MEMORANDUM OF OPINION AND ORDER
Plaintiff Owens-Brockway Glass Container, Inc. (“Owens”) seeks insurance coverage for its $22.5 million patent infringement settlement. The key question is whether the '“advertising injury” provisions of defendants’ policies are capacious enough to include room for patent infringement.
I
A. The Underlying Litigation
In September 1988, B & H Manufacturing Co. (“B & H”) filed suit for patent infringement against plaintiff Owens in the United States District Court for the Northern District of Georgia. B & H’s amended complaint sought “damages” and injunctive relief for Owens’ infringement of B & H’s two patents on its “wrap-shrink” bottle-labeling technology. After a trial, the jury found for B & H and awarded it $36,485,400. The verdict form indicated that this amount was intended as a “running royalty” for Owens’ nonwillful infringement. The court entered judgment accordingly and enjoined Owens from further infringing B & H’s patent.
On July 17, 1991, Owens and B & H negotiated a settlement. Under the terms of their agreement, Owens paid $22.5 million in satisfaction of the judgment against it for past royalties. B & H also granted Owens a non-exclusive license for future use of its patents and agreed not to enforce the injunction during the term of the license.
B. The Present Litigation
Owens sought insurance coverage for the $22.5 million payment under the “advertising injury” portion of policies issued by the defendant insurers. The insurers denied coverage and Owens filed suit in California state court seeking declaratory relief against the insurers. The case was removed to federal court under the court’s diversity jurisdiction.
Owens originally sought coverage under two separate lines of insurance. The first line included a policy issued by Seaboard Surety Company (“Seaboard”) and a similarly phrased excess liability provision found in “Coverage A” of Owens’ policy with defendant International Insurance Co. (“International”). In December 1992, however, the parties stipulated to dismiss all claims against Seaboard and the Coverage A claims against International. The 1992 California Supreme Court decision in Bank of the West effectively precluded those claims.
Owens now proceeds solely under its second line of insurance arising from “Coverage B” of the International umbrella policy 1 and *365 other policies which supplement the International policy. The other defendants are AIU Insurance Company, Columbia Casualty Company, Hartford Accident & Indemnity Company, Hartford Casualty & Insurance Company, National Union Fire Insurance Company, and Northfield Insurance Company.
On June 24, 1994 the court issued a stipulation and order, granting Owens leave to file a second amended complaint containing a new Seventeenth Cause of Action. In this new cause of action, plaintiff sought a declaratory judgment that the patent infringement damages fell within the scope of “Advertising injury” in the defendants’ policies. Subsequently, Owens filed a motion for partial summary judgment on this cause of action. Defendants filed motions for summary judgment, or, alternatively, judgment on the pleadings.
Summary judgment is proper where no genuine issue exists as to any material fact and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(c). There are no significant disputed facts relevant to the motions before the court. Most importantly, plaintiff concedes that when B & H Manufacturing sued Owens for patent infringement, “B & H did not allege or potentially allege, seek to recover, or recover for any injury that was in any way related to advertising.” Defendants have submitted a statement of six other undisputed facts sufficient to resolve the motion before the court, and plaintiff has accepted them as undisputed.
The parties agree that California law should be applied to the resolution of the summary judgment motions.
II
Owens cannot obtain coverage unless the “advertising injury” portion of defendants’ policies covers patent infringement damages. “Advertising injury” is defined in the applicable policies as follows:
1. Oral or written publication of material that slanders or libels a person or organization or disparages a person’s or organization’s goods, products or services;
2. Oral or written publication of material that violates a person’s right of privacy;
3. Misappropriation of advertising ideas or style of doing business;
4. Infringement of copyright, title or slogan.
(Emphasis added). Owens contends that patent infringement is encompassed within the definition under either “infringement of ... title” or “misappropriation of .style of doing business.”
Before examining Owens’ claim, it is helpful to consider the policy language here in comparison to language from other policies that have been interpreted recently, because the policies at issue in this case differ in two critical respects. First, the definition of “advertising injury” in the policies here does not include language defining advertising injury as an occurrence “in the course of’ or “arising out of’ the insured’s advertising activities. In
Bank of the West v. Superior Court,
Two recent California Supreme Court decisions plainly set forth the analysis which this court must use in deciding the motion:
Bank of the West,
In determining whether or not the language is clear or ambiguous, and in considering the objectively reasonable expectations of the insured based upon the contract language, “[t]he words of a contract are to be understood in their ordinary and popular sense.” Cal.Civ.Code § 1644;
Bank of the West,
The Bank of the West’s emphasis on context over “abstract philology” becomes critical in the interpretation of the policy language at issue here.
Ill
Plaintiff argues that patent infringement is included within the policy language insuring advertising injury as “infringement of title” or “misappropriation of style of doing business.” Plaintiff consults the dictionary to find that the word “title” can refer to ownership of property such as a patent. Under this argument, the phrase “infringement of ... title” could refer to infringement of a patent. Similarly, plaintiff argues that “misappropriation of style of doing business” could refer to patent infringement. Neither claim is reasonable, however, when the words “title” and “style of doing business” are examined in the context of their use and in the light of common sense.
First, and perhaps most significantly, there is the glaring absence of the word “patent” anywhere in the policy language defining advertising injury. The language defining “advertising injury” includes “slander” “libel,” “right of privacy,” “advertising ideas,” “style of doing business,” and “copyright.” These are specific terms connected to well known legal categories, just as a claim of patent infringement is a distinct legal claim. But there is not a mention of “patent” anywhere in the definition or elsewhere in the policy. Surely if coverage for patent infringement were anticipated there would be some mention of the term itself just as “copyright” is explicitly listed. Several courts have commented vigorously on the significanee of the omission of any reference to patent in the definition of advertising injury:
[I]t is nonsense to suppose that if the parties had intended the insurance policy in question to cover patent infringement claims, the policy would explicitly cover infringements of “copyright, title or slogan,” but then include patent infringement, sub silentio, in a different provision, by reference to “unauthorized taking of ... [the] style of doing business.”
Gencor,
It is even more absurd to suggest that the phrase “infringement of ... title”, as used in the clause “infringement of copyright, title or slogan”, encompasses patent infringement or inducement to infringe. Basic common sense dictates that if these policies covered any form of patent infringement, the word “patent” would appear in the quoted “infringement” clauses.
Second, neither the term “infringement of title” nor “misappropriation of style of doing business” suggests coverage of patent claims when these terms are viewed in the context of their use. One of the most significant parts of that context is that both terms are part of the definition of “advertising injury.” There is nothing about the term “advertising injury” itself that remotely suggests coverage of patent infringement. Owens correctly notes that in every ease involving litigation over “advertising injury,” the policies have contained additional language restricting “advertising injury” coverage to occurrences “in
*368
the course of advertising activity.” Were the causation language present here the matter would be governed by clear authority. But the omission of the “arising out of’ language, although removing the causation requirement, does not expand the substantive scope of the term “advertising injury.”
7
In effect, Owens argues that the term “advertising” should not be understood as a word in common usage but as a collection of letters defined for the first time in the policy. This is not a reasonable approach to policy interpretation. The term was chosen for a reason, that reason was to cover advertising related injuries, and patent infringement is a tort that does not normally occur in connection with advertising.
8
See Bank of the West,
Additional context is gleaned from the particular way in which “infringement of title” and “appropriation of style of doing business” are used. The term “infringement of title” is part of a list that includes copyright and slogan. In company with these terms, “title” apparently refers to a name, such as a name of a literary or artistic work, rather than to ownership of an invention or other thing.
See Atlantic Mutual Ins. Co. v. Brotech Corp.,
*369
Furthermore, the exclusion language in the policies at issue also suggests that “infringement of ... title” does not include patent infringement. Exclusion (H)(2) provides that trademarks are not protected, unless they are titles or slogans. (Farmer Deck, 9/18/92, Ex. B.) Therefore, in at least this section of the policy, the word “title” is used in the sense of name as opposed to property. Words like “title” may retain their meaning when they are used in different places of a policy.
See Helfand v. National Union Fire Ins. Co.,
Moreover, the context of the term “misappropriation of ... style of business” provides no succor to plaintiff. The immediately contiguous language is clearly limited to advertising activities: “Misappropriation of ... style of business” directly follows “Misappropriation of advertising activities,” which brings the word “advertising” into the immediate context as a similar sort of activity also covered.
See Titan Carp. v. Aetna Casualty & Surety Co.,
Ill
For the reasons stated above, the “advertising injury” portion of defendants’ policies does not cover patent infringement. Therefore, defendants’ motion for summary judgment is GRANTED. Plaintiffs motion for summary judgment is DENIED.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Notes
. International's Coverage B was an "umbrella” policy, while Coverage A was "excess” insuranee. The primary difference between the two is that an umbrella policy can differ from the pri *365 mary policy in its terms and conditions of coverage. Additionally, an umbrella policy can impose on the insurer a duty to defend for claims not covered by the underlying insurance.
. It is possible that one of the policies in
Microtec
may not have included causation language.
Id.
at 969. However, the opinion appears to assume that the language appears in all of the policies.
Id.
Defendants also cite one other case where an insurance policy appeared to lack any reference to advertising activities, as here.
Gencor Indus. v. Wasau Underwriters Ins. Co.,
. Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act, 42 U.S.C. §§ 9601 et seq.
.
"L language in a contract
must be construed in the context of that instrument as a whole, and in the circumstances of that case, and
cannot be found to be ambiguous in the abstract.
”
Bank of the West,
. The
St. Paul Pire
court adopted this analysis under California law.
. In addition to Gencor, a second federal district court has interpreted the "infringement of title” phrase to exclude patent infringement in policy provisions for advertising injury. Atlantic Mutual Ins. Co. v. Brotech Corp., 857 F.Supp. 423 (E.D.Pa.1994).
. Owens emphasizes that before 1986 defendants' policies explicitly restricted advertising injury to conduct “arising out of the insured’s advertising activities.” Owens argues that omission of the language therefore is significant to an understanding of the term "advertising.” At oral argument, however, International's counsel explained that the deletion of the language was designed to free the coverage from the restriction to "the insured's advertising activities," as opposed to advertising activities undertaken by others for whom the insured could be responsible. Thus, the deletion of the old language was intended to expand the scope of the persons "insured,” but not the scope of the concept "advertising injury.”
. It is not necessary to take a position of defendant's further argument that the term "advertising injury" necessarily applies only to activities arising in the course of advertising activity. By this argument defendants would replace the missing causation language by implication. Whatever the merits of the argument, and assuming that advertising injury may be covered even when not caused by advertising activity, the use of the term “advertising" still suggests some connection to that activity. Patent infringement is not normally related to advertising, and the parties have stipulated that the damage award in the underlying case was not in any way related to advertising.
. Plaintiff raises one additional argument for disregarding the fact that the term being defined is "advertising injury." Plaintiff cites the rule that specific provisions prevail over a mere heading in the event of any conflict between them.
Oakland Bank of Commerce v. Washington,
. Although plaintiff has managed to cite one case which interprets "infringement of title” more broadly, the case is distinguishable.
Merchants Co. v. American Motorist Ins. Co.,
.
See St. Paul Fire and Marine Ins. Co.,
Plaintiff suggests that there is a troubling aspect to defendants’ reliance on the
St. Paul Fire
and
American Economy
decisions: both cases rely on technical intellectual property interpretations of the policy terms rather than their “ordinary and popular sense." There is some force to this argument although it is somewhat weakened by the fairly technical approach taken to interpreting the terms "damages” and "unfair competition” in
Bank of the West,
