OPINION
• This matter is before the Court on Plaintiff Lansing Board of Water and Light’s Motion to Dismiss Defendant Deerfield Insurance Company’s Counterclaim pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6), which the Court will deny in part and grant in part. This matter is also before the Court on Defendant Deerfield Insurance Company’s Motion for Summary Judgment pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 56(a), which the Court will deny.
Plaintiff is suing for declaratory judgment pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2201. In addition, Defendant has made Counterclaims against Plaintiff, and the Court has diversity jurisdiction over those claims. After reviewing the filings with respect to the two motions before the Court, the Court does not feel that oral argument is necessary. See L. Civ. R. 7.2(d).
I. Standard of Review and Applicable Federal Rules of Evidence
A. Plaintiffs Motion to Dismiss
Under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6), a court may dismiss a complaint for failure to state a claim only if it is clear that no relief could be granted under any set of facts that could be proved consistent with the allegations.
Conley v. Gibson,
The rules generally require only a “short and plain statement of the claim” and not detailed allegations.
Leatherman v. Tarrant County Narcotics Intelligence & Coordination Unit,
B. Defendant’s Motion for Summary Judgment
Under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 56(c), summary judgment is proper if the pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories and admissions on file, together with affidavits, if any, show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. The initial burden is on the movant to specify the basis upon which summary judgment should be granted and to identify portions of the record which demonstrate the absence of a genuine issue of material fact.
Celotex Corp. v. Catrett,
The burden then shifts to the non-mov-ant to come forward with specific facts, supported by the evidence in the record, upon which a reasonable jury could find there to be a genuine fact issue for trial.
Anderson v. Liberty Lobby,
Credibility determinations, the weighing of the evidence, and the drawing of legitimate inferences are jury functions.
Adams v. Metiva,
II. Facts
This is a dispute involving insurance coverage. Many of the facts are recited in the Court’s earlier Opinion and Order of March 21, 2001, but facts pertinent to the motions currently before the Court are reiterated. The predecessor of Defendant Deerfield Insurance Company (Deerfield), First Reinsurance of Hartford, insured Plaintiff from April 27, 1998 to April 27, 1999 under an insurance policy titled Public Officials Liability Insurance, policy number TCB 73506.
Plaintiff Lansing Board of Water and Light (BWL), an administrative agency of the City of Lansing, was engaged in a project to remove and dispose of asbestos at the Plaintiffs Ottawa Station Property. Plaintiff awarded the bid on the project to SCS Group, L.C. (SCS), and SCS subcontracted portions to Performance Abatement Services, Inc. (PAS). During the period of Plaintiffs insurance coverage, a dispute arose in this Court between SCS and PAS and Plaintiff. SCS and PAS claimed that the drawings and other information provided to them by Plaintiff regarding the asbestos project failed to indicate the true scope of the project and that PAS was forced to remove more asbestos than disclosed without proper additional remuneration.
See Performance Abatement Services, Inc. v. Lansing Board of Water and Light, SCS Group, L.C.,
Plaintiff and Defendant disagree whether Defendant was required, under the terms of the Public Officials Liability In
The policy states that Defendant is “[t]o pay on behalf of the Insured all Loss in excess of the deductible which the Insured shall become legally obligated to pay as a result of Claims first made against the Insured during the Policy Period ... because of any Wrongful Act committed by the Insured.” (emphasis in original) The policy also contains a coverage exclusion, hereinafter referred to as the “pollution exclusion,” 1 precluding coverage for claims “arising out of any actual or alleged ... removal or disposal of ... irritants, contaminants or pollutants into or upon the land, atmosphere or water, to include groundwater.” 2
Defendant’s previously filed Motion to Dismiss was denied by the Court. In the motions now pending before the Court, Defendant argues that as a matter of law, this exclusion precludes coverage of defense and liability for the claims against Plaintiff.
III. Analysis of Defendant’s Motion for Summary Judgment
Defendant Deerfield seeks summary judgment on Count IV of its Counterclaim, which asks for indemnification of its defense costs of $360,339.01 in defending Plaintiff BWL in the underlying litigation and the payment of $1.8 million in a settlement, plus pre-judgment interest pursuant to Michigan law. Defendant claims in Count IV that it is entitled to indemnification of these amounts because the claims in the underlying litigation were excluded from policy coverage, pursuant to the policy’s pollution exclusion.
The parties agree that Michigan law applies to this controversy. In the absence of any indication in the record that another state’s law should apply, the Court will apply Michigan law to this dispute. The Court will deny Defendant’s Motion for Summary Judgment.
A. Whether Defendant Waived Its Defense Based on the Pollution Exclusion
After Defendant Deerfield learned of the claims in the underlying litigation against Plaintiff BWL, Defendant sent Plaintiff a letter, dated July 30, 1998, stating its intent to provide a defense for Plaintiff. (Compl. Exh. D at 3.) Defendant’s letter also contained a general reservation of its rights to contest coverage and asserted at least seven different coverage arguments. (Id.)
Defendant responded to Plaintiffs August 17, 2000 letter with an August 31, 2000 letter. (Compl.Exh. F.) In this letter, Defendant added three other reservation of rights theories, but reasserted its acceptance of the duty to defend Plaintiff in the underlying litigation to this case. (Compl. Exh. F at 7.) In addition to reasserting its original reservation of rights and adding others in this letter, Defendant stated that in light of the pollution exclusion clause covering irritants, it “will consider whether it will initiate coverage litigation” at the conclusion of the underlying suit. (Id.)
The Court finds that under Michigan law, an insurance company that undertakes a defense of its insured with a general reservation of rights does not waive any potential defenses to coverage, if the insured was not prejudiced in asserting its position of coverage.
3
The Michigan Supreme Court has held that generally, once an insurance company
denies
coverage, it is estopped from or has waived assertion of new defenses.
Kirschner v. Process Design Associates, Inc.,
... when an insurance company undertakes the defense of its insured, it has a duty to give reasonable notice to the insured that it is proceeding under a reservation of rights, or the insurance company will be estopped from denying its liability. The application of waiver and estoppel is limited, and, usually, the doctrines will not be applied to broaden the coverage of a policy to protect the insured against risks that were not included in the policy or that were expressly excluded from the policy.
Id. at 710-11 (emphasis added by Kir-schner Court) (citations omitted). The Kirschner Court expressed an interest that an insured receives “reasonable notice” of an insurer’s intention to deny liability, presumably out of a desire to prevent prejudice to an insured. In addition, there is an indication that courts, if possible, should consider disputes over coverage on their merits, ie., considering applicable defenses, because insurance contracts should generally be enforced with an eye toward the original intent of the contracting parties. These competing principles of law are resolved with the conclusion that an insurance company that undertakes a defense of its insured with a general reservation of rights does not waive any potential defenses to coverage, providing the insured is not prejudiced in asserting its position that coverage is due.
This conclusion was also reached by other judges of this Court when applying Michigan law in situations similar to this one.
See First Mercury Syndicate, Inc. v. Telephone Alarm Sys., Inc.,
Even closer to the instant case, a defense was held not waived where the insurer in
Action Auto
mentioned the specific defense at issue in its second reservation of rights letter two months prior to trial, where the first reservation of rights letter contained a general reservation of rights.
Action Auto,
Therefore, Defendant did not waive its defense that the pollution exclusion precludes coverage. Defendant promptly undertook defending Plaintiff and immediately put Plaintiff on notice of a general reservation of its rights under the policy. Moreover, Plaintiff has been on notice that Defendant intended to use the specific defense of the pollution exclusion since August 2000, and Plaintiff has not argued that it was prejudiced by this method of notice.
B. Whether the Pollution Exclusion Applies to Exclude Coverage of Plaintiffs Claim
Thus, the Court will consider whether the pollution exclusion at issue applies to exclude coverage of Plaintiff BWL’s claim. The pollution exclusion precludes coverage for claims “arising out of any actual or alleged ... removal or disposal of ... irritants, contaminants or pollutants into or upon the land, atmosphere or water, to include groundwater.”
Defendant Deerfield argues that the underlying litigation involves Plaintiffs liability for removal and disposal of irritants on its property, namely asbestos. As a result, Defendant’s assertion is that this type of liability is not covered in the policy it issued Plaintiff.
Plaintiff argues that the underlying litigation involves a case of a cost overrun, in that it was accused of misrepresenting facts concerning the amount of asbestos contained at its facility. This alleged misrepresentation caused removal of the asbestos to be much more expensive than PAS contemplated when it contracted with Plaintiff. But once asbestos removal began, PAS completed all of the removal work, and then PAS sued Plaintiff for additional compensation for removal of the additional asbestos. According to Plaintiffs argument, it is irrelevant for purposes of coverage that the subject of the contract concerned the removal of a polluting element. In other words, PAS claims an injury from Plaintiffs alleged failure to disclose certain information, not an injury caused by pollution. Thus the claim did not “aris[e] out of’ the removal or disposal of pollutants. This is the position that the Court finds to be correct as a matter of law.
The facts of this case are similar to those in
Owens Corning v. National Union Fire Ins. Co.,
The Sixth Circuit found that the “arising out of’ language, which is also contained in Plaintiffs insurance policy, requires a higher causal connection between the asbestos and the underlying claim than a “but for” nexus.
Owens Coming,
Another judge of this Court also found that the cause of a claim under Michigan law is only a close cause, and not a distant one, with respect to insurance cases. Hagger v. United States Life Ins. Co., 1:01— CV-71 (W.D.Mich. August 6, 2001) (Bell, J.) (see Supplemental Brief in Support of Lansing Board of Water and Light’s Motion to Dismiss Counterclaim (Dkt. No. 86), Ex. B). 5
Michigan courts have established strict limits on the scope of proximate cause in insurance cases. The Michigan Supreme Court has declared that the issue of causation in insurance contract disputes differs from torts in that “you are not to trouble yourself with distant causes .... [I]n insurance cases the concern is not with the question of culpability or why the injury occurred, but only with the nature of the injury and how it happened.”
Hagger,
Ex. B, at 5 (quoting
Vanguard Ins. Co. v. Clarke,
Thus, asbestos was too distant a cause of the underlying claim against Plaintiff for that claim to have “arisen out of’ asbestos. Asbestos was one cause of the claim, in that without its existence at the Ottawa Station, Plaintiff would have not contracted with PAS in the first place. But the immediate cause of the claim was alleged misrepresentation.
Meijer alleged that the insured failed to properly administer the contracts for construction of the berm and to properly design the berm, such that the insured failed to prevent disposal of inappropriate pollutants in the berm.
Progressive,
In
Progressive,
the insured was accused of “improperly approving or directing the burial of barrels and other debris in the berm,” and so one of its direct acts of alleged wrongdoing was “the actual, alleged or threatened discharge, dispersal, release or escape of ‘pollutants.’”
Progressive,
It is true that under Michigan law, pollution clauses are not blindly limited in application to “traditional” forms of environmental pollution, but instead should be applied according to their terms.
McKusick v. Travelers Indem. Co.,
Because of the policy’s “arises out of ... ‘your product’ ...” language, the failure of the hose-delivery system was a cause of the ultimate harm that excluded the event from policy coverage, since that specific pollution exclusion’s clear intent was to exclude damage caused by pollutants released as a result of failure of the insured’s products or work.
Cf. McKusick,
Furthermore, the Court fails to see the relevance that asbestos may or may not have been released into the environment during PAS’s work for Plaintiff. No interested party has made any claims against Plaintiff for damages arising out of alleged contamination. PAS’s claim that Plaintiff acted wrongfully during their contract negotiations, causing PAS financial harm, does not depend upon whether some party released asbestos into the environment during this project. Therefore, PAS’s claim does not “arise out of’ contamination.
As stated above, the Court finds that the “pollution exclusion” does not operate to bar coverage of Plaintiffs claim. Therefore, the Court will deny Defendant summary judgment on Count IV of its Counterclaim.
IV. Analysis of Plaintiffs Motion to Dismiss
Applying Michigan law, the Court will deny in part and grant in part Plaintiffs Motion to Dismiss Defendant’s Counterclaims. The Court will dismiss Count IV, but deny dismissal as to Counts I-III.
As a preliminary matter, Plaintiff BWL asserts that Michigan law would bar an insurance company from obtaining indemnification from its insured even upon a
Dismissal of all Counts of Defendant’s Counterclaim would have been appropriate if Defendant did not allege facts that an express agreement exists or that would permit this Court to imply an agreement under Michigan law between Plaintiff and Defendant. Plaintiff asserts that there was no express agreement and no circumstances in the instant case which would permit this Court to imply an agreement between Plaintiff and Defendant.
However, Defendant represents that there was an express agreement between itself and Plaintiff that Plaintiff would later indemnify Defendant if Defendant won the coverage determination. (See Defendant Deerfield Insurance Company’s Response to Plaintiffs Motion to Dismiss Counterclaim, at 5 (Dkt. No. 22)) (“... [Defendant Deerfield] would not have agreed to fund the settlement if [Plaintiff,] the Board[,] had not agreed to permit Deerfield its day in court on these issues.”). As such, Plaintiff cannot prevail on a Motion to Dismiss on this argument since Defendant has alleged existence of facts which would preclude Plaintiffs defense to indemnification.
A. Count I — Indemnification for Full Amount of Settlement Payment
The coverage clause states that Defendant has contracted:
To pay on behalf of the Insured all Loss in excess of the deductible which the Insured shall become legally obligated to pay as a result of Claims first made against the Insured during the Policy Period or Extended Reporting Period, if purchased, because of any Wrongful Act committed by the Insured.
(See Plaintiff and Counter-Defendant Lansing Board of Water and Light’s Motion to Dismiss Counter-claim, at 7 (Dkt No. 20) (emphasis in original).) In the definitions section of the policy, certain key terms are defined, including:
“Wrongful Act means any actual or alleged act, error, misstatement, misleading statement or omission, neglect or breach of the Insureds’ duties arising solely from the Insureds’ discharge of their duties on behalf of the Public Entity individually or collectively, or any matter claimed against any Insured Persons solely by reason of their being or having been duly elected or appointed officials.”
(See id. at 8 (emphasis in original).) Plaintiff can only succeed in its motion to dismiss this count if the underlying action involves a “wrongful act” as it is defined under the policy as a matter of law.
In its second-amended complaint in the underlying action, PAS alleged that Plaintiff “had material information within the knowledge of its personnel or within the possession of the [Plaintiff], which the [Plaintiff] failed to disclose and did not give to bidders, including PAS,” and alleges failure to disclose drawings and other documents detailing the full existence of asbestos throughout the property involved.
(See
Plaintiff and Counter-Defendant Lansing Board of Water and Light’s Motion to
However, it is also true that some of PAS’s complaints against Plaintiff were those which do not require proof of nondisclosure or other acts that might constitute “wrongful acts” under the policy in order for PAS to recover. PAS’s complaints which are strictly unjust enrichment claims, for example, where PAS complains that Plaintiff accepted labor and materials that the contract did not contemplate, would not encompass any acts of Plaintiff that constitute “wrongful acts” under the policy.
Therefore, Defendant is entitled to recover the amount of the settlement that does not represent payment to PAS or SCS for a “wrongful act.” In theory, this amount could be the entire amount of the settlement, if the value of the additional work was the entire amount of the settlement. In the alternative, this amount could be none of the settlement, or only part of it. Nonetheless, Defendant has alleged enough to avoid dismissal of this Count, and the Court will deny Plaintiffs Motion with respect to this Count.
B. Count II — Contribution for Portion of Settlement Payment
Defendant Deerfield alleges in the alternative that some portion of the settlement payment was not covered “Loss” under the policy. Defendant asserts that it is not liable for the entire settlement payment on one of three theories, but since the Court finds that Defendant has sufficiently stated a cause of action on the first of the three theories, the Court will not address the other two theories.
Defendant asserts that since the Plaintiff BWL received the value of the additional asbestos abatement, the only possible covered “Loss” it suffered is the amount above the value of the additional work it received. For reasons explained in the section on Count I, Defendant has sufficiently alleged facts such that dismissal is inappropriate. This is because as a matter of law, the Court has found that any amount of the settlement which constitutes the actual value of the asbestos removal work which Plaintiff would have agreed to pay is not covered “Loss” because no “Wrongful Act” by Plaintiff would be present. As such, the Court will not dismiss this Count.
C. Count III — Quantum Meruit Claim, or Unjust Enrichment
Defendant Deerfield asserts that it would be inequitable to allow Plaintiff BWL to receive the value of the additional amount of asbestos abatement without paying for it. Further, Defendant cites the two elements of
quantum meruit,
(1) that Plaintiff, in this case, received a benefit from Defendant, and (2) that it would be inequitable for Plaintiff to retain it.
In re Cardizem CD Antitrust Litigation,
Plaintiff argues that it has an express contract with Defendant to pay its
If settlement of the “wrongful act” claim required Defendant to pay out additional funds beyond PAS’s claims based on an actual or alleged “wrongful act,” i.e., the value of the additional work done by PAS, Plaintiff received an additional benefit from Defendant that was not contemplated in its insurance contract with Defendant. Therefore, a quantum meruit claim could be sustained by Defendant. The Court will deny Plaintiffs Motion to Dismiss this count of Defendant’s Counterclaim.
D. Count IV — Indemnification of Defense Costs and Settlement Payment
As analyzed in the section discussing Defendant’s Motion for Summary Judgment on Count IV, the pollution exclusion in Plaintiffs policy does not preclude coverage in the instant case as a matter of law. There is, therefore, no set of facts that Defendant could prove to win on this claim, and the Court will dismiss this count.
V. Conclusion
Therefore, the Court will deny Defendant’s Motion for Summary Judgment on Count IV of its Counterclaim. Further, the Court will deny in part and grant in part Plaintiffs Motion to Dismiss, dismissing Count IV, but not Counts I — III. An order will be so entered.
Notes
. The Court attributes no general operating meaning to the term "pollution exclusion” under Michigan law, given that Michigan law requires individual application of the terms of any one "pollution exclusion,” just like any other kind of contract term.
. In its entirety, the pollution exclusion at issue here reads: Any Claim arising out of any actual or alleged generation, storage, transportation, discharge, dispersal, escape, treatment, removal or disposal of smoke, vapors, soot, fumes, acids, alkalis, toxic chemicals, liquids or gasses, waste materials or other irritants, contaminants or pollutants into or upon the land, atmosphere or water, to include groundwater. (Emphasis in original.)
. Unfortunately, the Michigan state case most on point here,
Havens v. Roberts,
does not contain specific enough facts to guide this Court. There, the Michigan Court of Appeals held that an insurer could raise an exclusionary clause as a defense, after the insurer defended the original action against its insured, since the defense had been “preserved.”
Havens v. Roberts,
. The
Owens Coming
Court was applying Ohio law.
. This Court notes that this reading of Michigan law is the same as the Sixth Circuit's reading of Ohio law on this point in Owens Coming.
. However, the
Progressive
Court later reversed its grant of summary judgment to the insurance company because the insurance company had admitted in a letter to the insured that it owed the insured a duty of indemnity for the cost of removing the pollutants from the berm.
Progressive,
1:93-CV-539 (W.D.Mich. Dec. 13, 1994) (Miles, J.),
cited in
. Defendant also cites
Protective Nat'l Ins. Co. of Omaha v. City of Woodhaven,
438 Mich.
