A jury found Maxim Technologies improperly monitored construction of a pub-lie parking ramp in Dubuque. Maxim now argues the City of Dubuque should pay for its misdeeds because Dubuque agreed to do so. Because we find the parties’ agreement does not clearly and unambiguously express an intention that Dubuque indemnify Maxim under the circumstances of this case, we affirm dismissal of Maxim’s claim.
I. Facts and Prior Proceedings
For the purposes of this appeal, we assume the City of Dubuque hired Maxim Technologies, an independent inspection firm, to monitor construction of a public parking ramp. 1 The parties’ agreement included a cost proposal and two attached *899 pages of terms and conditions. Maxim drafted the terms and conditions, which were printed in a font small enough to make even the youngest eyes feel old; there are approximately sixty lines and fifteen hundred words on each page.
After construction began, cracks were found in buildings neighboring the jobsite. The owners of these buildings sued Du-buque, Maxim, and others. The plaintiffs claimed installation of the ramp’s foundation, which consisted of auger cast piles, had disturbed the soil under their buildings. To create the auger cast piles, workers drilled deep holes into the ground and filled them with grout.
The plaintiffs alleged Maxim did not properly monitor installation of the piles and failed to report problems. Maxim cross-claimed against Dubuque. Maxim maintained Dubuque had agreed in some fashion to defend and indemnify Maxim from third-party lawsuits, even if such a lawsuit was predicated upon Maxim’s own negligence. Maxim pointed to the eleventh paragraph of its terms and conditions, which read:
11. Third Party Claims. In the event any third party brings a suit or a claim for damages against Consultant alleging exposure to or damage from materials, elements or constituents at or from the project site before, during or after services are performed by Consultant under this Agreement, which is alleged to have resulted in or caused any adverse condition to any third party or resulted in claims arising from remedial action, cleanup, uninhabitability of property, or other property damage, Client, except to the extent of Consultant’s gross negligence or willful misconduct, agrees to defend, indemnify and hold Consultant harmless against any such suit or claim and any obligation or liability arising therefrom.
Dubuque contended this provision did not apply to the facts of the present case and therefore declined to defend or indemnify Maxim.
A jury decided Maxim was liable to the plaintiffs. In a special verdict, 2 the jury also found Dubuque had a contract with Maxim containing the disputed eleventh paragraph, as well as another paragraph in which Maxim generally agreed to indemnify Dubuque. 3
Dubuque moved for a judgment notwithstanding the verdict on the cross-claim. *900 Dubuque argued the eleventh paragraph applied only to environmental claims, such as where a chemical migrates onto another’s property and requires remedial cleanup. The district court dismissed the cross-claim, and Maxim appealed.
II. Scope arid Standards of Review
Appellate review of a grant of a motion notwithstanding the verdict is for correction of errors at law.
Lynch v. Saddler,
III. The Merits
At issue is the scope of an express contract for indemnification. In an indemnification contract, one party" promises to reimburse or hold harmless another party for loss, damage, or liability.
See McNally & Nimergood v. Neumann-Kiewit Constructors, Inc.,
By its terms, the indemnifiсation clause applied only if (1) a third party sued Maxim; (2) the third party alleged “exposure to or damage from materials, elements or constituents at or from the project site”; (3) this exposure or damage “resulted in or caused any adverse condition to any third party or resulted in claims arising from remedial action, cleanup, uninhabitability of property, or other property damage”; and (4) Maxim was not grossly negligent and did not commit willful misconduct. If all four of these conditions applied, Du-buque was obligated to defend and indemnify Maxim. The first and fourth conditions were met; the plaintiffs were plainly third parties, and there was no allegatiоn Maxim committed anything more than ordinary negligence.
Maxim takes an expansive view of the potential scope of the eleventh paragraph and seizes upon several of the broad and general phrases in second and third conditions to bolster its case. For example, Maxim argues soil is a “matеrial,” “element,” or “constituent” because the dictionary defines “element” as “one of the simple substances or principles of which according to early natural philosophers, the physical universe is composed, the four elements pointed out by Empedocles being fire, air, water, earth.” Black’s Law Dictionary 520 (6th ed. 1990) (emphasis added). Maxim also contends it is plain that its negligent acts resulted in an “adverse condition” to the plaintiffs.
The district court took a less expansive view of the provision, and so do we. We do not think the plain language of the *901 contract clearly and unambiguously expresses an intention that Dubuque indemnify Maxim under the circumstanсes alleged here, where there is no evidence of an environmental-type claim.
In determining the intent of the parties from the plain language of the agreement, a special rule of construction applies when, as here, a party asserts indemnification from its own negligence.
McNally & Nimergood,
This rule provides that indemnification contracts will not be construed to permit an indemnitee to recover for its own negligence unless the intention of the parties is clearly and unambiguously expressed. See McComas-Lacina Constr. Co. [v. Able Constructors], 641 N.W.2d [841,] 845 [(Iowa 2002)]; Sears, Roebuck & Co. v. Poling,248 Iowa 582 , 588,81 N.W.2d 462 , 465 (1957).... Thus, indemnification contracts claimed to contain these provisions are construed more strictly than other contracts. Exide Corp. v. Millwright Riggers, Inc.,727 N.E.2d 473 , 482 (Ind.Ct.App.2000); Amoco Prod. Co. v. EM Nominee P’ship,2 P.3d 534 , 541 (Wyo.2000).
Id.; see also
11 Richard A. Lord,
Williston on Contracts
§ 32:20, at 533-34 (4th ed. 1999) [hereinafter
Williston on
Contraсts] (indemnification provisions, as exculpatory clauses, are frequently construed strictly against the party seeking the benefit). This rule of construction dovetails with one of our rules of interpretation, insofar as any ambiguity in the exceptionally fine print of this contract must also be construed strictly against Maxim, its drafter.
See Iowa Fuel & Minerals, Inc. v. Iowa State Bd. of Regents,
With these principles in mind, we turn to the language of the indemnity provision. It is at once broad and narrow. On the one hand, we find broad and seemingly limitless phrases such as “materials, elements or constituents” and “other property damage”; on the other hand, indemnification appears limited to environmental-type claims, insofar as specific and prominent reference is made to indemnification for suits alleging “remedial action,” “cleanup,” or “uninhabitability of property.” We need only, however, focus upon the aforementioned third condition; reference to “remedial action,” “cleanup,” and “unhabit-ability of propеrty” indicates this provision was only intended to apply to environmental-type claims.
“Remedial action” is a term of art in federal environmental law. 42 U.S.C. § 9601(24) (2000);
see also Iowa Comprehensive Petroleum Underground Storage Tank Fund Bd. v. Shell Oil Co.,
release of hazardous substances so that they do not migrate to cause substantial danger to present or future public health or welfare or the environment.” 42 U.S.C. § 9601(24);
see City of New York v. Exxon Corp.,
In part, we are guided by the familiar precept of ejusdem generis. Ejus-dem generis (Latin for “of the same kind or class”)
is a well-established rule of construction used to aid in ascertaining the meaning of written instruments. It is sometimes known as Lord Tenterden’s Rule; and it means that “where an enumeration of specific things is followed by some more general word or phrase, such general word or phrase is to be held to refer to things of the same kind.... ”
Hewitt v. Whattoff,
In the alternative, Maxim contends the duty to defend is broader than the duty to indemnify. Maxim cites several insurance cases, in which we have held the insurer’s duty to defend was separate from, and broader than, its duty to indemnify.
See, e.g., Employers Mut. Cas. Co. v. Cedar Rapids Television Co.,
IV. Conclusion
Because we find the parties’ agreement does not clearly and unambiguously ex *903 press an intention that Dubuque indemnify Maxim under the circumstances of this case, we affirm dismissal of Maxim’s claim. Nor is the duty to defend in the parties’ contract broader than the duty to indemnify-
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. .In the district court, Dubuque maintained it did not have a valid аgreement with Maxim because the city council never formally approved of one. See Iowa Code § 364.3(1) (2003) ("A city council shall exercise a power only by the passage of a motion, a resolution, an amendment, or an ordinance."). Maxim rejoined that certain provisions in Dubuque’s contract with its architect and the ramp's official project manual — two documents that did receive formal approval of the city council — met this municipal approval requirement because they (1) contemplated the hiring of an independent consultant and (2) identified Dubuque’s parking systems supervisor as Du-buque’s "Designated Representative” "authorized to act on [Dubuque’s] behalf with respect to the Project.” Maxim alleged that the parking systems supervisor hired it to perform inspection services. The facts presented to the jury were as follows:
When the time came to find an inspection firm, Dubuque’s architect asked Maxim for a cost proposаl. Maxim sent a cost proposal to the architect, attaching two pages of fine print. The architect then sent a letter to the parking systems supervisor listing what work it wanted Maxim to do. The architect authorized approximately one third of the amount of work. Maxim had proposed. The architect sent a copy of the letter to Maxim.
Although Maxim indicated in its proposal that it would not work on the project without written authorization, Maxim did so anyway. Maxim sent all bills to the architect. These bills listed the architect as Maxim’s "client.” All payments went through the architect. The architect sent Maxim's bills to Dubuque. After receiving a check from Dubuque, the architect would either endorse it over to Maxim or write Maxim a separate check. During her deposition, however, the parking systems supervisor admitted she thought Dubuque, not the architect, had a contract with Maxim. She later recanted.
Although the record does not clearly disclose under what particular contract theory Maxim’s claim was based, a jury nonetheless found Maxim had an agreement with Du-buque. Moreover, the jury found the parties’ agreement included the fine print at issue in this appeal, i.e., a paragraph in which, Maxim alleged, Dubuque agreed to indemnify Maxim for Maxim's own negligence. Notwithstanding the jury's findings, however, thе district court held as a matter of law that Maxim did not have a valid agreement with Dubuque because the city council never gave its formal approval.
See City of Akron v. Akron-West field Cmty. Sch. Dist.,
. The court told the jury that while the cross-claim was an issue of law for the court alone to decide, answering some additional factual questions would help the court reach its decision.
. The ninth paragraph of the terms and conditions stated:
9. Indemnification. Consultant shall defend, indemnify and hold harmless the Client and its officers, employees, servants, agents, successors, and assigns from and against any and all liability, claims, demands, suits, actions, third party claim[s], penalties, fines, debts, accounts, damages, costs, expenses, losses and attorney's fees ... which directly or indirectly arise out of or result from injury or death to its employees and subcontractors or damage to property, to the extеnt the injury or damage is caused by the negligent act or willful misconduct of Consultant or its employees, servants and agents in the performance of Consultant's work under this Agreement. ... Indemnification under this provision shall exclude any and all Damages which either directly or indirectly arise out of or result from acts, errors, or omissions оf the Client or any of their officers, employees, servants, agents, consultants, or other representatives. Neither party shall be liable to the other party for any special, indirect, incidental, punitive, or consequen *900 tial damages, whether based on contract, tort (including negligence), strict liability or otherwisе.
Maxim argues the ninth paragraph does not apply to this case because the plaintiffs’ damages, either directly or indirectly, arose out of or resulted from Dubuque's negligence. (The jury found Dubuque was also at fault in causing damage to the plaintiffs' buildings.) Because our analysis focuses strictly upon the eleventh paragraph of the agreement, we do not reach this issue.
