Plaintiff-appellant Lakeside Non-Ferrous Metals, Inc. (“Lakeside”) appeals the district court’s order dismissing its claim seeking insurance coverage for its pollution of the Port of Oakland’s land along the Oakland estuary. Lakeside leases the land from the Port for metal recycling, battery salvage, and chemical storage. After the Port of Oakland sued Lakeside and other tenants for contaminating the Port’s land and surrounding waters, Lakeside filed an action to compel its insurers to defend the claim. 2 The insurers refused coverage, claiming that the “pollution exclusion” contained in Lakeside’s insurance policy excluded coverage for property damage arising out of actual or threatened discharge of pollutants. The district court, applying California law in this diversity action, dismissed the case for failure to state a claim. Lakeside timely appealed. We have jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291 and we affirm.
*704
We review de novo the district court’s dismissal for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted.
Steckman v. Hart Brewing, Inc.,
Lakeside contends that Scottsdale is obligated to defend against the Port’s nuisance and trespass claims. We look to the underlying complaint and the terms of the insured’s coverage to determine the insurer’s obligation to defend.
Legarra v. Federated Mut. Ins. Co.,
Lakeside had a Comprehensive General Liability policy with Scottsdale Insurance Company. The policy covered “Bodily Injury or Property Damage” as well as “Personal Injury and Advertising Injury.” The policy defines “Property Damage” as
(1) physical injury to or destruction of tangible property which occurs during the policy period, including the loss of use thereof at any time resulting therefrom, or (2) loss of use of tangible property which has not been physically injured or destroyed provided such loss of use is caused by an occurrence during the policy period.
(emphasis added).
Lakeside’s insurance policy also contained a “pollution exclusion” that excluded claims
(1) to bodily injury or property damage arising out of the actual, alleged or threatened discharge, dispersal, release or escape of pollutants: 3
(a) at or from premises owned, rented or occupied by the named insured;
(b) at or from any site or location used by or for the named insured or others for the handling, storage, disposal, processing or treatment of waste.
(emphasis added).
Lakeside’s Personal Injury coverage is also defined in the policy. The Personal Injury coverage applies to “damages because of personal injury ... to which this insurance applies, sustained by any person or organization and arising out of the con *705 duct of the named insured’s business.” “Personal injury” means “injury arising out of ... wrongful entry or eviction or other invasion of the right of private occupancy.”
Lakeside insists that the Port’s underlying claims are common law trespass and nuisance claims that fall within the personal injury coverage provision rather than the property damage provision. As personal injury claims, Lakeside argues, they are not barred by the pollution exclusion. The theory is attractive because “once the duty to defend attaches, the insurer is obligated to defend against all of the claims involved in the action, both covered and noneovered.... ”
East Quincy Services Dist. v. Continental Ins. Co.,
We must interpret an insurance policy “as a whole, in a manner which gives force and effect to every clause.”
Martin Marietta,
In
Legarra,
the court held that the personal injury endorsement, which covered “wrongful entry or eviction or other invasion of the right of private occupancy,” did not encompass a groundwater contamination claim because such an interpretation would nullify the pollution exclusion.
In
Titan,
an indemnity case, the insured’s policy contained a personal injury provision and pollution exclusion identical to those in Lakeside’s policy from Scottsdale. The court concluded that groundwater contamination was injury to property, not personal injury, and was excluded under the pollution exclusion. It was not “objectively reasonable for an insured to expect ‘personal injury’ to mean ‘property damage’ ... or to expect that a blanket pollution exclusion will never operate.”
Titan,
Here, too, we must look at Lakeside’s entire policy in context and at Lakeside’s objectively reasonable expectations as to coverage. See
Legarra,
Lakeside points to
Martin Marietta,
the most recent California case that interprets the scope of personal injury coverage in a pollution case, for the proposition that nuisance and trespass claims raise a potential for coverage under the “wrongful entry” and “other invasion” components of the personal injury provision and trigger the insurer’s duty to defend.
Martin Marietta,
We need not decide whether the nuisance and trespass claims filed against Lakeside would trigger Scottsdale’s duty to defend in the absence of a pollution exclusion, as the policy unambiguously contains a pollution exclusion.
Martin Marietta,
therefore, affords no guidance. “An insurer may select the risks it will insure and those it will not, and a clear exclusion will be respected.”
Legarra,
Our conclusion is strengthened by the policy’s definition of “property damage,” which includes “loss of use.” In the underlying complaint, the Port claimed that Lakeside’s contamination interfered with its ability to “use, develop, sell, let or encumber” its property and diminished its “use and enjoyment” of the property. These “loss of use” claims fit squarely within the definition of “property damage” and are excluded from coverage via the pollution exclusion.
See Staefa Control-System, Inc. v. St. Paul Fire Marine Ins. Co.,
Lakeside also seeks shelter in a footnote in
East Quincy,
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The only remaining defendant is Scottsdale Insurance Company. Hanover Insurance Company, an original defendant, settled its dispute with Lakeside and the parties stipulated to dismiss Hanover from the appeal. Coverage for the nuisance and trespass claims is at issue.
. The term "pollutants” means "any solid, liquid, gaseous or thermal irritant or contaminant including smoke, vapor, soot, fumes, acids, alkalis, chemicals and waste ... including] materials to be recycled, reconditioned or reclaimed.”
. We recognize that
Martin Marietta
later disagreed that an insured could not reasonably expect the "personal injury” provisions to apply to acts amounting to trespass and nuisance.
See Martin Marietta,
. In this amended opinion, the court backed away from its initial contention that "property damage” was inherently ambiguous and must be construed against the insurer.
Stae-fa,
