OPINION ON REHEARING
Appellant has filed a motion for rehearing. That motion is denied. However, we withdraw our opinion dated April 20, 2000 and substitute this opinion in its place.
This is an appeal of a plaintiffs summary judgment in favor of the insured appellees, Geo Pipe Company (“Geo Pipe”) and its corporate parent, Geo International Corporation (“Geo International”), in an insurance coverage dispute with appellant, St. Paul Surplus Lines Insurance Company (“St.Paul”), appellees’ general liability insurer.
Geo International contracted with St. Paul in Illinois for insurance coverage (“the St. Paul policy”) for itself and its subsidiaries and related affiliates. Several months after the St. Paul policy was issued, Geo International added Geo Pipe as a named insured, effective October 1, 1992. Most of Geo Pipe’s business is done in Texas and Louisiana.
Prior to the St. Paul pokey’s effective date, Geo Pipe sold chrome tubing to Walter Oil & Gas Corporation (‘Walter Oil”) to be deliverеd to Galveston, Texas and installed in Walter Oil’s offshore well.
*902 In May 1992, Walter Oil personnel detected a problem with constant pressure in the well. 1 In July 1992, Walter Oil performed an initial “workover” and replaced the seals in the well’s tubing. By August 1992, still before the effective date of the St. Paul policy, the pressure problem had returned. Walter Oil eventually took corrective action in March 1993, discovered a hole or “washout” in a joint of the tubing, and replaced the tubing.
Walter Oil demanded $1,628,348 from Geo Pipe for its workover costs of removing and replacing the tubing. Geo Pipe first reported Walter Oil’s claim to its insurers before the effective date of the St. Paul policy. When the prior insurers disputed that the loss occurred during their policy period, Geo Pipe forwarded the claim to St. Paul, which declined coverage.
Walter Oil sued Geo Pipe in 1994, alleging breach of contract, breach of express and implied warranties, and negligence in supplying defective tubing. Waltеr Oil sought damages for (1) shutdown of the well; (2) removal of defective tubing; (3) purchase and installation of replacement tubing; and (4) lost profits incurred from loss of production.
Before the suit went to trial, Geo Pipe declared bankruptcy. Under the bankruptcy court’s supervision, Geo Pipe assigned its claim against St. Paul for breach of contract to Walter Oil in exchange for Walter Oil’s agreement to satisfy any judgment against Geo Pipe solely from liability insurance proceeds. The cаse was never tried. Instead, in a proceeding contested by St. Paul as part of this appeal, Walter Oñ and Geo Pipe entered an agreed judgment against Geo Pipe, approved by the trial court, awarding Walter Oil $1,800,000 in damages.
As Geo Pipe’s assignee, Walter Oil then sued St. Paul and Geo Pipe’s prior insurers and filed a motion for summary judgment against St. Paul on Geo Pipe’s breach of contract claim. After a hearing, the trial court (1) determined that all issues between Geo Pipe and St. Paul were governed by Illinois law, (2) granted the summary judgment in favor of Walter Oil as assignee, and (3) awarded $1,000,000 in damages, $149,158.13 in prejudgment interest, and post-judgment interest. The trial court severed and abated the remaining causes of action against St. Paul and the prior insurers pending the resolution of this appeal.
On appeal, St. Paul asserts in its first point of error that the trial court erred in granting summary judgment on the breach of contract claim because St. Paul had no duty to defend Geo Pipe under thе policy.
The parties agree that construction of the policy language and the determination of a duty to defend is the same under Texas and Illinois law, and that choice of law analysis is relevant only to the effect of a breach of contract if a duty to defend is found. We therefore construe the policy and analyze St. Paul’s duty to defend un *903 der Texas law. 2
Texas courts apply the “eight corners” rule to determine whether the duty to defend
applies
— i.e., the Court compares the plaintiffs рleading allegations to the provisions of the insurance contract, without regard to the facts that eventually come out during discovery and trial.
See National Union Fire Ins. Co. v. Merchants Fast Motor Lines, Inc.,
The duty to defend and duty to indemnify are distinct and separate.
Trinity Universal Ins. Co. v. Cowan,
General policy coverage
The policy obligates St. Paul to pay amounts Geo Pipe “is legally required to pay as damages for covered bodily injury, property damage or fire damage that:
• happens while this agreement is in effect; and
• is caused by an event.”
The рolicy defines an “event” as “an accident; including continuous or repeated exposure to substantially the same general harmful conditions.” “Property damage” is defined as
• physical damage to tangible property of others, including all resulting loss of use of that property; or
• loss of use of tangible property of others that isn’t physically damaged.
Policy exclusions
The policy provides two relevant exclusions. First, the policy excludes damage “to any of your products (i.e. Geo pipe’s tubing) that’s caused by the product itself or by any of its parts.” Second, the policy excludes “impaired property”:
We won’t cover property damage to impaired property, or property that hasn’t been physically damaged, that’s caused by;
• your faulty ... products or completed work; or
*904 • a delay in fulfilling the terms of a contract or agreement.
The policy defines “impaired property” as
tangible property, other than your products or completed work, that can only be restored to use by:
• the adjustment, repair, replacement or removal of your products or completed work which forms a part of it; or
• your fulfilling the terms of a contract or agreement.
Thus, St. Paul’s policy generally excludes coverage for (1) damages to Geo Pipe’s own products (the tubing it sold to Walter Oil) or (2) property damage (defined as both physical damage and damages arising from loss of use) to a third person’s impaired property (Walter Oil’s well) caused by Geo Pipe’s tubing.
The exception to the exclusions
An exception to the application of these exclusions is that the policy will cover damages for the loss of use of a third person’s property if caused “by sudden and accidental physical damage” to Geo Pipe’s products:
[W]e won’t apply this exclusion to damages that result from the loss of use of other property not physically damaged that’s caused by sudden and accidental physical damage to your products or completed work after they’ve been put to their intended use. For example:
You supply an electric motor to a customer who uses it to power his conveyor. The motor’s shaft breaks several days later while he’s operating the conveyor. The conveyor isn’t damaged, but your customer has extra costs because he’s unable to use it until the motor is repaired. If he sues you to recover those costs, we won’t apply the exclusion. However, if the customer discovers while hooking the motor up to the conveyor that the motor’s shaft is broken, we won’t protect you.
(Emphasis in the original).
Walter Oil’s allegations
Walter Oil alleged in its рetition that it drilled the offshore well in the spring of 1992, commenced production in May 1992, and “[tjhereafter, and continuing through the winter of 1993, there was constant pressure in the casing.” The petition alleged that the cause of the pressure was unknown, that Walter Oil properly used the tubing at all times, and that it discovered a hole or “washout” in a joint of the tubing during a workover in March 1993. The petition alleged that the tubing was chrome and had been welded, and that this “weld corroded, thereby causing the washout” (emphasis аdded). Walter Oil argued this product defect was a cause of the “failure of the tubing in question.”
On appeal, St. Paul argues that Walter Oil’s pleadings do not allege sudden and accidental property damage, while Walter Oil as Geo Pipe’s assignee argues this exception was met by the allegation of a hole or washout in the tubing.
Two Texas decisions are helpful on the question whether a hole caused by corrosion is sudden and accidental. In
Pioneer Chlor Alkali Co., Inc. v. Royal Indem. Co.,
the Fourteenth Court of Appeals was faced with a duty to defend claim involving a chlorine liquifier that developed four holes in three of its tubes through corrosion, which in turn led to another corrosive hole in an elbow of downstream piping and resulted in the sudden release of 42 tons of chlorine into the atmosphere.
See
*905 [The insured] admits that the tubes damaged because of the direct steam of brine concentrated onto the tubes would not be covered because that damage is corrosion damage; however, the damage caused by the sudden and accidental release of forty-two tons of chlorine would be.
Id. at 934. The court also noted that, although corrosion was slow, the breach of the tubes fit the definition of sudden and accidental. Id. at 937.
To the extent that Pioneer held that the holes in the tubes constituted sudden and accidental physical damage, we disagree. A hole caused by corrosion is necessarily gradual. But a fairer reading of the Pioneer decision would be that although the tubes corroded gradually, the damage complained of was due to a sudden and accidental release of forty-two tons of chlorine as thе tubes were breached. That is, though the corrosion ate away the tubes gradually, the release of chlorine was virtually instantaneous.
A case more closely on point with the instant situation is
Mesa Operating Co. v. California Union Ins. Co.,
[The insured] argues that even if the word “sudden” is held to mean “quick” or “abrupt,” the salt water contamination at issue happened “suddenly.” [The insured] reasons that the discharge occurred suddenly becаuse at one point in time the well was whole and, an instant later, salt water breached the well and began escaping into the aquifer. According to [the insured], the fact that the leak was not discovered for a lengthy period of time does not negate the temporal suddenness with which the breach occurred. This argument has been described as the “metaphysical moment” theory. Under the logic of this theory, every event or condition not existing from the dawn of time would be considеred “sudden” because at one moment it did not exist and the next moment it did. While we agree that the time of discovery does not control whether the discharge was sudden, we also conclude that a discharge that continues over a lengthy period of time cannot be considered “sudden” as a matter of law. For example, if evidence showed that a container burst, releasing a finite amount of pollution into the surrounding area within a short period of time, this discharge could be сonsidered sudden even though its existence was not discovered for several years. Contrastingly, a leak of a pollutant that continues long past the point of the ini *906 tial release will not be considered sudden.
Mesa,
The
Mesa
court ultimately determined the salt water pollution was not “sudden” because of evidence that the salt water from the underground well lеaked into the aquifer for a period of years until it was discovered.
Mesa,
We agree with the Mesa court that the term “sudden” has a temporal component and that an ongoing condition of sufficient duration cannot constitute a sudden event.
Turning back to Walter Oil’s pleadings and viewing the policy language in the light most favorable to the insured, Walter Oil’s pleadings do not allege “sudden and accidental physical damage” within the meaning of the exception to the impaired property exclusion. Walter Oil’s entire cause of action is premised upon Geo Pipe’s having provided chrome tubing that corroded because it had been welded, resulting in a hole in the pipe. Corrosion has a commonly understood, unambiguous meaning; the verb “corrode” is defined as “to eat away by degrees as if by gnawing; esp: to wear away gradually usu. by chemical action.” Webster’s New Collegiate Dictionary, p. 253 (1981). Walter Oil’s allegations establish that its claim is that the welded chrome tubing corroded — was eatеn away by degrees, or wore away gradually — until a hole appeared. Such an allegation is one of physical damage that is incremental or gradual, the opposite of “sudden.” Nor do Walter Oil’s allegations establish a (temporally) sudden and discrete event such as the abrupt release of 42 tons of chlorine in Pioneer. Rather, Walter Oil’s pleadings allege “constant pressure” in the well casing after May 1992 and “continuing through the winter of 1993.” This situation more closely resembles the continuous, non-sudden, release of saltwater after corrosion in the well casing in Mesa.
While Walter Oil urges that we construe its pleading that a hole appeared as a sudden and accidental event, its literal allegation is that physical damage to the pipe was by corrosion, resulting in constant pressure over a period of months. We cannot construe such damage to the tubing as sudden physical damage.
Walter Oil’s loss was excluded because it was for property damage to Geo Pipe’s products (pipe tubing) and “impaired property” (Walter Oil’s well)' — “tangible property ... that can only be restored to use by ... repair, replacement or removal of [Geo Pipe’s] products or completed work which forms a part of it.” Further, the loss was not within the policy’s “sudden and accidental” exception to the application of these policy exclusions.
Application of the “eight corners” rule comparing Walter Oil’s pleаdings with the coverage provisions of St. Paul’s policy insuring Geo Pipe shows that the loss was excluded under policy terms.
In its motion for rehearing, Walter Oil as Geo Pipe’s assignee argues that an Illinois court would interpret “sudden and accidental” differently under Illinois law. Walter Oil points out that the Illinois Supreme Court has interpreted the words “sudden and accidental,” in an insurance policy’s pollution exclusion clause, as “unexpected or unintended,” rather than “abrupt, rapid, or swift.”
Outboard Marine Corp. v. Liberty Mut. Ins. Co.,
Outboard is distinguishable from this case. The Outboard court found that the term “sudden” as used in that particular policy could be interpreted both as abrupt (temporal) and unexpected (non-temporal). Id. Resolving the ambiguity in the insured’s favor, the court construed “sudden” as “unexpected or unintended,” the non-temporal definition. Id. The Outboard court was careful, however, to limit its analysis to the facts and policy before it:
We conclude that the two definitions of “sudden” set forth above are both reasonable interpretations of this term in the context in which it appears. Therefore, “sudden” is, at a minimum, ambiguous as used in these policies. In Illinois, ambiguities and doubts in insurance policies are resolved in favor of the insured, especially those that appear in exclusionary clauses. Consequently, in this particular context, we construe “sudden” in favor of OMC and find it to mean unexpected or unintended.
Id. (emphasis added, citations omitted).
In our case, we are presented not only with the term “sudden and accidental” but also with an example, within the policy, clarifying its meaning. As stated earlier, the policy provided the following example of a sudden and accidental event:
You supply an electric motor to a customer who uses it to power his conveyor. The motor’s shaft breaks several days later while he’s operating the conveyor. The conveyor isn’t damaged, but your customer has extra costs because he’s unable to use it until the motor is repaired. If he sues you to recover those costs, we won’t apply the exclusion. However, if the customer discovers while hooking the motor up to the conveyor that the motor’s shaft is broken, we won’t protect you.
The example provided in the policy has two elements. First, the accident immediately (a temporal requirement) prevents the use of the third party’s property — the customer’s motor’s shaft breaks and the customer is “unable to use [his property] until the motor is repaired.” (Emphasis added). Second, the event must be unexpected (a non-temporal requirement) — if the customer “discovers” the problem ahead of time, the event is excluded. Under this policy, the term “sudden” is thus clarified to mean an abrupt (temporal) and unexpected (non-temporal) event — both senses of the word sudden. The Outboard court concluded that “sudden” was ambiguous because of dispositive meanings — ei ther abrupt or unexpected — and construing the policy in favor of the insured, the court held that “sudden” requirеd only that the event be unexpected. Under this policy, however, the policy example shows that a “sudden and accidental” event must be both abrupt and unexpected. Both are requirements that must be satisfied, and because of the policy example we are not at liberty to choose between them; even under Illinois law there is no ambiguity under this policy.
Texas courts have decided that the term “sudden” unambiguously contains a temporal element.
See Mesa,
St. Paul therefore did not breach its duty to defend Geo Pipe under the policy. St. Paul’s first point of error is sustained. Because this point is dispositive, we do not consider St. Paul’s remaining points. 5
The summary judgment is reversed, and the cause is remanded to the trial court.
Notes
. James Loоke, a representative of Walter Oil, testified in a deposition that three days after the well originally went on production, Walter Oil noticed an increase in casing pressure in the well. He said that the casing pressure should ordinarily be lower than the pressure in the well’s pipe. He also testified that a well with increased casing pressure could continue to be used, "but it’s not a safe situation to have.” He stated that Walter Oil employees originally attributed the pressure to a problem with leakage in the seals, threads, or packer, though ultimately they discovered a hole in the pipe tubing. His final analysis of the cause of the problem was that "the pressure went up due to the hole in the pipe, and the hole probably started off as a small leak and then got bigger and bigger and bigger.” He also conceded that although Walter Oil could have worked over the well to determine the cause of the pressure problem from November 1992 through March 1993, it keрt operating the well until March because of high gas prices during the winter. Though our analysis in this opinion is confined to Walter Oil’s pleadings in its suit against Geo Pipe and to the language of the St. Paul policy, we set out this testimony as helpful background information.
. In its motion for rehearing, however, Walter Oil as Geo Pipe’s assignee argues that our interpretation of the policy term, “sudden and accidental,” is at variance with Illinois law, necessitating a new opinion with choice of law analysis to determine which forum’s law governs the determination of the duty to defend. As will be explained below, whether under Texas or Illinois law, we find that this particular policy language would be interpreted the same way. In the absence of a true conflict of law, we do not undertake choice of law analysis.
See generally Duncan v. Cessna Aircraft Co.,
. The
Mesa
decision is the first Texas decision to reach this precise issue; the
Pioneer
decision never expressly addresses whether the term "sudden” implies a temporal component. See
Mesa,
. Walter Oil also argues that thе cases cited by this decision involve pollution exclusion clauses and are inapplicable to Geo Pipe’s appeal. However, the case it cites to show *907 that the word “sudden” does not necessitate a temporal requirement, Outboard, involves a pollution exclusion clause. We find the discussion of "sudden and accidental” in pollution exclusion clauses in other decisions relevant to the meaning of the term in this policy.
. St. Paul’s remaining points of error generally аre premised on the choice of law governing the
effect
of the breach of a duty to defend. Illinois law, unlike that of Texas, es-tops an insurer from contesting indemnification coverage once the duty to defend has been breached.
Compare Thornton v. Paul,
