OPINION AND ORDER
On January 19, 2010, Plaintiffs Nationwide Mutual Insurance Company, Nationwide Mutual Fire Insurance Company, and Nationwide Property and Casualty Insurance Company (collectively “Nationwide”) filed a Complaint in the Richmond Division of this Court, seeking a declaratory judgment that Nationwide has no duty to defend or indemnify the Defendants — The Overlook LLC, Steven A. Middleton, Vista Middleton, LLC (collectively “Overlook”) and Ricky L. Edmonds (“Edmonds”) — under several relevant insurance policies. After a transfer of the ease to this Divi *505 sion, and significant motions practice, there are four principal motions before this Court — Nationwide’s motion for summary judgment, Edmonds’ motion to stay Nationwide’s motion for summary judgment, Overlook’s motion for summary judgment, and Edmonds’ motion for summary judgment. Nationwide has also filed a motion for leave to file an amended complaint. For the reasons set forth below, the Court GRANTS IN PART Nationwide’s motion for summary judgment. Specifically, the Court concludes that Nationwide does not have a duty to defend Overlook in Edmonds’ underlying state lawsuit, based on the Pollution Exclusion in the applicable insurance policies. As a result, Nationwide also has no duty to indemnify Overlook with respect to Edmonds’ state suit. Consequently, the Court DENIES the motions for summary judgment filed by Overlook and Edmonds, which requested a declaratory judgment that Nationwide has a duty to defend Overlook in the underlying Edmonds lawsuit. However, given the previous discovery stay in this matter and the absence of “litigated facts” on the subject of how the damages actually occurred in the “NonEdmonds” homes, the Court HOLDS ITS DECISION IN ABEYANCE, on the subject of Nationwide’s duty to indemnify Overlook with respect to the homes for which there are no underlying lawsuits, until the parties are able to develop sufficient facts on the issue or until Nationwide advances alternative legal grounds for summary judgment that do not require significant factual discovery. 1
With respect to the pending motion to amend the Complaint, which asks that Nationwide be granted leave to add allegations to the Complaint regarding two other actions that Edmonds has filed — the Wiltz and Amato actions — the Court will address that motion in a separate Order.
I. Facts and Procedural History
A. Facts
This is an action regarding Nationwide’s duty to defend and indemnify its insured, real estate developer Overlook, with respect to damage caused by defective drywall imported from China and installed in homes built by Overlook. Overlook is a real estate developer that owned real property in Richmond, Virginia, where it developed a complex known as the “Overlook Townhouses.” (Compl. ¶ 15; Answer and Counterclaim ¶ 15). Between July 2, 2006 and May 30, 2008, Overlook sold at least ten of the affected units to individuals and families. However, to the Court’s knowledge, Overlook still owns several unsold units. (Compl. ¶ 16, Answer and Counterclaim ¶ 16; Colinvaux Aff. Ex. 8, at 1-3). Of the units sold, one was purchased by Edmonds, a Defendant in this action.
By 2009, Overlook became aware that defective drywall imported from China may have been installed in some of the homes it constructed — with the suspicion subsequently confirmed through further investigation. While the parties dispute the exact method by which such drywall causes damage, it is undisputed that it is problematic in a home and should be removed. Therefore, in a May 22, 2009 letter that Overlook sent the owners of its townhomes, it encouraged them to have their homes inspected at Overlook’s expense. (Colinvaux Aff. Ex. 9). Where the homes were found to contain the imported drywall, Overlook told the owners that it would “work with [them], the Unit Owners Association, the general contractor, the suppliers and the appropriate insurance companies to formulate a plan to deter *506 mine how to best address the situation.” Id.
In light of this offer and subsequent fact-finding by Overlook, Overlook removed and replaced the defective drywall and other property in the affected homes. In return, the owners of the repaired homes signed agreements releasing Overlook from claims and liabilities arising out of the defective drywall. (See, e.g., Colinvaux Aff. Ex. 14). Overlook also removed and replaced the affected drywall from the unsold units which it still owned. However, there is one unit that Overlook has not repaired — the unit owned by Edmonds.
Edmonds refused the offer from Overlook as unacceptable and has since filed or is participating in several lawsuits against Overlook. As to the Virginia suit, on September 3, 2009, Edmonds filed suit against Overlook and other defendants in the Circuit Court for the City of Norfolk, styled Edmonds v. Parallel Design & Dev. L.L.C., Case No. CL09005697-00. It is this suit brought by Edmonds that will be the principle focus of this Opinion and Order. However, since the filing of this declaratory judgment action, two additional suits have been brought against Overlook. On February 10, 2010, Edmonds brought a second suit, filing as part of a putative class action in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Louisiana, styled Wiltz v. Beijing New Building Materials Public Limited Co., 2:10cv361. On March 19, 2010, Edmonds brought another suit against Overlook in the Eastern District of Louisiana, also filing as part of a putative class action, styled Amato v. Liberty Mutual Insurance Co., 2:10cv932. Since these lawsuits were filed after Nationwide filed its Complaint, and are thus not part of the current Complaint, the Court will not address these two lawsuits in this Opinion and Order. However, Nationwide has filed a motion to amend its complaint to include these lawsuits in its current declaratory judgment action. The Court will address that motion to amend in a separate Order. This Opinion and Order will address, however, the lawsuit Edmonds filed in Norfolk Circuit Court.
1. Edmonds v. Parallel Design and Development 2
Edmonds filed suit in the Circuit Court for the City of Norfolk against Parallel Design and Development, LLC, The Overlook, LLC, Venture Supply Inc. and The Porter-Blaine Corp. In this suit, Edmonds claims that his “family home located [on] Holly St----[in] Richmond, VA, 23220 ... was built with defective drywall by Overlook and Parallel [Design and Development, L.L.C.].” (Colinvaux Aff. Ex. 16, at ¶ 1). Allegedly, this drywall used in his home “is inherently defective because it emits various sulfide gases and/or other toxic chemicals through ‘off-gassing’ that create noxious odors, and cause damage and corrosion ... to the structural, mechanical and plumbing systems of the Plaintiffs home....” Id. at ¶ 11. Further, the “compounds emitted by the drywall at issue are also capable of, among other things, harming the health of individuals subjected to prolonged exposure.” Id. at ¶ 12. The “chemical compounds cause and have caused dangerous health consequences including, among other things, allergic reactions, respiratory afflictions, sinus and bronchial problems requiring medical attention, including headaches suffered by the Plaintiff.” Id. Additionally, as to health consequences, the state court complaint alleges that “some of the compounds being emitted from Defendants’ defective drywall are very hazardous, some *507 latently affecting the central nervous system and basic oxygenation on a cellular level.” Id. at ¶ 58.
As a result of these underlying factual allegations, Edmonds asserted twelve counts against the defendants in the state action, although not all counts were asserted against each defendant. These counts included: Breach of Contract, Breach of Express Warranty, Breach of Implied Warranties, Negligence, Negligence Per Se, Unjust Enrichment, Private Nuisance, Equitable Relief, Injunctive Relief, and Medical Monitoring, Breach of Implied Warranty of Merchantability, Breach of Implied Warranty of Fitness for a Particular Purpose, Violation of Consumer Protection Act, and Fraud. These claims are relevant to this action because Nationwide has issued several insurance policies to Overlook in recent years that contain language which obligates Nationwide to defend and indemnify Overlook from lawsuits if certain conditions are met.
2. The Subject Insurance Claims
Because of the existence of these policies, on May 20, 2009, counsel for Overlook informed Nationwide by letter that it had “recently learned that the town home project, The Overlook Townhouses, ... may contain imported Chinese Drywall.” (Sjullie Aff. Ex. 1, at 1). This letter was to put Nationwide “on notice of all potential claims for property damage; personal injury; breach of contract; breach of warranty; indemnification; contribution; and any and all other related claims arising from the use of [defective drywall].... ” Id. at 2. The Edmonds suit pending in Norfolk Circuit Court was filed shortly thereafter, in September 2009. To date, Nationwide is participating in Overlook’s defense of the Edmonds Norfolk Circuit Court suit, subject to a reservation of rights.
There are a total of twenty-six insurance policies issued by various Nationwide entities that are at issue in the present action. Although there are a number of policies, they generally include one of three types of coverage. First, some of the policies provide property insurance, which requires Nationwide to “pay for direct physical loss of or damage to Covered Property....” (Sjullie Aff. Ex. 4). Second, liability insurance provides that Nationwide “pay those sums that the insured becomes legally obligated to pay as damages because of ‘bodily injury’ or ‘property damage’ to which this insurance applies.” (Sjullie Aff. Ex. 8). Third, excess (or “umbrella”) liability insurance provides that Nationwide “will pay on behalf of the ‘insured’ that part of ‘loss’ covered by this insurance in excess of the total applicable limits of’ underlying liability insurance. (Sjullie Aff. Ex. 28). Nationwide argues in its motion for summary judgment that the Pollution Exclusion in all of the relevant policies prevents it from having to cover losses associated with defective drywall.
3. Pollution Exclusion
Despite the differences between the Nationwide property, liability, and excess liability policies, they all contain similar Pollution Exclusions. All of the relevant coverages in the applicable Nationwide policies include a definition of the term “pollutants.” Although there are minor wording variations across the policies, “pollutants” are generally defined as “any solid, liquid, gaseous, or thermal irritant or contaminant, including smoke, vapor, soot, fumes, acids, alkalis, chemicals and waste.” (Nationwide’s Mem. Supp. Mot. Summ. J. 12; Sjullie Aff. Ex. 8).
As to the Nationwide Property Coverages, they all state that “ [w]e will not pay for loss or damage caused directly or indirectly by any of the following ----[discharge, dispersal, seepage, migration, re *508 lease or escape of pollutants.... ” (Sjullie Aff. Ex. 4) (internal quotations omitted).
As to the Nationwide Liability and Excess Liability Coverages, the language of their Pollution Exclusions vary. All of the Nationwide Liability and certain of the Excess Liability Coverages provide that the liability insurance “does not apply to:”
1) “Bodily injury” or “property damage” arising out of the actual, alleged or threatened discharge, dispersal, seepage, migration, release or escape of “pollutants:”
a) At or from any premises, site or location which is or was at any time owned or occupied by, or rented or loaned to, any insured.
d) At or from any premises, site or location on which any insured or any contractors or subcontractors working directly or indirectly on any insured’s behalf are performing operations if the “pollutants” are brought on or to the premises, site or location in connection with such operations by such insured, contractor or subcontractor. However, this subparagraph does not apply to:
(ii) “Bodily injury” or “property damage” sustained within a building and caused by the release of gases, fumes or vapors from materials brought into that building in connection with operations being performed by you or on your behalf by a contractor or subcontractor. ...
(Sjullie Aff. Ex. 8).
In the remaining Excess Liability policies, the Pollution Exclusion applies to exclude all “ ‘[bjodily injury’, ‘property damage’ ... which would not have occurred in whole or part but for the actual, alleged or threatened discharge, dispersal, seepage, migration, release or escape of pollutants at any time.” (Sjullie Aff. Ex. 28).
B. Procedural History
1. Federal Complaint
Nationwide’s Complaint seeks a declaratory judgment on a number of different issues. (Docket No. 1). First, in Count I, the Complaint seeks a declaration that “Nationwide has no obligations under the property coverages of the Nationwide Policies in connection with the Overlook Property Coverage Claims.” (Compl. p. 49). These property coverage policies apply to direct physical loss of or damage to covered property — specifically property that Overlook still owns. Second, in Count II, Nationwide seeks a declaration that it “has no obligation under the Nationwide Policies to defend Overlook in connection with the Overlook Liability Coverage Claims.” Id. In Count III, Nationwide seeks a declaration that it “has no obligation under the Nationwide Policies to indemnify Overlook in connection with the Overlook Liability Coverage Claims.” Id. at 50. In Count IV, Nationwide seeks a declaration that “Nationwide has no obligation under the Nationwide Policies to defend Overlook in connection with the Edmonds Lawsuit.” Id. In Count V, Nationwide requests a declaration that it “has no obligation under the Nationwide Policies to indemnify Overlook in connection with the Edmonds Lawsuit.” Id. In response to this Complaint, Overlook filed a counterclaim, asserting a Breach of Contract claim against Nationwide, grounded in Nationwide’s refusal to provide insurance coverage stemming from such drywall damage.
After significant motions practice, on October 7, 2010, Nationwide moved the Court for an Order granting it leave, pursuant to Local Rule 56(c), to file a motion for summary-judgment limited to the issue of whether the Pollution Exclusion in the *509 insurance contracts eliminates Nationwide’s duty to defend and indemnify Overlook. (Docket No. 47). On October 25, 2010, the Court held a status conference between the parties to discuss the issues raised in that motion. Following that conference, the Court issued an Order on November 1, 2010. (Docket No. 73). In that Order, the Court granted Plaintiffs leave to file a motion for summary judgment solely on the legal issue of whether the Pollution Exclusion barred coverage in this case. Since Nationwide’s motion was to solely address legal issues, the Court’s Order stayed factual discovery. Id. Subsequently, Nationwide filed its motion for summary judgment, which was followed by a number of motions from the Defendants, including cross motions for summary judgment.
2. Natiomvide’s Motion for Summary Judgment
Nationwide’s motion for summary judgment makes two principal arguments with respect to the Pollution Exclusions in the current case. The first argument involves Overlook’s requests for reimbursement for expenses incurred repairing homes, other than the one owned by Edmonds. Importantly, in order for the Court to make a determination as to whether these expenses fall within the policies’ coverage provisions, Nationwide must present “litigated facts” that the Court can compare to the policy language in determining whether coverage exists.
The second argument in Nationwide’s motion, and the one that this Opinion and Order addresses, involves Overlook’s claims relating to Edmonds’ property. According to Nationwide, it has no obligation to defend or indemnify Overlook with respect to the Edmonds lawsuits, because under the Eight Corners Rule, 3 the “allegations of the Edmonds complaints fall squarely within the Pollution Exclusions in the Nationwide Liability and Excess Liability Coverages.” (Nationwide’s Mem. Supp. Mot. Summ. J. 22). This argument is not limited to Edmonds’ suit in the Circuit Court for the City of Norfolk, but rather involves the Wiltz and Amato actions as well. However, because the Court has not yet addressed Nationwide’s motion to add the other two lawsuits to the Complaint, and because the parties have not had an opportunity to brief the summary judgment motion with respect to those lawsuits, this Opinion and Order only addresses the Edmonds suit pending in the Circuit Court for the City of Norfolk.
3. Edmonds’ Motion to Strike
On October 29, 2010, Edmonds “move[d] this Court to strike the Plaintiffs’ Motion for Summary Judgment, or, in the alternative, hold consideration of it in abeyance until the close of discovery....” (Edmonds’ Mot. to Strike; Docket No. 71). Edmonds’ principal argument in that motion is that the Court imposed limitations on the reach of Nationwide’s motion for summary judgment both in the status conference between the parties and the Court’s subsequent November 1, 2010 Order. According to Edmonds, Nationwide’s motion exceeds those limits. From Edmonds’ perspective, the Court stayed factual discovery because Nationwide’s motion was only supposed to argue purely legal issues. Therefore, Edmonds argues the Court should only consider Nationwide’s obligations with respect to the Edmonds claims — the resolution of which does not require the Court to make factual determinations — and hold in abeyance any *510 decision on Nationwide’s coverage obligations with respect to the other twelve units until the parties have completed sufficient factual discovery for “litigated facts” to be determined.
J. Overlook’s Stance on the Reach of Nationwide’s Motion
While Overlook did not respond to Edmonds’ motion to strike, in its memorandum in opposition to Nationwide’s summary judgment motion it attaches a Rule 56(f) declaration from John J. Rasmussen, counsel for Overlook. 4 (Overlook’s Mem. Opp’n Mot. Summ. J Ex. A; Docket No. 77). In this declaration, Rasmussen requests a continuance in the event that the Court is inclined to grant the motion for summary judgment. During this continuance, Rasmussen asserts that Overlook “intend[s] to provide expert reports and other expert discovery regarding the science behind the type of harm allegedly caused by drywall that [Overlook] believe[s] will show the pollution exclusion does not apply.” Id. Overlook did not provide such evidence at the time of its response to the motion because “[t]heir time to provide such expert reports did not expire before discovery was stayed.” Id. Therefore, while Overlook believes that the duty to defend in the underlying Edmonds action can be determined based on the Eight Corners Rule, it contends that the Court cannot make a duty to indemnify determination at this point in the proceedings because such a determination requires factual discovery.
5. Overlook’s Motion for Summary Judgment
On November 17, 2010, Overlook responded to Nationwide’s motion for summary judgment by also filing its own motion for summary judgment. (Docket No. 81). In this motion, which is limited to Nationwide’s duty to defend Overlook in the Edmonds action, Overlook seeks a declaration that Nationwide has a duty to defend Overlook against Edmonds’ complaint because, according to Overlook, the Pollution Exclusion does not act to bar coverage on the facts of this case. In the alternative, Overlook contends that even if the exclusion does apply to some of the claims in Edmonds underlying lawsuit, many of Edmonds allegations do not implicate the alleged defect in the drywall and thus do not trigger the Pollution Exclusion. Therefore, according to Overlook, since some of the claims are not excluded from coverage under the Pollution Exclusion, Nationwide has a duty under Virginia law to defend Overlook as to all the claims in the Edmonds action pending in the Circuit Court for the City of Norfolk.
6. Edmonds Motion for Summary Judgment
On November 29, 2010, Edmonds also filed a motion for summary judgment. (Docket No. 88). This motion requests that the Court declare, as a matter of law, that Nationwide must defend Overlook in the underlying Edmonds suit. While this motion raises substantially the same arguments as can be found in Over *511 look’s Motion, it does also point to a different paragraph in the Pollution Exclusion, not previously raised by any party, that Edmonds contends requires Nationwide to defend Overlook. 5
7. Motion Hearing and Certification
The Court heard extensive oral argument on these summary judgment motions on March 8, 2011. During this oral argument, the Court advised the parties that, consistent with its prior ruling and Order, it only intended to rule on that portion of the summary judgment motion involving the underlying Edmonds state court complaint — because that was the only portion of the summary judgment motion that raised purely legal issues. The rest of the issues raised in Nationwide’s summary judgment motion require the determination of facts — “litigated facts” — since the parties have not stipulated to such facts. 6 As to the legal issue regarding Nationwide’s duty to defend and indemnify Overlook with respect to Edmonds’ state court claims, Edmonds’ counsel indicated at the hearing that he had planned to file a motion requesting that the Court certify the Pollution Exclusion coverage issue to the Supreme Court of Virginia, but had not yet done so. See R. Sup. Ct. Va. 5:40. Such certification motion was filed on March 9, 2011, and this Court entered an Order of Certification to the Supreme Court of Virginia on April 12, 2011. (Docket No. 121). In this Order of Certification, the Court posed the following question to the Supreme Court:
In the pollution exclusion clause of the relevant insurance contracts, is the definition of “pollutant,” as “any solid, liquid, gaseous or thermal irritant or contaminant, including smoke, vapor, soot, fumes, acids, alkalis, chemicals and waste,” ambiguous, 1) because it could be interpreted to apply only to traditional environmental pollutants, 2) because it is so broad that it could cover virtually any substance and potentially lead to absurd results, or 3) because it is substantively unreasonable?
By Order of April 22, 2011, the Supreme Court of Virginia “declined to accept this certified question of law.” (Docket No. 129). As a result, the Court addresses the reach of the Pollution Exclusion below.
II. Standard of Review
A. Applicable Law
This case was brought before this Court under diversity of citizenship jurisdiction. (Compl. ¶ 12). In suits filed in federal court under diversity jurisdiction, questions of procedural law are governed by federal law, e.g.,
Gasperini v.
*512
Ctr. for Humanities, Inc.,
B. Summary Judgment Standard
“Summary judgment is particularly well-suited for resolution of insurance coverage disputes because the construction of insurance contracts is a legal question.”
Mount Vernon Fire Ins. Co. v. Adamson,
Case No. 3:09cv817,
Once a motion for summary judgment is properly made and supported, the opposing party has the burden of showing that a genuine dispute of fact exists.
Matsushita Elec. Indus. Co. v. Zenith Radio Corp.,
C. Virginia Law of Insurance Contracts
1. Duty to Defend and Duty to Indemnify
Since Nationwide has requested declaratory judgments on the issues of both its “duty to defend” and “duty to indemnify” Overlook, the Court will briefly address the rules of decision with respect to those two duties, before addressing general principles of Virginia insurance contract interpretation.
“Under Virginia law, an insurer’s duty to defend arises ‘whenever the complaint against the insured alleges facts and circumstances, some of which, if proved, would fall within the risk covered by the policy.’ ”
Penn-America Ins. Co. v. Coffey,
The duty to indemnify, on the other hand, is different than the duty to defend. It is a narrower obligation.
Minn. Lawyers Mut. Ins. Co. v. Antonelli, Terry, Stout & Kraus, LLP,
In order to make this indemnification determination, where there is an underlying state suit, the court considering the duty to indemnify question must generally analyze the ultimate findings of fact in the underlying state suit once it is concluded, rather than making its own evidentiary findings in the first instance.
Builders Mut. Ins. Co. v. Futura Grp., L.L.C.,
*514
No. 2:10CV324,
2. General Principles of Virginia Insurance Contract Interpretation
Before conducting the duty to defend analysis and comparing the allegations in the four corners of the underlying complaint to the policy language, the Court must determine the meaning of the policy language. “Courts interpret insurance policies, like other contracts, in accordance with the intention of the parties gleaned from the words they have used in the document.”
Seals v. Erie Ins. Exch.,
However, “[b]ecause insurance companies typically draft their policies without the input of the insured, the companies bear the burden of making their contracts clear.”
Res. Bankshares Corp.,
When examining a patent ambiguity, where the language is to be construed against an insurer, such “[a]n ambiguity, if one exists, must be found on the face of the policy.”
Id.
“[L]anguage is ambiguous when it may be understood in more than one way or when it refers to two or more things at the same time.”
Id. “As
with other contracts, when interpreting a policy courts must not strain to find ambiguities.”
Res. Bankshares Corp.,
When ultimately determining whether coverage exists, courts impose separate burdens on each party. “A policyholder bears the burden of proving that the policyholder’s conduct is covered by the policy.”
Res. Bankshares Corp.,
III. Discussion
A. The Scope of Nationwide’s Motion
Edmonds has filed a motion to strike Nationwide’s motion for summary judgment on the ground that the motion is outside of the permissible scope discussed in the October 25, 2010 status conference and the Court’s subsequent November 1, 2010 Order. Additionally, Overlook states in its Rule 56(f) declaration that the Court should not consider any issues that require a resolution of factual questions since the parties have not had sufficient time to engage in factual discovery. According to arguments made by both Edmonds and Overlook in writing and at oral argument, Nationwide’s motion for summary judgment was to be limited to solely legal issues. As a result, Edmonds and Overlook contend that, at this juncture, the Court can properly address Nationwide’s duty to defend Overlook with respect to the Edmonds lawsuit, since the resolution of that issue does not require the Court to make factual determinations and thus the Court’s finding would not be affected by the previous discovery stay. However, they urge the Court not to address Nationwide’s duty to indemnify Overlook with respect to the other twelve remediated units because any decision on that issue requires the Court to make factual deter *516 minations requiring additional discovery and the presentation of litigated facts.
As the Court stated during oral argument, and memorializes in this Opinion and Order, because Nationwide’s motion for summary judgment was to be limited to only legal issues, this Opinion and Order will only address Nationwide’s duties with respect to Edmonds’ claims — which can be resolved under the Eight Corners Rule. Although the Court recognizes that a motion to strike is an improper procedural tool for striking another motion,
8
and therefore the Court declines to grant Edmonds’ motion to strike, the Court has discretion to limit the reach of Nationwide’s motion for summary judgment under the Court’s inherent power to manage its docket and discovery.
See, e.g., Ingle v. Yelton,
Although the Court has limited the reach of Nationwide’s motion for summary judgment, the issues that the Court will address cannot be dealt with summarily. The parties have raised a substantial number of arguments and the Court must analyze Nationwide’s insurance obligations to Overlook vis-á-vis Edmonds’ claims. Those issues are discussed below.
B. Duty To Defend Overlook on the Edmonds Claims
1. Edmonds Lawsuit in the City of Norfolk Circuit Court
Nationwide argues that the Pollution Exclusion above is unambiguous and excludes coverage for Edmonds’ suit. However, Overlook and Edmonds argue that the Pollution Exclusion is ambiguous, meaning reasonable minds could differ on whether Edmonds’ allegations trigger the exclusion, and as a result, the language should be construed against the insurer. 9
As mentioned previously, “[a] policyholder bears the burden of proving that the policyholder’s conduct is covered by the policy.”
Res. Bankshares Corp.,
The question of whether the exclusion applies is addressed under the Eight Corners Rule. According to that rule, the district court “need only decide such coverage by comparing what [the state court Plaintiff]
has alleged
in the state court action with the language of the [provider’s] insurance policy.”
Penn-America Ins. Co.,
Edmonds alleges that the drywall used in his home “is inherently defective because it emits various sulfide gases and/or other toxic chemicals through ‘off-gassing’ that create noxious odors, and cause damage and corrosion ... to the structural, mechanical and plumbing systems of the Plaintiffs home.... ” (Colinvaux Aff. Ex. 16, at ¶ 11). Further, the “compounds emitted by the drywall at issue are also capable of, among other things, harming the health of individuals subjected to prolonged exposure.” Id. at ¶ 12. The “chemical compounds cause and have caused dangerous health consequences including, among other things, allergic reactions, respiratory afflictions, sinus and bronchial problems requiring medical attention, including headaches suffered by the Plaintiff.” Id. Additionally, as to health consequences, the complaint alleges that “some of the compounds being emitted from Defendants’ defective drywall are very hazardous, some latently affecting the central nervous system and basic oxygenation on a cellular level.” Id. at ¶ 58.
With these allegations in mind, the Court must compare the allegations in Edmonds’ complaint to the language of the Pollution Exclusion in the relevant policies, and determine if the allegations in the complaint unambiguously fall within the reach of the Pollution Exclusion. If the allegations are within the exclusion, with no allegations in Edmonds’ complaint falling outside the exclusion, Nationwide has no duty to defend Overlook with respect to Edmonds’ underlying lawsuit. Further, if there is no duty to defend, there can be no duty to indemnify with respect to the claims in Edmonds’ lawsuit because the duty of indemnification applies in a narrower set of circumstances than the duty to defend.
See Penn-America Ins. Co.,
a. Bodily Injury or Property Damage
According to the Liability Insurance and Excess Liability Coverages, the insurance *518 does not apply to “bodily injury” or “property damage” arising out of pollutants. Therefore, before addressing the issue of whether Edmonds’ allegations refer to “pollutants,” the Court must determine whether the injuries complained of by Edmonds are “bodily injury” or “property damage.” In Edmonds’ suit, he asserts twelve claims. In each of these claims, Edmonds concludes the count with a statement such as “[a]s a direct consequence of the material breaches ... Plaintiff have [sic] sustained substantial damages set forth herein,” (Colinvaux Aff. Ex. 16, at ¶ 20), “Plaintiff has incurred economic and other damages set forth herein,” id. ¶ 68, or “Plaintiff has suffered damages set forth herein.” id. ¶ 75. Therefore, the Court must look to the damages section of the state court complaint to determine the types of damages Edmonds has allegedly suffered.
In the damages section, Edmonds describes in detail the damages to which he is referring. This section states that “Plaintiff has suffered damage because their home contains inherently defective drywall that has caused damage to their home, Other Property, and their health.” Id. at ¶ 90 (emphasis added). This damage includes, but is not limited to, repair or replacement of their family home, other property, materials contaminated or corroded by the drywall as a result of “off-gassing,” costs of medical care, costs of relocation during repairs, storage costs, and other incidental and consequential damages. Id. at ¶ 91. Additionally, Edmonds seeks environmental monitoring, medical care, and monitoring. Id. ¶ 92.
These damages of which Edmonds complains all entail “bodily injury” or “property damage” — two terms that are unambiguous in this context. It matters not that Edmonds’ claims sound in legal theories that do not all specifically mention bodily injury or property damage since it is clear that bodily injury and property damage are precisely the injuries underlying each one of Edmonds’ claims.
See Nat’l Elec. Mfrs. Ass’n v. Gulf Underwriters Ins. Co.,
b. Discharge, Dispersal, Seepage, Migration, Release or Escape
While the Court will consider whether emissions from defective drywall constitute “pollutants” in the following section, this section addresses the issue of discharge, dispersal, seepage, migration, release or escape. Overlook argues that Nationwide has failed to show that any “pollutants” traveled in such a manner. As discussed above, Nationwide need not produce such evidence with respect to the duty to defend. The Court need only look at Edmonds’ claim to determine if allegations made therein allege such a movement of the alleged sulfide gases.
“Because the words ‘discharge,’ ‘dispersal,’ ‘seepage,’ ‘migration,’ ‘release,’ or ‘escape,’ are not defined in the Policy, they must be given their usual, common, and ordinary meaning.”
Firemen’s Ins. Co.,
When applying the above definitions to the allegations in Edmonds’ lawsuit, it is clear that Edmonds has alleged movement on the part of the sulfide gases that fall within the scope of the Pollution Exclusion. Edmonds’ complaint states that the inherently defective drywall “emits various sulfide gases and/or other toxic chemicals through ‘off-gassing.’ ” (Colinvaux Aff. Ex. 16, at ¶ 11). While the term “emit” is not used in the Pollution Exclusion, the dictionary definition of the term defines it as “throw[ing] or giv[ing] off,” as in “chimneys emitting thick, black smoke.” See Merriam-Webster Online Dictionary (2011). If a chimney emits thick, black smoke, it can be said that the smoke is “spreading] ... from a fixed source” — which is the dictionary definition of disperse. Moreover, the dictionary lists “discharge” and “release,” both words used in the Pollution Exclusion, as synonyms for the term “emit.” See Merriam-Webster Online Dictionary (2011). As a result, Edmonds’ allegations in his complaint regarding the movement of the sulfide gases satisfy the discharge, dispersal, seepage, migration, release or escape requirement of the Pollution Exclusion. 10 However, the Court must still address whether those sulfide gases can be classified as pollutants.
c. Pollutants
As mentioned above, despite minor wording variations, the relevant policies all define “pollutants” as “any solid, liquid, gaseous or thermal irritant or contaminant, including smoke, vapor, soot, fumes, acids, alkalis, chemicals and waste.” (Sjullie Aff. Ex. 8). Therefore, in order for a substance to qualify as a pollutant it must be both: (1) solid, liquid, gaseous, or thermal; and an (2) irritant or contaminant.
As to the first element of the definition, it is clear that Edmonds has alleged that the substance affecting his house is “gaseous.” His complaint specifically states *520 that the drywall is “inherently defective because it emits various sulfide gases and/or other toxic chemicals through ‘off-gassing.’ ” (Colinvaux Aff. Ex. 16, at ¶ 11 (emphasis added)). Further, in the damages section of the complaint, Edmonds alleges that materials within his home have been contaminated because of “off-gassing.” Id. at ¶ 91. In fact, the parties have not asserted that Edmonds alleges anywhere in his complaint harm caused by a substance not in a solid, liquid, or gaseous state. As a result, the Court concludes that the sulfide gases complained of are gases within the first portion of the definition of pollutant.
i. Irritant or Contaminant
The relevant insurance policies also require the harm-causing substance to be unambiguously classified as an irritant or contaminant. Nationwide argues that the gases produced by the defective drywall are irritants and contaminants, based purely on the dictionary definition of the words. Overlook and Edmonds disagree with Nationwide’s classification. According to Overlook and Edmonds, regardless of whether sulfide gases that cause property damage and bodily injury might otherwise be classified as irritants or contaminants, in the context of the present case, those gases cannot be unambiguously classified as pollutants. They argue that the definition of pollutant is ambiguous for a myriad of reasons and consequently the Court must construe the exclusion against the insurer and in favor of coverage. For the reasons set forth below, the Court concludes that the allegations in Edmonds’ complaint unambiguously fall within the ambit of the relevant Pollution Exclusions.
(a). Traditional Environmental Pollution
The first argument pressed by Edmonds and Overlook asserts that the Pollution Exclusion was meant to exclude coverage for damage caused by traditional environmental pollution, not damage allegedly caused by drywall used in the construction of a home. Since this case does not present an instance of a traditional environmental pollutant, Overlook and Edmonds contend that the Pollution Exclusion does not apply to the present case.
“The word ‘pollutant’ has received a great deal of scrutiny by the courts” and has been the subject of intense litigation.
Firemen’s Ins. Co.
While the court is cognizant of the positions of other courts in other jurisdictions, its principal task is to try “to determine how the highest state court would interpret the law,” and in doing so, it “should not create or expand that State’s public policy.”
Wade v. Danek Med., Inc.,
In
City of Chesapeake v. States Self-Insurers Risk Retention Grp., Inc.,
271
*521
Va. 574,
As a result, this Court must look to the contract law of the Commonwealth. One of the basic tenets of Virginia contract law is that the courts, when interpreting a contract, “construe it as written and will not add terms the parties themselves did not include.”
Landmark HHH, LLC v. Gi Hwa Park,
There, the court said that “[n]owhere in the Policy is there any reference to the word ‘environment,’ ‘environmental,’ ‘industrial,’ or any other limiting language suggesting the pollution exclusion is not equally applicable to both ‘traditional’ and indoor pollution scenarios.”
Firemen’s Ins. Co.,
Although the Supreme Court of Virginia in
City of Chesapeake
limited its analysis to Virginia law, this Court also concludes that the precedent of the United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit, applying non-Virginia law, does not dictate a different result. The Fourth Circuit addressed the question of whether Pollution Exclusions are limited to traditional environmental pollutants in two cases in 1998. In
National Electrical Manufacturers Ass’n,
the court was faced with the question of whether a Pollution Exclusion barred coverage under District of Columbia law for welders who were exposed to
*522
welding fumes and suffered neurological injuries as a result.
Similarly, in
Assicurazioni Generali, S.p.A v. Neil,
While the Fourth Circuit concluded that the Pollution Exclusions in those policies were unambiguous and applied to non-traditional environmental harms, it reached the opposite conclusion in a recent unpublished opinion,
NGM Insurance Co. v. Kuras,
In its analysis, the district court first noted the split of opinion nationwide on the question of whether Pollution Exclusions “bar coverage for incidents outside of traditional environmental pollution.”
Id.
at *4,
While it noted “that the split of opinions [nationwide] provides only an indication of ambiguity, not a conclusive determination,”
Id.
at *5,
In its unpublished opinion, the Fourth Circuit affirmed the district court’s decision, calling it “well reasoned.”
See Kuras,
This Court expresses no opinion as to the reach of a Pollution Exclusion under South Carolina law. However, there are several reasons why it is not clear to this Court that the district court’s analysis in
NGM
is consistent with how the Supreme Court of Virginia would decide the issue under Virginia law. First, despite all of the various avenues of analysis performed by the district court in
NGM,
the Fourth Circuit chose to highlight only one in its affirmance — the district court’s survey of the division of authority on the issue nationwide.
Kuras,
Second, the court in
Belt,
followed by the district court in
NGM,
declined to credit the term “pollutants” with what it viewed as an overly broad meaning because such a definition would contradict the ‘“common speech’ understanding of the relevant terms.”
NGM Ins. Co.,
Third, the court in
Belt
narrowed the meaning of the term “pollutants” because it believed that a broad interpretation of the word would not comport with the “reasonable expectations of a business person.”
NGM Ins. Co.,
Lastly, the
Belt
court held that it “cannot be said that” the terms “discharge, dispersal, seepage,' migration, release or escape” “unambiguously appl[y] to ordinary paint or solvent fumes that drifted a short distance from the area of the insured’s intended use and allegedly caused inhalation injuries to a bystander.”
NGM Ins. Co.,
Consequently, while the Fourth Circuit’s unpublished opinion noted that the district court’s opinion in NGM was “well reasoned” under South Carolina law, for the reasons explained above, this Court deter *525 mines that the analysis adopted by the district court would not be persuasive to the highest court in Virginia. 11 However, the Defendants assert an alternative ground on which they believe the Pollution Exclusion in the present case is ambiguous — reasonableness.
(b). Reasonableness
The Defendants argue that the Pollution Exclusion should not apply in the present case because it is unreasonable. According to Overlook and Edmonds, in
Virginia Farm Bureau Mutual Insurance Co. v. Williams,
Overlook’s argument, however, fails for several reasons. First, the Court is hesitant to attribute a significant new feature of Virginia insurance law, namely, that the Court must conduct a “reasonableness” analysis when judging exclusionary language in insurance contracts, solely on the basis of an isolated word the Supreme Court of Virginia used in its statement of the rule. In
Williams,
the Supreme Court of Virginia considered whether an exclusion in an automobile insurance policy prohibited an insured party from combining multiple different coverages.
Williams,
In
Williams,
the Supreme Court of Virginia cited
Lower Chesapeake Assocs. v. Valley Forge Ins. Co.,
The
Williams
court also cited
Granite State.
There, the court did state that “[reasonable exclusions not in conflict with statute will be enforced, but it is incumbent upon the insurer to employ exclusionary language that is clear and unambiguous.”
Id.
(quoting
State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co. v. Gandy,
To travel even further down this “rabbit hole,” in
Nusbaum,
[t]hus, the question in this case is resolved by the mere fact that reasonable men, including experts on the subject of the real estate industry, may reach reasonable, but opposite, conclusions as to whether leasing is a part of property management. It was incumbent upon the insurer to employ exclusionary language clear enough to avoid any such ambiguity, if it wished to exclude coverage for errors committed in the course of leasing.
Id.
Like the other cases cited above, the reach of the court’s reasonableness analysis in
Nusbaum
was limited to whether a policy was ambiguous because it was subject to several reasonable interpretations. Therefore, a Virginia court does not engage in a substantive analysis of whether it believes an insurance exclusion is in fact reasonable. In fact, such a test would be contrary to established principles of Virginia contract law.
See Keller,
Additionally, the Defendants do not point to any principles by which this Court could guide itself in conducting such an amorphous substantive reasonableness analysis, if such analysis were required. Nor does it point to any case where a Virginia court has employed such a reasonableness test. In support of its contention
*527
that the Pollution Exclusion in the present case is unreasonable, Overlook asserts that many courts around the country have found that it can be reasonably read to apply to only traditional or environmental pollution. However, that statement ignores the fact that many other courts have concluded that it could also apply to situations not involving traditional environmental pollution.
See, e.g., TRAVCO Ins. Co.,
While the Court concludes that the Pollution Exclusion need not pass a substantive reasonableness test in order to be deemed unambiguous, the Defendants also argue that the definition of “pollutants” is overbroad and thus ambiguous. The Court addresses this contention below.
(c). Overbreadth
At oral argument, the Defendants argued that the term “pollutants,” as defined in the insurance contracts, is so broad that a plain meaning application of the terms “irritants” and “contaminants” would lead to absurd results. As a practical example, defense counsel noted that sulfur released from a sliced onion has the ability to irritate one’s eyes; therefore, it would be a “pollutant” under the definition found in the relevant insurance contracts. Hearing Tr., 56, Mar. 8, 2011. According to the Defendants, such an outcome would be an absurd result, and given this potential absurdity, the Pollution Exclusion is ambiguous. In support of this argument, the Defendants cite to Granite State for -the proposition that an overbroad exclusion that can lead to absurd results is ambiguous.
In
Granite State,
the Supreme Court of Virginia was faced with the question of whether an exclusion in an insurance contract issued to a “home for adults” barred coverage for burns suffered by a resident in the bathtub or shower at the home. See
Granite State,
While the insurance company contended that the bathing of an elderly resident was within the plain, unambiguous meaning of the phrase “rendering ... service or treatment conducive to health,” and that coverage was therefore barred, the Supreme Court of Virginia disagreed.
Id.
at 232-33,
*528 Second, during trial, counsel for the insurance company noted that the exclusion would not apply to an injury resulting from a hypothetical slip and fall on soapy water negligently left in the hallway. Id. The Supreme Court found this concession quizzical because it believed that keeping hallways free of water could also be classified as “conducive to health.” Given the fact that the insurance company’s own reading of the policy led to conflicting results, namely coverage being excluded for an injury occurring during one act that the court felt was conducive to health, but not another that was also conducive to health, the court was not prepared to pronounce the exclusion unambiguous.
The Court finds that there are significant differences between Granite State and the present case. As a result, despite the fact that the Supreme Court of Virginia found the exclusion in Granite State to be ambiguous, there are several reasons why this Court is not persuaded that Granite State dictates the same result in the present case. First, as mentioned above, in Granite State, one of the court’s main concerns was that a broad interpretation of the exclusion would swallow a significant portion of the policy’s intended coverage provisions. Since such an interpretation raised significant issues regarding the intended reach of the exclusion, the court concluded that the exclusion could not be read so broadly. In the present case, the parties have not made such an argument and there is no reason for the Court to conclude that a plain reading of the Pollution Exclusion would effectively nullify the remainder of the policies’ coverage provisions. Therefore, a reading of the Pollution Exclusion that results in it applying broadly is not as problematic as it was in Granite State.
Second, in Granite State, trial counsel effectively conceded that the language of the exclusion was unclear. Counsel for the insurer believed that the exclusion would apply to certain activities that the court felt were “conducive to health,” yet not apply to other activities that the court also believed to be “conducive to health.” As a result of this conflict, the court held that the exclusion was ambiguous. In this case, to the contrary, there has been no such concession. Nationwide understandably argues that the Pollution Exclusion is clear and applies broadly. Therefore, trial counsel has not created the conflict that existed in Granite State.
Lastly, even if the
Granite State
holding could be read for the proposition that broad exclusionary language that has the potential to lead to absurd results is inherently ambiguous, which proposition is not altogether clear, a finding that the language in the present Pollution Exclusion is ambiguous does not necessarily follow. In
City of Chesapeake,
the Supreme Court of Virginia evaluated a Pollution Exclusion that was nearly identical to the one currently before this Court and did not find it to be ambiguous.
City of Chesapeake,
*529 Based on the reasons discussed above, the Court finds the Granite State holding regarding overbreadth inapplicable to the present case and the Pollution Exclusion is not ambiguous purely because the term “pollutants” is broadly defined. However, Edmonds also argues that even if the Exclusion is not found to be ambiguous due to overbreadth, the plain language of the exclusion itself creates an ambiguity that must be construed against Nationwide.
(d). Gases, Fumes or Vapors Exception
In Edmonds’ motion for summary judgment, he asserts an alternative reason as to why the Pollution Exclusion in the present case should not free Nationwide from a duty to defend Overlook in the underlying state action. While Nationwide argues that subparagraph (a) of the Pollution Exclusion excludes coverage, Edmonds argues that subparagraph (d) of the exclusion either provides coverage or creates an ambiguity as to the meaning of the term “pollutants.”
Subparagraph (a) of the Pollution Exclusion excludes from coverage injury or damage caused by pollutants occurring “[a]t or from any premises, site or location which is or was at any time owned or occupied by, or rented or loaned to, any insured.” 13 (Sjullie Aff. Ex. 8). Subparagraph (d), on the other hand, provides a completely independent basis for excluding coverage. It excludes from coverage, property damage or injury caused by pollutants:
d) At or from any premises, site or location on which any insured or any contractors or subcontractors working directly or indirectly on any insured’s behalf are performing operations if the “pollutants” are brought on or to the premises, site or location in connection with such operations by such insured, contractor or subcontractor.
Id. However, the policy states that subparagraph (d) does not apply to:
(ii) “Bodily injury” or “property damage” sustained within a building and caused by the release of gases, fumes or vapors from materials brought into that building in connection with operations being performed by you or on your behalf by a contractor or subcontractor....
Id. Edmonds’ argument with respect to the exception to subparagraph (d) has two prongs. First, Edmonds contends that the exception to subparagraph (d) explicitly provides coverage for injuries or damage sustained as a result of the release of fumes, vapors or gases within a building. Second, in the alternative, Edmonds argues that the exception to subparagraph *530 (d) creates an ambiguity as to whether gases, fumes or vapors inside a building amount to pollutants. These arguments, however, are unavailing.
As to the first argument, the exception to subparagraph (d) does not provide any coverage. It merely illustrates a scenario where coverage
under subparagraph (d)
is not excluded. If the Court concludes that coverage is excluded under subparagraph (a), then subparagraph (d) has no bearing on coverage. It does not “trump” the exclusion of coverage found in subparagraph (a) and give back coverage that subparagraph (a) previously excluded. The exception to subparagraph (d) only has a bearing on subparagraph (d)’s applicability — it is without force with respect to subparagraph (a). As Nationwide notes, when exclusions in a policy are disjunctive, only one exclusion need apply to bar coverage.
See Mt. Hawley Ins. Co. v. Dania Distrib. Ctr.,
In the alternative, Edmonds argues that the exception to subparagraph (d) creates an ambiguity as to the meaning of the term “pollutants.” According to his brief, Edmonds contends that subparagraph (d) establishes “that there is clearly a distinction between the events involving gases, fumes or vapors occurring inside of the buildings as opposed to a traditional environmental event.” (Edmonds Mem. Supp. Mot. Summ. J 8). Therefore, Edmonds surmises the introduction of this “gases, fumes or vapors” exception in subparagraph (d) is evidence that “pollutants” was not intended to cover substances outside the scope of traditional environmental pollutants, and thus the exclusion should not apply in the present case. That argument, however, is unavailing for at least two reasons.
First, the presence of the exception indicates that the parties were clearly capable of limiting the effect of the Pollution Exclusion if they intended to do so. However, subparagraph (a) of the Pollution Exclusion, which has three exceptions of its own, does not contain an analogous exception to the one in subparagraph (d). In fact, two of the exceptions to subparagraph (a) deal with smoke and fumes, yet none of them discuss such substances coming from “materials brought into that building.” The absence of such an exception in sub-paragraph (a) indicates that the exception to subparagraph (d) was not meant to effect or modify the exclusion in subparagraph (a). Second, the fact that the contract excepts from the Pollution Exclusion, in certain instances, “gases, fumes or vapors from materials brought into the building,” could also militate in favor of the position that such substances are considered pollutants under the policies’ definition. It can be argued that, if they were not pollutants, there would be no need to except them. As a result, the exception does not create ambiguity as to whether the Pollution Exclusion only applies to traditional environmental pollutants.
(e). Irritants and Contaminants Revisited
Since the Court concluded above that the Defendants’ arguments regarding the reach of the Pollution Exclusion are unavailing, the Court must simply apply the plain language of the Pollution Exclusion to the allegations in Edmonds’ complaint to determine if coverage is excluded. The
*531
Court has already determined that Edmonds has alleged only “bodily injury” or “property damage” and that the harmful gases are alleged to have moved in a way contemplated by the exclusion. Therefore, the Court is only left with the question of whether the gases are irritants or contaminants. Because the words “irritant” and “contaminant” are not defined under the applicable insurance policies, the Court must attribute to them their ordinary meaning.
See D.C. McClain, Inc.,
Edmonds’ state court complaint alleges that the drywall “emits various sulfide gases and/or other toxic chemicals through ‘off-gassing’ that creates noxious odors, and cause damage and corrosion ... to the structural, mechanical and plumbing systems of the Plaintiffs home.” (Colinvaux Aff. Ex. 16, at ¶ 11). Further, according to Edmonds’ complaint, this damage necessitates a repair or replacement of various parts of his home as well as medical care and monitoring. Id. at ¶¶ 91, 92. These allegations place the sulfide gases squarely within the categories of irritants and contaminants. Certainly a gas that produces noxious odors and necessitates medical care and monitoring is one that “provokes displeasure.” Moreover, a gas that allegedly damages components of one’s home can also be said to have made those components “unfit for use by the introduction of unwholesome or undesirable elements.” As a result, when the Court looks just to the dictionary definition of the terms “irritant: and contaminant,” and applies those definitions to the allegations in the Edmonds complaint, the Court concludes that the sulfide gases alleged in the Edmonds complaint unambiguously qualify as irritants or contaminants under the Pollution Exclusion.
This conclusion is consistent with decisions of other federal courts deciding the reach of the Pollution Exclusion under Virginia law.
See Firemen’s Ins. Co.,
d. Allegations in the Complaint not implicating Pollutants
Regardless of the Court’s determination that the Pollution Exclusion is unambiguous and applicable to gases Edmonds alleges were emitted from defective drywall, the Defendants argue that even if some of the allegations in Edmonds’ lawsuit fall within the Pollution Exclusion, other allegations fall outside of it and thus Nationwide has a duty to defend. Since the law in Virginia requires that “[w]hen an initial pleading ‘alleges facts and circumstances,
some of which would, if proved,
fall within the risk covered by the policy,’ the insurance company is obliged to defend its insured,”
Parker v. Hartford Fire Ins. Co.,
For example, Overlook points out that Count IV of Edmonds’ state court complaint states that “Defendants owed a duty to the Plaintiff to exercise reasonable care in distributing, delivering, supplying, inspecting, installation, marketing, and/or selling drywall, including a duty to adequately warn of its failure to do the same and to warn the Plaintiff of this Defect.” (Colinvaux Aff. Ex. 16, at ¶ 33). According to Overlook, “[i]f Edmunds [sic] can prove those allegations, but does not prove that the mechanism suggested in other parts of his allegations is what actually caused the alleged problems, the resulting judgment could be covered no matter how one reads the exclusion or defines ‘pollutant.’ ” (Overlook Mem. Opp’n Mot. Summ. J. 9).
In support of this contention, Overlook cites two principal cases,
Parker
and
Fuisz.
In
Parker,
the insurance policy issued to the Parkers obligated the insurance company to “defend any suit against the Insured alleging such bodily injury or property damage ... [,]” but it did not apply to “bodily injury or property damage caused intentionally.”
Parker,
In
Fuisz v. Selective Ins. Co. of Am.,
The Court concludes that there is at least one significant distinction between
Parker, Fuisz
and the present case. In both
Parker
and
Fuisz,
the underlying
*533
complaint made allegations that provided a ground for recovery that did not implicate the policy exclusions in those cases. Since Virginia case law is very clear that “an insurer’s duty to defend arises “whenever the complaint against the insured alleges facts and circumstances, some of which, if proved, would fall within the risk covered by the policy,’ ”
Penn-America Ins. Co.,
The Edmonds suit states that the drywall is “inherently defective because it emits various sulfide gases and/or other toxic chemicals through ‘off-gassing’ that creates noxious odors, and cause damage and corrosion” — which the complaint classifies as the “Defect.” (Colinvaux Aff. Ex. 16, at ¶ 11). Further, each of the first eleven counts of the complaint state that the “Plaintiff incorporates and restates all preceding paragraphs as if fully set forth herein.” See, e.g., id. at ¶ 16. While the twelfth count does not include such language, it does directly reference the “Defect” in the drywall. Id. at ¶ 82. Further, in the damages section of Edmonds’ complaint, which is referenced in eleven of the twelve counts, Edmonds states that “Plaintiff has suffered damage because their home contains inherently defective drywall.” Id. at ¶ 90. As to Count seven, which does not mention the damages portion of the complaint, it references the “conduct” of the Defendants, which refers to the installation of drywall with the “Defect.” Id. at ¶ 55. As a result, every claim in the underlying Edmonds complaint implicates the defective drywall as either the basis for the claim, or the cause of the resulting damages. Thus every claim implicates the Pollution Exclusion.
Although it is not argued in Overlook’s brief, Count XI of the Edmonds lawsuit comes closest to providing a ground for recovery that does not implicate the Pollution Exclusion. In Count XI, Edmonds states a claim under the Virginia Consumer Protection Act. The Virginia Consumer Protection Act states:
A. The following fraudulent acts or practices committed by a supplier in connection with a consumer transaction are hereby declared unlawful:
1) Misrepresenting goods or services as those of another;
2) Misrepresenting the source, sponsorship, approval, or certification of goods or services;
3) Misrepresenting the affiliation, connection, or association of the supplier, or of the goods or services, with another;
4) Misrepresenting geographic origin in connection with goods or services; ...
Va.Code. Ann. § 59.1-200. In order to state a cause of action for a violation of this statute, “plaintiff must allege a fraudulent misrepresentation of fact.”
Weiss v. Cassidy Dev. Corp.,
Edmonds alleges that the Defendants violated the consumer protection act by, among other things, “Misrepresenting the source, ... of goods or services;” “Misrepresenting the affiliation, connection or association of the supplier or of the goods or services, with another;” and “Misrepresenting geographic origin in connection with goods or services.” (Colinvaux Aff. Ex. 16, at ¶¶ 80, 81). These are all allegations regarding misrepresen *534 tations of fact that do not implicate the underlying defect found in the drywall.
However, under Virginia law, as a pre-requisite to bringing suit under this statute, Edmonds must show that he “suffered] loss.”
Polk v. Crown Auto, Inc.,
In applying the Eight Corners Rule, the Fourth Circuit has recently counseled that “the potentiality rule does not require us to abandon the rule of reason.”
CACI Int’l, Inc.,
IV. Conclusion
For the reasons discussed above, the Court GRANTS IN PART Nationwide’s motion for summary judgment. Nationwide does not have a duty to defend Overlook in Edmonds’ lawsuit brought in the Circuit Court for the City of Norfolk because coverage is excluded under the relevant policies’ Pollution Exclusion. As a result, the Court DENIES the motions for summary judgment brought by Overlook and Edmonds. However, given the prior discovery stay and the lack of evidence on the subject of how the damages actually occurred in the “Non-Edmonds” homes, the Court exercises its discretion and HOLDS ITS DECISION IN ABEYANCE on the subject of Nationwide’s duty to indemnify Overlook in regards to the other units until the Court determines how it will proceed with the remainder of the case. Additionally, since the indemnity issue with respect to the Non-Edmonds units will be decided at a later date, the Court DECLINES TO DISMISS Overlook’s counterclaim regarding breach of contract until the Court concludes whether or not Nationwide has actually breached a contractual duty. Lastly, concerning the pending motion to amend the Complaint, which asks that Nationwide be granted leave to add allegations to the Complaint regarding the Wiltz and Amato actions, the Court will address that motion in a separate Order.
*535 The Clerk is DIRECTED to send a copy of this Order to all counsel of record.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
. The allegations in Edmonds Suit are not in dispute and are taken directly from his complaint in his state lawsuit. (See Colinvaux Aff. Ex. 16).
Notes
. The Court will issue a subsequent Order, following this Opinion and Order, which will discuss the manner in which the Court will proceed on the "Non-Edmonds” claims.
. The Eight Corners Rule is discussed extensively in the subsequent sections of this Opinion and Order.
. Under the version of Rule 56(f) that was effective until December 1, 2010 and thus applicable to Overlook's filing, “[i]f a party opposing the motion shows by affidavit that, for specified reasons, it cannot present facts essential to justify its opposition, the court may: (1) deny the motion; (2) order a continuance to enable affidavits to be obtained, depositions to be taken, or other discovery to be undertaken; or issue any just order.” Fed. R.Civ.P. 56(f) (modified Dec. 1, 2010). However, under the most recent amendments to the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, that provision is now located in Rule 56(d). According to the Amendment notes, “[s]ubsection (d) carries forward without substantial change the provisions of former subdivision (f).” Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(d) advisory committee's note.
. Although raised for the first time by Edmonds, this provision, is noted above in the Court’s recitation of the relevant policy language. The provision provides an exception to one of the subparagraphs in the Pollution Exclusion, stating that that subparagraph does not apply to injury or damage “sustained within a building and caused by the release of gases, fumes or vapors from materials brought into that building....” The applicability of this provision will be discussed below.
. The summary judgment motion that Nationwide filed asked the Court to adjudicate its defense and indemnity obligations with respect to damage caused in Edmonds' home— reflected in Edmonds' underlying lawsuit — as well as damage caused in the units owned by other individuals and Overlook itself — which are not the subject of any underlying lawsuits. As discussed in later sections, the Edmonds’ claims are the only claims discussed in Nationwide’s Complaint which do not require further factual development before the Court is able to determine whether the claims are excluded from coverage based on the relevant Pollution Exclusions. As a result, the Court informed the parties that it would address Edmonds’ claims in this Opinion and Order, while eventually allowing additional discovery with respect to those other units.
. The Court notes that ambiguity can be found in two different forms — patent ambiguity and latent ambiguity.
See SunTrust Mortq., Inc. v. AIG United Guar. Corp.,
No. 3:09cv529,
. Under the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, "[t]he court may strike from a
pleading
an insufficient defense or any redundant, immaterial, impertinent, or scandalous matter.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(f) (emphasis added). The Court may do this on its own accord, or after a timely motion filed by a party.
Id.
According to Rule 7, a document is a pleading only if it fits in one of the following categories: complaint; answer to complaint; answer to a counterclaim; answer to a crossclaim; a third-party complaint; answer to a third party complaint; and a reply to an answer. Fed. R.Civ.P. 7(a). Therefore, a "motion is not a pleading”
Structural Concrete Prods., LLC v. Clarendon Am. Ins. Co.,
. Though the distinction is not made in the briefs, the argument made by Overlook and Edmonds is a patent ambiguity argument because they essentially claim that the language of the policies on their face, is ambiguous, i.e., the reference to "pollutants” can on its face, be read to mean two different things.
. During oral argument, counsel for Edmonds argued that subsequent scientific research suggests that harmful substances are not actually released from the drywall, but rather substances released from the drywall only become harmful when mixed with other substances in the air. Hearing Tr., 56, Mar. 8, 2011. As a result, Edmonds argues that even if the gases emitted by the drywall move in a manner contemplated by the Pollution Exclusion, at the point they are emitted, they are not yet pollutants because they have not yet become harmful. While the Court expresses no opinion on whether damage caused by the drywall under Edmonds' new theory would fall within the ambit of the Pollution Exclusion, Edmonds cannot argue this new theory at this stage because such a theory is outside the bounds of his complaint. The only fair reading of Edmonds' complaint is that the gases released by the drywall are harmful. The complaint states that the defective drywall "emits various sulfide gases and/or other toxic chemicals through "off-gassing” that create noxious odors, and cause damage and corrosion.” (Colinvaux Aff. Ex. 16, at ¶11 (emphasis added)). Under an Eight Corners analysis, the Court may only consider the factual allegations contained in the complaint. Since the complaint does not support Edmonds' re-categorization of those facts, the Court cannot consider those arguments.
. The Court notes that there are two possible ways in which opinions from other jurisdictions may be used to inform a court's analysis on the issue of whether a Pollution Exclusion is ambiguous. As to the first use, a court may generally look at the fact that courts in other jurisdictions have disagreed as to whether a particular clause is ambiguous, and this disagreement itself can then be taken as evidence that the exclusion must be ambiguous. The district court in NGM Insurance Co. considered this method of analysis, but ultimately did not rest its conclusion on such thinking. In City of Chesapeake, the Supreme Court of Virginia expressly rejected this first approach and therefore this Court, following Virginia law, refuses to consider that line of reasoning. As to the second use, a Court may examine another jurisdiction’s analysis of the issue, and conclude that such analysis provides the most logical framework for determining whether ambiguity exists. This appears to be the method utilized by the district court in NGM Insurance Co. While, in the Court’s view, such an approach is perfectly acceptable under Virginia law, the Court declines to adopt the reasoning in Belt for the reasons discussed above.
. One might argue that since City of Chesapeake dealt with traditional environmental pollutants, finding the exclusion applied in that case would not be an absurd result. However, the absurd results argument is not an argument based on the facts before the *529 Court — it is an argument based on hypothetical facts. For example, as mentioned above, counsel for Edmonds used the example of cutting an onion to show that fumes from an onion could also be classified as a pollutant under the policy. According to counsel, such an outcome would be absurd and thus the policy must be ambiguous. As a result, even though City of Chesapeake dealt with traditional environmental pollutants and this case does not, the absurd results argument has equal applicability in both cases. Thus, the fact that the Court in City of Chesapeake did not invoke such reasoning to find the exclusion ambiguous is informative in this case as well.
. Subparagraph (a) of the Pollution Exclusion applies if the premises, site or location where the pollutant is found was at one time owned by an insured. In his Norfolk Circuit Court Complaint, Edmonds describes Overlook as a "builder/developer” of his home. (Colinvaux Aff. Ex. 16, at ¶ 1). Edmonds also alleged that the builder/developer warranted the home, id. at ¶ 22, and demanded that defendants "repurchase” the home. Id. at ¶ 57. Nationwide has also presented evidence accompanying its motion that indicates that Overlook owned Edmonds' unit prior to and during its construction before it was eventually sold to him. (See generally Colinvaux Aff. Ex. 1). The Defendants have not disputed this point.
