This case emerges from the sale of a Wisconsin water park by Black Wolf Lodge, LLC (Black Wolf), Tall Pines Rental, LLC, Tall Pines Realty, LLC and Tall Pines Development of Wisconsin Dells, LLC (collectively, Sellers) to Great Bear Lodge of Wisconsin Dells, LLC (Buyer). 1 *520 The asset purchase agreement for the transaction required the Sellers to indemnify the Buyer against claims resulting from pre-closing acts, omissions or events and required the Buyer to indemnify the Sellers against claims resulting from post-closing acts, omissions or events. Almost seven years after the transaction was completed, the Buyer was sued by a park visitor who allegedly was injured on one of the park’s attractions. The Buyer sued the Sellers for contributory negligence and the Sellers tried to invoke their right to indemnification under the asset purchase agreement. After the Buyer refused to indemnify the Sellers, the Sellers counterclaimed for indemnification. Both parties moved for summary judgment on the indemnification issue. The district court found that the Buyer’s contributory negligence claim resulted from the Sellers’ allegedly negligent pre-closing design, installation and maintenance of one of the rides. As a result, the court concluded, the Sellers were not entitled to indemnification under the agreement. The Sellers appeal that decision. We reverse and direct that judgment be entered in favor of the Sellers.
I. Background
Prior to 1999, Black Wolf owned and operated a water park and resort in Lake Delton, Wisconsin. In 1998, a new attraction, the Tree Wolf slide, was constructed at the park. In November 1999, the Buyer purchased the water park. The Buyer agreed to purchase the assets “as-is,” subject to exceptions expressly included in the asset purchase agreement. For their part, the Sellers represented that they were “in compliance with all applicable Laws and Orders” and that they “ha[d] not received notice of any violation or alleged violation of any Laws or Orders.” The Buyer agreed to assume the following liabilities of the Sellers:
2.1.(a) Furniture, Fixture and Equipment Orders. Sellers’ obligations to purchase furniture, fixtures and equipment on order as of the Closing Date.
2.1.(b) Contractual Liabilities. Sellers’ Liabilities relating to the period beginning with the Closing Date under and pursuant to the Contracts.
2.1.(c) Liabilities Under Permits and Licenses. Sellers’ Liabilities arising on and after the Closing Date under any permits or licenses listed in Schedule 4.9(b) and assigned to Buyer at the Closing.
2.1.(d) Prorated Liabilities. Liabilities of Sellers for which Buyer receives a credit against the Purchase Price (as defined below) at Closing.
Section 2.2 of the agreement expressly limited the Buyer’s assumption of liabilities:
2.2 Liabilities Not to be Assumed.
Except as and to the extent specifically set forth in Section 2.1, Buyer is not assuming any Liabilities of Sellers and all such Liabilities shall be and remain the responsibility of Sellers. Without limiting the generality of the foregoing sentence, Buyer is not assuming and Sellers shall not be deemed to have transferred to Buyer the following Liabilities of Sellers, except to the extent specifically set forth in Section 2.1:
* * *
2.2.(e) Violation of Laws or Orders. Liabilities of Sellers for any violation of or failure to comply with any applicable *521 statute, law, ordinance, rule or regulation (collectively, “Laws”) or any order, writ, injunction, judgment, plan or decree (collectively, “Orders”) of any court, arbitrator, department, commission, board, bureau, agency, authority, instrumentality or other body, whether federal, state, municipal, foreign or other (collectively, “Government Entities”).
As in any asset sale, the parties had to agree on how to allocate the risk that any of the assets were defective and the risk that claims, particularly tort claims, would be brought against either party after the transaction’s closing date. To this end, the agreement also included the following indemnification provisions:
10.1 By Sellers.
Subject to the terms and conditions of this Section 10, Sellers shall, jointly and severally, indemnify, defend and hold harmless Buyer, and its directors, officers, employees and controlled and controlling persons (hereinafter “Buyer’s Affiliates”), from and against all Claims (as hereafter defined) incurred by Buyer, Buyer’s Affiliates, the Business or the Purchased Assets by reason of or resulting from:
10.1.(a) the material inaccuracy or breach of any representation or warranty of Sellers contained in or made pursuant to this Agreement;
10.1.(b) the material breach of any covenant of Sellers contained in this Agreement;
10.1.(d) any Claim of or against Buyer, the Purchased Assets or the Business resulting from acts, omissions or events occurring prior to the Closing Date, and not specifically assumed by Buyer pursuant to this Agreement;
10.1.(f) any Claim of violation or infringement of Laws and/or Orders in existence as of the Closing Date;
10.2 By Buyer.
Subject to the terms and conditions of this Section 10, Buyer shall indemnify, defend and hold harmless Sellers, their officers, employees, Members and controlling persons from and against all Claims incurred by any such person by reason of or resulting from: (a) the material inaccuracy or breach of any representation or warranty of Buyer contained in this Agreement; (b) the material breach of any covenant of Buyer contained in this Agreement; (c) any Claim of or against Sellers, the Purchased Assets or the Business resulting from acts, omissions or events occurring on or after the Closing Date, except for Claims described in Sections 10.1(e) or 10.1(g) ... or (f) all Claims of or against Sellers specifically assumed by Buyer pursuant hereto.
“Claim” is defined to include:
(i) all Liabilities; (ii) all losses, damages, judgments, awards, penalties and settlements; (iii) all demands, claims, suits, actions, causes of action, proceedings and assessments; and (iv) all reasonable costs and expenses (including, but without limitation, reasonable attorneys fees and costs) of investigating, defending or successfully asserting any of the foregoing or of successfully enforcing this Agreement.
Section 10.5(a) of the agreement limits the Sellers’ indemnification obligations, providing that “[n]o claim or action shall be brought against Sellers under this Section 10 after the lapse of eighteen (18) months following the Closing Date.” The parties agreed that Wisconsin law would govern the Agreement.
*522 The closing occurred in November 1999 and the Buyer subsequently assumed the operation of the water park. Almost six years later, in August 2005, Dr. James Foskett allegedly suffered serious and permanent injuries when he struck the side of the Tree Wolf slide plunge pool. He and his wife filed a lawsuit against the Buyer in 2006 alleging that the slide and plunge pool were unsafe as designed and violated the Wisconsin Safe-Place Statute and state regulations. The Buyer, in turn, filed a third party complaint against the Sellers alleging that Dr. Foskett’s injuries were caused by the Sellers’ negligent “design, construction, installation, inspection, and/or maintenance of the subject Tree Wolf ride.” (R. 21 ¶¶ 12-13.) The Buyer sought contribution from the Sellers in the event that the Fosketts prevailed in their lawsuit. In response, the Sellers invoked § 10.2’s indemnification provision and tendered the defense to the Buyer. When the Buyer refused to indemnify the Sellers, the Sellers counterclaimed for indemnification.
Both the Buyer and the Sellers subsequently settled with the Fosketts and moved for summary judgment on the indemnification issue. The Buyer argued that it is not obligated to indemnify the Sellers against claims arising from their own pre-closing negligence, namely, the allegedly negligent design, construction, inspection, installation and/or maintenance of the Tree Wolf slide. Interpreting the indemnification provision in the context of the entire agreement, the district court determined that “the language does not require, and the parties did not intend to require, [Buyer] to indemnify [Sellers] for claims based on [Sellers’] alleged negligent conduct prior to the sale.”
Foskett v. Great Wolf Resorts, Inc.,
II. Discussion
We review grants of summary judgment de novo.
Hicks v. Midwest Transit, Inc.,
Because resolution of this case is a matter of contract interpretation, we begin by noting that our goal is to ascertain the intent of the parties by reference to the language they used.
See State ex rel. Journal/Sentinel, Inc. v. Pleva,
With these principles in mind, we turn to the language of the indemnification provision that the Sellers invoke. Section 10.2 of the asset purchase agreement requires the Buyer to indemnify the Sellers against claims “resulting from acts, omissions or events occurring on or after the Closing Date.... ” The first question we must address, therefore, is whether the Buyer’s contribution claim against the Seller “resulted from” a post-closing “act, omission or event.” The Buyer argues that the contribution claim “resulted from” the Sellers’ allegedly negligent pre-closing design and construction of the Tree Wolf slide. The district court agreed with the Buyer, interpreting the phrase “resulting from acts, omissions or events occurring on or after the Closing Date” as referring to “conduct of the parties themselves which becomes the basis for a claim.”
Foskett,
Even if the Sellers were negligent in their design and construction of the Tree Wolf slide in 1998, at most there existed only inchoate, potential liability until the accident occurred in 2005. A negligence claim requires “an actual loss or damage as a result of the injury.”
Avery v. Diedrich,
This reading of § 10.2 reflects the most plausible understanding of the parties’ risk allocation. If each party really intended to assume liability for its own conduct, as the district court believed, it makes little sense that the Sellers’ indemnification obligations would expire eighteen months after the closing. If the indemnification provisions made each party responsible for its own conduct, one would expect the Sellers’ indemnification responsibilities for claims resulting from their pre-closing negligence to exist in perpetuity, or at least as long as the Buyer continued to own the water park. In addition, it makes great sense that the parties would allocate the risk of tort liability based on who was in a better position to prevent events giving rise to claims. Prior to the closing, the Sellers had ownership and control of the park and were the parties with the power to make any necessary safety-related improvements to the park’s attractions. After the closing, however, the Sellers no longer had authority to maintain or repair the park facilities. That authority belonged to the Buyer. In light of these facts, it seems quite reasonable that the Sellers would seek to limit their tort liability after they surrendered ownership and control of the
*524
park.
See Cremona,
While the Sellers’ incentive to seek indemnification against negligence claims arising after the closing seems obvious, the Buyer argues that it makes no sense for it to indemnify the Sellers “for conduct that [the Buyer] had no opportunity to control,
e.g.,
the design and construction of the Tree Wolf slide, occurring a year
prior
to the Closing Date.” (Appellee’s Br. at 14) (emphasis in original). The Buyer’s argument might be more persuasive if the agreement required it to indemnify the Sellers against their own future negligent conduct. An indemnitor may have difficulty anticipating whether an indemnitee will behave negligently in the future and may not be in a position to prevent negligent conduct that results in harm.
See Sutton v. AO. Smith Co.,
In short, it seems implausible that the Sellers would agree to an indemnification provision that left them exposed to liability for injuries that may occur many years after they lost the ability to prevent accidents like Dr. Foskett’s. The indemnification provisions show that the parties did not intend such an implausible allocation of risk, agreeing instead that the Buyer would be required to indemnify the Sellers for claims arising after the closing. Our reading of the indemnification provisions does not, as the Buyer asserts, render meaningless its right to indemnification under § 10.1. Rather, under our interpretation the Buyer had eighteen months during which it would be indemnified for any claims brought after the closing that resulted from pre-closing accidents or injuries. This is consistent with holding each party liable for accidents that occur while it is in a position to prevent those accidents. In addition, § 10.1 gave the Buyer eighteen months to seek indemnification for costs it incurred due to the Sellers’ breach of a representation or warranty. Once the Buyer assumed ownership and control of the park, however, it was in the best position to prevent any injuries to visitors and thus, it was required to indemnify the Sellers against claims resulting from post-closing events, like Dr. Foskett’s accident.
*525
The district court noted that its interpretation of the indemnification provisions was consistent with the general rule that a party will not be presumed to have indemnified another against claims based on the indemnitee’s own negligence.
Foskett,
Although we believe the language of the indemnification provisions clearly places the Buyer’s contributory negligence claim within the scope of its indemnification obligations, we address how our interpretation fits within the context of the entire agreement to ensure that we “giv[e] a reasonable meaning to every provision of the contract” and avoid “leaving some of the language useless or superfluous.”
Kennedy v. Nat’l Juvenile Det. Ass’n,
After determining the Sellers were not entitled to indemnification because the Buyer’s contributory negligence claim “resulted from” the Sellers’ alleged pre-clos-ing negligence, the district court also held that the Buyer was not required to offer proof of the Sellers’ negligent conduct in order to avoid its indemnification responsibilities. The conclusion that the Sellers lose their right to indemnification not only if they
were
negligent but if anyone
says
they were negligent strikes us as a dubious one.
See Sutton,
III. Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, we REVERSE the judgment of the district court and direct that judgment be entered in favor of the Sellers.
Notes
. The Third Party Plaintiffs in this case include Great Wolf Resorts and Great Bear Lodge; the Third Party Defendants include Black Wolf Lodge; and the water park attrac *520 tion involved in the case is the Tree Wolf slide at the Great Wolf Lodge water park. With the various wolves and bears involved in this case, our opinion could begin to sound like a twisted version of a Grimm Brothers' fairytale. For the sake of clarity, we refer to the parties as simply "Buyer” and "Sellers.”
