Sometimes common sense prevails, even in the law. This is one of those occasions.
This case returns to us following a remand to the district court. Nationwide Insurance sought a declaratory judgment that it need not defend or indemnify its insured, Aleck Zavalis, in an Illinois state court suit filed by the Trustees of the University of Illinois after Zavalis and two other students set fire to the Astroturf in the football stadium at the University’s Urbana Champaign campus, causing in excess of $600,000 in damage. The homeowner’s policy that Nationwide issued to Zavalis’ parents in Pennsylvania excludes liability for property damage “which is expected or intended by the insured” (R. 51 Ex. A at 11), and Nationwide contended that the damage caused by Zavalis and his cohorts falls into that category, relieving it of the duty either to defend or indemnify Zaval-is. In the prior appeal, we concurred with the district court’s assessment that it was premature to assess Nationwide’s duty to indemnify while the state court action remained pending.
Nationwide Ins. v. Zaval-is,
Both Zavalis and the University’s Board of Trustees have appealed the district court’s judgment, but the Trustees are not properly before us. They are not parties to the underlying insurance contract, and although as the victims of Zavalis’ alleged wrongdoing they have an obvious interest in the question of indemnification (which the district court did not reach), they have no interest in whether Nationwide must supply Zavalis with a defense.
Grinnell Mut. Reins. Co. v. Reinke,
Our prior opinion explored at some length the circumstances under which Pennsylvania courts consider damage to have been “expected or intended” by the insured.
On appeal, Zavalis does not take issue with the notion that if he intended to set fire to some portion of the Astroturf, the resulting damage was “expected or intended” even though far more of the turf burned than he planned on. He instead quarrels with the premise that he intended to burn any part of the Astroturf. We took this as a given in the prior appeal, but in that respect Zavalis claims that we jumped the gun. We did not have Zavalis’ deposition in the state court action before us at that time,
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and there Zavalis testified that it was never his intent for the Astroturf to burn; rather, he and his colleagues thought that the lighter fluid alone would burn, leaving only a residue of soot on the portions of the Astroturf to which it had been applied — spelling out the letters “F-O-0”
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— which would be visible on television or
In their effort to bring intentional acts within the coverage of insurance policies, insureds and their victims find themselves creatively alleging that the insured “carelessly and negligently failed to refrain from avoiding” his victim (read: repeatedly stabbed him with a four-inch blade),
Allstate Ins. Co. v. Carioto,
Zavalis’ artful (if less extravagant) spin on his own actions fits comfortably within this genre, and to no greater degree of success. The undisputed (and inescapable) fact is that Zavalis did intend to damage the Astroturf. Whether he meant to actually scorch the Astroturf (to “brand” it, as the University alleges in its complaint
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) or merely to leave a layer of soot on the turf that could be cleaned away later as if he had used a giant washable Crayola marker, common sense teHs us that his purpose was to damage the field nonetheless. Damage need not be permanent to constitute “damage,” and defacement certainly qualifies as damage even if is easier and less costly to rectify than several hundred square feet of incinerated Astroturf. What is more, Zavalis meant to inflict that damage by means of fire. We may assume, as Zaval-is steadfastly maintains, that he meant only for the fighter fluid to bum, not the Astroturf itself. There might be some quibbling with the plausibility of that plan. The very purpose of an accelerant like lighter fluid is, through its own combustion, to cause other things with a higher flash point (charcoal, for example) to burn; little if any soot is likely to be left behind if the accelerant fails in that purpose. But this may be putting too fine a
Aleck Zavalis and his companions most likely had no idea when they sallied forth into the wee hours of that September morning in 1989 that someone would make a federal case out of their prank. Then again, they probably did not anticipate that their little escapade would cost the University more than half a million dollars, either. The principle is as important as the price tag. Nationwide need not supply Zavalis with a defense if the University’s complaint against him does not comprehend an injury within the coverage of his parents’ insurance policy. Here, Zavalis literally played with fire; and although the resulting harm was far beyond what he expected, “this [was][a] harm controlled by the insured, and it is this harm which the companies should not be forced to insure against.”
Elitzky,
Appeal No. 96-1109 is Dismissed; and the judgment in No. 96-1720 is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The court therefore granted Nationwide’s motion for summary judgment and denied the summary judgment motion filed by Zavalis and the Trustees. All of the defendants subsequently filed motions to reconsider, which the court denied. R. 70.
. We are not oblivious to the practical import of the resolution of Nationwide's duty to defend Zavalis. Because the duly to defend is a broader obligation than the duty to indemnify, a holding that Nationwide is not obligated even to defend its insured bodes ill for any future argument that it must indemnify him. Even so, the victim of the insured's alleged wrongdoing suffers no cognizable injury from an adverse assessment of the duty to defend alone, which is all that we have here.
See Grinnell Mut. Reins. Co.,
.The district court found “particularly troublesome" (Order at 3) a footnote in our prior opinion where we observed: “Zavalis could, we suppose, assert that he did not intend to cause any damage whatsoever to the football field ... [and][i]f indeed this premise from which both suits spring were
genuinely
disputed, then it might well be impossible for this suit to proceed until the issue is resolved in the state court action.”
Zavalis,
. There are actually two interviews that Zavalis has given on the record: his 1993 discovery deposition, and an earlier interview conducted by a Nationwide representative, apparently in 1990. R. 66 Exs. 2 and 3. The two are consistent in terms of what Zavalis recalled about the incident and his intent vis a vis the fire. We shall cite the 1993 deposition as "Deposition” and the 1990 interview as "Statement.”
. With the benefit of the deposition, we at long last know why they chose the letters "F-O-O." "Foo” was a word derived from "Foofur,” a lazy but lovable blue hound dog who held the title
. See Board of Trustees of Univ. of Illinois v. Astroturf Indus., et al., No. 90 L 1233, Third Amended Complaint at 9 para. 5 (Cir. Ct. of Champaign County, Ill.).
. Zavalis makes no argument, however, that his acknowledged state of intoxication bears on the assessment of his intent.
Cf. Montana v. Egelhoff,
- U.S.-,
