The Motion For Rehearing is overruled. Our opinion of March 2, 1995, is withdrawn and the following opinion is substituted.
In this action for damages, injunctive relief, and a declaration of coverage, the issue is whether so-called “absolute pollution exclusions” in insurance policies unambiguously apply to еxclude damage coverage from an accidental explosion producing a toxic hydrofluoric acid cloud over a city. The trial court granted summary judgment in favor of the defendant insurance companies. The court
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of appeals reversed the summary judgment and remanded the cause to the trial court.
CBI Industries, Inc. (“CBI”) brought this action against various insurance companies which insured CBI under general liability policies. The insurers fall into three groups providing successive “layers” of coverage: (1) National Union Fire Insurance Company of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania (“National Union”); (2) Anglo American Insurance Company, Ltd. and others (collectively “Anglo American”); and (3) Rome and Companies (collectively “Rome”). Each of the policies issued to CBI by these companies contained a version of what is known in the industry as an “absolute pollution exclusion.” The National Union policy contained the following exclusion:
This policy does not apply to ... any Personal Injury or Property Damage arising out of the actual or threatened discharge, dispersal, release or escape of pollutants, anywhere in the world; ... “Pollutants” means any solid, liquid, gaseous or thermal irritant or contaminant, including smoke, vapor, soot, fumes, acids, alkalis, сhemicals and waste material. Waste materials include materials which are intended to be or have been recycled, reconditioned or reclaimed.
The Anglo American and Rome policies contained this exclusion:
Notwithstanding anything to the contrary contained in this policy, this policy is amended in that it shall not apply to any claim or claims: For personal injuries or property damages directly or indirectly caused by seepage or pollution or contamination of air, land, water or any other property, however caused and whenever occurring.
In October of 1987, CBI, through its wholly owned subsidiary CBI Na-Con, Inc. 1 , was working as a contractor for Marathon Petroleum Company (“Marathon”) in connection with a periodic “turnaround” of Marathon’s Texas City Refinery, during which the refinery is shut down and equipment removed for cleaning, maintenance and replacement. As contractor, CBI was supervising the removal by crane of the convection section of a heater unit. An accident occurred when the crane’s load was dropped onto a pipe connected to a storage tank which contained hydrofluoric acid, a substance identified by the United States Environmental Protection Agency as a toxic waste. 2 CBI claims that Marathon, in contravention of standard industry practices, had faded to empty the storage tank prior to the commencement of the turnaround and that CBI was unawarе of the presence of hydrofluoric acid in the tank prior to the accident.
In numerous lawsuits brought against CBI and others in connection with the accident, residents of Texas City and others alleged that they were injured when a large cloud of hydrofluoric acid was released as a result of the accident. CBI tendered these claims to National Union, Anglo American and Rome. All of the companies denied coverage and CBI filed this suit.
The insurance companies moved for summary judgment on the ground that the “absolute pollution exclusions” in their policies precluded coverage as a matter of law. CBI argued in response that the policies, by virtue of these exclusions, contained both patent and latent ambiguities. The trial court granted summary judgment for the insurance companies before CBI had the opportunity to obtain any documents through the discоvery process. However, the trial court did accept for the record certain insurance industry documents which, CBI contends, indicate that “absolute pollution exclusions” such as those involved in this case are ambiguous and will not be read literally to exclude coverage for еvery situation involving the discharge of pollutants. 3
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Insurance policies are controlled by rules of interpretation and construction which are applicable to contracts generally.
See Forbau v. Aetna Life Insurance Company,
If, however, the language of a policy or contract is subject to two or more reasonable interpretations, it is ambiguous.
See Glover v. National Insurance Underwriters,
An ambiguity in a contract may be said to be “patent” or “latent.” A patent ambiguity is evident on the facе of the contract.
See Universal Home Builders, Inc. v. Farmer,
In this ease, the court of appeals did not decide that the contrаct was either patently or latently ambiguous. Rather, the court held that the trial court abused its discretion when it rendered summary judgment before allowing discovery.
The court of appeals relies on the
Bache
decision, which held that if a latent ambiguity is discovered when “applying the contract to the subject matter with which it deals,”
then
the proponent оf the ambiguity may introduce parol evidence to establish the parties’ intent.
Bache,
The question to be decided here is whether these insurance policies, by virtue of their “absolute pollution exclusions,” are patently or lаtently ambiguous. On its face, the language of the policies is clear and not patently ambiguous. Nor are the policies latently ambiguous. Applying the policies’ language to the context of the claim here does not produce an uncertain or ambiguous result, but leads only to one reasonable conclusion: the loss was caused by a cloud of hydrofluoric acid, a substance which is clearly a “pollutant” for which coverage is precluded.
CBI correctly contends that the language of the policies must be interpreted with reference to both thе facts of the claim
and
the facts within the contemplation of the parties at the signing of the policies.
See Coker,
Extrinsic evidence may, indeed, be admissible to give the words of a contract a meaning consistent with that to which they are reasonably susceptible,
ie.,
to “interpret” contractual terms.
6
If the contract language is not fairly susceptible of more than one legal meaning or construction, however, extrinsic evidence is inadmissible to contradict or vary the meaning of the explicit language of the parties’ written agreement.
Hubacek v. Ennis State Bank,
Courts usually strive for uniformity in construing insurance provisions, especially where, as here, the contract provisions at issue are identical across the jurisdictions. Most courts which have examined the same or substantially similar absolute pollution exclusions have concluded that they are clear and unambiguous.
8
“This pollution exclusion is just what it purports to be — absolute ...”
Alcolac,
Notes
. CBI Na-Con, Inc. was an additional named insured on all of the insurance policies at issue in this case.
. 40 C.F.R. § 261.33(f) (1992).
.For example, during testimony at a 1985 hearing conducted by the Texas State Board of Insurance, Ward Harrel, a representative of Liberty Mutual Insurance Company, indicated that the *520 pollution exclusion could be read literally to exclude coverage in situations where "no one would read it that way,” noting that "our insureds would be at the Stаte Board ... quicker than a New York minute if, in fact, everytime [sic] a bottle of Clorox fell off a shelf at a grocery store and we denied the claim because it's a pollution loss.”
. For example, if a contract called for goods to be delivered to “the green house on Pecan Street,” and there were in fact two green houses on the street, it would be latently ambiguous.
. In its brief to this Court, CBI argues that the insurance companies’ summary judgment proof did not establish as a matter of law that the language of the exclusions was unambiguous “in light of the surrounding circumstances,” i.e. that "[tjherе remained genuinely disputed issues of material fact as to whether the parties intended to apply the pollution exclusions to CBI's construction accidents.” As discussed above, however, no issue regarding the parties’ intentions is raised
unless
the policy is ambiguous — and evidence of those intentions cannot be used to create an ambiguity.
See Universal,
CBI also contends that one of the inferences that should be made in its favor on summary judgment is that “the policies contain patent ambiguities that preclude summary judgment and cry out for discovery.” Whether the policies contain ambiguities is a matter of law for the court,
see Coker,
. In cases involving "trade usage” evidence, for example, the meaning to which a certain term or phrase is most reasonably susceptible is the one which so regularly observеd in place, vocation, trade, or industry so “as to justify an expectation that it will be observed with respect to a particular agreement.” Restatement (2d) of Contracts § 222(1). See also TexBus. a Com.Code § 1.205(b).
. The National Union policy applies to "any” pollution, and the Anglo American and Rome policies аpply to pollution "however caused."
.
See, e.g., Heyman Assoc. No. 1 v. Insurance Co. of State of Pennsylvania,
