MEMORANDUM OPINION
This declaratory judgment is before the court on cross-motions for summary judgment as to the obligation of Aetna Casualty & Surety Company (hereinafter referred to as “Aetna”) to defend the plaintiffs (hereinafter collectively referred to as “GNN”) in a multitude of civil cases which have been filed in state court. The issue the court must address is whether the personal injury endorsement in the Aetna policies provides coverage for the claims of trespass, nuisance, and emotional distress which have been alleged in the underlying state lawsuits.
Facts
The pending state court actions have been filed by over 2,000 individuals who own or use land along the Leaf and Pascagoula Rivers. The first of such lawsuits was brought in 1989. All of the cases are related to the operation of the Leaf River Forest Products’ pulp mill in New Augusta, Mississippi. The mill processes timber into market pulp which is used to produce high-quality paper products. As part of daily operation, the pulp mill discharged pollutants, including dioxin, into the Leaf River which joins the Chickasawhay River to form the Pascagoula River. The typical underlying complaint makes claims for trespass, nuisance, and claims for emotional distress due to the fear of developing cancer.
Aetna sold GNN two primary comprehensive general liability insurance policies covering from January 1, 1984, through April 1, 1986. These two policies cover the subsidiaries of Great Northern Nekoosa. The coverage under the policies included the obligation to pay the defense costs of any action covered under the bodily injury, property damage, or personal injury provisions. Aetna defended the plaintiffs during Simmons v. Leaf River Forest Products, Inc., Civil Action No. 4566 (Cir. Ct., Greene County), but a judgment was entered against Leaf River. After further investigation, and during the pendency of Ferguson v. Leaf River Forest Products, Civil Action No. 91D-20 (Cir. Ct., Jackson County), Aetna notified the plaintiffs that the insurance policy did not provide coverage for the alleged incidents in state court, and that Aetna had no duty to defend nor an obligation to indemnify the plaintiffs. Aetna had agreed to defend the plaintiffs under a reservation of rights.
In the insurance policy for bodily injury and property damage coverage, Aetna agreed to:
pay on behalf of the insured all sums which the insured shall become legally obligated to pay as damages because of
bodily injury or property damage
to which this insurance applies, caused by an occurrence, and ... [Aetna] shall have the right and duty to defend any suit against the insured seeking damages on account of such bodily injury or property damage____
The insurance policy contains a pollution exclusion which provides:
This insurance does not apply:
(f) to bodily injury or property damage 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____
Personal injury coverage which is provided in the Broad Form Comprehensive General Liability Endorsement is coverage separate and distinct from the bodily injury and property damage coverage. Section II of the personal injury coverage provides:
[Aetna] will pay on behalf of the insured all sums which the insured shall become legally obligated to pay as damages because of personal injury ... to which this insurance applies, sustained by any person or organi *405 zation and arising out of the conduct of the named insured’s business ... and ... [Aetna] shall have the right and duty to defend any suit against the insured seeking damages on account of such injury____
“Personal injury” is defined as:
injury arising out of one or more of the following offenses committed during the policy period:
(1) false arrest, detention, imprisonment, or malicious prosecution;
(2) wrongful entry or eviction or other invasion of the right of private occupancy;
(3) a publication or utterance
(a) of a libel or slander or other defamatory or disparaging material, or
(b) in violation of an individual’s right to privacy____
This definition was expanded by an endorsement amendment to include:
4. Fright, Mental Anguish, Plagiarism
5. Creation of Emotion Disturbance
6. Discrimination____
Ferguson v. Leaf River Forest Products Inc.
In
Leaf River Forest Products v. Ferguson,
Both Great Northern Nekoosa and Aetna allege that Ferguson supports their position in this declaratory judgment action. The jury did not find trespass, but did return a verdict for the Fergusons in the amount of $10,000.00 each for nuisance; $90,000.00 each for emotional distress; and $3,000,000.00 in punitive damages. The Mississippi Supreme Court went into great detail reciting the facts and evidence presented at the circuit court trial, and concluded that the evidence was insufficient to support the jury’s verdicts. Regarding the emotional distress verdict, the Ferguson court stated:
In this case, there is a lack of evidence proving exposure of the appellees to a dangerous or harmful, agent and the record is devoid of any medical evidence pointing to possible distress predicated on potential or probable future illness. Certainly, if one is to recover for emotional distress predicated on potential, future illness, there must be substantial proof of exposure and medical evidence that would indicate possible future illness.
Id.
Contract Construction
The interpretation of an insurance policy is a question of law for the court when the meaning of the terms is clear and unambiguous.
See Aero Int’l, Inc. v. United States Fire Ins. Co.,
It is equally well settled law that “the special rules favoring the insured are only applicable when there is an ambiguity ... [and that] courts ought not to strain to find such ambiguities, if, in so doing, they defeat probable intentions of the parties ... even when the result is an apparently harsh consequence to the insured.” Courts will neither create an ambiguity where none exists nor make a new contract for the parties. If the policy language is clear, unequivocal, and, hence unambiguous, its terms will be enforced.
Brander v. Nabors,
The construction of an insurance contract is limited to an examination of the “written terms” of the policy itself.
Employers Mut. Casualty Co. v. Nosser,
Duty to Defend
“The duty of the insurer to defend is determined by the allegations of the complaint.”
Putman v. Insurance Co. of North America,
The right of the insurer to exclusive control over litigation against its insured is accompanied by a correlative requirement that the insurer defend the insured against all actions brought against him on the allegation of facts and circumstances covered by the policy, even though such suits may be groundless, false or fraudulent. The traditional test is that the obligation of a liability insurer is to be determined by the allegations of the complaint or declaration. Moreover, a divergence may exist between the facts as alleged in the petition and the actual facts as they are known to or reasonably ascertainable by the insurer, in which latter case the insurer has a duty to defend, notwithstanding a policy exclusion____
State Farm Mutual Automobile Ins. Co. v. Taylor,
Discussion
The issue before the court is centered around whether the personal injury endorsement to the general liability policy provides coverage for the allegations made in the underlying state court lawsuits. Aetna argues that the personal injury endorsement cannot be used to circumvent the expressed pollution exclusion which is applicable to both bodily injury and properly damage. Aetna asserts that there is no distinction between the property damage sustained due to the plaintiffs’ discharge of dioxin and the alleged personal injuries for which the plaintiffs are seeking coverage. The plaintiffs argue that the state lawsuits allege trespass and nuisance, which comport with a basic reading of “wrongful entry or eviction or other invasion of the right of private occupancy.” Additionally, GNN argues that the underlying lawsuits allege emotional distress from the fear of contracting cancer.. Aetna argues that there is no coverage for the alleged emotional distress since the discharge of dioxin did not become public knowledge until several years after the Aetna policies had expired. GNN counters that the emotional disturbance was created during the Aetna polices when the dioxin was released.
The holding of this court follows a simple logical progression:
The policy’s pollution exclusion is only applicable to bodily injury and property damage. It is not applicable to liabilities enumerated within the personal injury endorsement. The underlying state court plaintiffs have alleged personal injuries which fall within the personal injury endorsement. Additionally, the policies clearly provide coverage for “fright, mental anguish ... [and] creation of emotional disturbance” which has been alleged to have occurred during the policy period. The Aetna policies purchased by GNN provide coverage for those personal injury allegations.
Unfortunately, a great many cases have addressed the same coverage issue and either due to factual nuances or different legal methods have concluded that similar insurance policies do not provide coverage for pollution related injuries. 2 There are cases *408 which have found the personal injury provision to provide coverage for damage caused by pollution. 3 This court’s holding generally follows the premise of these decisions.
Distinction Between Property Damage and Personal Injury
In
Titan Holdings Syndicate v. City of Keene,
First of all, the exclusion language does not support the district court’s understanding of an exclusion for all “pollution related activities.” The clauses expressly exclude only bodily and property damage liability “arising out of the actual, alleged or threatened discharge, dispersal, release or escape of pollutants.” To read the clauses as excluding all claims for damages from all “pollution related activity” stretches the exception beyond its express language, and provides less coverage than agreed to.
Id.
Relying on a New Hampshire Supreme Court decision, the First Circuit found that “an invasion of the right of private occupancy need not involve ‘an appreciable and tangible interference with the physical property itself.’”
Titan Holdings,
Blaekhawk-Central City Sanitation District v. American Guarantee and Liability Ins. Co.,
In
Pipefitters Welfare Educ. Fund v. Westchester Fire,
The Sixth Circuit recently addressed these same issues in
Harrow Products, Inc. v. Liberty Mut. Ins. Co.,
The essence of the claim for which Harrow seeks defense and indemnification is an injury to property. The endorsement does not alter or amend the coverage of the *410 underlying policy except as it states by its terms. Simply because the personal injury endorsement adds coverage does not mean that the pollution exclusion does not apply to the entire policy.
Harrow,
The Harrow court criticizes the Seventh Circuit’s holding in Pipefitters. The Harrow court stated:
The [Pipefitters ] court did not explain what was so disingenuous, let alone sanctionable, about claiming that a clause that clearly excluded coverage for property damage from pollution applied to an attempt to recast the pollution damage to property as a personal injury.
Id.
Here, unlike the Titan, Pipefitters and Hirschberg cases, no showing has been made that Harrow Products is threatened with liability for interfering with property owners’ or occupants’ rights of private occupancy. No private occupants of property have filed claims in either action. Nor has the MDNR or Village of Saranac asserted claims as subrogees of, or in some other representative capacity for, occupants of property. The MDNR and Village of Saranac actions, asserting claims under the Michigan Water Resources Commission Act, the Michigan Environmental Protection Act, and CERCLA based on the “people’s” interest in uncontaminated groundwater, cannot reasonably be characterized as premised upon interference with rights of private occupancy.
Harrow Products, Inc. v. Liberty Mut. Ins. Co.,
The pollution exclusion by its expressed terms, applies only to bodily injury and property damage.
This insurance does not apply: ...
(f) to bodily injury or property damage 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____
No similar exclusion appears within the personal injury endorsement. Exclusions must be in clear and unmistakable language and are always strictly interpreted.
Exceptions to the general liability are to be strictly construed against the company, and any uncertainty in the meaning of the exclusion clause should be decided in favor of insured. A liability policy having a clear and unequivocal guaranty against accidental loss will not be limited or controlled by later doubtful exemptions.
American Hardware Mutual Ins. Co. v. Union Gas Co.,
The Harrow court is not bothered by such technicalities. The overriding force behind the Harrow decision was the attempt to interpret the insurance policy as a whole. Quoting Michigan law, the appellate court stated:
The intention of the parties must be deduced from the entire agreement, not from any part or parts of it, and, where a contract has several stipulations, the intention of the contracting parties is not expressed by any single clause or stipulations, but by every part and provision in it, which must all be considered together, and so construed as to be consistent with every other part.
Harrow,
Of course, applying the exclusion to personal injuries caused by pollution negates or neutralizes the coverage specifically provided under the personal injury endorsement. An insurance contract which contains provisions for coverage as well as exclusions naturally creates inconsistencies of coverage. To extend the sphere of an exclusion beyond its specific wording denies to the contracting parties the option of sculpting the contract to fit the specific contours of coverage to which the parties agree. The personal injury endorsement has a separate insuring agreement, definitions, and exclusions. It stands alone and is not dependent upon or limited by coverage or exclusion provisions elsewhere in the policy. It is a fundamentally inappropriate construction of the insurance policy to apply the pollution exclusion to the personal injury endorsement.
Those courts which do take the leap of interpretation by categorically applying the pollution exclusion to the separate personal injury endorsement may mistakenly be interpreting other cases which have held that the injuries which the plaintiff is alleging to be personal injuries are in fact property damage and, thus, not capable of being brought as personal injuries. Such courts apply the pollution exclusion to the claims not because the claims are personal injury but because they actually are property damage. Since the allegations have been categorized as property damage and were caused by pollution, then they are precluded from coverage by the pollution exclusion. This approach means that the pollution exclusion will not preclude coverage over personal injuries which have been caused by the discharge of pollution and have been properly pled.
Although a California state court case,
Legarra v. Federated Mutual Ins. Co.,
The Legarra court finds fault in those cases which do not apply the pollution exclu *412 sion to injuries alleged under the personal injury endorsement.
While “wrongful entry or eviction or other invasion of the right to private occupancy” in the abstract might apply to pollution damage, read in the context of the entire policy it is unreasonable to expect such coverage here. The Board’s claim against the Legarras relates to property damage caused by groundwater contamination. Coverage for such damage is clearly excluded under the pollution exclusion____ We must interpret the insurance contract to give effect to every part if possible. That can be done here by rejecting the expansive view of personal injury offered by the Legarras____ Our conclusion that personal injury does not cover pollution damage to real property is consistent with that of courts that have considered the policy as a whole. Cases that have found such coverage are not persuasive because they have interpreted the personal injury provision in a vacuum, ignoring the effects of the pollution exclusion on the insured’s reasonable expectation of coverage.
Id.
Some cases which apply the pollution exclusion to the personal injury endorsement do not acknowledge that the discharge of pollution can result in a personal injury. These courts seem to stand for the proposition that there is no distinction between injury to possessory interests and injury to the realty. Those courts which do not recognize the distinction flatly deny coverage for all injuries which have been caused by pollution. The advantage of concluding that pollution can only cause property damage is the simplicity of applying the exclusion. The fallacy of this position is that it fails to acknowledge that pollution is capable of inflicting a personal injury separate from property damage.
In
Titan Corp. v. Aetna Casualty & Surety Co.,
The policy here unambiguously declares it will not pay for either bodily injury or property damage when the cause of such injury or damage is pollution. Under the interpretation urged by Titan and adopted by the trial court, that exclusion will never operate, because the pollution exclusion’s “property damage” provisions are relevant only to eliminate liability for third party property injury. However, under the trial court’s interpretation, such injury would simply be relabeled as an “other invasion of the right of private occupancy,” rendering the pollution exclusion a dead appendage to the policy.
We interpret the coverage afforded by the personal injury portion of the policy as being limited to damages other than the injury to realty which an occupier of land may suffer when his quiet enjoyment of occupancy is disturbed.
Id.
This court is not allowing the property damage to be retooled as personal injuries. The underlying state court plaintiffs generally are not only seeking damages for the physical injury to their property (which is excluded under the pollution exclusion), but also for damage to the exercise of their personal rights which are an incident of the ownership of the realty. Although inextricably related, there is a difference. Since they are distinct, the first falls under property damage coverage and, under the circumstance, would be precluded by the pollution exclusion; the second falls under the personal injury endorsement qualifying as either “wrongful entry,” “other invasion of the right of private occupancy,” or “Sight, mental anguish ... [and] creation of emotional disturbance.”
The Fifth Circuit concluded in
Gregory v. Tennessee Gas Pipeline Co.,
Wrongful entry into, or eviction of a person from a room, dwelling or premises that the person occupies.
The Fifth Circuit accepted the district court’s conclusion “that to extend Coverage B [personal injury] to all property damages, including damages which would be covered under Coverage A [property damage], would render the pollution exclusion meaningless.” The state court plaintiffs made no allegations of trespass in association with the discharge of the pollution. Additionally, the state court plaintiffs did not allege intentional conduct by the insured; rather, it was alleged only that the city “knew of the pollution in the lake and failed to either clean it up or warn plaintiffs of the contamination.”
Id.
[No authority] supports the City’s assertion that pollution generated by a third party, Tennessee Gas, which passed into and through property owned or occupied by the City — the lake — and injured abutting property of the plaintiffs constitutes a wrongful entry within the meaning of Coverage B. The definition of personal injury bears this out. Each of the enumerated risks specifically assumed requires active, intentional conduct by the insured. When viewed in the context in which they appear, the words “wrongful entry into, ... premises that the person occupies” do not afford coverage for the offense alleged in any complaint.
Gregory,
Gregory
has been cited as standing for the proposition that plaintiffs cannot retool property damage as personal injury in order to avoid the pollution exclusion.
See Harrow Products, Inc. v. Liberty Mut. Ins. Co.,
In
U.S. Fidelity & Guar. Co. v.B&B Oil Well Service Inc.,
More pertinent to this court’s review, some of the U.S.F. & G. policies contained a personal injury provision identical to that found in the Aetna policies. The district court stated that the underlying lawsuits complained that:
... the NORM contamination of their properties constitutes “an ongoing nuisance that has trespassed on plaintiffs’ property to the injury of the plaintiffs,” and which has caused plaintiffs to be damaged “relative to [their] property values and rights.”
B & B Oil Well Service,
It is difficult to discern whether the B & B Oil court found that the state court lawsuits had only alleged property damage or whether the court concluded that the discharge of pollution was not capable of inflicting personal injuries. If the court’s holding is the former, the allegations of the complaints in the underlying lawsuits distinguish B & B Oil. The state court plaintiffs involved in this action are not just alleging property damage from the release of the pollution. There are allegations that the release of dioxin trespassed and inflicted nuisance upon those personal rights which are derivative of and incidental to the ownership of property. If the court’s holding is the latter, this court must disagree. The release of pollutants can cause injuries which come within the definition of personal injury different from bodily injury or property damage.
Same Nucleus of Facts
Several cases, all from Texas district courts, after applying a “same nucleus of facts” test, have found that the alleged property damage and bodily injury were excluded by the pollution exclusion. In
Northbrook Indem. v. Water Dist. Management Co.,
Separate from its discussion on the “same nucleus of facts” test, the court briefly discussed the personal injury endorsement, but concluded that “[n]o coverage exist[ed] under Coverage B for the wrongs asserted in the underlying complaints.”
Id.
Trespass in Mississippi
Causes of action which seek to preserve the rights incidental to ownership of property (possessory interests) are recognized in the state of Mississippi. For example, trespass, as commonly acknowledged, rarely entails more than minimum physical damage to the property, but more generally is a mechanism to revenge the offense to the possessory interests in the property. In
City of Jackson, Miss. v. Filtrol Corp.,
In
Keppner v. Gulf Shores, Inc.,
A trespass may be an offense to another’s person, health, reputation, or property. This situation is analogous to the owner of a servient estate interfering with the enjoyment of the easement rights of another, even though the easement is nonpossessory-
Keppner,
In
Shutes v. Platte Chemical Co.,
Personal Injury Endorsement
The personal injury provision covers various “offenses” committed by the insured against a person or organization. The personal injury endorsement extends liability coverage to the specific torts enumerated. The list includes torts of recognizable types involving damages which can be lumped under the descriptive term “personal injury.” “[Personal injury coverage is not determined by the nature of the damages sought in the action against the insured, but by the nature of the claims made against the insured in the action.”
Martin Marietta Corp. v. Insurance Company of North America,
GNN contends that trespass and nuisance are analogous to “wrongful entry” or the general phrase “other invasion of the right of private occupancy.” Aetna argues that trespass and nuisance are not offenses which come under the personal injury definition. “Personal injury” is defined as:
injury arising out of one or more of the following offenses committed during the policy period:
(1) false arrest, detention, imprisonment, or malicious prosecution;
(2) wrongful entry or eviction or other invasion of the right of private occupancy;
(3) a publication or utterance
(a) of a libel or slander or other defamatory or disparaging material, or
(b) in violation of an individual’s right to privacy____
This definition was expanded by an endorsement amendment to include:
4. Fright, Mental Anguish, Plagiarism
5. Creation of Emotion Disturbance
6. Discrimination____
All of the listed personal injuries are recognized torts, except for “wrongful entry” and “other invasion of the right of private occupancy.” Every court which has wrestled with this provision has attempted to understand what is meant by the phrases. Aetna argues that the “or other ...” phrase cannot extend coverage beyond the scope of the two specific enumerations — “wrongful entry” or “eviction.”
[T]he specific phrase ‘other invasion of the right of private occupancy1 ... must be interpreted in light of the preceding words ‘wrongful entry or eviction,’ Martin v. Brunzelle,699 F.Supp. 167 , 170 (N.D.Ill.1988). This must mean and involve some affront to an interest in possession of real property.
Straits Steel and Wire Co. v. Michigan Millers Mut. Ins. Co., No. 91-72991-DK (Mich.Cir.1992). .
Aetna urges the court to use the principle of ejusdem generis in order to interpret the phrase “or other invasion of the right of private occupancy.” Ejusdem generis is a method of construction which provides:
Of the same kind, class, or nature. In the construction of laws, wills, and other instruments, the “ejusdem generis rule” is, that where general words follow an enumeration of persons or things, by words of *417 a particular and specific meaning, such general words are to be held as applying only to person or things of the same general kind or class as those specifically mentioned.
Black’s Law Dictionary (5th Ed.1983). The rule restricts the broadness of the general phrase to the same category as the previous specific enumerations. Most court which have used the ejusdem generis rule to interpret the “or other ...” phrase sub judice have restricted it to have application only within the realm of landlord/tenant remedies. The courts which have applied the doctrine of ejusdem generis to the phrase “other invasion of the right to private occupancy” conclude that the phrase must be at least analogous to eviction and wrongful entry which both require dispossessing. Thus, the argument goes, the phrase cannot entail simple trespass.
GNN points out that no Mississippi case has used the doctrine of ejusdem generis to interpret an insurance contract. The court has not found reference to the doctrine as a specific means of insurance policy construction. GNN argues, with some logical force, that the rule of ejusdem generis results in a constricted reading of the phrase, but that insurance policy construction methods are designed to err on the side of broadness of interpretation. GNN asserts that application of the rule to the provision improperly prevents the general phrase from having independent meaning and full effect. Ironically, this is the same “logic” used to conclude that the personal injury endorsement does not provide coverage for pollution related damage since it would negate the effect of the pollution exclusion.
Wrongful entry is argued to be an ancient common law remedy that is similar to modern day unlawful entry and detain-er.
7
The court has found “wrongful entry” only in one Mississippi ease, and there as an adjective (wrongful) modifying the manner of entry.
See Jackson Municipal Airport Authority v. Wright,
Additionally, the court believes that the key to understanding “wrongful entry” is the middle offense, “eviction.” Eviction is a legal remedy for a landlord to regain control of property which is being wrongfully pos *418 sessed. “Eviction” is not an offense. It makes no sense for an insured to have coverage for “eviction.” A complaint which alleges “eviction” is not alleging a cause of action, but a complaint which alleges “wrongful eviction” or “improper eviction” does. Obviously, “wrongful eviction” is the offense covered by the personal injury endorsement. 9 This means that “wrongful” before entry has to be an adjective modifying both entry and eviction. “Wrongful entry” as it appears in the provision cannot be the common law “writ of entry” or its modern day equivalent, “unlawfid entry and detainer,” but is a general descriptive term which would include trespass. By the same token, if wrongful entry was a specific enumeration of an offense, it would appear as “wrongful wrongful entry.” It does not, which indicates that it is a general phrase that reasonably includes trespass.
GNN argues that the
Ferguson
case supports its assertion that the nuisance claims come within the definition of personal injury. In
Ferguson,
the Mississippi Supreme Court recited the definition of private nuisance. “ ‘A private nuisance is a nontrespassory invasion of another’s interest in the use and enjoyment of his property.’ ”
Ferguson,
The phrase “or other invasion of the right of private occupancy” is not intended to be an enumeration of a specific tort. It is designed to expand coverage to torts other than wrongful entry or wrongful eviction, but within the same lineage of causes of action. The problem is that “wrongful entry” as a particular cause of action is not recognized in the state of Mississippi. Therefore, it is impossible to determine the lineage of the general phrase. Since wrongful entry is analogous to trespass, and trespass in Mississippi does not require dispossession, then the general phrase (“or other invasion ...”) should not be interpreted to require dispossession. A nuisance claim fits nicely within the meaning of the general phrase, and accordingly, a claim of nuisance is covered by the personal injury endorsement.
Additionally, since wrongful entiy is not a specific enumeration, the rule of ejusdem generis is not applicable, or, if applied, would not result in the phrase “or other invasion of the right of private occupancy” as requiring dispossessing. This general phrase clearly states that it covers offenses which are invasions of the right of private occupancy. The right of private occupancy is the possessory interest which is incidental to the ownership of the realty — the same right which the underlying state court plaintiffs have alleged to have suffered trespass and nuisance. The personal injury endorsement provides coverage for the claims of trespass and nuisance alleged in the underlying state court lawsuits.
Creation of Emotional Disturbance
The personal injury endorsement provides coverage for “offenses committed during the policy period.” The amendment to the personal injury endorsement expanded coverage to include “fright, mental anguish, *419 ... [and] creation of emotional distress.” Aetna characterizes the emotional distress claims as fear of cancer claims. Aetna argues that such fear could not have occurred until it had become public knowledge that dioxin had been discharged into the Leaf River. The earliest that it could have become known that dioxin was being discharged was in 1989, three years after the Aetna policies expired. Aetna argues that it is impossible to be emotionally disturbed without knowledge of the discharge. Aetna asserts that emotional distress claims are viable once they have manifested which could not have been when the dioxin was released. Since the release of the dioxin did not become public knowledge until three years after the last Aetna policy had expired, the emotional distress claims could not be covered. GNN asserts that the offense is “creation of emotional disturbance.” GNN argues that the emotional disturbance claim was created when the dioxin was released which was while the Aetna policies were in effect.
In Mississippi, emotional distress requires proof that the defendant’s conduct evokes outrage or revulsion. “In such instances, it is the nature of the act itself — as opposed to the seriousness of the consequences—which gives impetus to legal redress.”
Ferguson,
It is undisputed that GNN discharged dioxin into the Leaf River when the Aetna policies were in effect. It is undisputed that the Aetna policies had expired when it was announced that GNN had been discharging the dioxin. The question regarding the underlying emotional distress claims is whether the offenses of “fright, mental anguish ... [and] creation of emotional disturbance” were committed when the dioxin was discharged or when it was announced that dioxin had been discharged. If the offense was committed when the dioxin was discharged, Aetna has an obligation to defend and indemnify. If the offense was committed when it was announced that dioxin had been discharged, beyond the policy period, Aetna would have no obligations.
Both of the parties’ arguments are credible. The court has been unable to find any authority to assist in determining the intentions of the drafters regarding this issue. In regard to when the coverage for the listed offenses attaches, the phrase is ambiguous and must be construed in GNN’s favor. Additionally, to restrict coverage of “fright, mental anguish ... [and] creation of emotional disturbance” to thé policy in effect at the time that it became known that a potential health hazard had been occurring would encourage delaying the announcement. Such a construction of the provision would be contrary to public policy. Thus, the Aetna policies provide coverage for the allegations of emotional distress made in the underlying state court lawsuits.
Alternatively, there have been testimony and affidavits submitted which indicate that some of the state court plaintiffs noticed that the river became discolored and had a foul smell in 1985, when the Aetna policies were in effect. Some of the state court plaintiffs allege that the foul odor and discoloration caused them to suffer emotional distress. This would raise a genuine issue of fact whether these observations created emotional disturbance. Accordingly, the court finds that the allegations of emotional distress in the state court lawsuits are offenses which are covered by the personal injury endorsement in the Aetna policies, and obligates Aetna to defend and indemnify GNN for those claims.
Violation of Penal Statute
Aetna alleges that the policies do not provide coverage because GNN violated a penal statute by discharging dioxin into the Leaf River without a permit. At the time of coverage under the Aetna policies, dioxin was not a regulated discharge. Failure to have had a permit for dioxin discharge is understandable. The court would be overstepping its authority in this declaratory judgment *420 action if it found GNN’s action was a violation of a penal statute.
Reinsurance Policies
The reinsurer or excessive carriers have filed motions seeking to be dismissed from this aetion. In essence, these insurers argue that since the principle insurers have not been exhausted of the policy limits, there is no justiciable cause of action against them. In light of this court’s ruling regarding Aetna, at this stage the court is not prepared to address these motions. Considering the inordinate long delay in rendering this opinion, it is appropriate that the parties file with the court an agreed case status report so the court may consider those matters which the parties agree are still pending.
An order in accordance with this memorandum opinion shall be issued concurrently.
DECLARATORY JUDGMENT AND ORDER
In accordance with a memorandum opinion issued concurrently, IT IS DECLARED, ADJUDGED, AND ORDERED:
That the plaintiffs’ motion for partial summary judgment as to Aetna Casualty and Surety Company is granted; the court declares that Aetna has an obligation to defend and indemnify the plaintiffs for the allegations of trespass, nuisance, and emotional distress which fall within the personal injury endorsement of the Aetna insurance policies;
That Aetna’s motion for summary judgment is denied;
That the parties are directed to file within thirty (30) days of the date of this order an agreed case status report.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. Aetna argues that the allegation of the complaint rule does not apply in this case since
Simmons
and
Ferguson
have judicially established the facts of this case. This declaratory judgment action includes a great many more cases than
Simmons
and
Ferguson.
Not only is GNN attempting to recover the cost it incurred in defending since Aetna’s withdrawal of representation, but also, GNN is seeking an adjudication of Aetna's obligation of indemnification and resumption of defense. The jury in
Ferguson
did not return a verdict regarding the trespass claim, and the verdicts finding nuisance and emotional distress were overturned for lack of evidence. Ultimate success does not preclude the obligation to have defended the insured. Considering the
court's
holding, Aetna’s decision to withdraw defense was wrong. But since the court has found only select allegations to fall within the coverage of the insurance policy, Aetna may not have an obligation to provide the entire defense costs. Aetna has requested that the court prorate the costs of defense for the covered and noncovered claims.
See EEOC v. Southern Pub. Co., Inc.,
. Those courts which have found “other invasion of the right of private occupancy” to not expand the policy coverage to situations of pollution spills or migrations have so concluded for various reasons. First, there are the cases which concluded that the pollution exclusion is applicable to the expanded coverage of the personal injury endorsement. Generally, the logic of these courts is to give full effect to the intent of the parties by barring any claims associated with pollution injuries.
See Harrow Products, Inc. v. Liberty Mut. Ins. Co.,
.
See Titan Holdings Syndicate, Inc. v. City of Keene,
. The Union Gas court cites the following lengthy passage from American Jurisprudence:
The rule is well established that if conditions, exceptions and exemptions from, or limitations of, the liability of an insurer are not expressed plainly and without ambiguity, they will be construed strictly against the insurer, and liberally in favor of the insured, in order that the purpose of insurance shall not be defeated. It has been deemed that an insurer should not be allowed, by the use of obscure phrases and exceptions, to defeat the very purpose for which the policy was procured. The reason for this rule is that the insurance company selected the phrase to be construed and should *411 have specifically excluded the risk if there was any doubt.
id.
. The Legarra court justifies its position with extrinsic evidence.
Our conclusion that an insured could not have reasonably expected such coverage is supported by the fact the policy offered coverage for pollution clean-up as an optional coverage.
Id..,
. Some pollution exclusions, including the one in the instant case, do provide coverage for discharges of pollution which are sudden or accidental in nature. Such has not been alleged nor argued sub judice.
. Most of the cases which have concluded that the “wrongful entry or eviction or other invasion of the right of private occupancy” provision to be limited by the rule of ejusdem generis consider "wrongful entry” to be án enumeration of a specific tort. See generally William J. Bowman & Patrick F. Hofer, The Fallacy of Personal Injury Liability Insurance Coverage for Environmental Claims, 12 Va.Envtl.LJ. 393 (Spring 1993). The specific tort is argued to be the "writ of entry." Writ of entry is defined as: "A real action to recover the possession of land where the tenant (or owner) has been disseised or otherwise wrongfully dispossessed.” Black's Law Dictionary (5th ed. 1983).
. In
Continental Casualty Co. v. Garrett,
... the home is a place where the occupant and his family shall be entitled, not as a matter of sentiment, or of morals, or of good manners, but of positive law, to the right of quiet and peaceable enjoyment, free from hostile intrusions, whatever the character of the offensive intrusions may be, which includes, as its mere statement will prove, the right to be free from insults within the precincts of the home; and that a violation of that right shall be deemed an actionable tort.
Id.,
. In
Titan Corp. v. Aetna Casualty & Surety Co.,
In
Waranch v. Gulf Insurance Co.,
(1990)
Id. (emphasis added). In the Titan and Waranch cases, the personal injury phrase was identical to the one before this court, but those courts concluded that "wrongful entry” and "eviction” were specific torts. Each court applied ejusdem generis and found the general phrase required dispossessing.
Aetna states on page nineteen of its memorandum in opposition to plaintiff's motion for partial summary judgment: "The offenses of ‘wrongful entry, wrongful eviction or other invasion of the right of private occupancy’ were not committed by GNN in damaging the underlying plaintiffs' property.” (Emphasis added.)
