Defendant Safety King, Inc. (Safety King), and defendants Deborah and Michael Mastrogiovanni, individually, and Deborah Mastrogiovanni, as next friend of Michael Mastrogiovanni, a minor (the Mastrogiovanni defendants), appeal as of right an order granting summary disposition in favor of plaintiff Hastings Mutual Insurance Company (Hastings) in this insurance dispute. We reverse.
Safety King was insured under a commercial general liability policy issued by Hastings when the Mastrogiovanni defendants sued Safety King for damages allegedly resulting from Safety King’s use of a sanitizing agent during air duct cleaning services performed in their home. Hastings initially defended Safety King under a reservation of rights, but then filed this action for a declaratory judgment. Hastings alleged that, because of the policy’s pollution exclusion provision, it owed no duty to defend and indemnify Safety King with respect to the Mastrogiovanni defendants’ claims. In response to the declaratory judgment action, Safety King brought a counterclaim against Hastings requesting declaratory relief and asserting claims of breach of contract, fraudulent inducement, negligent misrepresentation, and innocent misrepresentation.
Hastings filed motions for summary disposition under MCR 2.116(C)(10) with regard to both actions. Hastings argued that the Mastrogiovanni defendants’ claims arose from Safety King’s application of a sanitizing agent to their ductwork. The active ingredient of the sanitizing agent used is triclosan, a pesticide. Hastings argued that because pesticides qualify as “pollutants” under pollution exclusion provisions, coverage under the policy was precluded and Hastings was en titled to summary disposition of its declaratory judgment action. Further, Hastings argued, because neither fraud nor misrepresentations were involved in the issuance of the insurance policy, it was also entitled to summary dismissal of Safety King’s counterclaim.
Safety King and the Mastrogiovanni defendants opposed Hastings’ motion for summary disposition of the declaratory judgment action, arguing that a “pollutant” was not involved in the underlying lawsuit but, if a pollutant were involved, it was not used in the manner proscribed by the policy and, further, an exception to the pollution exclusion clause applied under the facts of this case. Safety King also opposed Hastings’ motion for summary dismissal of its counterclaim, arguing that it
Following oral arguments, the trial court agreed with Hastings and granted the motions. In a clarifying order, the trial court quoted the policy’s definition of “pollutant” and held:
There can be no dispute that the damages alleged in the underlying action are alleged to have been caused by a pollutant as defined by the terms of the policy. Thus, coverage is excluded by the terms of the policy, and Plaintiffs motion for summary disposition is properly granted.
Both Safety King and the Mastrogiovanni defendants appealed and the appeals were consolidated pursuant to an unpublished order of the Court of Appeals, entered July 30, 2008 (Docket Nos. 286392, 286601).
On appeal, Safety King and the Mastrogiovanni defendants argue that a “pollutant” did not cause the damages claimed by the Mastrogiovanni defendants in the underlying lawsuit; thus, Hastings had a duty to defend and indemnify Safety King in that matter and the trial court’s holding to the contrary was erroneous. We agree.
This Court reviews de novo a trial court’s decision on a motion for summary disposition.
Spiek v Dep’t of Transportation,
“Interpretation of an insurance policy ultimately requires a two-step inquiry: first, a determination of coverage according to the general insurance agreement and, second, a decision regarding whether an exclusion applies to negate coverage.”
Auto-Owners Ins Co v Harrington,
The same contract construction principles apply to insurance policies as to any other type of contract because it is an agreement between the parties.
Rory,
supra
at 461;
Auto-Owners Ins Co v Churchman,
The record evidence shows that Safety King was in the business of providing air duct cleaning services and provided such services to the Mastrogiovanni defendants. During the course of performing those services, Safety King applied a sanitizing agent, Aeris-Guard Advanced Duct and Surface Treatment, to the Mastrogiovanni defendants’ ductwork. The active ingredient in Aeris-Guard Advanced Duct and Surface Treatment is triclosan, which is an antimicrobial pesticide. In support of its motions for summary disposition, Hastings argued, as it does here, that our Supreme Court, in
Protective Nat’l Ins Co of Omaha v Woodhaven,
Safety King and the Mastrogiovanni defendants argue, however, that triclosan is not a substance to which the pollution exclusion clause applies because it is not a “pollutant.” They argue that triclosan is a ubiquitous antimicrobial agent found in a variety of cosmetic and personal hygiene products. Triclosan targets bacteria and dental plaque and is used in various products including, for example, soaps, skin cleaning agents, deodorants, shaving gel, toothpaste, mouthwash, dental cement, surgical sutures, cosmetics, and air duct treatments. They argue that, because triclosan is commonly used in products that are applied directly to human skin and, in many cases, within the mouth, Safety King’s use of a triclosan-containing product did not implicate the pollution exclusion. It simply is not a “pollutant.”
The trial court without analysis, and after merely quoting the definition of “pollution” contained in the policy, agreed with Hastings, holding: “There can be no dispute that the damages alleged in the underlying action are alleged to have been caused by a pollutant as defined by the terms of the policy.” We cannot agree that the issue is that basic or the answer that obvious. The definition of “pollutant” does not include “pesticide.” Instead, the defining characteristic of a “pollutant” under this policy is that it is an “irritant” or “contaminant.” Illustrative examples of potential types of irritants and contaminants are set forth as including “smoke, vapor, soot, fumes, acids, alkalis, chemicals and waste” without further qualification or limitation. 1
The terms “irritant” and “contaminant,” however, are not defined by the policy. We turn to their dictionary definitions to ascertain the plain and ordinary meaning of these terms as they would appear to a reader of the contract. See
Rory, supra
at 464;
Coates v Bastian Bros, Inc,
But contractual terms must be construed in context and in accordance with their commonly used meanings.
Henderson v State Farm Fire & Cas Co,
In this case, Hastings has failed to establish that Safety King’s use of a “pollutant” gave rise to the damage claims asserted by the Mastrogiovanni defendants. Specifically, Hastings did not prove that triclosan is an irritant or contaminant. Rather, the evidence set forth by Safety King showed that triclosan was supposed to be where it was located, i.e., in ductwork, and that it is not generally expected to cause injurious or harmful effects to people. Accordingly, Hastings’ motion for summary disposition of its declaratory judgment action should have been denied.
Hastings’ reliance on the holding of Protective Nat’l to support its apparent claim that all pesticides are “pollutants” is misplaced. In that declaratory judgment action, the defendant city of Woodhaven had sprayed a chemical pesticide as part of its service to control insects and pests and a third party brought an action for damages allegedly sustained as a result of being exposed to the pesticide. Protective Nat’l, supra at 156. The defendant’s insurer claimed that the insurance policy’s pollution exclusion clause was applicable, relieving it of its duty to defend or indemnify the city. Id. at 157. But whether the pesticide used was, in fact, a “pollutant” to which the pollution exclusion clause applied was not at issue or contested. The evidence of record in that case, as noted by the majority opinion, clearly proved that the specific pesticide at issue was an “irritant, contaminant or pollutant.” Id. at 163-166. However, in our case, the record evidence did not prove that the specific pesticide at issue, triclosan, is an irritant or contaminant. And we reject Hastings’ contention that all pesticides are necessarily “pollutants” under their policy terms. Many homemade pesticides, for example, which use dishwashing detergent or pureed garlic as their active ingredient would not typically be considered “pollutants.”
We recognize that many jurisdictions have considered the definition of
We conclude that the contract terms at issue here are not ambiguous. There is only one reasonable interpretation of each term when they are considered in accordance with their commonly used meanings and in the particular context of being in a pollution exclusion clause in an insurance policy. See Henderson, supra at 354. A “pollutant” is “any solid, liquid, gaseous or thermal” substance that, because of its nature and under the particular circumstances, is generally expected to cause injurious or harmful effects to people, property, or the environment, i.e., an irritant, “including smoke, vapor, soot, fumes, acids, alkalis, chemicals and waste.” A “pollutant” is also “any solid, liquid, gaseous or thermal” substance that, because of its nature and under the particular circumstances, is not generally supposed to be where it is located and causes injurious or harmful effects to people, property, or the environment, i.e., a contaminant, “including smoke, vapor, soot, fumes, acids, alkalis, chemicals and waste.” In this case, Hastings did not establish that triclosan is a pollutant.
Our interpretation of this pollution exclusion clause is also cognizant of, and consistent with, the longstanding principle that
[i]n construing [contractual provisions] due regard must be had to the purpose sought to be accomplished by the partiesas indicated by the language used, read in the light of the attendant facts and circumstances. Such intent when ascertained must, if possible, be given effect and must prevail as against the literal meaning of expressions used in the agreement. [W O Barnes Co, Inc v Folsinski, 337 Mich 370 , 376-377;60 NW2d 302 (1953).]
The purpose of insurance is to insure.
Shumake v Travelers Ins Co,
Accordingly, Hastings’ motion for summary disposition with regard to its declaratory judgment action should have been denied and the trial court’s decision to the contrary is reversed. There is, at least, a genuine
issue of material fact regarding whether triclosan is a pollutant under the terms of the policy. Therefore, Hastings, at minimum, had a duty to defend Safety King against the Mastrogiovanni defendants’ claims because they arguably came within the policy coverage. See
Radenbaugh v Farm Bureau Gen Ins Co of Michigan,
Next, Safety King argues that the trial court erroneously granted Hastings’ motion for summary dismissal of Safety King’s counterclaim. We agree. The trial court did not set forth any justification for its decision to dismiss the counterclaim and we are unable to discern whether the trial court actually even considered the matter. Therefore, the decision to dismiss Safety King’s counterclaim is reversed and the matter is remanded to the trial court for further proceedings.
Reversed and remanded for further proceedings. We do not retain jurisdiction.
Notes
All “smoke, vapor, soot, fumes, acids, alkalis, chemicals and waste” are not necessarily irritants and contaminants; accordingly, they are characterized here as “potential types of irritants and contaminants.” For example, vinegar is comprised of acetic acid and table salt is sodium chloride but they are not necessarily “pollutants.” Similarly, water and oxygen are not necessarily “pollutants.”
See, e.g.,
Nautilus Ins Co v Jabar,
