purchased portions of the property to construct the residential apartment buildings referenced above), Crown Metro, Inc. (somewhat confusingly, a South Carolina corporation not otherwise involved in this case), Em-hart, and New England Container Company ("NECC”) (the now-defunct entity that operated a drum-reconditioning facility on the southern portion of the Site during the time in question). However, the reality of the situation is that Emhart, the only economically viable PRP, will have to shoulder the bulk of the remediation.
. The parties agree that the Primary Policy was cancelled ahead of timе on January 1, 1970.
. Zajac supplemented this explanation in an April 20, 2005 letter, which denied coverage on the ground that Emhart could not prove that property damage was discovered or reasonably discoverable during the policy period (more on this later).
See Textron, Inc. v. Aetna Cas. & Sur. Co.,
. This odd chronology is in great part due to the complexities of this case, and in some small measure to this writer's reluctance to find a duty to defend at all. As the reader will see below, the Rhode Island Supreme Court has not had occasion to apply its relevant precedents to circumstances quite like these. Although hindsight makes this result more apparent now, it was not nearly as clear only several months ago.
.The reader's knowledge of the Court's previous rulings is presumed. (See, for example, Hr'g Tr. Aug. 3, 2006, 14-19 (ruling, inter alia, that the underlying administrative action constituted a "suit” within the meaning of the policies at issue).)
. Century's cases are helplessly conclusory; furthermore, none of them involves occurrence policies that are remotely similar to those in the present case.
See, e.g., Burkett v. Maricopa County Pub. Fiduciary,
. It should be noted that Century does not invoke the “continuity of the enterprise” theory or the "product line” doctrine (or anything similar) to support its successorship argument.
See, e.g., B.F. Goodrich v. Betkoski, 99
F.3d 505, 519 (2d Cir.1996);
United States v. Mexico Feed & Seed Co.,
. In
Shelby Ins. Co. v. Northeast Structures, Inc.,
. One court has commented that the difference is semantical only.
See Avondale Indus., Inc. v. Travelers Indem. Co.,
. For whatever reason, the parties have chosen not to contest whether this element provides a potential for coverage.
. The exception is
Peerless Ins. Co. v. Viegas,
. Strangely (but par for the course in this case it seems), the authority that the
Millers Mut.
court relied upon,
Fidelity & Cas. Co. of N.Y. v. Envirodyne Eng’rs, Inc.,
. Tellingly, even the cases upon which Century relies (with the exception of
Burd)
appear to require such a showing.
See Delta,
. For good reason, Centuiy has retracted its argument, advanced in previous memoranda, that it does not have to defend Emhart because the jury found no indemnity obligation. An indemnity finding favorable to an insurer does not erase that insurer’s defense obligations, as long as the pleadings test has been satisfied.
See Travelers Indem. Co. v. Ins. Co. of N. Am.,
. The Remedial Investigation was issued by an environmentаl consulting firm on behalf of the EPA in June 2005. Century claims that ''[t]he EPA's allegations include the [Remedial Investigation],” implying, it would seem, that, if the Remedial Investigation did in fact allege the intentional or willful introduction of waste products (it does not), Century’s decision in 2000 not to defend Emhart under the Excess Policy was proper. This contention borders on frivolous. If anything, the Remedial Investigation merely would have discontinued Century’s duty to defend as of June 2005, not five years earlier. See supra note 18. In any event, the Remedial Investigation fails to show that there is no potential for coverage.
. In pertinent part, Endorsement 5 reads: "(Except with respect to the products hazard), such insurance as is afforded by this policy or any other endorsement thereto shall not apply to any claim for damages arising out of contamination or pollution of land, air, water or other real or personal property."
. Also conspicuous is the fact that when OneBeaeon received a courtesy copy of Endorsement 6 in the mail, it did nothing to dispute the modification.
. Emhart disputes this on the grounds that it is an "innocent” party to the CERCLA action and is therefore entitled to an unending defense by its insurers. Emhart cites no authority to support this position. This writer has found several that, in addition to
Shelby, supra,
definitively reject it.
See, e.g., Conway Chevrolet-Buick, Inc. v. Travelers Indem. Co.,
. Uncharacteristically, Emhart does not appear to contest this argument. (See Dkt. Entry # 517, PL’s Proposed Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law 4-6.) Although Century is likely correct,
see, e.g., Elan Pharm. Research Corp.
v.
Employers Ins. of Wausau,
. To this writer’s knowledge, only one court in the country has considered the question.
See Steadfast Ins. Co. v. Purdue Federick Co.,
No. X08CV020191697S,
. As an interesting aside, these factors mirror (and predate) those developed by the Fifth Circuit in
Johnson v. Ga. Highway Express, Inc.,
. Century's criticism here is particularly bold considering it too (unsuccessfully) challenged Emhart’s status as a corporate successor to Crown Metro. See supra Part II.A.1.
. This figure assumes that defense costs accrued at a constant rate. In all likelihood, they did not. With that caveat, the calculation would look something like this:
Tail Allocated Coverage
Exposure Defense Costs Ratio Pro Rata
_(Days)_(Hypothetical)_(Months)_Share_
Primary 329/2157 $691,252.37 10.5/696 $10,368.79
Policy (11/22/00 (15% of reasonable (1.5% of allocated *255 through defense costs) 10/17/01_ defense costs)
Excess 1828/2157 $3,197,096.79 13/696 $60,744.84
Policy (10/18/01 (85% of reasonable through defense costs) 10/19/06)_ (1.9% of allocated defense costs)
$4,608,349.16 Total $71,113.63
($4,740,617.92-
$132,268.76
($4,408,958.80
.
Century accuses the settling parties of colluding to keep this figure artificially low, and argues that it should receive a setoff for the full amount allocated to the Site ($1 million). Despite an opportunity for limited discovery in the twilight of this case, Century's only basis for this argument is the fact that the settling parties allocated more to indemnity costs ($750,000). However, under Massachusetts law, which governs this issue, that basis alone is insufficient to modify or otherwise challenge the allocation of settlement funds.
See, e.g., United States v. Dynamics Research Corp.,
. The identity of this settling insurer is irrelevant; also, other information contained in the settlement agreement is subject to a protective order.
. In another uncharacteristic move, Century concedes that the policies’ aggregate limit of liability applies only to indemnification costs, and that it must therefore reimburse Emhart for all reasonable defenses costs even if they exceed that limit. Century provides no authority to support this rather expensive concession (not that it needed to); however, a glance at the case law suggests that Century is correct.
See, e.g., Aetna Cas. & Sur. Co. v. Commonwealth.,
. Why Zajac would have initiated a second search in August 2002 if she believed that her 2001 search was comprehensive is another mystery in this case. The only change in circumstances was the filing of the lawsuit; however, the record reveals that Emhart did not submit document requests or interrogatories to Century in connection with this litigation until October 2002, when Zajac's second search was already underway.
. Century offers no explanation for why Za-jac’s 2002 search located the Primary Policy when her 2001 search did not. The only material distinction between the two searches was the parameters for the policy’s alleged inception/expiration dates: in the 2001 search, she used specific dates (December 2, 1968 and December 31, 1976); in the 2002 search, however, she simply put “UNKNOWN.” The source of these dates is unclear; also unclear is whether these parameters limited the search to policies (1) with corresponding inception/expiration dates or (2) with inception/expiration dates somewhere in that range. Zajac testified to the latter, but the fact that her 2002 search discovered the Primary Policy — indeed, that it was found in a facility ("Pierce Leahy/Iron Mountain”) where, in 2001, it was specifically disclaimed — strongly suggests the former. If this is correct (and Century has presented no evidence to suggest otherwise), Zajac’s first search was doomed from the start, and carelessly delayed the production of the Primary Policy.
.The plain language of
Conanicut
does not require an insurer who seeks a declaratory judgment to defend its insured simultaneously under a reservation of rights,
see Conanicut,
. A final consent decree (like the one Em-hart is expected to enter into with the EPA) is considered to be a "settlement,” at least for purposes of seeking contribution under CERCLA.
See
42 U.S.C. § 9613(f)(2);
see also Responsible Envt’l Solutions Alliance v. Waste Mgmt., Inc.,
. It is unclear whether the policy in
Conanicut
had a limit less than $18,000. Because this figure is so low, and because the court’s observation is in a footnote, the likely answer is that it did not. Although this statement (or observation) in
Conanicut
is probably
dictum,
the Rhode Island Supreme Court has, in at least one analogous context, made insurers liable for judgments in excess of their policy limits.
Asermely v. Allstate Ins. Co.,
. It should be noted that, because the amount of indemnity costs is just a measure of punitive damages (as opposed to an award for the breach of the duty to indemnify), Century would have to pay the full amount even if the Court had agreed (it did not) that pro-ration was the appropriate allocative tool for this case.
. Because the Court ultimately does not apply
Conanicut
to these facts, Century’s argument under the Due Process Clause need not be addressed.
See State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co. v. Campbell,
. Apologies here to Judge Jerome Frank, the esteemed jurist to whom this colorful metaphor is attributed.
See Richardson v. Comm’r,
. Such predictions have been rare.
See, e.g., Provencher v. Berman, 699
F.2d 568, 570 (1st Cir.1983) (predicting that Massachusetts would follow what had become a “virtually universal” rule of property law, notwithstanding an 1878 Supreme Judicial Court case to the contrary);
Mason
v.
Am. Emery Wheel Works,
. This familiar rule traces its roots to
Hadley v. Baxendale,
156 Eng. Rep. 145, 151 (Ex.1854), as adopted by the Rhode Island Supreme Court in
Greene v. Creighton,
. The interested reader might consider Bruce M. Selya, Certified Madness: Ask a Silly Question ..29 Suffolk U.L.Rev. 677 (1995), for a thoughtful exegesis of certification practice.
. The fact that Emhart raised a related issue (overwhelming effect of the expect-or-intend evidence) does not preclude waiver because the two issues are not "inextricably intertwined.”
See Chrabaszcz,
.However, were the Court to consider this argument under the rubric of Rule 59, it would find that the jury correctly determined that dioxin was not reasonably discoverable at the Site in 1969 because (1) a duly diligent *265 Crown Metro had no reason to test for dioxin or other toxins that could have led to it, and (2) reasonably available technologies could not have detected it.
. Rule 803(16) provides that ''[s]tatements in a document in existence twenty years or more the authenticity of which is established” are not excluded by the hearsay rule.
