MEMORANDUM OPINION
This mаtter comes before the court on a motion by certain tort claimants to intervene as of right under Rule 24(a)(2) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure in this declaratory judgment action. Plaintiffs in the underlying litigation seek a determination of their rights and the defendant insurance companies’ obligations with respect to the defense and indemnification of civil actions brought against plaintiffs arising out of instances of alleged dioxin cоntamination in Missouri. The tort claimants moving to intervene claim that disposition of this matter may result in a practical impairment of their ability to collect on any judgment they ultimately obtain against plaintiff Independent Petrochemical Corp., and
Background
The underlying litigation in this matter involves a declaratory judgment action by Independent Petrochemical Corp. (“IPC”) and its two parent corporations, The Charter Company (“TCC”) and Charter Oil Company (“COC”),
On April 20, 1984, plaintiffs filed voluntary petitions for business reorganizations under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code in the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Middle District of Florida, where TCC is headquartered. As a result, all of the tort litigation pending against plaintiffs was automatically stayed. On June 22, 1984, the Bankruptcy Court lifted the automatic stay solely with respect to IPC and the tort claimants seeking to intervene here. According to that order, the tort claimants were “granted relief from the automatic stay in order to proceed to judgment or otherwise liquidate their clаims” against IPC, and were allowed to “collect any judgments, settlements, or other liquidated claims” against IPC to the extent that those claims can be satisfied from the insurance coverage available to IPC. In re The Charter Oil Co., et al., Nos. 84-289-BK-GP, 84-314-BK-GP, 84-326-BK-J-GP (Bankr.M.D.Fla., June 22, 1984). The motion by these tort claimants to intervene in this action was filed shortly after the entry of that order.
The motion to intervene has been opposed by twenty of the twenty-two remaining defendants,
Discussion
A. Rule 24(a)(2)
Under Rule 24(a)(2) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, an applicant for nonstatutory intervention must make a timely motion, and must demonstrate: (1) an interest in the subject matter of the action, (2) which the applicant may be impeded in protecting because of the action, (3) that is not adequately represented by an existing party. See Nuesse v. Camp,
B. Tort claimants’ “interest”
The parties opposing intervention first claim that the tort claimants have no “interest” in the subject matter of this action sufficient to satisfy the requirements of rule 24(a)(2). Opponents characterize the interest which a putative intervenor must have as “a direct, substantial, legally рro-tectable interest in the proceedings,” Plaintiffs’ Statement of Points and Authorities in Opposition to Tort Claimants’ Motion to Intervene at 7, 10 [hereinafter cited as Plaintiffs’ Opposition], “a present, substantial interest [in the subject matter of the action] as distinguished from a contingent interest or mere expectancy,” Defendant Hartford Accident & Indemnity Company’s Opposition to Tort Claimants’ Motion to Intervene at 9 [hereinafter сited as Hartford Opposition], or a “direct, non-contingent, substantial and legally protectable interest,” Opposition of Defendant Aetna Casualty and Surety Company to Motion to Intervene at 8 [hereinafter cited as Aetna Opposition]. The parties opposing intervention refer to these “general standards” as “well-recognized.” It is clear, however, that courts have long recognized the ambiguity inherent in the use of the term “interest” in rule 24(a)(2),
Since 1967, the approach taken by this jurisdiction in determining whether a potential intervenor as of right satisfies the “interest” requirement under rule 24(a)(2) has been to look to the “practical consequences” of denying intervention, rather than to “revert to a narrow formulаtion that ‘interest’ means ‘a specific legal or equitable interest in the chose.’ ” Nuesse v. Camp,
This liberal formulation оf the “interest” test has repeatedly been reaffirmed in this jurisdiction
The court’s inquiry, thеn, is to determine whether circumstances are such that “[t]he goal of ‘disposing of lawsuits by involving as many apparently concerned persons as is compatible with efficiency and due process’ may ... be met” by allowing intervention. Smuck,
In determining whether the tort claimants possess an interest sufficient to meet this threshold requirement, neither the parties nor the putative intervenors have been able to cite to any case in this jurisdiction in which a movant whose tort claim is wholly contingent on his ability to obtain a judgment in a separate suit has been allowed to intervene as of right in a case such as this one. The parties opposing intervention have, however, cited three district court decisions that refused to recognize a potential claimant’s right to intervene in an action by an insured against its insurer to determine the existence or extent of coverage. See Jet Traders Investment Corp. v. Tekair, Ltd.,
C. Intervenors’ ability to protect their interests
Even were the court to decide that the tort claimants have an interest relating to the subject of this action, the court would be unable to conclude that denying intervention would impede them in protecting that interеst. The tort claimants argue that if they are not allowed to intervene, the parties may reach a settlement which provides less than the fullest possible coverage for IPC, resulting in a substantial and immediate impairment of the applicants’ interests. See Motion to Intervene at 5. Plaintiffs and defendants, on the other hand, argue that any settlement agreement in this litigation would have to be approved by the Bankruptcy Court after a hearing at which the tort claimants and others would have an opportunity to inquire into and challenge any settlement reached by the parties. See Plaintiffs’ Opposition at 11; Hartford Opposition at 8-11, 16; Aetna Opposition at 8-9, 12.
The availability of another forum in which applicants could protect their interests is not necessarily sufficient to prevent the tort claimants from satisfying this requirement of rule 24(a)(2). In Natural Resources Defense Council v. Costle,
Further, a decision allowing the tort сlaimants to intervene here would unavoidably interfere with the efficient disposition of this litigation. In addition to the tort claimants presently seeking intervention, thousands of other individuals have brought claims against IPC, any or all of whom may seek to intervene if the motion of this group of claimants is granted. In addition, both the federal Environmental Protection Agency and the state of Missouri have filed claims against IPC, each of which would likely represent an interest distinct from that represented by the tort claimants. In sum, granting this motion for intervention would likely result in a flood of intervention motions by other “apparently concerned persons” whose participation would clearly be incompatible with the efficient disposition of this lawsuit. See Nuesse,
D. Adequacy of representation by existing parties
Even if an applicant for intervention as of right demonstrates an interest in the subject of the action which he may be impeded in protecting if not allowed to intervene, intervention as of right will still be denied if the applicant’s interest is adequately protected by existing parties. Fed.R.Civ.P. 24(a)(2). The parties opposing intervention argue that both the tort claimants and plaintiffs seek precisely the same result in the underlying litigation—maximum insurance coverage for plaintiffs. Therefore, they argue, the tort claimants have failed to make the “compelling showing” of inadequate representation which they argue is required by the Federal Rules. See Hartford Opposition at 14 n. 9; see also Aetna Opposition at 11-13; Plaintiffs’ Opposition at 12-13. Although plaintiffs and defendants have overstated the probable identity of interests between the tort claimants and all of the plaintiffs, the court is unable to find that the interests of the proposed intervenors will not be adequately represented by Independent Petrochemical Corp.
It must be pointed out that, contrary to the assertion of the parties opposing intervention, a party seeking to intervene as of right need only show that the representation of his interest “may be inadequate,” and that this burden is “miminal.” Trbovich,
E. Conclusion
In sum, the court holds that the proposed intervenors have failed to demonstrate an “interest” in the subject matter of this litigation sufficient to justify intervention under rule 24(a)(2). Allowing thesе claimants to intervene as of right would, as a practical matter, be incompatible with the efficient disposition of this lawsuit. Even assuming that this jurisdiction’s liberal approach to intervention would mandate a finding that the tort claimants had demonstrated such an interest, the court would be unable to conclude that denying intervention will, as a practical matter, impede the tort claimants’ ability to protect their interests in the insuranсe coverage available to IPC, or that the applicants’ interests will not be adequately protected by IPC, an existing party to this litigation. Intervention as of right shall therefore be denied.
Notes
. COC is a stock holding company which owns all of IPC's stock. TCC is a publicly-owned stock holding company which, in turn, owns all of the stock of COC.
. Insurance companies named in the original suit as defendants are: Aetna Casualty & Surety Co., Hartford Accident & Indemnity Co., First State Insurance Co., Insurance Co. of North America, American Employers’ Insurance Co., Commercial Union Insurance Co., The Travelers Indemnity Co., American Home Assurance Co., The Insurance Company of the State of Pennsylvania, Lexington Insurance Co., Harbor Insurance Co., American Re-Insurance Co., Unigard Mutual Insurance Co., Continental Casualty Co., Mission Insurance Co., North Star Reinsurance Corp., United States Fire Insurance Co., Certain Underwriters at Lloyd’s and Companies in the London Market, Pacific Indemnity Co., Midland Insurance Co., The Continental Insurance Co., Corporate Insurance & Reinsurance Co. Ltd., and Stonewall Insurance Co. Defendant Corporate Insurance and Reinsurance Co. Ltd. was subsequently dismissed as a party to this suit.
. Since December 1982, forty-one civil actions have been filed against one or more of the plaintiffs, arising from the alleged involvement of IPC in the disposal of dioxin-contaminated waste at various sites in Missouri, including a number of locations near Times Beach and Imperial, Missouri. These lawsuits have been filed by several hundred individual tort claimants, as well as by the state of Missouri and the United States Environmental Protection Agency, the latter seeking reimbursement of remedial costs incurred in cleaning up various sites that were contaminated by dioxin.
. Defendants First State Insurance Co. and United Stаtes Fire Insurance Co. have not opposed the tort claimants' motion to intervene.
. Sixteen of the defendant insurance companies jointly filed a supplemental memorandum in opposition to the motion to intervene in response to this court’s Order of December 5, 1984, which was adopted by the so-called “London defendants” and Midland Insurance Co.
. See Meridian Homes Corp. v. Nicholas W. Pras-sas & Co.,
. See, e.g., Foster v. Gueory,
. Id.; see also C. Wright & A. Miller, Federal Practice and Procedure § 1908. This approach is consistent with the Supreme Court's decision in Cascade Natural Gas Corp. v. El Paso Natural Gas Co.,
. The parties opposing interventiоn also argue that because Missouri law does not permit a declaratory judgment action by a tort claimant against an insurer prior to final judgment, the tort claimants have no right to join plaintiffs’ insurers in this action in advance of judgment. See Aetna Opposition at 9-10. Indeed, counsel for Hartford contended at oral argument that “[tjhere has never been an intervention of right granted ... in a situation where the plaintiff could not have ... maintained an action in its own right.” Transcript at 38. Yet the notion that a party seeking to intervene pursuant to rule 24(a)(2) must possess the standing necessary to initiate the lawsuit is clearly no longer tenable after the Supreme Court’s decision in Trbovich v. United Mine Workers of America. See Trbovich,
The Trbovich Court held that intervention by union members in a suit by the Secretary of Labor presented no interference with the objectives of a statute making suit by the Secretary the "exclusive” remedy for violation of that stаtute. Trbovich,
Further, opponents’ position misconstrues the nature of the court’s inquiry in a motion for intervention as of right. As the court in Smuck made clear, the issue here is not whether the parties seking to intervene could initiate their own lawsuit, but rather “whether already initiated litigation should be extended to include additional parties.”
. Plaintiffs also argue that the expertise of the law firm representing the Charter entities in the underlying action is somehow indicative of the tenacity with whiсh the interests of the tort claimants will be represented. Plaintiffs’ Opposition at 13 n. 4. However, the expertise of plaintiffs’ counsel is of little relevance in determining whether the interests of the parties are the same. As the Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit pointed out in Wilderness Society v. Morton, "[W]hile ... counsel for plaintiffs in this case are extraordinarily able, it does not follow necessarily that their clients’ interests are identical to those of appellants."
