OPINION
Plаintiff in this action, McNeilab, Inc., is and has been since 1959 a wholly-owned subsidiary of Johnson & Johnson, 1 a multi-national, multi-billion dollar corporation involved primarily in the health care business. Since 1955, plaintiff has been engaged in the manufacture and sale of acetaminophen, an internal analgesic for temporary relief of pain and fever, which it has marketed under the trade name “Tylenol”.
The nation was stunned when, between September 29 and October 1, 1982, seven persons in the Chicago area died after ingesting Extra Strength Tylenol capsules laced with cyanide. Acting swiftly and efficiently to protect the public, to dissipate fear, and to clear the shelves of Tylenol so that it could quickly remarket a product in which the public would have confidence, Johnson & Johnson, between September 30 and October 7, 1982 and without consultation at any time with its insurers, undertook and funded a host of actions. Tylenol capsules and certain other McNeilab products were withdrawn from the market in the United States and seven foreign countries; the withdrawn Tylenol capsules were tested; the source of the tampering was investigated; non-tamper resistant packaged products were destroyed; tamper resistant packaging was developed; consumer studies and surveys were performed; an enormous number of reassurance messages were placed in print and on television and teleconferences were conducted; and a consumer research and exchange campaign as well as a campaign which enabled consumers to redeem coupons for tablet products issued during the crisis were launched. These actions were so successful that Tylenol not only regained but in short order exceeded its former share of the market. Without exception, those who have studied what took place during this period of time have concluded that, whatever the motive, no further deaths occurred 2 and Johnson & Johnson with its brilliant marketing strategy scored a major business coup.
This action began as a two-count complaint in which plaintiff, a named insured under the policy issued to Johnson & Johnson, sued nine of its insurers to recover *528 costs related to the recall. Those costs have at various times been estimated from $40,000,000 to $150,000,000 and it now appears that the appropriate figure is approximately $100,000,000, a figure which plaintiff proclaims, rather prоudly, “spared” the insurers from having to assume the defense of additional liability actions with potential recoveries in untold millions, of dollars. I note, albeit parenthetically at this juncture, that Johnson & Johnson spent this $100,000,000 to mitigate damages on a liability it has claimed from day one does not exist. Stated somewhat differently, not believing it was liable, Johnson & Johnson could not have believed it was mitigating damages.
The first count of the complaint, the count before me now, seeks a determination that Johnson & Johnson’s excess and umbrella liability insurers — defendants North River Insurance Company, Transit Casualty Company, Employers Insurance of Wausau, Aetna Casualty and Surety Company, American Centennial Insurance Company, Granite State Insurance Company, First State Insurance Company, and Northbrook Excess & Surplus Insurance Company (hereinafter “defendants”) — are required to reimburse plaintiff for those recall-related costs to the extent of their respective layers of excess insurance coverage. 3 Defendants North River, Transit Casualty, Employers of Wausau and First State, denying coverage, have moved for summary judgment, in which motion the remaining defendants have joined.
Plaintiff, arguing that coverage exists, has cross-moved for summary judgment as to liability 4 relying essentially on two theories. First, it argues that the language of the excess liability insurance policy at issue here, as construed by the courts, clearly and unambiguously covers recall and recall-related expenses even though neither recall nor anything akin to it is mentioned in the coverage provision of the policy. Second, it argues that if there be ambiguity in the policy, it must be resolved in favor of the insured without resort to extrinsic evidence.
This aversion to extrinsic evidence may perhaps be explained by the fact that at no time until counsel became involved following the recall was there any thought, belief, or intent on the part of Johnson & Johnson or of any party that recall and expenses related thereto, which were neither sought nor paid for, were covered. Rather, in the years preceding the recall, Johnson & Johnson’s Corporate Insurance Department, in Annual Reports to the Board of Directors, unequivocally stated that it maintained no recall coverage whatsoever. Johnson & Johnson, which at one time carried recall coverage, knew such coverage cоuld be purchased, elected not to purchase it because the cost was prohibitive, and now claims that it enjoys recall coverage anyway. These and all other material facts are undisputed and it is similarly undisputed that the issue as to whether recall and recall-related expenses are within the scope of the policy is ripe for summary resolution on the cross motions of the parties.
There are, no doubt, a host of reasons— legal, commercial, and moral — for the massive recall campaign and its various permu *529 tations. The question before the court, however, is whether Johnson & Johnson can quite literally “pass the buck” to its insurers and require them to compensate it, through plaintiff, for the actions which it took. To that question, which itself is proof positive of the adage “nothing ventured, nothing gained,” the answer must be “No”.
I. THE INSURANCE CONTRACT'
In 1977, Johnson & Johnson signed on behalf of itself and its subsidiaries an excess insurance policy with representatives of defendant North River Insurance Company, policy number JU 1081. The terms of the policy with North River are identical to those of the other defendant excess and umbrella insurers, each of which subscribed to an additional layer of coverage. The policies were renewed annually, and the North River policy applicable here was executed on May 13, 1982. 5
The parties contend that the policy language clearly supports their respective positions. The relevant policy language provides as follows:
COVERAGE OR CONDITIONS UMBRELLA LIABILITY
Hit * # * * *
1. COVERAGE
The Company [North River] hereby agree[s], subject to the limitations, terms and conditions hereinafter mentioned, to indemnify the insured [Johnson & Johnson and its subsidiaries] for all Sums which the insured shall be obliged to pay by reason of the liability
(a) imposed upon the insured by law, or
(b) assumed under contract or agreement by the Named Insured and/or any officer, director, stockholder, partner or employee of the Named Insured, while acting in his capacity as such. for damages on account of—
(i) Personal Injuries
(ii) Property Damage.
(iii) Advertising Liability
caused by or arising out of each occurrence happening anywhere in the world.
* * sjc # $ 3k
THIS POLICY IS SUBJECT TO THE FOLLOWING DEFINITIONS:
% sfe # Hi % #
5. OCCURRENCE
The term “Occurrence” where ever used herein shall mean an accident or happening or event or a continuous or repeated exposure to conditions which unexpectedly and unintentionally results in personal injury, property damage or advertising liability during the policy period. All suсh exposure to substantially the same general conditions existing at or emanating from one premises location shall be deemed one occurrence.
* $ * * * # .
THIS POLICY IS SUBJECT TO THE FOLLOWING EXCLUSIONS:
This Policy shall not apply:—
* *#*>(< *
*530 (c) to claims made against the Insured:
* * # * * #
(iv) for the withdrawal, inspection, repair, replacement, or loss of use of the Insured’s products or work completed by or for the Insured or of any property of which such products or work form a part, if such products, work or property are withdrawn from the market or from use because of any known or suspected defect or deficiency therein.
A. THE COVERAGE PROVISION
1. The Impact of Precedent
Plaintiff states that the coverage provision of the policy clearly covers first-party recall expenses or “first-party mitigation expenses”, as plaintiff prefers to call them, presumably because that is the description used in the cases on which it relies. Defendants contend that the coverage provision only contemplates certain third party claims against the insured. Clearly the coverage provision by its terms does not include recall and recall-related expenses whether those expenses are denominated as “recall”, “withdrawal”, or “mitigation”. Indeed, Exclusion (c)(iv) (the so-called “sistership” provision, discussed below), which specifically excludes coverage for third-party “withdrawal claims”, is the only point in the policy at which any such language is used explicitly.
Plaintiff contends, nonetheless, that certain cases construing similar coverage language have held liability insurers responsible for their insured’s mitigation expenses, and suggests that those results apply to bind the parties here.
6
I note in
*531
passing that there has been little discussion by the parties in this case as to whether expenses for the recall itself much less the variety of expenses extraneous to recall and/or mitigation may be considered “mitigation” expenses within the meaning of the cases cited by plaintiff. It is, indeed, open to considerable doubt that the courts which developed the doctrine on which plaintiff relies even contemplated the question of whether “mitigation” expenses included product recall expenses. There is utterly no doubt, however, that those courts never contemplated such expenses in the context of a potential mass disaster. Indeed, the facts of the case plaintiff describes as “the leading case,”
Leebov v. United States Fidelity and Guar. Co.,
Plaintiff relies primarily upon
Leebov
for its construction of the coverage clause. The policy in
Leebov
read, “[The defendant insurance company agrees] to pay on behalf of the Insured all sums which the Insured shall become obligated to pay
by reason of the liability
imposed upon him by the loss of use thereof, caused by accident and arising out of the hazards hereinafter defined.”
*532 Plaintiff urges that, following the distinction made in Leebov between “by reason of liability ... for damages”, the policy language at issue here, and “as damages”, the language of the Desrochers’ policy, courts always allow mitigation expenses in the former case but not necessarily in the latter. Defendants, on the other hand, contend that this, is distinctio absque differentia — a distinction without a difference. H. Fielding, Tom Jones, bk. VI, Ch. 13 (1747). 8 This question has never been directly discussed in the courts of New Jersey. 9 Were there authoritative New Jersey cases construing the language at issue here, it would, of course, be game, set, and match with reference to this case.
Leebov
states, without revealing its reasoning or relying on any authority, that the phrase, “as damages”, is a limited one, while the statement “by reason of. liability” is not limited, eliminating insurer responsibility for mitigation expenses under the former phraseology and including such expenses under the latter phraseology.
Leebov,
“the leading case,” certainly has not been frequently relied upon. Since it appeared twenty-six years ago, only thirteen published cases have cited it and only one slip opinion citing
Leebov
was available in the computer-aided legal research databases. Of these fourteen cases, none was decided by a New Jersey court, and only two discuss the distinction made in
Leebov
between “by reason of liability for damages” and “as damages”.
Slay Warehousing Co. v. Reliance Ins. Co.,
In fact, it appears that the plurality of subsequent citations to Leebov stand for the proposition that extrinsic evidence is admissible to aid in ascertaining the parties’ intent in the interpretation of a contract generally or an insurance policy in particular, 10 a determination which plaintiff seeks to avoid. Several cases cite Leebov generally for the proposition that, in certain circumstances, mitigation expenses may be recoverable against an insurer, but do not refer to specific coverage lan *533 guage. 11 Other cases distinguish Leebov’s mitigation expenses holding on various grounds. 12 Yet other cases cite Leebov for various propositions having nothing to do with the coverage provision. 13
Slay Warehousing Co. v. Reliance Ins. Co.,
The
Slay Warehousing
court pointed to another court which had found the insurer liable for mitigation expenses based upon an exclusion, not a coverage, clause
(Harper v. Pelican Trucking Co.,
Slay Warehousing
has been cited even less frequently than
Leebov
and not one of those citations discusses any distinction between the phraseology “as damages” and “by reason of liability.”
14
On the other hand,
Aronson Associates, Inc. v. Pennsylvania National Mut. Cos. Ins. Co.,
14 Pa.D. & C.3d.1, discussed the distinction and, deciding that it was unimportant, found
Leebov
controlling and awarded mitigation reimbursement expenses against the insurer where there was an “as damages” coverage clause. The
Aronson
court stated, 14 Pa.D. & C.3d at 6-7, “Justice Musmanno
appeared to distinguish
a New Hampshire case, which went in favor of the insurer, where the policy language was
*534
similar to the within policy. However, a full reading of the decision in
Leebov,
Aronson’s refusal to recognize a distinction between the two coverage phrases is eminently more reasonable than Slay Warehousing’s recognition of that distinction and is strengthened by three factors. First, the court in Aronson was obviously aware of Slay Warehousing, as it cited it, 14 Pa.D. & C.3d at 7, apparently for the general proposition that mitigation expenses are recoverable by the insured. Second, Aronson was affirmed by the Pennsylvania Superior Court, which adopted the opinion below. 15 Third, a Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas case, Lehigh Electric & Engineering Co. v. Selected Risks Ins. Co., 30 Pa.D & C.3d 120, relied on Aronson’s interpretation of Leebov with reference to a policy which also used the “as damages” phraseology. Without explicitly discussing the distinction between the “as damages” and the “by reason of liability for damages” language, the Lehigh Electric court stated, “The language contained in the instant policy is strikingly similar to that ... in Aronson Associates, Inc. ...,” and found Aronson Associates both persuasive and controlling.
In spite of its heavy reliance on the argument that the “by reason of liability” coverage language in the present policy should be construed to include and require reimbursement of mitigation expenses by the insurer to the insured, plaintiff has offered only
Leebov
and
Slay Warehousing
and there appear to be no other cases so construing similar coverage language.
16
Cases cited by plaintiff, other than those two, tend to show that, as far as reimbursement for mitigation expenses is concerned, the use of “as damages” or “by reason of liability” simply makes no differ
*535
ence.
Goodyear Rubber & Supply, Inc. v. Great American Ins. Co.,
Thus, the argument that case law requires this court to construe a coverage clause using the phrase “by reason of liability” as mandating the coverage of recall and recall-related expenses, an argument which plaintiff believes to be the jewel in its crown, is wholly unavailing. Only
Leebov
appears to have attached independent significance to the phrase “by reason of liability” as mandating first-party mitigation coverage in a liability insurance policy and the distinction made there is entirely unconvincing. Moreover, an analysis of
Leebov,
especially in light of its interpretation by the lower courts of Pennsylvania, makes clear that that conclusion was merely
obiter dictum.
Finally, the cases and learned commentary that have referred to
Leebov
have criticized that aspect of the court’s decision. Under the standard set forth in
Mazzilli v. Accident & Cas. Ins. Co.,
2. Significance of the Phrase “by reason of’
As there is no construction of the relevant terms of the coverage provision binding on me, or, indeed, persuasive to me, I turn to an analysis of whether the language of the coverage provision in the policy at issue here provides for the reimbursement of recall and recall-related expenses.
LeFelt v. Nasarow,
The majority of those cases which discuss the meaning of the phrase “by reason of” indicate that its meaning, in a legal context, while somewhat wider than the categories of coverage which follow that phrase in a particular policy — in this case, liability for damages imposed upon plaintiff by law and liability assumed by plaintiff under a contract or agreement — cannot widen liability significantly beyond the scope and nature of those categories.
Coverage “by reason of” liability simply does not cover all damages related in some way to liability; rather, there must be a causal connection between the object of the prepositional phrase “by reason of” and the damage claimed.
General Acc. Fire & Life Assur. Corp. v. Continental Cas. Co.,
The causal connection implied by the phrase “by reason of” is normally that of proximate causation.
Currier v. McKee,
It is clear that the use of the phrase “by reason of liability” in the present case does not include recall and recall-related expenses as covered items but, to the contrary, excludes them. As explained above, “by reason of” requires at least some causal connection between the allegedly covered expense and liability and in most cases would appear to require proximate causation. The recall in the present case was not caused by
liability
for the seven deaths; it was at best merely related to the seven deaths in that they served as notice to plaintiff that the Tylenol remaining on the shelves was potentially harmful. The recall was thus prompted, if for any related reason, by the possibility of
future
liability for possible
future
poisonings and not, as the policy requires, by liability
“imposed
by law” — which can refer only to previously completed torts — or “assumed under contract” — which refers to settlements and is not applicable here.
See Dreis & Krump Mfg. Co. v. Phoenix Ins. Co.,
THE COURT: Well, what catastrophe were you stopping here?
[COUNSEL FOR PLAINTIFF]: Stopping the death of the additional unknown numbers of people.
THE COURT: And that’s why you did it?
[COUNSEL]: That is a principal motivating factor for why we did it. That is—
THE COURT: But that doesn’t emerge from the submissions, that this was the principal, — are you saying it was the principal factor?
[COUNSEL]: I think it was the principal factor.
(emphasis added) Transcript at 31.
Contrary to plaintiff’s assertion that intent in the withdrawal of Tylenol was unimportant, I find that intent, as it relates to the cause for the recall, is crucial. As plaintiff concedes that its withdrawal of Tylenol from the market was caused not by its liability but by its desire to prevent further deaths, to alleviate fear and, less altruistically, to restore Tylenol to its preeminent position, the present coverage language cannot include recall and recall-related expenses. It is not, therefore, necessary to inquire into the much harder case that would have been posed had plaintiff's recall been motivated by a desire to avoid liability in future potential suits although, for reasons stated more fully below, even *537 such a motivation would not have been within the coverage of the policy.
3. Scope of Coverage
Plaintiff asserts next that even if there is no specific language in the coverage provision affording coverage for recall and recall-related expenses, the general language of the policy so provides. Defendants, resting in large part upon the reasoning expressed in
Weedo v. Stone-E-Brick, Inc.,
The parties agree that the policy is a liability policy, and frame their arguments in terms of liability only on account of personal injury. Defendants assert, and I agree, that an entirely different type of insurance coverage, recall insurance, was available. It is sufficient to note at this juncture that at one time Johnson & Johnson purchased such coverage from defendant Aetna and let this coverage expire, that Johnson & Johnson’s domestic insurance broker attempted to interest Johnson & Johnson in the purchase of such insurance, and that in internal memoranda Johnson & Johnson reported itself as self-insured as to recall because, although such coverage was available, the cost was prohibitive.
Weedo,
Black’s Law Dictionary, at 824 (5th ed. 1979), defines “liability insurance” as
[A] contract by which one party promises on consideration to compensate or reimburse [the] other if he shall suffer loss from specified cause or to guaranty or indemnify or secure him against loss from that cause. Fidelity General Ins. Co. v. Nelsen Steel & Wire Co.,132 Ill.App.2d 635 ,270 N.E.2d 616 , 620 [1971]. That type of insurance protection which indemnifies one from liability to third persons as contrasted with insurance coverage from losses sustained by the insured.
*538
(emphasis added).
18
Thus, liability insurance, and the traditional interpretation thereof, applies only to damages claimed of the insured by third parties (and attorney’s fees incurred in dеfense thereof) and not to first party losses of the insured itself.
See, e.g., Alcorn Bank & Trust Co. v. United States Fid. & Guar. Co.,
This distinction between first party losses and third party damage claims is generally recognized ... [C]overage on liability policy does not extend to damages for injuries to the insured personally since “liability insurance ..., as concerns the assured, is third party coverage”____
The district court concluded that the insurance contract 'only encompasses losses sustained by third parties for which the bank is ultimately liable.’ We agree. This liability insurance policy does not extend first party protection to [the] [b]ank. That type protection may be purchased ... but it was not part of the comprehensive general liability insurance policy____
(citations omitted).
See also Twin City Fire Ins. Co. v. Wilkerson,
Numerous cases have dealt with the issue of whether liability insurance covers replacement or repair by a building contractor due to defective construction. The almost unanimous conclusion is that mere replacement or repair is not covered, but damage caused by the defective construction to persons and to property not built by the contractor is covered. The cases deny coverage to the insured, even for third party claims, where the damage to the third party is consequential and there is no direct tangible damage. Many of these cases address themselves specifically to exclusionary clauses typical of building contractors’ liability insurance.
See, e.g., Weedo v. Stone-E-Brick, Inc.,
It is clear, as'defendants contend, that “liability insurance,” as it is traditionally understood, does not cover first party expenses. In construing a contract, a court must look to the ordinаry and popular sense of the terms and give them a reasonable and natural construction. 13 Apple-man § 7386 at 138-167 (1976 & 1986 Supp.); 2 Couch 15:16-18 at 166-94 (1984 & 1985 Supp.). Thus, unless there be persuasive authority for finding otherwise, which there is not, it would appear that coverage for recall and recall-related expenses is outside the scope of coverage of liability insurance and, therefore, not cognizable in the instant policy under the reasoning of Weedo. 21
*540
Even if recall and recall-related expenses could be within the scope of coverage of liability policies generally, there is grave doubt that such expenses would be covered under the instant policy. The premium paid is apparent from the face of the policy, and it is clear that the amount of the premium can be used in/ establishing the extent of coverage when the extent of coverage is in doubt. This proposition was succinctly stated in a New Jersey case and has been followed in other jurisdictions.
Prather v. American Motorists Ins. Co.,
It is, of course, possible in construing a policy for a court to consider that alternative language explicitly placing the asserted coverage clearly outside the policy could have been used, such as the language of the Insurance Services Office (“ISO”) policy to which plaintiff points which clearly excepts first party recall claims. Nevertheless, it is quite clear under New Jersey law that that fact is merely an aid to construction, and not conclusive.
Mazzilli v. Accident & Cas. Ins. Co.,
Moreover, if an alternative type of coverage is available and known to the insured, as here first-party recall insurance was both available and known, such coverage will not be imputed to the policy in question. “We cannot rewrite the policy or create a better contract than that which the insured purchased.”
Boonton Handbag Co. v. Home Ins. Co.,
B. OTHER POLICY PROVISIONS
The parties make several arguments in terms of policy provisions other *541 than the basic coverage provision, in particular the sistership provision, a provision designed to exclude coverage for recall which in the present policy specifically excludes only third-party recall claims, and the definition of “occurrence.”. It is obvious that these provisions, as well as the rest of the policy in question, were written entirely with the view that only third-party claims were covered. It simply makes no sense to suggest, as plaintiff suggests, that the parties explicitly agreed to exclude third-party recall claims on a primarily third-party policy, yet implicitly agreed to include first-party claims when first-party coverage was at best a residual and remediary category of coverage of the policy. Stated somewhat differently, there must be first-party coverage before one can even argue that a type of first-party coverage was not excluded.
Certainly, the policy behind the sistership provision — to avoid ambiguity and qualify the breadth of coverage — would be violated if recovery were allowed here. The Insurance Services Office (“ISO”) issued the following statement in 1966, a statement which remains the position of the insurance industry today:
If the named insured’s product causes injury or damage and identical products are withdrawn from the market or from use because of a known or suspected defect (one airplane crashes and others are withdrawn from use), the cost of withdrawing or replacing products or completed work may be either a direct expense to the insured or liability to others. Such cost, whether damages or expenses, are not intended to be covered. Sistership liability or products recall insurance is the subject of a special form of coverage.
Moreover, even if first-party recall expenses were recoverable on the present policy, because the sistership provision specifically excludes third-party claims for recall plaintiff may well have had a duty to its insurer to carry out the recall in a manner such that as much of the recall expense as possible fell within the exclusion. For the development of and reasoning behind the sistership provision, see 7A Appleman § 4508.01 at 355 & n. 24, § 4508.02 at 371-72 & n. 26-29, 38-81 & n. 45 (1970 & 1986 Supp.); 12 Couch § 4A:62 at 100-01 (1981 & 1985 Supp.).
With reference to the definition of “occurrence,” defendants claim that the recall was аn event which was neither unexpected nor unintended by plaintiff and is, therefore, not covered. Plaintiff claims that the failure of defendants to modify the words “unexpectedly and unintentionally” with the phrase “from the point of view of the insured,” means that “unexpectedly and unintentionally” refers to the point of view of potential victims, and therefore recall would still be covered. In essence, the reasoning behind similar clauses in earlier insurance policies had been to exclude from coverage intentional acts by the insured as well as to narrow the definition of coverage to events somewhat approximating accidents as opposed to planned events.
See
Annot.,
Construction and Application of Provision of Liability Insurance Policy Expressly Excluding Injuries Intended or Expected by Insured,
The only case directly on point,
Ashland Oil, Inc. v. Miller Oil Purchasing Co.,
The fact that no policy provision afforded coverage is confirmed by the manner in which the policy was viewed by the parties. Not one employee or agent of Johnson & Johnson who testified, save Hubert Seiffert, its Assistant Treasurer, stated that he believed, expected, or intended at any time that recall expenses would be covered under the policy and plaintiff describes Mr. Seiffert’s assumption to the contrary as “uninformed.” Somewhat confusingly, in another submission plaintiff describes the understanding of Frederick B. Molineux, Johnson & Johnson’s highly experienced Director of Corporate Insurance, (and, presumably, would describe the understanding of everyone else) that there was no recall coverage as “erroneous” but then only because of the “plain language of the policy.” This language, I note, was so “plain” that it and the coverage it purports to afford were not discovered for years.
Prior to the recall, Annual Reports to the Board of Directors unequivocally stated that Johnson & Johnson maintained no recall insurance whatsoever. Indeed, it appears that insurance for recall expenses was never even discussed with H.S. Weavers, North River’s principal reinsurers. Coincidentially, one month before the recall, Johnson & Johnson’s domestic insurance broker, Johnson & Higgins, offered Johnson & Johnson a form of cover known as product integrity/impairment insurance. Johnson & Higgins’ representatives testified that no such offer would have been made had it been thought that any Johnson & Johnson policy would indemnify Johnson & Johnson were it to incur recall expenses.
The reason why there was no insurance for recall and recall-related expenses is clear — it was simply too expensive. As Judge Lacey found in the Affiliated FM aspect of this litigation, findings which plaintiff does not here dispute and which, in any event, it is estopped from disputing:
In performing his duties as a risk manager, Mr. Molineux had identified the risk of a product recall and the potential catastrophic financial impact it could have on plaintiff or one of its family of companies. In 1979 he advised the plaintiff’s executive committee that losses involving the recall or withdrawal of any of plaintiff’s products from the marketplace were insurable but at a prohibitive cost— Findings of Fact No. 44.
... Mr. Molineux knew that the risk existed of someone in the public tampering with a packaged product of plaintiffs once it had been unconditionally sold and *543 delivered to third parties, and he made a conscious decision not to insure the interruption of plaintiff’s operation flowing from a recall. Findings of Fact No. 45.
He similarly made a conscious decision not to insure product recall expenses. This decision was fully consistent with the philosophy of the Corporate Insurance Department of Johnson & Johnson whereby the transfer of risk to an insurer was the last step in the risk management process. See Findings of Fact No. 20.
Following the Tylenol poisonings and while renegotiating the policy, Mr. Molineux supposedly represented to H.S. Weavers that, aside from the seven death cases, no further claims would be presented in connection therewith, a representation defendants suggest was made for the purpose of obtaining a premium reduction. While plaintiff denies that Mr. Molineux promised that there would be no further claims, it is undisputed that a premium reduction was, in fact obtained; that no mention was made of product recall insurance; and that Johnson & Johnson’s attorneys had not yet begun to examine the liability policy seeking a basis for recall coverage.
Indeed, no claim has yet been presented; rather this lawsuit was filed. As Judge Lacey found in the Affiliated FM case:
Plaintiff’s conduct in presenting its insurance claim at issue here suggests it knew after the loss occurred that it had no explicit coverage to cover the losses involved herein. Under normal circumstances, plaintiff’s Corporate Insurance Department would have submitted any potential claims to the insurance carrier involved. In this particular case the department never submitted a claim to Affiliated, but rather a lawsuit was started. Findings of Fact No. 69.
C. INTERPRETATION OF AMBIGUITIES
The importance of the manner in which the parties viewed the policy is borne out in those cases dealing with ambiguities in the insurance cоntract.
Weedo v. Stone-E-Brick,
Any confusion read into the policy is read only by plaintiff both from the absence of language negating terms foreign to the policy and imputing into that policy, which is entirely third-party in context and effect, a first-party coverage which was not intended. Courts will not strain the language of the policy to find an ambiguity where there is none in order to grant coverage that does not exist.
Weedo v. Stone-E-Brick, Inc.,
But even were the policy ambiguous, defendants would prevail. Plaintiff argues that if an ambiguity be found, the rule of contra proferentem should be strictly applied and that extrinsic evidence, which here goes one way and one way only and which plaintiff seeks to avoid like the plague, should not be allowed to demonstrate the actual intent of the parties. Plaintiff reads New Jersey law to be that the strict rules of insurance construction should apply even when the insured is a large corporation which had the aid of counsel in choosing and bargaining over the policy. Plaintiff is wrong.
Weedo
states that as to policies which are ambiguous, “the ‘doctrine of ambiguity’ works to effectuate the consumer’s expectation that the policy purchased extended greater coverage in the particular underwriting area.”
All rules as to the interpretation of ambiguities must be subordinated to the common intent of the parties which governs.
22
If the intent of the parties is unclear from the contract, extrinsic evidence can be brought in to elucidate their intent. 11 Couch § 44:261 at Supp. 19-20 (1982 & 1985 Supp.) This aspect of the
Leebov
decision and its general acceptance have been discussed above. But plaintiff reminds me that the Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit, in applying Pennsylvania law, disagrees.
AC & S, Inc. v. Aetna Cas. & Sur. Co.,
Stating, “[T]he courts have disregarded the insured’s own opinion that he was not covered,” plaintiff also relies incorrectly upon
City of Newark v. Hartford Acc. & Indent. Co.,
In
Mahon v. American Cas. Co.,
Based upon the citation in Mahon to general contract construction principles, the strong emphasis in New Jersey insurance cases on ascertaining the intent of the parties, and the emphasis in Weedo on the insured’s expectations, it is quite clear that New Jersey courts would admit extrinsic evidence to aid in the interpretation of insurance policies.
Cases urged on me by plaintiff for the contrary proposition are miscited, are relied upon for much more than they stand for, or are out-of-state cases that conflict with New Jersey law. Notably, plaintiff’s reliance upon
AC & S, Inc. v. Aetna Cas. & Sur. Co.
and
Daburlos v. Commercial Ins. Co.
is misplaced in light of even
Leebov
and its progeny.
See Bakery & Confectionary Workers Int’l Union v. Great Atlantic & Pacific Tea Co.,
It has been held that in disputes as to policies between a large corporation and a large insurance company, both of which
*546
were advised by competent counsel at the time of the agreement, ordinary rules of contract construction apply.
Eastern Associated Coal. Corp. v. Aetna Cas. & Sur. Co.,
The Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit has recently held to the contrary in a case decided under Pennsylvania law.
AC & S, Inc. v. Aetna Cas. & Sur. Co.,
Although there are no New Jersey cases directly on point, it would seem that the New Jersey courts would decide that insurance policies of large, skilled corporations — and here, I venture to suggest, Johnson & Johnson is larger than its insurers — would be treated as ordinary contracts.
See Fenwick Machinery, Inc. v. A. Tomae & Sons, Inc.,
In the present case, there is no question but that the parties were of equal bargaining power and that all that preceded and all that followed the execution of the policy at issue here is reminiscent of *547 the entry into and the living under a treaty between two great nations. Plaintiff’s protestations about the size and competitiveness of thе liability insurance market and the “adhesion contract” prepared without its input, in a phrase, fall flat. This latter protest, I note, cannot have been other than tongue in cheek for the evidence belies any suggestion other than that the policy itself was negotiated, as were almost all of the fifteen addenda to the policy, most of which added or subtracted specific form coverages over the years. If the policy reflected few if any changes from the “London form”, none were requested, not because Johnson & Johnson lacked the opportunity or the capacity to make such requests, but because the language accomplished what was intended. I also note that while denying negotiation, plaintiff describes Mr. Molineux, Johnson & Johnson’s Director of Corporate Insurance and an attorney, as its “principal negotiator”.
Johnson & Johnson, which ranks fifty-ninth in the Fortune 500, generates annual insurance premiums of approximately $20,-000,000 and maintains a Corporate Insurance Department consisting of an expert insurance staff with a legal staff at its disposal. Judge Lacey found in the Affiliated FM aspect of this litigation not only that Johnson & Johnson was a “favored customer” (Findings of Fact Nos. 40, 41), but that “the significance of plaintiff’s having its own expert insurance staff to represent it in determining its insurance program, in implementing that program, and thereafter in its negotiations with [Affiliated] cannot be overstressed. This was not the usual insured-insurer relationship.” Findings of Fact No. 21; see also No. 41.
Concededly a sophisticated insured, Johnson & Johnson cannot seek refuge in the doctrine of
contra proferentem
by pretending it is the corporate equivalent of “Mike” Leebov.
Cessante ratione legis, cessat et ipsa lex
— “where the reason stops, there stops the rule.”
United States v. Criden,
Thus, even if there were some ambiguity in the instant policy, which there is not, I would be compelled to find in favor of defendants.
II. QUASI-CONTRACT AND AGENCY
There can, therefore, be no basis of recovery in the present case for expenses, however denominated, based on contractual principles, as it is clear that such expenses are outside the provisions of the policy. Certain commentators have suggested, however, that based on a theory akin to unjust enrichment, recovery for such expenses might be had outside the explicit provisions of - the policy assuming, of course, that there be coverage for the potential damage averted.
See
Levmore,
supra
note 16;
Allocation of Costs, supra
note 16. For instance, a theory of implied agency suggests itself, the insured acting as agent for the insurer in mitigating damages at the scene of rapidly occurring dаmage with immediate decisions required and with the insured best able to judge which measures to take, a scenario unlike the scenario here. There is, of course, no express agency by virtue of any provision in the policy which explicitly required the insured to mitigate or which stated that such actions will be considered as taken at the request of the insurer.
See Harper v. Pelican Trucking Co.,
A noted commentator on insurance law has observed that the relationship between insurer and insured is analogous to that of debtor and creditor and not to that of a trustee and a cestui que trust, which latter fiduciary relationship would be more similar to one of agency. 2A Couch § 23:11 at 784 (1984 & 1985 Supp.). “Ordinarily, an insurance company stands in no fiduciary relationship to a legally competent applicant for ... [an] insurance contract.” Id. at 787. In fact, an insurance agent is not allowed to issue insurance for himself without his principal’s consent for the reason that one simultaneously an agent and an *548 insured would be serving conflicting interests. 4 Couch § 26A:193 at 369-70 (1984 & 1985 Supp.) When, as in this case, “liability is based upon a theory of unjust enrichment, the case properly falls within the principles of restitution and not agency principles.” H. Reuschlein & W. Gregory, The Law of Agency & Partnership 82 n. 46 (1979).
Two commentators have suggested that recovery on claims for mitigation expenses based on general liability policies might be based upon grounds of quasi-contract. Levmore, supra note 16, at 117-20; Allocation of Costs, supra note 16, at 1316. 24 Levmore would allow recovery for mitigation in Leebov-type situations based on his theories of wealth-dependency and lack of market encouragement problems. However, the wealth-dependency theory applies primarily in a world of unequal bargaining power, a situation which, as discussed above, is not the situation here. As discussed below, Levmore too easily dismisses market encouragement problems, i.e., the distortion of free market bargaining caused when restitution is invariably awarded.
Allocation of Costs, supra note 16, takes a quantum leap in analogizing from the long line of cases allowing mitigation expense coverage in maritime insurance, where there is an explicit sue and labor clause authorizing such expenses, to require such expenses to be paid under a general liability policy with no such explicit provision. Allocation of Costs would allow recovery based upon an unjust enrichment theory grounded on a constructive contract — a contract the parties would have made had they foreseen the future event when they negotiated the contract. See generally A Theory of Hypothetical Contract, supra note 24. It argues that a reasonable insurer, faced with an accident in which it would have to pay the entire eventual damage costs, would agree to reimburse the insured for mitigation expenses. In essence, Allocation of Costs urges that to conclude otherwise would place the insured in an unfair position in that it would be forced to mitigate based upon external exigencies and would, therefore, be in a poor bargaining position at that time to urge coverage for mitigation expenses.
Such reasoning is faulty on two grounds. First, it presupposes that the insured has other reasons for mitigating, thus vitiating the force of any public policy argument requiring recovery in such cases in order to encourage mitigation, an argument discussed below. Second, the time frame is ex post in that coverable damage has already occurred and is increasing. The insurer would be in a poor bargaining position to do other than accede to the insured’s requests to cover mitigation expenses.
But the parties should be viewed at the time of the making of the contract. At that time, an insurer and insured who foresaw the possibility of an accident requiring mitigative efforts could well have decided on one of two alternatives — liability insurance with mitigation expense recovery for a higher premium or liability insurance without such added coverage at a lower premium. Based on the variety of possible ex ante scenarios, it is impossible to predict *549 on a hypothetical contract basis what decision as to coverage the parties in this case would have made although clearly the amount of the premium would have been considered, a consideration of critical importance to plaintiff.
Moreover, it might well be argued that even if recovery on a restitutionary theory were colorable in the present case, several of the traditional defenses to such recovery would apply. For instance, plaintiff does not appear to meet the strict test of exigency required for recovery of expenses undertaken in an emergency situation. See Restatement of Restitution 2d, Tentative Draft No. 1, § 3 Comment b, (April 5, 1983). Moreover, under plaintiff's theory that its recall saved defendants possible future damage obligations, that recall was, as towards defendants, the act of an officious intermeddler or volunteer. “A person who receives a benefit through conduct officious as to him does not owe restitution to the person so acting. A person acts officiously when he intervenes in the affairs of another without adequate justification, such as to that which may be afforded by a request or a mistake.” Restatement of Restitution 2d, Tentative Draft No. 1 § 2 (April 5, 1983). See Restatement of Restitution §§ 2, 112 (1937). The rationale underlying this principle is that the common law supports the right to decide on and undertake one’s own obligations and prevents one from thrusting an obligation upon another. Restatement of Restitution 2d, Tentative Draft No. 1, § 2 Comments a & d (April 5, 1983).
It is, indeed, a narrow line that must be walked in order to recover under a restitutionary theory. The actor must be motivated in part by an interest in reward, or his actions will be altruistic, gratuitous, and uncompensible. Plaintiff’s recall was not at all motivated by an interest in a reward from its insurers. On the other hand, in most cases there can be no recovery if the actor’s deeds are undertaken in self-interest (as opposed to interest in a reward recovery) for the actor has suffered no loss, ie., he would have done the same thing even had the beneficiary possessed no interest in the object of the actor’s efforts. This self-interest is evident here.
Allocation of Costs
argues that an insured cannot be an officious intermeddler in the business of the insurer when he acts to mitigate damages to himself. This contention, too, can be disputed on two grounds. First, according to a noted expert in the field of restitution, courts have consistently denied attempts of all persons but lawyers who, simultaneously serving their own interests, seek to recover on a restitutionary theory from another whose interest was also served by their endeavors. Dawson,
The Self-Serving Intermeddler,
87 Har.L.Rev. 1409, 1444-50, 1457-58 (1974).
See
Restatement of Restitution 2d, Tentative Draft No. 1, § 21 Comment c (April 5, 1983). This conclusion is in line with the civil law precept denying recovery on
negotiorum gestio
when the benefactor’s acts also benefit himself. Second, at least one recent case has held that an insured was an intermeddler vis-a-vis the insurer when he acted to mitigate damages for which the insurer might ultimately have been liable.
See J.L. Simmons Co. v. Lumbermens Mut. Ins. Co.,
*550 Thus, under quasi-contract and agency and the various permutations of those theories, plaintiff cannot prevail.
III. LEEBOV AND ITS PROGENY— REDUX
All else having failed, plaintiff turns again to a handful of out-of-state liability insurance cases which allow covеrage for mitigation expenses, cases both poorly decided and only indirectly pertinent. Those cases all anticipate that the hypothetical damage ultimately prevented would have been covered.
Goodyear Rubber & Supply, Inc. v. Great American Ins. Co.,
A. COVERAGE FOR HYPOTHETICAL INJURY
There is some question as to whether defendants will be liable to plaintiff or Johnson & Johnson if damages are assessed against the latter in the seven Chicago death cases, let alone whether defendants would have been liable had there been further deaths. In the first place, at least one of the defendants, Northbrook Excess & Surplus Ins. Co., asserts that coverage for the seven deaths is excluded under the completed products exclusion, c(i). 26 In the second place, Johnson & Johnson has been and is now vigorously contesting its liability in the pending death cases. It is ludicrous to argue, under the very cases upon which plaintiff relies, that there is coverage for recall and recall-related expenses when plaintiff and its parent deny any responsibility for the deaths. Indeed, they have said from day one and to this day that Tylenol was not tampered with while in their possession and control and utterly nothing has surfaced to suggest that that conclusion was untrue. Leebov, it bears *551 mention, was a case in which liability was absolute.
Moreover, I strongly disagree with plaintiffs assumption that there would have been coverage had additional deaths occurred absent the recall. Plaintiff itself admits, both in its complaint and in its briefs, that it would have been negligent or grossly negligent were any subsequent deaths caused by its retention of Tylenol on the market. It is a well settled proposition of law that an actor who has negligently imperiled the life of another has a duty to aid that person and save him or her if at all possible.
See Butler v. Acme Markets,
With reference to a fire insurance policy, the Supreme Court stated, “Generally speaking, insurances against fire are made in the confidence that the assured will use all the precautions to avoid the calamity insured against, which would be suggested by his interest. The extent of this interest must always influence the underwriter in taking or rejecting the risk, and in estimating the premium.”
Columbian Ins. Co. v. Lawrence,
Thus, although an insured has a duty to mitigate damage once some damage has occurred of which it has knowledge, the insured has no duty to lessen damage that occurred before it was informed and able to mitigate. Therefore, in cases where an insured takes steps to minimize the harm already incurred, the insured is lessening an already vested damage recovery right and is, therefore, entitled to reimbursement for its reasonable expenses from its insurer.
Chemical Applications Co. v. Home Indem. Co.,
Failure so to act may entail not only civil, but criminal liability. N.J.S.A. 2C:2-l.b(2) (liability for omissions when duty to perform imposed by law); Model Penal Code § 2.01(3)(b) (similar; note 30 adds, “The ‘duty imposed by law’ may be a statutory duty, a contractual duty, or a duty arising from tort law.”); 4 W. Blackstone,
Commentaries on the Laws of England
25-26 (1769); W. LaFave & A. Scott,
Criminal Law
186 (1972) (questioning criminal liability for failure to act after innocent acts, inapplicable here as plaintiff has admitted it would be negligent); R. Perkins & R. Boyce,
Criminal Law
666 (3d Ed.1982).
See State v. Reitze,
Public policy strongly condemns, and thus disallows, any insurance against a criminal act or omission.
Ruvolo v. American Cas. Co.,
The leading recent case on this point in New Jersey,
Ambassador Ins. Co. v. Montes,
Were a person able to insure himself against the economic consequences of his intentional wrongdoing, the deterrence attributable to financial responsibility would be missing. Further, as a matter of moral principle no person should be permitted to allege his own turpitude as a ground for recovery. Accordingly, we have accepted the general principle that an insurer may not contract to indemnify an insured against the civil consequences of his own wilful criminal act.
However, this principle is not to be applied undеr all circumstances. Certainly it should not come into play when the wrongdoer is not benefited and an innocent third party receives the protection afforded by the insurance.
B. OTHER DISTINCTIONS
There are various other factors that distinguish the present case from that of Lee bov and its related cases. First, those cases were all based upon liability for a swift, single, and continuing occurrence of property damage, while the present case is bottomed on liability for personal injury in a potential mass disaster. 28 Second, the mitigation efforts that were considered covered in those cases were specifically designed to limit damage to a particular third party who had already been injured and not to more general damage prevention. Thus, the closer parallel in the present case might be whether the insurer was obligated to pay for hospital expenses the insured incurred in treating a victim of a poisoning incident. 29 Third, in each case, there was a genuine emergency requiring *554 instantaneous action, which precluded setting up any significant plan with the insurer. In the present case, also, of course, an emergency situation, plaintiff had sufficient time during the week-long recall period and thereafter to consult with defendants, or at least to notify them, as to what actions it would take, yet failed to do so until the commencement of this lawsuit. 30 This failure, plaintiff explains, occurred because the recall took place prior to anyone thinking about insurance much less discussing the question of coverage, an explanation that is hardly surprising given the fact that no one believed there was coverage. Fourth, in eаch case, in spite of its emergent nature, there was a representative of the insurer on the scene who, at least implicitly, acceded to the emergency measures of the insured. 31
At argument on these motions, Judge Lacey observed: “ ... [w]ithout Leebov you don’t have anything.” (Tr., Dec. 24, 1985 at 79). Once again, Leebov and cases related to it have not taken plaintiff where it wishes to be.
IY. PUBLIC POLICY
Even if the parallels with Leebov and its related cases were stronger, I would disagree with the policy implications of those *555 decisions, at least as far as plaintiff would have them applied in the present case. What the Leebov court did was to state that, in a liability policy which it found to be ambiguous as to coverage for mitigation expenses, such expenses were covered. The public policy invoked was the encouragement of mitigation. If mitigation expenses are considered covered in such cases, so the argument goes, insureds would be encouraged to mitigate while if the courts disallow such expenses under general liability policies, insureds would be encouraged to permit damages to mount, knowing that direct damages would be covered. This argument, while superficially appealing, must be rejected.
In the first place, to apply this doctrine properly, coverage for mitigation expenses would have to be mandatory in all liability policies. If mitigation coverage were not mandatory, insurers could develop (as they have) specific mitigation insurance, in addition to liability insurance, for which former coverage they would charge substantial premiums. Ordinary liability policies, available at the lower premium rate paid in the present case, would therefore not encompass any mitigation coverage. Thus, any time an insured under an ordinary liability policy found to be insufficiently clear recovered mitigation expenses, it will have received a windfall in that it attained coverage that was available but that it did not bargain for, while other insureds will have paid substantially higher premiums for the same coverage. Such a windfall would not, and could not, be a form of encouragement to undertake mitigation efforts but, to the contrary, a reward for having made such efforts. 32
Eventually, then, a sharply divided market with two types of liability policies (one including coverage for mitigation expenses and one specifically excluding such covеrage) and no potentially ambiguous policies would evolve. An unscrupulous insured would in that circumstance have a greater incentive to purchase the non-mitigation insurance (as it would be lower in price) and quietly let damages mount in order to be reimbursed. With mandatory coverage for mitigation expenses there would then be no element of windfall in a recovery of such expenses, as all policies would have premiums set so high as to cover both ordinary liability and mitigation recoveries, and the unscrupulous insured (concern over whom is the main factor behind allowing mitigation expenses) would not be tempted to buy lower priced insurance in hopes of receiving a higher priced recovery. Making such coverage mandatory would, of course, compromise the important public policies of freedom of contractual choice in the mar *556 ketplace and the reduction of premium costs to the consumer. 33
In the second place, as discussed above, there are important alternative reasons that encourage mitigation in cases such as the present one, if here “mitigation” it even be, without strained judicial construction and the necessity of judicial intervention to create additional grounds for mitigation. See, Allocation of Costs, supra note 16, at 1324-26. It is sound judicial practice not to develop, on public policy grounds, additional bases for legal liability when preexisting reasons suffice to encourage the desired activity. Here, plaintiff has made no secret of the fact that the primary reason for the recall was moral and that that reason alone was sufficient for the actions that were taken. Plaintiff, moreover, indicates that it believes that others in similar positions would similarly do what it did out of a moral duty — a feeling that “mitigation” was the right thing to do. This proposition vitiates any *557 public policy ground for allowing coverage of expenses, however denominated, as an encouragement to mitigation. “It is virtually a precept that the merit of emergency salvage efforts is, and should be, its own reward.” Restatement of Restitution 2d, Tentative Draft No. 1, § 3 Comment a (April 5, 1983), describing the common law’s aversion to awarding restitution for benefits altruistically conferred.
Moreover, here, in addition to the strong moral reasons for undertaking the recall, there were strong business reasоns as well. Plaintiff stood to lose a large portion of its share of the analgesic market if it did not act promptly to dispel worries about the safety of its product, and did not promptly remarket that product in tamper resistant packaging. Additionally, mitigation of covered damages is an implicit contractual obligation of all insurance contracts, as discussed above, and failure to mitigate after knowledge of ongoing damage will reduce insurance coverage and implicate direct liability for negligence on the part of the insured.
See Ambassador Ins. Co. v. Montes,
Yet another independent ground for mitigation by the insured in the real world, as discussed above, are the policies of underinsurance, caps on liability, and large deductibles. Finally, here, criminal liability might well have attached had further deaths occurred after plaintiff had knowledge of the connection between its product and the poisoning deaths. In light of these manifold additional reasons for an insured to mitigate damages, it would be contrary to the public policy against unnecessarily increasing uncertainty in the marketplace (in this case the likelihood of recovery against insurers for mitigation expenses) and, thereby, increasing the price of liability insurance, to give a windfall recovery to plaintiff.
The so-called discovery problem, an additional reason advanced by some for the recovery of mitigation expenses, must similarly be rejected. The advocates of this concept argue that, even given other reasons for mitigation, an unscrupulous insured would have no reason to mitigate at its own expense if it felt it would not be caught allowing damages to mount and, therefore, the additional encouragement of allowing mitigation expenses on an ordinary liability policy would be necessary. 34
In addition to being circular, the discovery argument is weak in that it fails to allow for the ease of discovery of the failure to mitigate in today’s complex and interrelated world where, as here, large numbers of people might well be involved in such a decision and failure to mitigate when it was possible would surely become public knowledge. In addition, the fear of the possibility of the disclosure of a failure to mitigate, even if remote, would act as a powerful additional stimulus to mitigation. Moreover, I am not so quick to impugn the character of individual and commercial in *558 sureds by imputing to them the qualities the discovery argument would require me to believe they possessed. Aside from the fact that plaintiff admits that even it, a part of a huge corporate enterprise, was motivated by ethical concerns more than greed in its recall of Tylenol, plaintiff urges, and I accept, that such an upright response would typify most American insureds.
Finally, the argument for mitigation expenses is unsound at its very core as, even under plaintiff's construction, the standard liability policy language and the problems with proximate causation discussed above would require some damage before subsequent mitigation expenses could be reimbursable if there were no mandatory mitigation coverage. Therefore, by allowing mitigation expenses at all, unscrupulous insureds are in effect encouraged not to mitigate at the initial signs of trouble, but to await some damage — which might well run out of control — before they mitigate. 35
Far from indicating that coverage for mitigation expenses as a result of the construction of inexplicit liability policies encourages mitigation, the above observations demonstrate that at most such an interpretation rewards mitigators who need no additional encouragement after the fact, and that at worst such a policy discourages mitigation and encourages carelessness.
On public policy grounds, as well, plaintiff’s claim must fail.
CONCLUSION
On all grounds, therefore, plaintiff’s claim fails. Defendants’ motions for summary judgment are granted and plaintiff's cross-motion is denied.
Notes
. Johnson & Johnson has its principal place of business in New Jersey and if joined would destroy diversity jurisdiction, the sole basis of jurisdiction alleged by the parties. None of the parties has moved to determine whether Johnson & Johnson is an indispensable party within the meaning of Fed.R.Civ.P. 19, although this case has proceeded in this court since 1982 and Johnson & Johnson has been intimately involved in the proceedings. Thus, following
Provident Bank v. Patterson,
. £‘ It appears that during the course of the recall, three additionаl potentially lethal doses of cyanide were found in Extra-Strength Tylenol bottles in the Chicago area although the complaint notes only two such doses.
. The second count, which named as a defendant only Affiliated FM Insurance Co., plaintiffs business interruption insurer, sought similar relief and was terminated on September 23, 1985 with a judgment in favor of Affiliated after a "minitrial” on the merits pursuant to Fed.R. Civ.P. 42(b) before the Hon. Frederick B. Lacey. That judgment was affirmed by the Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit on June 12, 1986.
McNeilab, Inc. v. North River Ins. Co.,
. Argument on the cross-motions was heard by Judge Lacey on December 24, 1985, decision was reserved, and the case was assigned to me upon his retiring from the bench the following month. I note that early in the history of this case, plaintiff moved for summary judgment on the same grounds as are now raised to me. Judge Lacey denied plaintiffs motion, indicating that further discovery was necessary. Discovery over the ensuing three years has resulted in much that is helpful to defendants on the issue of intent and little or nothing helpful to plaintiff, which continues to rely on the policy construction arguments it advanced in its earlier summary judgment motion.
. Under the doctrine of
Erie Railroad Co. v. Tompkins,
. Plaintiff cites
Allstate Ins. Co. v. Campbell,
New Jersey cases that have stated a similar position with greater precision stem from
Mazzilli v. Acc. & Cas. Ins. Co.,
Several of these citations merely refer to
Mazzilli
for its broader holding that insurance policies are generally construed in favor of the insured.
Ohio Cas. Ins. Co. v. Flanagin,
While
Mahon v. American Cas. Co.,
. The wording of the Desrochers policy is echoed in Johnson & Johnson’s underlying products liability policy with its subsidiary captive insurance company, Middlesex Assurance Co., Ltd., which reads, “The Company will pay on behalf of the insured all sums which the insured shall become legally obligated to pay as damages because of A. personal injury or B. property damage arising out of a Products Hazard to which this insurance applies, caused by an occurrence____” The standard form Insurance Services Office (ISO) language is similar, “We will pay those sums that the insured becomes legally obligated to pay as damages because of 'personal injury’ or ‘advertising injury’ to which this insurance applies.” [emphasis added]
. In other words, this is "a difference that makes no difference.” Attributed to William James,
Oswalt
v.
Scripto, Inc.,
. Under the doctrine of
Erie v. Tompkins,
.
See Bakery & Confectionary Workers Int'l Union v. Great Atlantic & Pacific Tea Co.,
. Economy-Wallace Joint Venture v. Commercial Union Ins. Co., No. 83 C 6172 slip opinion (N.D.Ill. March 6, 1984) [available on Westlaw, DCTU database]; Lehigh Electric & Engineering Co. v. Selected Risks Ins. Co., 30 Pa.D. & C.3d 120 (Com.Pl.1982).
.
Southern California Edison Co. v. Harbor Ins. Co.,
.
Riehl
v.
Travelers Ins. Co.,
.
Verio v. Equitable Life Assur. Soc.,
. I note, however, that under Pennsylvania law a
per curiam
memorandum affirmance of a trial court opinion is of no precedential value.
Reed v. Pennsylvania Nat. Mut. Cas. Ins. Co.,
. The relatively few citations to Leebov in scholarly works reflect and reinforce the discussion in the cases as to the lack of distinction between coverage phrases. Again, Leebov is cited for the proposition that extrinsic evidence is admissible to show the intent of the parties. Plowman, Evidence, 23 U.Pitt.L.Rev. 539, 544 & n. 24 (1961) (hereinafter referred to as "Plowman"); Reed, The Pushy Ox: Character Evidence in Pennsylvania Civil Actions, 58 Temp. L.Q. 623, 633 & n. 72 (1985) (hereinafter referred to as "Reed”). Several articles discuss Leebov in reference to the general concept of the reimbursement of mitigation expenses, without explicitly discussing the distinction between "as damages" and “by reason of liability". Recoverability, Under Property Insurance, supra n. 14 at 1266 & nn. 16 & 19, 1273 & n. 2, 1274-75; Levmore, Explaining Restitution, 71 Va.L.Rev. 65, 118-20 (1985) (hereinafter referred to as "Levmore"); Note, Allocation of the Costs of Preventing an Insured Loss, 71 Colum.L.Rev. 1309, 1309-10, 1316, 1321, 1323 (1971) (hereinafter referred to as "Allocation of Costs"); Young, Equivocation in the Making of Agreements, 64 CoIum.L.Rev. 619, 631 n. 53 (1964). There are, as well, a few miscellaneous citations. Holahan, Commercial Transactions, 25 U.Pitt.L.Rev. 211, 214 & n. 12 (1963) (discussing what constitutes an "accident”); Thornburgh & Craig, Remedies, 23 U.Pitt.L.Rev. 547, 62 & n. 50 (1961) (referring to the measure of damages).
Only one of the citations to Leebov discusses the distinction in coverage provision terminology. Holahan, Contracts, Sales, and Insurance, 23 U.Pitt.L.Rev. 363, 372-73 (1961). That contemporary account observed, in reference to the Leebov court’s distinguishing of Desrochers’ denial of reimbursement for mitigation expenses where the policy used the "as damages" language: "The distinction does not seem persuasive."
.
See, e.g., Entron, Inc. v. Affiliated FM Ins. Co.,
.
See Donnelly
v.
Transportation Ins. Co.,
Corpus Juris Secundum defines liability insurance as follows: "Liability insurance is that form of insurance by which insured is indemnified against loss or liability on account of bodily injuries sustained by others or, in a broader sense, against loss or liability on account of injuries to property.” 44 C.J.S.,
Insurance
§ 21 at 481 (1945 & 1985 Supp.). It is clear that this language, while perhaps awkward, implicitly restricts coverage to liability for property damage on third party claims. The phrase "in a broader sense, against loss or liability on account of injuries to property,” does not imply that the broader form of liability insurance covers all injuries to property but, to the contrary, that the broader form of liability insurance covers only third-party claims for property damage and bodily injury, while the narrower form allows coverage only for third-party claims for bodily injury.
See, e.g., Alcorn Bank & Trust Co. v. United States Fid. & Guar. Co.,
. While, to a certain extent, some of the numerous progeny of
Twin City Fire Ins. Co. v. Wilkerson,
.
LaMarche v. Shelby Mut. Ins. Co.,
.
Recoverability under Property Insurance, supra
note 14, states at 1272, "As to recoverability, under a policy of liability insurance, of expenses incurred by the insured to mitigate damages for
property loss
for which the insured
(and his insurer)
would be liable, the cases are sharply divided, both in their results and rationales. Most of the cases dealing with this issue have turned on a construction of policy language which establishes as a condition precedent to recovery against the insurer that the insured be 'legally obligated’ to pay damages [a condition equivalent to "liability imposed by law” in the present case] to an injured third party.” (emphasis added). The cases discussed in the Annotation in fact fall within a narrow and highly specialized subset of liability policies. Two important distinctions between the cases cited in the Annotation and the present case are that the former restricts itself (1) to property losses and (2) to cases in which the insurer would be liable. The importance of these distinctions is discussed below. The Annotation and its supplement cite four cases in favor of allowing recovery of mitigation expenses. Three, however, rest on reasoning entirely inapplicable to the present case. The insurance in
Teeples v. Tolson,
On the other hand, the cases cited in
.
See, e.g., Kopp v. Newark Ins. Co.,
. Plaintiff misreads my opinion in
Lac D'Amiante du Quebec, Ltee. v. American Home Assur. Co.,
. For a history of quasi-contract at common law and the rationale for granting recovery on that basis, see J. Baker, An Introduction to English Legal History 300-14 (1970). See also Restatement of Restitution, Pt. 1 Introductory Note at 4-10 (1937). (The term “restitution" is somewhat more comprehensive than “quasi-contract".) I note that even when there is a breached contract, a recovery in restitution is unwarranted when the recovery would be for a sum of liquidated damages, as here. Restatement of Restitution 2d, Tentative Draft No. 1 § 17 at 153-54 (April 5, 1983); Restatement of Contracts 2d § 373 (1979); Restatement of Contracts § 350 (1932). Any such recovery must be on the contract, and this contract provides for none. A recent study of restitutional recoveries observes, “A court should not impose a hypothetical contract if the parties could have negotiated an express agreement." Note, A Theory of Hypothetical Contract, 94 Yale LJ. 415, 420 (1984) (hereinafter referred to as "A Theory of Hypothetical Contrae!'). See Restatement of Restitution 2d, Tentative Draft No. 1, § 1 Comments h. & k., § 21 comment a. (April 5, 1983). It is quite clear that Johnson & Johnson was aware of and could well have negotiated for and purchased coverage for recall had it so desired.
. Common law restitutionary theories, with their qualifications and pro-individualistic failure to reward altruism, are insufficient for recovery here. Moreover, civil law quasi-contract theories, which tend more in the direction of reward for unselfish acts, are similarly unavailing. The civil law, although on different theoretical grounds, has hedged its quasi-contractual remedies with exceptions and narrow definitions in order to avoid an overexpansion of this theory of recovery beyond its basic rationale in unjust enrichment. See B. Nicholas, An Introduction to Roman Law 229-31 (1962) (hereinafter referred to as "Nicholas"). The quasi-contract theory of the Roman law most relevant here is negotiorum gestio ("management of the affairs [of another]”) — a theory of legally implied agency whereby a negotiorum gestor ("manager”) who undertakes to perform a service on behalf of a dominus rei gestae ("principal”) without a specific mandatum ("agency”) or similar obligation is entitled to reimbursement for his actions. The policy behind allowing such recovery was to encourage the protection of an absentee’s interests by public spirited neighbors. See W. Buckland, A Text-Book of *550 Roman Law 536-44 (3d ed. 1963); W. Buckland & A. McNair, Roman Law & Common Law 329-37 (2d ed. 1952); R. Lee, The Elements of Roman Law 371-77 (1956); Nicholas, supra this note, at 227-33 (1962); F. Schulz, Classical Roman Law 610-25 (1951). For an excellent study of the survival of this principle in present day civil law, see Dawson, Negotiorum Gestio: The Altruistic Intermeddler, 74 Harv. L. Rev. 817-65, 1073-1129 (1961). A primary restriction upon recovery under this theory was that the affair managed needed to be that of another, and not one’s own as well. Another prerequisite for recovery was that the principal be absent (i.e., unreachable) or be present and consent. Finally, as at common law, the manager must have acted with the expectation of being rewarded for his services. While all of these requirements, which would preclude recovery in the present case, have been to a certain extent modified and reshaped by modern developments, they continue to be major elements within the theory of recovery under negotiorum gestio. Moreover, "Negotiorum gestio ... constitutes one of the most marked divergences ... between the Civil law and the Common law. The latter insists on the individualistic principle that a man should not be required to pay for a service for which he has not asked, and holds that to encourage rendering of such services would be to encourage the 'officious intermeddler.' ” Nicholas, supra this note, at 229. For a thorough discussion of how the primarily modern doctrine of unjust enrichment as a theory of recovery in its own right in the civil law developed, see generally J. Dawson, Unjust Enrichment (1951). For a brief summary of the reasoning behind this principle and how its use is circumscribed, see Nicholas, supra this note, at 231-33.
.
Cf. Weedo,
. The question of coverage for a criminal act, of course, is relevant only to the question of whether hypothetical future deaths would have been covered by the policy (the underlying theory for recovery on the present liability policy), and not to the issue of coverage for the recall itself, which, of course, is a business expense which certainly could have been insured against separately as an independent act.
.
Recoverability under Property Insurance, supra
note 14, clearly contemplates only claims based on property damage and not those arising out of personal injury.
See
15 Couch § 54:174 at 559-62 (1983
&
1985 Supp.), which relates coverage for such expenses to necessity for care for damaged property. Moreover, the policy implications that must be taken into account when discussing harm to persons are different from and more stringent than those relating to property damage.
Compare
N.J.S.A. 2C:3-5 ("Use of force for the protection of other persons”)
with
NJ.S.A. 2C:3-6 ("Use of force in defense of premises or personal property”). Such distinctions stem from ancient precedent.
See State v. Zellers,
. This line of argument is related to the question of the proximity of relationship between the accident and the mitigation. It makes no sense to allow mitigation expenses, for instance, for the repair of a car’s brake system only after one of the brakes has malfunctioned and caused someone injury, and yet to deny recovery before such an injury takes place.
But see
Levmore,
supra
note 16, at 118-19. Yet, plaintiff admits that the only way that the recall-related damages it seeks could be recovered were if some damage first took place. On public policy grounds, this proposition is unsound and is discussed below. Continuing the brake analogy, it would be equally absurd to allow coverage under an automobile liability or collision policy for brake repairs before an accident. There must be some relationship of proximate causation between an accident and acts in mitigation thereof and some line drawing. If not, the notion of prevention of a specific accident becomes overly remote and unrelated to coverage for a specific accident, and related only to general safety measures which entail an entirely different kind of premium structure. For a discussion as to various theories of proximate causation and foreseeability,
see
W. Prosser & W. Keeton,
Law of Torts,
§§ 42-43 at 272-300 (5th ed. 1984). For a discussion of how tenuous and remote recovery on a liability policy under mitigation theory might become without delineation of its limits,
see Allocation of Costs, supra
note 16, at 1323-24. It is clear from the great majority of the cases discussed above that the courts have chosen to avoid the slippery slope and have drawn the line between acceptable recovery and overly remote preventative claims very close to the division between third-party and first-party claims. For instance, in
Farr v. Traders & General Ins. Co.,
To this extent it might well be argued that the reasonableness of plaintiffs mitigation efforts goes not only to damages, but also to liability. See Restatement of Restitution 2d, Tentative Draft No. 2, Ch. 9, § A (April 6, 1984), “Nо *554 award of restitution in money for a benefit or gain will be made unless ... the value of the benefit, or the amount of the gain, has been established to a reasonable certainty____" But see Allocation of Costs, at 1327, which argues that the court should inquire into and verify the extent of the insured's claimed mitigation expenses as a means of assuring that the insured does not undertake and charge the insurer for unnecessary extra precautions, an argument that relies heavily on the unscrupulous insured and his interest in allowing damages to mount secretly — the discovery problem discussed below.
Allocation of Costs,
at 1323, also raises the problem that in any quasi-contractual recovery against the insurer for mitigation expenses, numerous other parties, including potential victims to the extent insurance would not cover their injuries and the insured to the extent of his underinsurance, are benefited by the insured's mitigation efforts and, therefore, recovery of mitigation expenses solely against the insurer would not spread the burden of the benefit fairly.
Allocation of Costs,
indicates, as well, that it would be fairly easy to ascertain the relatively small number of parties legally benefited by mitigation and to divide the respective proportions of liability among them, and states that the doctrines of
de minimis
and gratuitousness could narrow the scope of beneficiaries. I have some difficulty with the Note’s reference to “legally” benefited, a term "Allocation of Costs" does not adequately define, as this relates to the much more difficult question of who is proximately benefited by the mitigation and of who is and is not gratuitously benefited as discussed in reference to who is a volunteer in such circumstances. In this context,
see Winkler v. Great American Ins. Co.,
.
See Farr v. Traders & Gen. Ins. Co.,
. In this regard,
Bowman Steel Corp. v. Lumbermens Mut. Cas. Co.,
. Allocation of Costs, supra note 16, at 1326, briefly discusses and dismisses this problem of potentially large premiums entailed in including mitigation expense recovery in standard liability policies. It states that recovery on such clauses would be insufficiently frequent to raise premiums substantially throughout the industry and that uncertainty as to coverage by inclusion of a mitigation reimbursement clause could be accurately assessed by closely drawn definitions and appropriate actuarial calculations. The facts before me lead me to believe otherwise. Recall coverage is in fact available to insureds, but at a substantial premium. Surely any liability insurance policy that included recall coverage in addition to the basic policy would cost substantially more than the basic policy alone. The note’s point as to uncertainty of premiums is well taken, but beside the point. Such calculations already take place in the free market which currently offers both pure third-party insurance in the form of general liability insurance and liability insurance with clauses such as cooperation clauses similar to maritime sue and labor clauses.
Moreover, with the uncertainties involved in any such ex post facto reward system, mitigation might be actually discouraged in a worst case scenario. Ceteris paribus if mitigation expenses were recoverable on a liability policy unclear as to such coverage, the insured would be equally likely to mitigate (which effort would be compensated) or to allow damages to mount (assuming all damages to be covered). Thus, allowing recovery of mitigation expenses under ordinary liability policies where the policy was not explicit as to nonrecovery of such expenses (e.g., by analogy to the present case), would be somewhat of a lottery. An unscrupulous insured, instead of risking the potentiality of nonrecovery of mitigation expenses through the long and complex litigation process, might well chance the possibility of a surer recovery for damages and, thus, permit them to mount.
. This discussion clearly raises the market encouragement problems envisioned by Levmore, supra note 16, at 79-81. Levmore at 118, states that there would be no market encouragement problem in allowing restitution for mitigation expenses as the insurer would prefer to have the insured, who is immediately available, mitigate rather than bring in its own agents to mitigate damages. However, this is a superficial analysis which only looks at the situation ex post, i.e., after damage has commenced. If looked at ex ante in a real world perspective, awarding restitution with regularity in insurance mitigation cases would eventually require all liability policies to include mitigation expenses, a situation that would considerably restrict market choice in the liability insurance market between policies that do and do not include coverage for mitigation expenses and would thus take away a certain force for choice and competition in the insurance market.
The economic concept of "moral hazard” as it relates to insurance is relevant to this discussion.
See
Stiglitz, “Risk, Incentives and Insurance: The Pure Theory of Moral Hazard,” Princeton University Department of Economics Financial Research Center Memorandum #42 (1982) (hereinafter referred to as “Stiglitz”). Economists have developed the doctrine that an insured will always desire full coverage at “actuarial fair rate,” but that the system cannot allow full coverage because to do so would unduly encourage careless actions by the insured — i.e., an insured knowing he was fully insured may well, both consciously and unconsciously, fail to take all the precautions an ordinary uninsured actor would normally take in his day to day life. Because of this reticence on the part of insurers fully to insure, a stance that is backed by the public policy encouraging care, there would be no true equilibrium (where supply equals demand) in insurance markets. Some insurance, on the other hand, is useful to economic growth and development, in that it encourages creative and productive risk taking. Finding the optimum point is the function of the insurance market. To increase coverage above this optimum point, the insurer must require a large additional premium, both as a sort of bond against careless action by the insured and to cover the additional “moral hazard” of encouragement towards the carelessness that additional coverage might occasion.
See generally
Stiglitz.
See also Centex Homes Corp. v. Prestressed Systems, Inc.,
It is because of this concept of “moral hazard” that insurers have developed policies of under-insurance, caps on liability, and large deductibles, in order to make the insured more responsible for his own actions and, therefore, more careful in the initial instance. Underinsurance, caps, and large deductibles, as discussed below, also act as additional factors encouraging mitigation, as the insured who allows actual damages to mount increases his personal loss, whereas if he mitigates he decreases his personal loss, irrespective of coverage. In a system in which mitigation expenses might sometimes be allowed under ordinary liability policies, in addition to the problem of uncertainty of the insurer’s liability, there is also the potential for the “moral hazard” of recovery for mitigation expenses to be seen as additional coverage tending towards uncompensated full coverage, which potential, absent the discouraging element of an additional premium, would encourage carelessness, and thus increase the number of occasions in which actual mitigation is necessary. See Stiglitz.
. Levmore, supra note 16, and Allocation of Costs, supra note 16, suggest that this discovery problem is a primary reason behind the uniform provision for coverage of mitigation expenses under sue and labor clauses of marine insurance policies. I would suggest, however, that the inclusion of such clauses in marine insurance is due primarily to the emergency nature of most maritime accidents and the difficulty in communication with the insurer as to how best to mitigate. Allocation of Costs, at 1323-24, suggests in addition that in maritime insurance there is generally less concern with the scope of the beneficiaries in reference to the problems or proximate cause (as the interests at stake are made rather finite by the surrounding seas) than there is with terrestrial policies and there is greater doubt with maritime insurance as to the insured’s personal interest in mitigating damages (as the insured property is generally at the high seas and not under direct control of the insured, but of an agent) than is present in most land-based insurance. In spite of these many differences between marine and non-marine insurance, Levmore and Allocation of Costs imply that marine insurers are wiser than non-marine insurers in invariably utilizing sue and labor clauses in their policies, while non-marine insurers fail to use similar clauses on a regular basis, and they urge the courts to correct this "oversight” by interpolating such a term into all insurance policies. It may well be, however, that non-marine insurers are properly responding to market pressures in their particular fields, which pressures, as the authors admit, are different in several ways from those in the maritime area.
. In
J. L. Simmons Co. v. Lumbermens Mut. Ins. Co., 228
N.E.2d 227, the court distinguished
Leebov v. United States Fidelity & Guar. Co.,
