This action to recover pursuant to a comprehensive general liability umbrella insurance policy for environmental cleanup costs, and on related theories, requires the court to interpret three separate provisions of the policy: (1) the pollution exclusion; (2) the “care, custody or control” exclusion; and (3)' the term “damages” in the insuring agreement of the policy. Because the court holds that the cleanup costs are not “damages” within the meaning of the policy, the court concludes that plaintiff is not entitled to recover the environmental cleanup expenses for which it sues.
I
Plaintiff SnyderGeneral Corporation (“SnyderGeneral”) brings this lawsuit to recover from defendant Century Indemnity Company (“Century”) for breach of contract, breach of duty of good faith and fair dealing and violation of the Texas Insurance Code, and declaratory judgment, based upon Century’s refusal to pay a claim made by Sny-derGeneral pursuant to a comprehensive general liability (“CGL”) umbrella policy (the “Policy”) that SnyderGeneral purchased from Century. The Policy insured SnyderGeneral during the period April 3, 1983 to April 3, 1984. By incorporating the terms of an underlying CGL policy owned by SnyderGeneral, 1 the Policy excluded coverage for pollution liability except for “sudden and accidental” discharges. The Policy provided, in relevant part:
This insurance does not apply: ... to ... property damage arising out of the discharge, dispersal, release or escape of smoke, vapors, soot, fumes, acids, alkalis, toxic chemicals, liquids or gases, waste materials or other irritants, contaminants or pollutants into or upon land, the atmosphere or any water course or body of water: but this exclusion does not apply if such discharge, dispersal, release or escape is sudden and accidental [.]
D.MSJ App. Ex. 3, Exclusion (f) (emphasis added).
In April 1982 SnyderGeneral purchased the Climate Control Division of The Singer Company. As part of the purchase, Snyder-General acquired a manufacturing facility located in Wilmington, North Carolina. From April 1982 to July 1988 SnyderGeneral operated the Wilmington facility. In 1988 Sny-derGeneral sold the facility to Heatcraft, Inc. (“Heatcraft”), retaining responsibility for the pollution discharge that is the subject of this litigation. SnyderGeneral used and stored the industrial degreaser solvent trichloroeth-ane (“TCA”) during the manufacturing process. SnyderGeneral employees cheeked the level of TCA in the storage tanks on a daily basis. Plant Manager Donald Knowlton noticed a dramatic loss of TCA from one of the tanks on November 18, 1983. SnyderGeneral employees observed several leaks, each the size of the end of a ballpoint pen, 2 on the side of that tank. They also saw rust surrounding the holes, and concluded the leak had been caused by corrosion.
The groundwater at the Wilmington facility is now contaminated with TCA. Snyder-General regularly pumped the groundwater from wells for use during its manufacturing process.
*995 Over a number of years, SnyderGeneral incurred environmental cleanup costs that it contends were the result of the 1983 TCA discharge. SnyderGeneral made these expenditures in order to comply with an Administrative Order on Consent governing the voluntary cleanup of the Wilmington facility. Neither SnyderGeneral, nor its successor, Heatcraft, was sued regarding the cleanup of the Wilmington facility. In a May 1988 letter, SnyderGeneral notified Century of its claim for Policy coverage for the cleanup expenses. SnyderGeneral’s counsel advised Century of the claim in letters written in July 1992 and October 1992. The parties dispute whether Century responded to this correspondence.
Century now moves for summary judgment on the breach of contract claim 3 based on three Policy provisions: (1) the pollution exclusion; (2) the “care, custody or control” exclusion; and (3) the term “damages” in the insuring agreement of the Policy. Century also contends it is entitled to summary judgment on SnyderGeneral’s claim for breach of duty of good faith and fair dealing and violation of the Texas Insurance Code.
II
Century contends it is entitled to summary judgment dismissing SnyderGeneral’s breach of contract claim. The first question presented is whether a reasonable trier of fact could find that the TCA discharge for which SnyderGeneral seeks coverage was “sudden and accidental.”
A
The parties agree that this issue is governed by Texas law, which requires the court to interpret the phrase “sudden and accidental” as a matter of law.
See Guaranty Nat’l Ins. Co. v. North River Ins. Co.,
Because Century does not have the burden of proof, it can meet its summary judgment obligation by pointing the court to the absence of evidence to support SnyderGeneral’s claim.
See Celotex Corp. v. Catrett,
B
The court will decide as a threshold issue whether the phrase “sudden and accidental” has a temporal component. 4 Neither party *996 has cited, nor has the court located, any controlling Texas ease. In this diversity action the court must therefore make an Erie 5 prediction concerning what the Texas Supreme Court would decide if presented with the question.
1
Some courts have held that the word “sudden” is subject to two reasonable interpretations. The term could connote an abrupt happening or a boom-type event, or it could refer to an unforeseen event. Under the doctrine of
contra proferentem,
courts construe ambiguities in favor of the insured,
e.g., Puckett v. U.S. Fire Ins. Co.,
Among federal courts, however, there is an “emerging majority” that holds that the term “sudden” unambiguously includes a temporal component.
Trico Indus., Inc. v. Travelers Indem. Co.,
The court predicts that the Supreme Court of Texas will agree with the emerging majority of federal courts and conclude that the phrase “sudden and accidental” has a temporal component. The word “sudden” appears as part of the phrase “sudden and accidental,” and the word “accidental” already refers to unforeseen events. To hold that “sudden” can mean either abrupt or unforeseen is to render the word superfluous. Texas courts attempt to avoid redundancy by giving contractual terms independent meaning.
See Collier v. Employers Nat’l Ins. Co.,
In addition, although construing the phrase “sudden and accidental” to mean “unexpected or unforeseen” would force insureds to demonstrate that they did not expect or intend to cause pollution damage, thus preventing the obvious moral hazard that would result if insureds were covered for intentionally wrongful acts, the standard CGL policy already excludes coverage in all situations where insureds expect or intend damage. See D.MSJ App. Ex. 1 (defining “occurrence”). While it might not be completely redundant to have an expected or intended exception for pollution alone, 8 the standard form policy illustrates that insurers know how to say “expected or intended.” They could easily have provided coverage for “unexpected or unintended” pollution if this had been their intent. Instead, the use of the phrase “sudden and accidental” discloses a different meaning.
2
SnyderGeneral cites
Pioneer Chlor Alkali Co. v. Royal Indem. Co.,
Pioneer
contains language that suggests that a split of authority is alone sufficient to create ambiguity that favors the insured.
Id.
at 929. This premise would be akin to that adopted by the Colorado Supreme Court, when it concluded that the term “sudden” was ambiguous based partly
*998
on this reasoning.
See Hecla Mining Co.,
Few Texas cases have addressed this issue. In
Pioneer
the court appeared to summarize the holding of a prior case for the proposition that a split in authority creates ambiguity, but the opinion that
Pioneer
cited did not adopt such a rule.
Pioneer,
Additionally, this court wonders even in those cases where legitimate, differing interpretations of the same language result, at what point the language becomes ambiguous as a matter of law. Is that point reached when the jurisdictions are split evenly, when there is a 40%, 30%, or 20% minority; or can a court no longer consider the issue for itself when only one other court reaches an opposite conclusion? This court prefers the alternative which allows each court to decide the issue in light of the policy terms and the facts before it.
T.C. Bateson Constr. Co. v. Lumbermens Mut. Cas. Co.,
The court holds that Bateson more accurately reflects Texas law because the issue was raised in that case, and the court expressly analyzed and rejected the argument. Were the rule as Pioneer suggests, a significant majority of courts could construe “sudden” to have a temporal component, but if only a few courts interpreted “sudden” to mean unexpected or unintended, the decision would compel Texas courts to resolve an unambiguous term in favor of the insured.
SnyderGeneral also cites
Pioneer’s
interpretation of a boiler and machinery policy as controlling Texas precedent. The policy in
Pioneer
covered losses caused by a “sudden and accidental” breakdown of the insured’s equipment, but explicitly excluded
inter alia
corrosion.
Pioneer,
Under the reasoning of these cases, the time it actually took for the erosion/corrosion mechanism to breach the tubes is immaterial. The actual penetration of the tubes was unexpected and unforeseen, complying precisely with the definitions of “sudden” and “accidental.” At one point in time the tubes were whole, an instant later they were breached.
Id. at 937.
Pioneer involved a slightly different issue than does the present case. The boiler and machinery policy excluded coverage for corrosion, but did not explicitly exclude damage caused by corrosion. The insured argued that although corrosion existed and it could not recover for the replacement of corroded machinery, it was nevertheless covered for a sudden and accidental event caused by corrosion. The court agreed with the insured on this point, but it made ambiguous statements regarding whether “sudden and accidental” included a temporal component. Compare id. at 936 (stating that corrosion of an air conditioner would not be covered except for the possibility that the air conditioner burst and exploded) and id. at 937 (“Here, while the corrosion/erosion mechanism that caused *999 the holes in the liquefier tubes was slow, the breach of the tubes was instantaneous, and therefore, sudden and accidental”) with the language cited by SnyderGeneral. This suggests that Pioneer did not attempt to define “sudden and accidental” in all circumstances.
The Supreme Court of Florida has rejected the proposition that the phrase “sudden and accidental” in the pollution exclusion of a CGL policy should be construed in the same manner as a boiler and machinery policy.
See Dimmitt Chevrolet, Inc. v. Southeastern Fid. Ins. Corp.,
policies, the court rejects SnyderGeneral’s argument.
3
The court therefore holds that the phrase “sudden and accidental” unambiguously has a temporal component, and the pollution exclusion does not permit coverage for a discharge 10 that is merely unexpected or unintended.
C
The court must next decide if there is a genuine issue of material fact concerning whether the November 18, 1983 TCA discharge was in fact “sudden.”
Some courts that have recognized that “sudden” has a temporal component have also concluded — without explaining the analytical path that they have followed — that a discharge was not “sudden.” 11 Several courts have emphasized the cause of the discharge. 12 A small minority has looked to the duration of the time lapse before the discharge resulted in property damage. 13 The reported cases typically address pollution coverage disputes concerning long-term discharges. No court appears to have decid *1000 ed the issue in the context of an insured’s prompt discovery of a discharge for which insurance coverage is sought. 14 To determine if there is a genuine issue concerning whether the TCA discharge was sudden, the court will define the temporal component of sudden, and will then determine which aspect of a discharge must be sudden in order for there to be coverage.
1
The temporal component of the term “sudden” can reasonably refer solely to the duration of an event. For example, rainstorms that begin and end instantaneously or abruptly are often referred to as “sudden” storms.
A second category of “sudden” events includes instances in which a characteristic other than the duration of the incident justifies the classification. Several courts have noted that sudden merges a temporal component with the unforeseen or unexpected.
E.g., American States Ins. Co. v. Sacramento Plating, Inc.,
The court therefore concludes there are two reasonable interpretations of the temporal element of “sudden.” It can mean an instantaneous or abrupt event, or an unexpected incident of limited (although longer than instantaneous) duration.
2
The court next decides which aspect of a discharge must be “sudden.”
a
In
Bell Lumber & Pole Co. v. U.S. Fire Ins. Co,
The Bell Lumber panel based its decision on Minnesota law. CGL policies provide coverage for property damage caused by an “occurrence,” and this definition determines the existence of coverage because it controls which policy year or years cover an event that spans several years. The Eighth Circuit interpreted Minnesota law as applying an injury-in-fact trigger that provided coverage when the contaminants reached third party property. Id. The panel reasoned that the “sudden and accidental” exception paralleled the definition of occurrence, and afforded coverage only when the contaminants suddenly reached the groundwater.
In
Union Pac. Resources
the court addressed the question whether the “occurrence” within the meaning of a pollution ex-
*1001
elusion in a CGL policy was waste disposal by the insured, or leakage into the environment.
Because Texas adheres to a different approach from the one taken in Minnesota, the court predicts that Texas will follow the majority of courts that reject the proposition that discharge refers to the moment contamination reaches third party property. 15
b
The time of discovery represents another post-discharge event to which courts could look when determining the suddenness of a discharge.
16
The time of discovery does not, however, control the legal determination whether a discharge occurred instantaneously, or represented an unexpected leak. Although prompt detection may corroborate that a discharge was of short duration, neither prompt nor dilatory discovery can retroactively change the historical facts of the occurrence. In addition, Texas’ focus on the discharge with respect to the definition of “occurrence” suggests that Texas would not give controlling weight to post-discharge factors such as the amount of time until discovery. The court predicts that Texas will follow those courts that reject the proposition that the time of discovery determines whether a discharge is sudden.
See SCSC Corp. v. Allied Mut. Ins. Co.,
C
The court next considers whether the determining event is the instant that pollutants escape their state of containment. Under this interpretation, the test is whether the leak started abruptly. This approach, known as the “metaphysical moment” argument, suggests that every leak occurs suddenly because there will always be an instant in time when a once nonexistent leak “suddenly” develops. The metaphysical moment principle would read the temporal component of the term “sudden” out of the Policy, thus reducing this term to mere surplusage. This court joins the other courts that have rejected the metaphysical moment argument as an unreasonable interpretation of the CGL policy.
See Federated Mut. Ins. Co. v. Botkin Grain Co.,
d
The court holds there are two aspects of a pollution discharge that, if “sudden,” are not excluded from insurance coverage.
The first is the period of time that commences with the release of a contaminant and terminates with the cessation of the flow. In the case of a leak, this period represents the time that begins when waste first escapes from its container and ends when the flow ceases. Under this view, the duration of the leak determines the suddenness of the discharge.
The second is the cause of the discharge. The cause is a logical starting point to look for reliable evidence of the nature of the discharge. Snyder General objects to this approach on the ground it would effectively alter the Policy language to read “the
cause
of the discharge must be sudden and accidental,” rather than to require that the “dis
*1002
charge ... is sudden and accidental,” as the pollution exclusion now reads. The court disagrees. When read with the word “accidental,” the Policy’s focus on causation becomes clearer. The requirement of an accidental discharge means the policyholder cannot intentionally discharge pollution.
E.g., American Motorists Ins. Co. v. General Host Corp.,
The court views both interpretations as consistent with insurers’ probable intent to limit pollution coverage to events that satisfy a temporal requirement. The sudden and accidental pollution exclusion attempts to deny coverage for intentional polluters. The “accidental” prong of the test already deals with such conduct. But even with an accidental requirement, insureds might engage in sloppy, although unintentional, waste disposal practices over a period of time. The temporal component of sudden bolsters the goal of the accidental prong by providing insureds with the incentive to avoid careless long-term waste disposal practices. As one court stated:
The policy reasons for the pollution exclusion are obvious: if an insured knows that liability incurred by all manner of negligent or careless spills and releases is covered by his liability policy, he is tempted to diminish his precautions and relax his vigilance. Relaxed vigilance is even more likely where the insured knows that the intentional deposit of toxic material in his dumpsters, so long as it is unexpected, affords him coverage. In this case, it pays the insured to keep his head in the sand.
Waste Mgmt. of Carolinas, Inc. v. Peerless Ins. Co.,
D
Under Texas law, the court must adopt the reasonable interpretation of the Policy that is most favorable to SnyderGeneral as the insured.
Truck Ins. Exch. v. Musick,
SnyderGeneral has presented evidence that the TCA leak occurred within a 24-hour period. 17 This proof raises a genuine issue of material fact regarding whether the TCA leak was of a limited duration. It is uncontested for purposes of this motion that the leak was unexpected. Accordingly, there is a genuine issue of material fact that precludes summary judgment based on the Policy’s pollution exclusion.
Ill
Century contends that SnyderGeneral’s use of groundwater at the Wilmington facility excludes coverage under the Policy’s “care, custody or control” exclusion.
By endorsement, the Policy excludes coverage for property damage to “property used by the insured” or “property in the care,
*1003
custody or control of the insured or as to which the insured is for any purpose exercising physical control.” D.Br. Ex. A. Century does not maintain that SnyderGeneral owned the groundwater. Instead, it posits that, by pumping water from aquifers beneath the Wilmington property and using that water in its manufacturing process, SnyderGeneral exercised control over or used the entire aquifer.
See Joslyn Mfg. Co. v. Liberty Mut. Ins. Co.,
No. 90-1157-JU (D.Ore. Jan. 21, 1993) (Juba, Magis.),
adopted
No. 90-1157-JU, order at 2 (D.Ore. Mar. 23, 1993),
aff'd,
No. 93-35403,
Texas law follows a different interpretation of the “care, custody, or control” exclusion. In
Hartford Cas. Co. v. Cruse,
The [homeowners] continued inhabiting the house while [the contractor] worked on the foundation. We thus reject the contention that [the contractor] had care, custody, or control of the entire house. “The cases have limited this control to the particular object of the insured’s work, usually personalty, and to other property which he totally and physically manipulates.”
Id.
at 604 (quoting
Goswick v. Employers’ Cas. Co.,
In this case, SnyderGeneral did not totally and physically manipulate the entire pool of groundwater beneath the Wilmington site. SnyderGeneral’s control extended only to the groundwater that it actually pumped out and used. Just as a contractor’s work on the foundation of a house does not amount to control of the entire house, SnyderGeneral’s use of a portion of the groundwater does not constitute the use or control of all the groundwater. Therefore, the court rejects Century’s contention that the “care, custody or control” exclusion bars SnyderGeneral’s claim.
IV
The court now decides the question that is dispositive of SnyderGeneral’s breach of contract action.
Century contends that SnyderGeneral’s claim for liability coverage does not constitute “damages” within the meaning of the Policy’s insuring agreement. The Policy provides, in pertinent part:
[Century] hereby agrees ... to indemnify the insured for all sums which the insured shall be obligated to pay by reason of liability a) imposed upon the insured by law ... for damages ... on account of [property damage].
Century reasons that the plain meaning of “damages” refers to the technical distinction between legal damages and equitable relief. Century relies on a federal case that applies Texas law, and on Texas appellate precedent that distinguishes between legal and equitable relief in other insurance contexts.
In
Mustang Tractor & Equip. Co. v. Liberty Mut. Ins. Co.,
*1004
In
Nortex Oil & Gas Corp. v. Harbor Ins. Co.,
Mustang Tractor
also relied on a Fifth Circuit opinion that established the same distinction between legal and equitable relief. In
Aetna Cos. & Sur. Co. v. Hanna,
SnyderGeneral makes no attempt to distinguish Nortex or Hanna. It argues that its cleanup expenses resulted from a legal obligation to pay for property damage to the Wilmington site. SnyderGeneral points out that the Policy does not define the term “damages,” and urges that the court should interpret this undefined term in a manner favorable to it as the insured.
Several courts from other jurisdictions agree with SnyderGeneral’s position:
[T]he average person would not engage in a complex comparison of legal and equitable remedies in order to define ... damages, but would conclude based on the plain meaning of words that the cleanup costs imposed on [the insured] ... would constitute an obligation to pay damages. The average businessman does not differentiate between “damages” and “restitution;” in either case, money comes from his pocket and goes to third parties. The average businessman would consider himself covered for cleanup expenditures applicable to others’ properties.
State of New Jersey v. Signo Trading Int’l, Inc.,
Neither SnyderGeneral nor the available cases dispute the characterization of environmental response costs as equitable relief.
See Boeing Co. v. Aetna Cas. & Sur. Co.,
In Nortex the court of appeals held that a conversion action did not qualify as “property damage” within the meaning of a liability policy. The Fifth Circuit’s decision in Hanna established the same legal versus equitable relief distinction on facts that amounted to a “cleanup” of adjoining property. Although it is not apparent to the court why insurers would generally exclude coverage for liability claims of an equitable nature, environmental cleanup expenses present a more likely setting for distinguishing between legal and equitable relief. Insurers may in fact desire not to cover expenses incurred due to governmental regulation. Because the distinction between legal and equitable relief would appear to have a more plausible explanation in the context of environmental cleanup expenses, the court discerns no basis to distinguish Nortex and Hanna from the present case.
The court does not find a strong indication that the Texas Supreme Court would reach a different outcome. Although a majority of courts in other jurisdictions appears to favor SnyderGeneral’s position,
see, e.g., Boeing,
Following Nortex, the court holds that SnyderGeneral’s environmental cleanup expenses do not qualify as “damages” under the Policy. These expenses resemble restitution or reimbursement, but not compensation for a traditional legal injury. Accordingly, the court grants Century’s motion for summary judgment based on the term “damages” in the insuring agreement of the Policy.
V
Having concluded that Century is entitled to summary judgment dismissing Snyder-General’s Policy claim, the court now determines whether Century is entitled to summary judgment dismissing SnyderGeneral’s claim for breach of duty of good faith and fair dealing and violation of the Texas Insurance Code.
Century maintains that as a consequence of obtaining summary judgment dismissing SnyderGeneral’s claim for Policy coverage, it is entitled on the basis of the Texas Supreme Court’s recent decision in
Republic Ins. Co. v. Stoker,
*1006 A
In Stoker the Texas Supreme Court noted that the insurer had promptly investigated all claims, and that the insured based its Insurance Code claims on the exact facts asserted in its bad faith claims. Id. at 340. The court held as a general rule that an insured cannot establish a bad faith claim when the insurer has a reasonable ground for denying coverage. Id. at 341. But the court also said, albeit in dicta, that there are exceptions:
We do not exclude, however, the possibility that in denying the claim, the insurer may commit some act, so extreme, that would cause injury independent of the policy claim. Nor should we be understood as retreating from the established principles regarding the duty of an insurer to timely investigate its insured’s claims.
Id. (citation omitted).
The Texas Insurance Code lists certain unfair claims and settlement practices by insurers. One of its provisions includes failure to acknowledge an insured’s communications with reasonable promptness. Tex.Ins. Code Ann. art. 21.21-2, § 2(b)(2) (West 1981 & Supp.1995). SnyderGeneral seeks recovery pursuant to Article. 21.21, § 16 (West Supp.1995), which allows a private cause of action for inter alia violations of Article 21.21. 22 Stoker does not deprive SnyderGen-eral of its right to pursue an Insurance Code violation. Stoker also appears to preserve a failure to investigate claim in at least some situations where the insurer ultimately denies coverage on a proper ground.
By presenting evidence that Century failed completely to respond during a five-year period to three letters requesting coverage, SnyderGeneral has adduced sufficient evidence for a reasonable jury to find that Century failed to acknowledge SnyderGeneral’s communications with reasonable promptness, and failed to undertake a reasonable investigation of SnyderGeneral’s claim. The court is unable to conclude that Century is entitled to summary judgment.
B
Century also maintains that Snyder-General cannot show any damages for violations of the Insurance Code. At oral argument, SnyderGeneral’s counsel conceded that attorney’s fees are its only damages. Counsel asserted that Century’s failure to investigate SnyderGeneral’s claim caused it to incur legal expenses that it would not otherwise have expended. 23
The summary judgment record reflects that SnyderGeneral retained counsel to press its complaint that Century had not responded to SnyderGeneral’s claim for Policy coverage. It is reasonable to infer that SnyderGeneral would not have incurred expenses inquiring into the status of its claim had Century fulfilled its duty to investigate. Therefore, the court denies this aspect of Century’s motion for summary judgment.
Century’s motion for summary judgment is granted as to SnyderGeneral’s breach of contract claim and declaratory judgment action, and denied as to SnyderGeneral’s claim for breach of duty of good faith and fair dealing and violation of the Texas Insurance Code.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. Commercial Union Insurance Company was SnyderGeneral’s primary CGL carrier.
. Several employees described small, corroded rust pits the size of pinholes. D.App. at ¶ 4. This could mean the holes were the size of a pin, but at least one employee described the holes as being the size of the end of a ballpoint pen. The court will therefore refer to pen hole size leaks, because this interpretation of the evidence is more favorable to SnyderGeneral as the summary judgment nonmovant.
. SnyderGeneral’s declaratory judgment action is a remedial overlay on its breach of contract claim. SnyderGeneral seeks a declaratory judgment that Century is obligated to pay Snyder-General for its cleanup expenditures in excess of those covered by SnyderGeneral’s primary insurer. The court therefore addresses the declaratory judgment action in tandem with, and under the rubric of, SnyderGeneral’s breach of contract claim, and its analysis applies equally to both.
. At latest count, the highest courts of Florida, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, North Carolina, and Ohio have defined the term "sudden” as unambiguously containing a temporal component, while the highest courts of Colorado, Geor
*996
gia, Illinois, New Jersey, Washington, West Virginia, and Wisconsin have held that "sudden” is ambiguous and have construed the term in favor of the insured.
See Cincinnati Ins. Co. v. Flanders Elec. Motor Serv.,
.
Erie R.R. Co. v. Tompkins,
. Although it is well-established under Texas law that ambiguous language in an insurance policy will be construed in favor of the insured,
e.g., Puckett,
. The court’s independent research bolsters Trico' s characterization of an "emerging majority." Of the federal courts that have predicted how a state supreme court would define "sudden,” the majority of cases decided within the last five years have determined that this term contains a temporal component. This approach excludes all federal cases applying the state law of the 13 states, see supra note 4, whose highest courts have defined the term to mean "unexpected or unintended.”
Federated Mut. Ins. Co. v. Botkin Grain Co.,
New Castle County v. Hartford Acc. & Indem. Co.,
. This would be true because under the normal expected or intended exception, the insured must expect or intend the property damage, whereas the insured would probably have to expect or intend only the discharge of pollution for the pollution exclusion.
. The Boiler and Machinery Policy in Pioneer provided:
"Accident" is defined by the Policy as: ... a sudden and accidental breakdown of the "object” or a part of the "object." At the time the breakdown occurs, it must manifest itself by physical damage to the "object” that necessitates repair or replacement.
None of the following is an “accident”: a. Depletion, deterioration, corrosion or erosion; b. Wear and tear; c. Leakage at any valve, fitting, shaft seal, gland packing, joint or connection; d. Breakdown of any vacuum tube, gas tube or brush; e. Breakdown of any electronic computer or electronic data processing equipment; f. Breakdown of any structure or foundation supporting the "object” or any of its parts; g. The functioning of any safety or protective device.
Pioneer,
. The Policy refers to a "discharge, dispersal, release or escape.” For clarity, and because any distinction among these terms is immaterial in the context of today’s decision, the court will refer only to a "discharge.”
.
E.g., Smith,
.
Federated,
.
Bell Lumber & Pole Co. v. U.S. Fire Ins. Co,
. Although the question was presented in
Upjohn,
the Michigan Supreme Court decided the case without reaching the issue. Upjohn pumped chemical byproducts into an underground storage tank. Upjohn measured the tank level daily. Prior to August 16, 1992 the tank level measured 10 inches (475 gallons). On August 16 tank level measurements read three inches (80 gallons). The tank had developed three holes due to corrosion. Despite the discrepancy in measurements, Upjohn pumped byproduct into the tank until the end of the month. The court decided the case on the basis that Upjohn intended pollution damage by continuing to pump byproduct into the tank.
Upjohn,
. The majority of courts rejects the
Bell Lumber
approach.
See Anaconda Minerals Co. v. Stoller Chem. Co.,
. The time of discovery may roughly approximate the discharge if discharge refers to the continued release of contaminants, and the insured abates the release upon discovery.
. For purposes of its summary judgment motion, Century does not dispute the duration of the TCA leak.
. The insured had already sold a portion of the land to another party at the time of the EPA declaration.' That party also sued the insured for rescission of its partial purchase of the land.
. In relevant part, the liability policy in Nortex provided that the insurer agreed to indemnify the insured for “all sums which the insured shall by law become liable to pay ... as damages for damage to property.” Id. at 492 n. 2.
. The other Texas appellate case is
Feed Store, Inc. v. Reliance Ins. Co.,
.The policy did not differ in any significant respect from the language of the Policy in the present case. The policy in Hanna covered "all sums which the Insured shall become obligated to pay by reason of the liability imposed upon him by law ... for damages because of ... destruction of property[.]” Id. at 502.
. The Insurance Code itself does not grant a private cause of action, but § 4(b) of Texas Insurance Board Order 18663 states that conduct determined pursuant to law to be an unfair or deceptive act or practice is actionable pursuant to Article 21.21.
Maryland Ins. Co. v. Head Indus. Coatings & Servs., Inc.,
. Of course, because the court concludes that Century is not liable pursuant to the Policy, Sny-derGeneral cannot circumvent this ruling by obtaining damages for coverage by way of an Insurance Code claim.
See Maryland Ins. Co.,
