This diversity case requires us to consider a question we reserved in
Pipefitters Welfare Educ. Fund v. Westchester Fire Ins. Co.,
I. BACKGROUND
This declaratory judgment action grows out of two complaints filed against Dennis Bruce Dwyer and others in the Circuit Court of Rock County, Wisconsin (the “Rock County actions”). The plaintiffs in the two suits owned various parcels of real property, including ground wells, in Beloit, Wisconsin that allegedly were contaminated when chemicals were released into the soil during a fire on the neighboring property of Dwyer’s father. The blaze destroyed a building that housed materials used in Dwyer’s insulation business as well as pesticides and herbicides used in his father’s seed and fertilizer business. The chemicals allegedly were washed into the ground with the water utilized to fight the fire. The plaintiffs in the underlying suits allege that the chemicals have infiltrated their wells, contaminating their water supplies. They allege damage to their real property as well as personal injuries caused by the ingestion and use of the contaminated water. The complaints assert an entitlement to relief under various legal theories, the most important for our purposes being a negligent trespass to property.
Dwyer tendered the suits to Scottish Guarantee Insurance Company, Limited (“Scottish”) for defense and indemnification under a policy he had purchased for his insulation business. Scottish denied a defense on the ground that the allegations in the underlying *309 complaints fell under the policy’s pollution exclusion. 1 Scottish later filed this declaratory judgment action under our diversity jurisdiction, again asserting that it had no duty to defend or to indemnify Dwyer under the policy. Dwyer counterclaimed, alleging coverage under the personal injury portion of the policy, which he maintained is not subject to the pollution exclusion. By its terms, the pollution exclusion applies only to bodily injury and property damage liability (“Coverage A”), and the parties agreed below that this exclusion negates any duty to defend under Coverage A. Yet a separate provision provides coverage for personal or advertising injuries (“Coverage B”), and that portion of the policy, as Dwyer noted below, is not subject to the pollution exclusion. Scottish maintained, however, that the Rock County complaints do not allege “personal injuries” as that term is defined in Coverage B.
The parties filed cross-motions for summary judgment on Scottish’s duty to provide a defense under the pokey’s personal injury provision. The district court referred the motions to a magistrate-judge, who recommended that Dwyer’s motion be granted. The district court adopted that recommendation and held that Scottish has a duty to defend the Rock County lawsuits because the complaints there arguably allege a wrongful entry within the scope of Coverage B. The court also granted Dwyer’s motion for attorney’s fees and costs. We review the district court’s grant of summary judgment de novo.
Pipefitters,
"Bodily injury" or “property damage” arising out of the actual, alleged or threatened discharge, dispersal, release or escape of pollutants:
(a) At or from premises you own, rent or occupy....
II. DISCUSSION
A. Duty to Defend
In determining whether Scottish has a duty to defend Dwyer under Wisconsin law, we look to the allegations in the Rock County complaints, as we must determine whether those complaints “allege facts which, if proven, would give rise to liability covered under the terms and conditions of the policy.”
Sola Basic Indus., Inc. v. United States Fidelity & Guar. Co.,
Wisconsin treats an insurance policy as any other contract and applies the same rules of construction. Maas
v. Ziegler,
The Scottish policy defines a “personal injury” as:
injury, other than “bodily injury”, arising out of one or more of the following offenses:
a. False arrest, detention or imprisonment;
b. Malicious prosecution;
c. Wrongful entry into, or eviction of a person from, a room, dwelling or premises that the person occupies;
d. 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; or
e. Oral or written publication of material that violates a person’s right to privacy.
Dwyer maintains that the chemical trespass counts of the Rock County complaints allege a “wrongful entry” under the policy. Scottish concedes that the underlying actions allege a negligent trespass, but it maintains that the term “wrongful entry,” like the other offenses constituting “personal injuries” under Coverage B, requires an intentional rather than merely a negligent act.
See, e.g., Gregory v. Tennessee Gas Pipeline Co.,
We addressed a similar argument in
Pipe-fitters.
2
There, a “personal injury” was defined as, among other things, a “wrongful entry or eviction or other invasion of the right to private occupancy.”
The approach we utilized in
Pipefitters
was followed by the Wisconsin Court of Appeals in
City of Edgerton v. General Casualty Co.,
The parties have directed us to little Wisconsin authority on this question. Scottish asserts that the term “wrongful entry” has been used by Wisconsin courts in only one context — the improper entry by a landlord onto the leased property of a tenant. (Scottish Br. at 14 (citing
Simhiser v. Farber,
The only remaining question is whether a Wisconsin court would recognize a cause of action for negligent trespass. In
Fortier,
the Wisconsin Appellate Court considered whether allegations that the defendant’s toxic chemicals “seeped or leached ... to the plaintiffs’ nearby properties, contaminating their residential water wells and causing them personal injury and economic loss” stated a claim for trespass.
One who recklessly or negligently, or as a result of an abnormally dangerous activity, enters land in the possession of another or causes a thing or third person so to enter is subject to liability to the possessor if, but only if, his presence or the presence of the thing or the third person upon the land causes harm to the land, to the possessor, [or] to a thing or a third person in whose security the possessor has a legally protected interest.
Id.; see also Edgerton,
B. Fees and Costs
Scottish also challenges the district court’s order requiring it to pay Dwyer’s attorney’s fees and costs in this coverage dispute. The district court based its decision on
Elliott v. Donahue,
The insurer that denies coverage and forces the insured to retain counsel and expend additional money to establish coverage for a claim that falls within the ambit of the insurance policy deprives the insured the benefit that was bargained for and paid for with the periodic premium payments. Therefore, the principles of equity call for the insurer to be liable to the insured for expenses, including reasonable attorney fees, incurred by the insured in successfully establishing coverage.
Id.,
The district court’s judgment is in all respects
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The pollution exclusion excludes from coverage:
. Scottish maintains that Pipefitters has no application because it involved Illinois and Missouri rather than Wisconsin law, and because the pertinent policy language there differs from that in the Scottish policy. Although Scottish is correct that Pipefitters does not control our decision here for those reasons, it remains highly relevant, as it establishes the framework we must follow in determining whether a claim falls under the personal injury portion of such a policy.
. Indeed, Magistrate Judge Crocker's exhaustive research below revealed that in other states, "litigants and courts sometimes use the term 'wrongful entry' interchangeably with the term 'trespass.' " (Report at 13.)
. Having concluded that the Rock County complaints allege facts with the scope of Coverage B, there is no question that Coverage A’s pollution exclusion would not apply.
See Pipefitters,
