MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
Before the Court are the parties’ cross motions for summary judgment on the issue of the insurers’ duty to defend. Plaintiff’s motion is GRANTED and defendants’ motions are DENIED.
This is a declaratory judgment action to determine the parties’ rights and obligations pursuant to various comprehensive general liability insurance contracts. Plaintiff Higgins Industries is a manufacturer of copper and brass tubing. It has used tri-and tetrachloroethene (“TCE”) de-greaser solvents in its manufacturing operations for about 30 years, having received a permit from the Michigan Department of Natural Resources (“MDNR”) to discharge wastewater into the environment on the condition that the wastewater did not contain contaminants in excess of certain levels.
On December 20, 1985, the MDNR notified Higgins that agency inspection revealed that water in monitor wells on Higgins’ property contained unacceptable levels of TCE. The MDNR ordered investigation and testing and Higgins employed Keck Consulting Services for that purpose. On April 18, 1986, Higgins notified its insurance carriers INA and Aetna of these events, pursuant to policy requirements.
On May 2, 1986, MDNR issued a Notice of Noncompliance. The Notice stated that Higgins had failed to meet the terms of the permit, ordered Higgins to cease the unper-mitted discharge, and further warned that Higgins’ failure to comply “will result in further enforcement action.” On May 9, 1986, plaintiff notified its carriers of the MDNR demand letter.
The insurers have declined to assist Higgins in paying the costs of responding to the MDNR notice, contending here that their duty to defend the company attaches only at the commencement of a formal, traditional lawsuit. Higgins disagrees, maintaining that the MDNR’s actions were the functional equivalent of a lawsuit, in light of the agency’s power to require Hig *776 gins to expend substantial sums to discover and eliminate the damage, or in the alternative, to inflict enforcement litigation on the company if it did not comply.
This disagreement turns on the parties' intent in framing and agreeing to the insurance contracts. Are the insurance companies correct in asserting that their intention was to charge Higgins premiums only to cover the more easily anticipated and circumscribed costs of traditional litigation, or is Higgins correct in asserting that the insurers must help shoulder the formidable costs of environmental clean-up until a factual foundation establishes whether the policies apply?
The question has engendered sharp disagreement in the courts across the nation, between panels of the Michigan Court of Appeals as discussed below, and at the trial level in this judicial circuit as well. For the reasons stated, this Court finds for the plaintiff insured, holding that insurance companies must defend governmental claims and demands in the environmental context, irrespective of whether those claims are couched in demand letters, administrative procedures, or in formal suits, until it is factually established that the policies do not apply. Cases in accord
1
are:
Jonesville Products, Inc. v. Transamerica Insurance Group,
Avondale Industries, Inc. v. Travelers Indemnity Co.,
The Michigan Supreme Court has not decided the issues posed in this case, so it falls to this Court to ascertain what it would do if so called.
Grantham and Mann, Inc. v. American Safety Products, Inc.,
As noted, the Michigan Court of Appeals has split. As shall be explained, this Court prefers the result in
United States Aviex Co., v. Travelers Ins.,
The two following cases to the contrary are not persuasive. This Court disagrees with their result for the reasons stated further
infra;
moreover, these are both
per curiam
opinions that do not do justice to the substantial nature of this controversy.
City of Evart,
No. 103621 (Mich.App. April 10, 1989), limited the events triggering insurance coverage to traditional litigation only, for the sole stated reason that the word “suit” is plain and unambiguous.
Jones v. Farm Bureau,
This Court has decided in favor of the Aviex and Jonesville Products result for the following additional reasons. From the plain language of the policies, 4 and in the practice of the insurance business generally, the duty to investigate the facts of a situation in which liability might result is inherent in an insurance company’s contractually conferred power to decide how to handle the claim before a suit is filed: whether a defense exists and a contest would be worthwhile, or whether a straightforward settlement would be the appropriate course. Thus, insurance companies have already undertaken this duty in circumstances other than environmental.
They have undertaken the duty in the environmental context as well, despite their reluctance to admit it, by means of “pollution exclusion” clauses.
5
The clauses operate to preclude coverage if releases of an environmental contaminant occurred on a regular basis in the ordinary course of business. Pollution releases
are
covered, however, if they occurred as the result of a sudden, instantaneous, precipitous, and accidental discharge, of which the polluter had no previous warning.
U.S. Fidelity and Guaranty Co. v. Star Fire Coals, Inc.,
Thus, even with a lawsuit having been filed and discovery pursued, there are still outstanding issues of material fact rendering a decision on liability inappropriate. As here, Judge Peikens held in
Ex-Cell-O (I),
Indeed, the defendants have painted themselves into a corner. To defeat the duty to defend, the insurers argue that they should not be required to act on Higgins’ behalf until a formal suit were to be lodged against it. To justify that position, the insurers urge that the policies at issue do not apply to the facts of this case. To establish these facts, the defendants use evidence that they have obtained by discovery, after plaintiff has instigated this suit against them. The defendants thereby demonstrate that the very investigation they oppose is required.
The Court is further in accord with Judge Feikens, who noted in
Ex-Cell-O (I),
It is merely fortuitous ... that the state has chosen to have plaintiff remedy the contamination problem, rather than choosing to incur the costs of clean-up itself and then suing plaintiff to recover those costs.
Moreover, as a federal district court has noted in
Avondale,
the government has discretion in choosing responsive action in combatting pollution .... By choosing a more expensive option, the government can adversely affect the insured’s rights.... Thus, the need to be represented is acute at the time the demand letter is received
... [and] is greatest before [a] remedial plan is formulated, when the government is accepting input from the responsible parties.
Further, as Avondale also noted, at 1319 a hypertechnical analysis of what constitutes a “suit” or “damages” is helpful only to lawyers.
The average businessman does not differentiate between “damages” and “restitution”; in either case, money comes from his pocket and goes to third parties. See United States Fidelity and Guaranty Co. v. Thomas Solvent Co.,683 F.Supp. at 1168 (“the insured ought to be able to rely on the common sense expectation that property damage within the meaning of the policy includes a claim which results in causing him to pay sums of money_”). The average businessman would consider himself covered for cleanup expenditures applicable to others’ properties.
*779
Finally, as Judge Enslen also noted in
Thomas Solvent,
For the reasons stated above, plaintiffs motion for partial summary judgment on the duty to defend issue is GRANTED and defendants’ on the same issue is DENIED. 8 The parties are FURTHER ORDERED to submit, by means of a formal filing within 15 days of this writing, any name changes of the parties and motions that have been withdrawn in connection therewith.
SO ORDERED.
ON MOTION TO ENFORCE JUDGMENT
The following was established at the December 5, 1989 hearing on plaintiffs Motion to Enforce Judgment:
(1) The parties shall submit to the court an agreed-upon question for certification to the Michigan Supreme Court. The question regarding the insurers’ duty to defend shall be filed on or before December 15, 1989, and shall be submitted along with appropriate background information for the state Supreme Court.
(2) The parties shall submit to the court, by January 6, 1989 both disputed and undisputed defense costs to be paid plaintiff by defendants in accordance with this Court’s judgment of August 8, 1989.
(3) Defendant’s pending Motion for Reconsideration and plaintiff’s response to it are hereby held in abeyance until the Michigan Supreme Court either accepts or rejects the proposed question for certification.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. Courts have either analyzed this issue as to the meaning of the words "suit” or "damages"; i.e., whether the duty to defend extends beyond the bounds of the traditional "suit,” or whether insurance contracts require insurers to pay for investigative and remedial costs that are not "damages” in the traditional sense of money awards or settlements. Though there has been some debate as to the applicability of cases that decide one of the issues to cases deciding the other,
see, e.g., Jones v. Farm Bureau Mutual Insurance Co.,
. Some cases taking the opposite view, holding that only a traditional suit triggers the duty to defend, are:
City of Evart v. Home Insurance Co.,
No. 103621 (Mich.App. April 10, 1989);
Jones v. Farm Bureau Mutual Insurance Co.,
. Aviex analyzed the issue in terms of what constitutes covered "damages,” but, as this Court has noted, the distinction between “damages” and “suits” in this context is one without a difference.
. An example of the clauses at issue is taken from the American/Fireman’s Fund policy, plaintiffs Exhibit M, which reads in relevant part as follows:
[T]he Company shall ... [d]efend any suit against the insured alleging ... injury to or destruction of property and seeking damages on account thereof.... [T]he Company may make such investigation, negotiation and settlement of any claim or suit as it seems expedient ....
. As an example, one policy reads:
It is agreed that the insurance does not apply to bodily injury or property damage arising out of the discharge [of various pollutants] ... but this exclusion does not apply if such discharge ... is sudden and accidental.
American/Fireman's Fund Policy, Plaintiffs Exhibit P.
.The Sixth Circuit purportedly decided
Star Fire Coals
under Kentucky law, but cited authority from several other jurisdictions in support of its ruling that “sudden” means precipitous and instantaneous. Accordingly,
Star Fire Coals
is binding unless this Court determines that the Michigan Supreme Court would rule differently. This Court holds that it would not, for the reasons stated by Judge Feikens in
Fireman's Fund Insurance Cos. v. Ex-Cell-O Corp., 702
F.Supp. 1317, 1324-25 (ED.Mich.1988), (Ex-Cell-O II). Thus, other law from other jurisdictions is of no consequence.
See, e.g., U.S. Fidelity & Guaranty Co. v. Specialty Coatings Co.,
. Moreover, as one federal trial judge has noted in an unpublished decision, the split of authority among the courts should have put insurers on notice that they might be obligated to defend environmental claims short of indemnification.
American Motorists Insurance Co. v. Levelor Lorentzen, Inc.,
(D.N.J. October 14, 1988) (Westlaw No.
. It is obvious that the law should be settled by the Michigan Supreme Court. Interestingly, no one has suggested certification of the issue to that Court, and so we can look to more and more litigation with varying opinions, any one of which can ultimately be upheld.
