OPINION
After denying summary judgment for New Hampshire Insurance Company (New Hampshire), the trial court certified certain insurance coverage issues as important and doubtful pursuant to Minn. R. CivApp. P. 103.08(h). On appeal, New Hampshire argues the asbestos contamination of residential rental properties owned by Sentinel Management Company is not a covered loss under Sentinel’s all-risk insurance policy.
FACTS
Sentinel Management Company and other general and limited partnerships (collectively, Sentinel) own and manage certain residential rental properties in the Twin Cities. In 1991 and 1992, Sentinel purchased “all-risk” first-party insurance coverage from *298 New Hampshire. The relevant parts of the policy state:
III. PERILS INSURED AGAINST Coverage: This policy is extended to insure against all risks of direct physical loss to building(s), subject to provisions and stipulations herein * * ⅜.
⅜ ⅜ ⅜ ⅜ ⅜ ⅜
Y. EXCLUSIONS
In addition to the provisions of POP-220 and part A this policy does not insure under this form against:
D. Loss caused by:
1.Wear and tear, deterioration, rust or corrosion, mould, wet or dry rot, inherent or latent defect; smog; smoke, vapor or gas from agricultural or industrial operations; mechanical breakdown, including rupture or bursting caused by centrifugal force; settling, cracking, shrinkage, bulging or expansion of pavements, foundations, walls, floors, roofs or ceilings; animals, birds, vermin, termites or other insects; unless loss by a peril not otherwise excluded ensues and then the company shall be liable for only such ensuing loss.
sH * * * * *
This Policy Does Not Insure Under This Form Against:
A. Loss occasioned directly or indirectly by:
1. Enforcement of any local or state ordinance or law regulating the construction, repair or demolition of buildings or structures unless such liability is otherwise specifically assumed by endorsement.
(Emphasis added.) Although the comprehensive general liability part of Sentinel’s policy contains a contamination exclusion, the first-party section does not.
Sentinel’s apartment buildings were built between 1962 and 1978, with asbestos-containing materials (ACMs) incorporated in ceiling and floor tiles, surface treatments, and thermal and mechanical systems insulation. In 1992, experts retained by Sentinel concluded all the buildings contained asbestos fibers on carpeting and other surfaces, released from the ACMs by abrasions from normal residential and building maintenance activities. While asbestos left undisturbed in building materials does not pose a health risk, released asbestos is a known carcinogen. The buildings remain occupied, however, and Sentinel has not yet taken action to remove the asbestos fibers. No ordinances or regulations require Sentinel to abate the contamination.
Sentinel brought suit against New Hampshire and its other insurance earners in 1994, claiming it had suffered a direct, physical loss from the release of asbestos fibers and resultant contamination of the buildings. The trial court granted summary judgment in favor of the other insurers, finding coverage had not been triggered until Sentinel discovered the asbestos contamination while New Hampshire’s policy was in effect in 1992. New Hampshire moved for summary judgment, arguing the claimed losses did not fall within the coverage of its all-risk policy. The trial court denied New Hampshire’s motion, but certified the following question as important and doubtful:
Whether a loss resulting from the release of asbestos fibers in a residential building caused by abrasions of asbestos-containing materials, air circulation and building vibrations is a covered peril under an all-risk, first-party property insurance policy?
New Hampshire appeals from the trial court’s denial of summary judgment.
ISSUES
I. Was Sentinel’s loss from the release of asbestos fibers fortuitous?
II. Does asbestos contamination constitute a direct physical loss?
III. Is Sentinel’s loss excepted from the policy’s wear-and-tear exclusion by the ensuing loss clause?
IV. Is Sentinel’s loss covered despite the policy’s ordinance exclusion?
ANALYSIS
On appeal from a denial of summary judgment, this court determines whether the trial court erred in its application of the law and whether genuine issues of material fact exist.
Nicollet Restoration, Inc. v.
*299
City of St. Paul,
I.
Generally, an “all-risk” insurance policy creates
a special type of coverage extending to risks not usually covered under other insurance, and recovery under an “all-risk” policy will, as a rule, be allowed for all fortuitous losses not resulting from misconduct or fraud, unless the policy contains a specific provision expressly excluding the loss from coverage.
13A George E. Couch,
Couch on Insurance 2d
§ 48:141 (rev. ed.1982);
accord 5
John Alan Appleman & Jean Appleman,
Insurance Lato and Practice
§ 3092 (rev. ed. 1970
&
Supp.1997). The implied requirement of fortuity in all-risk insurance policies is universally recognized.
Adams-Arapahoe Sch. Dist. No. 28-J v. Continental Ins. Co.,
New Hampshire argues the asbestos contamination of Sentinel’s buildings is not fortuitous because the release of asbestos fibers through ordinary wear and tear was certain to occur.
See Chute v. North River Ins. Co.,
An occurrence is fortuitous if “the outcome of the event ⅜ * * [is not] known in advance by the insured.”
Bituminous Cas. Corp. v. Bartlett,
which so far as the parties to the contract are aware, is dependent on chance. It may be beyond the power of any human being to bring the event to pass; it may be within the control of third persons; it may even be a past event, as the loss of a vessel, provided that the fact is unknown to the parties.
Restatement of Contracts § 291 cmt. a (1932) (emphasis added),
quoted in University of Cincinnati v. Arkwright Mut. Ins. Co.,
*300
Sentinel seeks recovery, not for the mere presence of ACMs in the buildings, but for the release of asbestos fibers and resultant contamination.
Cf. Leafland Group-II v. Insurance Co. of N. Am.,
Viewed in hindsight, the eventual contamination of Sentinel’s buildings was inevitable, due to the presence of asbestos-containing materials.
See Greene v. Cheetham,
II.
Sentinel’s all-risk policy provides indemnity against “all risks of direct physical loss.” “Direct physical loss” provisions require only that a covered property be injured, not destroyed.
See, e.g., Adams-Arapahoe,
New Hampshire argues asbestos contamination, absent structural damage, cannot constitute “direct physical loss” under the policy. Sentinel concedes it has neither closed its rental properties nor taken action to remove the released fibers from the buildings. However, Sentinel presented evidence showing that released asbestos fibers have contaminated the buildings, creating a hazard to human health. Although asbestos contamination does not result in tangible injury to the physical structure of a building, a building’s function may be seriously impaired or destroyed and the property rendered useless by the presence of contaminants.
Cf. Farmers Ins. Co. v. Trutanich,
III.
Sentinel’s first-party policy excludes damage caused by wear and tear “unless loss by a peril not otherwise excluded ensues and then the company shall be liable for only such ensuing loss.” “Wear and tear” is the process of ordinary or natural deterioration of a building.
See Northwestern Nat’l Cas. Co. v. Khosa, Inc.,
The events that caused the release of asbestos fibers in the Sentinel properties include: closet doors dislodging from their tracks and scraping the ceiling; residents screwing bolts directly into the ceiling to hang plants; residents and maintenance staff accidentally striking the ceiling with broom and mop handles; and air circulating through the building. All of these events were expected, normal occurrences, which, together, contributed to the natural deterioration of Sentinel’s buildings. Given these facts, the trial court correctly concluded the release of asbestos fibers was caused by ordinary wear and tear.
However, an “ensuing loss” clause, like the one following Sentinel’s wear- and-tear exclusion, brings within coverage a loss from a covered peril that follows as a consequence of an excluded peril.
See Aetna Ins. Co. v. Getchell Steel Treating Co.,
Sentinel argues the release of asbestos fibers in its buildings, while ensuing from ordinary wear and tear, also constitutes a distinct peril. We agree. Damage to the buildings arising from wear and tear, such as holes in the ceilings and abrasions on walls, is separable from the asbestos contamination. The two are not different classifications of a single phenomenon.
Cf. Aetna Cas. & Sur. Co. v. Yates,
We conclude the wear-and-tear and ensuing loss provisions, read together, exclude from coverage the normal results of wear and tear, but cover distinct, separable, ensuing losses like the asbestos contamination.
See Henning Nelson Constr. Co. v. Fireman’s Fund Am. Life Ins. Co.,
IV.
A provision in Sentinel’s insurance policy excludes from coverage any damage resulting “directly or indirectly” from the “enforcement of any local or state ordinance or law regulating the construction, repair or demolition of buddings.” So long as extraneous forces cause physical damage to property, this type of exclusion does not defeat recovery when, as a result, a governmental body enforces an ordinance against the property.
See, e.g., Hampton Foods, Inc. v. Aetna Cas. & Sur. Co.,
In denying summary judgment, the trial court noted Sentinel’s evidence demonstrated its damages were caused by “the release of a toxic substance in its buildings, not the law’s requirements that the substance be removed.” Sentinel’s loss is asbestos contamination; that Sentinel might one day be required by law to remove the released asbestos does not change the nature of its existing loss into one caused by enforcement of an ordinance. Therefore, the court correctly concluded the damage Sentinel suffered due to the release of asbestos fibers does not fall within the policy’s ordinance exclusion.
DECISION
Viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the nonmovant, Sentinel’s loss by asbestos contamination constitutes a fortuitous, direct, physical loss, which is excepted from the policy’s wear-and-tear exclusion by the ensuing loss provision.
Affirmed; certified questions answered in the affirmative.
