*1513 Opinion
On cross-motions for summary judgment or adjudication of issues, the trial court determined as a matter of law United States Fidelity and Guaranty Company (USF&G) has no duty to defend or indemnify Oliver Machinery Company (Oliver) in the underlying action under a vendor’s broad form endorsement contained in a policy issued to Pal Industries, Inc. (Pal).
There are two issues on appeal. First, does an exclusionary clause for relabeled products release the insurer from providing coverage and the duty to defend the additional insured. Second, is a product manufactured by a predecessor corporation a “named insured’s product” under an insurance policy carried by a successor corporation so as to obligate the insurer to provide coverage and defend the additional insured on that policy. We conclude this exclusionary clause does not release the insurer from its obligation to cover and defend Oliver. Nonetheless we hold USF&G is not required to provide coverage or defend Oliver in this case because the product allegedly causing the injury was not a “named insured’s product” under the terms of this policy. Accordingly, we affirm the summary judgment in favor of USF&G.
Statement of Facts and Proceedings Below
The parties agreed to a stipulated statement of facts for the purposes of the summary judgment. On March 30, 1979, Pal agreed to purchase Rankin Brothers Manufacturing Company, Inc. (Rankin). Rankin was legally dissolved as a corporation on March 17, 1980, after the sale of its assets. Pal Rankin Division continued to manufacture the same line of machines under the Davis & Wells trade name. On May 12, 1980, USF&G issued a special multiperil policy with a comprehensive general liability coverage part to Pal for the period June 4, 1980, to June 4, 1981. Pal was designated as the “named insured.” Oliver was named as an “additional insured” on a vendor’s broad form endorsement to the policy. On May 16, 1980, Pal requested $651 from Oliver to cover the cost of the vendor’s coverage for Oliver based on an estimated $100,000 of purchases of Davis & Wells woodworking equipment. Oliver complied.
Plaintiff Miguel Aguirrez was allegedly injured on March 31, 1981, by a Davis & Wells woodworking machine manufactured and sold by Rankin to Oliver in 1971 which distributed it after 1971 and prior to 1980. USF&G assumed the defense of named insured Pal in the underlying action, but *1514 refused to represent Oliver on the basis of an exclusion applying to relabeled products.
Oliver and USF&G brought cross-motions for summary judgment seeking declaration of USF&G’s duty to defend and indemnify Oliver in the underlying action. The trial court ruled in favor of USF&G. It determined as a matter of law USF&G has no duty to defend or indemnify Oliver under the vendor’s broad form endorsement for injuries caused by products manufactured and sold by a predecessor corporation to the named insured. Oliver appealed.
I. Provision 1(B)(IV) of the Vendor’s Broad Form Endorsement Provides Illusory Coverage for Oliver
USF&G contends provision 1(B)(IV) relieves it from providing coverage and defense of Oliver in the underlying action because the product was relabeled after the contract of sale was negotiated. The provision at issue in the vendor’s broad form endorsement states as follows: “The Insurance With Respect to the Vendor Does Not Apply to . . . (B) Bodily Injury or Property Damage Arising Out of . . . (IV) Products Which After Distribution or Sale by the Named Insured Have [sic] Labeled or Relabeled or Used as a Container, Part or Ingredient of Any Other Thing or Substance by or for the Vendor.” We think proper construction of this exclusionary clause does not support USF&G’s argument.
An exclusionary clause “must be ‘conspicuous, plain and clear.’”
(Gray
v.
Zurich Ins. Co.
(1966)
Based on the meager facts at our disposal,
1
it appears all the Davis & Wells machines distributed by Oliver are relabeled by Pal with an Oliver Machinery Company nameplate by the terms of their purchase agreement.
*1515
Thus, to interpret this clause as USF&G argues would render the endorsement covering additional insured Oliver a nullity.
(Sears, Roebuck and Co.
v.
Reliance Ins. Co.
(7th Cir. 1981)
We find persuasive the construction of a virtually identical exclusionary clause by the Seventh Circuit in
Sears, Roebuck and Co.
v.
Reliance Ins. Co., supra,
II. A Product Manufactured by Predecessor Corporation Rankin and Distributed by Oliver Is Not a “Named Insured’s Product” Under Insurance Policy Carried by Successor Corporation Pal Industries
The parties stipulated to the policy provisions in dispute. The vendor’s broad form endorsement for the additional insured, that is, Oliver states in pertinent part:
“This Endorsement Modifies Such Insurance as Is Afforded by the Provisions of the Policy Relating to Comprehensive General *1516 Liability Insurance Completed Operations and Products Liability Insurance
“It is Agreed That the ‘Persons Insured’ Provision Is Amended to Include Any Person or Organization (Designated Below [Oliver Machinery Company]) 1. (Herein Referred to as ‘Vendor’) as an Insured, but Only With Respect to the Distribution or Sale in the Regular Course of the Vendor’s Business of the Named Insured’s Products (Designated Below [Pal Industries]) 2, Subject to the Following Additional Provisions: . . . .” (Emphasis added.)
The policy defined “Named Insured’s products” as “goods or products manufactured, sold, handled or distributed by the Named Insured [boldface] or by others trading under his name, including any container thereof (other than a vehicle), ...”
We must make our own independent review of the contract before us since this case was submitted pursuant to a written “stipulation of facts” and the insurance policy was received without any evidence to aid in its construction.
(Paul Masson Co.
v.
Colonial Ins. Co.
(1971)
Oliver contends machines manufactured by Rankin constitute “named insured’s products” under the policy definition because Rankin’s products are being traded under the named insured’s name, Pal. We agree with the trial court’s conclusion “ [i]t strains logic and the ordinary meaning of language to conclude, as Oliver argues, that the product was sold by Rankin Brothers Manufacturing Inc. while trading under the name of Pal, Rankin Division. The product was in fact sold to Oliver years before Pal acquired Rankin.”
“[W]ords in an insurance policy are to be read in their plain and ordinary sense” unless there is a clear indication to the contrary. (Citation omitted.)
(Nichols
v.
Great American Ins. Companies
(1985)
Oliver maintains the term “named insured’s products”
should
be interpreted to include products manufactured by a predecessor corporation. It relies on
Ray
v.
Alad Corporation
(1977)
The Alad court looked to the social policies underlying strict tort liability for defective products to determine if there should be another exception to the general rule of successor liability which holds a purchaser does not assume the seller’s liabilities. {Id., at pp. 28, 30.) Finding the purpose of the rule of strict tort liability is to insure the manufacturer bears the cost of injury from defective products, it considered three factors which justify the imposition of successor liability: (1) plaintiff’s lack of remedies against the original manufacturer; “(2) the successor’s ability to assume the original manufacturer’s risk-spreading role, and (3) the fairness of requiring the successor to assume a responsibility for defective products that was a burden necessarily attached to the original manufacturer’s good will being enjoyed by the successor in the continued operation of the business. ” (Id., at pp. 30-31.)
We decline to extend this narrow exception for successor liability to insurance coverage for sellers of products which were manufactured by a predecessor company. Coverage is a question of contract interpretation and the duty to defend is based on the subject insurance contact. (7C Appleman, Insurance Law and Practice (Berdal ed. 1979) § 4682, pp. 22, 27.) In successor liability cases, such as Alad, the person injured is not in a contractual relationship with the manufacturer and generally cannot protect himself or herself from the eventuality of injury from a product manufactured *1518 by a predecessor company. Here the distributor Oliver was a party to the insurance contract and could have purchased independent insurance for its liability for products it sold which were manufactured by the predecessor company or could have amended the policy in question to cover liability for these products. 2
Thjis, we turn again to the provisions at issue. “The express provisions of the insurance contract must be considered in light of the insured’s normal expectations of the extent of the coverage of the policy, . . . [Citations omitted.]”
(Gyler v. Mission Ins. Co.
(1973)
The vendor’s broad form endorsement clearly states it applies “only with respect to the distribution or sale in the regular course of the vendor’s business of the named insured’s products.” To include products manufactured by Rankin, the predecessor company, perhaps years earlier is an irrational construction of both the insured’s and insurer’s reasonable expectations for coverage. (See
Herzog
v.
National American Ins. Co.
(1970)
III. USF&G Has no Duty to Defend or Indemnify Oliver Because There Is No Potential Coverage Under the Terms of This Policy
Oliver claims any ambiguities in the policy should be construed in favor of providing it a defense in the underlying action. It also argues no distinction can be made between USF&G’s providing a defense for Pal and not for Oliver. We disagree. USF&G asserts it assumed Pal’s defense in the underlying action because allegations against Pal bear the potential of successor liability. We do not, and need not, reach the question whether USF&G has a duty to defend and indemnify Pal for injuries caused by products manufactured by Rankin. 4
An insurer has a duty to defend the insured “whenever the insurer ascertains facts which give rise to the possibility or potential of liability to indemnify. [Citation omitted.]”
(Nichols
v.
Great American Ins. Companies, supra,
Disposition
Although the “relabeled product exclusion” does not relieve respondent USF&G from its duty to defend and indemnify appellant Oliver Machinery, a product manufactured by a predecessor corporation is not a “named insured’s product” and thus is not within the coverage of this insurance *1520 contract. Accordingly, the judgment is affirmed. Respondent to receive its costs on appeal.
Lillie, R J., and Thompson, J., concurred.
Notes
Stipulation number 8 states: “The Davis & Wells machines distributed by Oliver have all been relabeled at the manufacturing plant with an Oliver Machinery Company nameplate, pursuant to the terms of their purchase agreement.”
Oliver also contends it expected continuous coverage from USF&G for “all claims arising during the policy period” because prior to Pal’s purchase of Rankin it had been an additional insured on Rankin’s insurance policy on a claims basis. (Italics in original.) Thus Oliver argues it would be unreasonable for it to have concluded it must purchase additional coverage for claims arising from products it distributed for Rankin while it is an additional insured on Pal’s policy. We do not find this a persuasive argument. We also note there is no evidence of the prior policy in the record since this point was not included in the stipulation of facts.
Appellant cites
Sears, Roebuck & Co.
v.
Employers Ins. of Wausau
(N.D.Ill. 1983)
In fact, we cannot determine the full extent of USF&G’s obligation to defend and indemnify the named insured because of the very poor reproduction and compilation of the policy in the record.
