Plaintiff University of Cincinnati appeals the district court’s grant of defendant Arkwright Mutual Insurance Company’s motion for summary judgment in this diversity action in which plaintiff seeks a declaration that the insurance policy it obtained from defendant covered the damages sustained by its property during the removal of asbestos pri- or to the demolition of the property. On appeal, the issues are (1) whether the district court erred in granting defendant’s motion for summary judgment, thereby finding that the damage to plaintiffs property caused by the asbestos removal was not a “fortuitous” loss covered by plaintiffs all-risk insurance policy; (2) whether the district court erred by failing to grant plaintiffs motion for summary judgment and failing to find that the damages plaintiff sustained were insured losses resulting from physical damage rather than uninsured economic losses; (3) whether plaintiffs action is untimely in light of a provision in the insurance policy requiring all actions to be commenced within one year after the insured discovers the occurrence giving rise to the claim; and (4) whether coverage for plaintiffs asbestos-related losses is precluded by the insurance policy’s exclusions for contamination and inherent vice. For the reasons that follow, we affirm.
I.
A.
In 1985, 1988, and 1991, plaintiff University of Cincinnati purchased from defendant Arkwright Mutual Insurance Company an “all-risk” property insurance policy to insure against “ALL RISKS OF PHYSICAL LOSS OR DAMAGE” to plaintiffs real and personal property, except those risks or losses explicitly excluded under the terms of the policy. J.A. 15,145. 1 Plaintiffs decision to seek all-risk insurance, rather than the standard “named peril” coverage it had previously utilized, was based on the desire to consolidate its coverage and benefit from the “broader coverage” against property damage offered by an all-risk policy. Prior to 1985 and plaintiffs decision to seek a single all-risk policy, plaintiffs property insurance portfolio had consisted of multiple layers of insurance provided by numerous insurers. This arrangement left gaps in plaintiffs coverage, although it was significantly less expensive than the single policy plaintiff obtained from defendant. Prior to 1985, defendant had written boiler and machinery policies for plaintiff.
One of the buddings covered by plaintiffs policy with defendant was a multi-story budding known as Sander Had, which was located at 45 West Charlton Street, in Cincinnati, Ohio. The building was constructed as a dormitory between 1969 and 1972 and served as a student residence facility untd 1982. After a fire demolished part of the sixth floor, the budding was closed and, except for occasional use, was primarily utilized as storage space. Plaintiff claims that structural and design problems unrelated to the presence of asbestos-containing materials (“ACMs”) dictated that the budding remain largely unused.
Plaintiff learned in 1983 that ACMs had been used in the construction of Sander Hall, a 29-story budding. (Defendant claims that the budding was 27 stories tad.) There is no evidence, though, that plaintiff had made plans to remove the ACMs or to demolish Sander Hall by 1985, when defendant first issued the ad-risk podcy to plaintiff. In July 1989, however, plaintiff completed a cost-benefit analysis that weighed the possibility of renovating Sander Had against the cost of demodtion and concluded by recommending demodtion. On Decémber 13, .1989, plaintiffs Board of Trustees voted to demodsh Sander Had because it was not suitable for any use without major renovation. The presence of the ACMs does not appear to have been a factor in the trustees’ decision. However, removal of the ACMs prior to demodtion was required both by Ohio law, Ohio Admin. Code § 3745-20-01
et seq.,
and by federal regulation, 40 C.F.R. §§ 61.145 and
In order to move forward with the planned demolition, plaintiff hired a private consulting firm to perform an environmental assessment of Sander Hall. In May 1990, the consulting firm recommended to plaintiff that all of the ACMs in Sander Hall be physically removed prior to demolition, except for a few ACMs located in the roof and floor of the building that posed little risk of releasing asbestos fibers into the air during the implosion process. This recommendation effectively warned plaintiff that destruction of the interior of Sander Hall was certain if plaintiff chose to proceed with the planned demolition of the building. Plaintiff stuck to its decision to demolish the budding, and the process of removing the ACMs from Sander Hall began in July 1990. In accordance with the consulting firm’s recommendation, workers tore out walls, ceilings, and interior and exterior panels of the budding. The asbestos removal was completed in June 1991, and the demolition was accomplished through implosion of the budding on June 23, 1991. The cost of the removal totaded approximately $2,204,-253.00.
Plaintiff, through its legal counsel, sent a notice of loss to defendant on March 27,1991, requesting payment for the cost of removing the ACMs from Sander Hall under the terms of its all-risk policy. A proof of claim was filed on or about June 27, 1991. Defendant denied coverage for the claimed expenses on September 12, 1991. There is no indication that plaintiff ever considered whether defendant’s ad-risk podcy covered costs incurred in connection with asbestos removal or that any representative of plaintiff ever discussed the subject with defendant prior to the assertion of plaintiffs asbestos-related claim. Moreover, the word “asbestos” does not appear in either the 1985 or the 1988 podcy.
B.
Plaintiff commenced this action on October 15, 1991. In its complaint, plaintiff requested a declaration that the cost of removing the ACMs was within the coverage of plaintiffs 1985 and 1988 podcies and a judgment for the amount of the expenses. Plaintiff claimed that “the presence of asbestos-containing materials in Sander Had” was the physical loss or damage it had sustained; it did not refer to the damage to the budding caused by the removal process. 3 J.A. 10. Both parties moved for summary judgment on November 30, 1992. The magistrate judge reviewing the motions recommended that the district court grant defendant’s motion for summary judgment on the ground that the damage sustained by plaintiff during the asbestos removal process was not “fortuitous” and thus was not covered by the all-risk podcy. The district court adopted the magistrate judge’s recommendation. On February 24, 1994, the district court issued an order granting defendant’s motion for summary judgment, denying plaintiffs motion, and dismissing plaintiffs complaint with prejudice. This timely appeal fodowed.
II.
A.
Plaintiff argues that the district court erred in granting defendant’s motion for summary judgment and in holding that the property damage caused by the removal of the ACMs from Sander Had was not a “fortuitous” loss covered by plaintiffs all-risk insurance policy with defendant. Plaintiff argues that the damages were the result of a fortuitous loss since the asbestos removal was not contemplated at the time the podcy was entered and was not certain to occur. Because plaintiff is a citizen of the State of Ohio, defendant is a corporation incorporated in the State of Massachusetts, and the amount in controversy exceeds $50,000, this court will exercise its diversity jurisdiction
“We review a district court’s grant of summary judgment de novo.”
Brooks v. American Broadcasting Cos.,
■ “The Court must adopt the construction of [an] insurance contract which most nearly corresponds with the intention of the parties as ascertained from the words employed by them in their plain, ordinary and usual meaning.”
River Servs. Co. v. Hartford Accident & Indem. Co.,
Unlike a named peril insurance policy, an all-risk insurance policy extends coverage “to risks that are not ordinarily included in other types of insurance coverage.”
Essex House v. St. Paul Fire & Marine Ins. Co.,
In order to withstand defendant’s motion for summary judgment, plaintiff was' required to present evidence (1) that it sustained a physical loss and (2) that the loss was the result of a fortuitous event.
Harbor House Condominium Ass’n v. Massachusetts Bay Ins. Co.,
The question of whether plaintiffs removal of the ACMs from Sander Hall prior to demolition of the building constituted a fortuitous event under plaintiffs insurance policy is an issue of law for the court to decide.
Intermetal Mexicana, S.A. v. Insurance Co. of N. Am.,
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.
Derby,
In this ease, plaintiff voluntarily elected to remove the ACMs from Sander Hall in order to move forward with the planned demolition of the building. Plaintiff was not surprised that the asbestos removal process harmed the interior of Sander Hall; it was informed of the probable damage by the engineering consultant’s report in May 1990. “It is generally recognized that ... ‘(I)nsurance contracts do not cover economic detriment that is not fortuitous from the point of view of the person (usually the insured) whose detriment is asserted as the basis of the insurer’s liability. For example, a loss is not fortuitous in this sense if caused intentionally by that person.’”
American Economy Ins. Co. v. Liggett,
Any analysis of fortuity involves an examination of whether plaintiff caused and intended the consequences that resulted in its claim for damages. Robert E. Keeton and Alan I. Widiss,
Insurance Law
§ 5.3(a), at 475 (1988). In this case, plaintiffs losses were neither unanticipated nor unintended. The decision to demolish Sander Hall and the consequent decision to remove the ACMs from the building before the demolition were solely in the discretion of plaintiffs board of trustees. It can hardly be argued that the damage to the building brought on by the asbestos removal process was a matter of chance when plaintiff exercised total control over whether and when such damage would occur and possessed discretion to execute its own loss.
See Intermetal Mexicana,
Were we to ignore plaintiffs control over its loss in deciding the fortuitousness of plaintiffs claim, we would convert plaintiffs all-risk insurance policy into a cash fund for plaintiffs business plans. Plaintiff essentially invites this court to find that its intentional destruction of property is covered under its insurance policy. We decline this invitation and find that “it is against public policy to allow insurance coverage on a certainty.”
Intermetal Mexicana,
Plaintiff urges this court to find that the courts in Ohio would follow a recent line of decisions that hold a loss fortuitous so long as “neither party knew of the defect or expected the loss” at the time the policy was issued.
Adams-Arapahoe,
Plaintiff emphasizes that “a new definition of the term ‘fortuitous’ has emerged,”
Underwriters Subscribing to Lloyd’s Ins. Certificate No. 80520 v. Magi, Inc.,
In
Compagnie des Bauxites de Guinee v. Insurance Co. of N. Am., 724
F.2d 369 (3d Cir.1983), the Third Circuit found that losses due to a business interruption, caused by the insured’s cessation of production for repair of improperly constructed equipment, was a fortuitous loss under an all-risk business interruption policy.
Compagnie,
However, in
Compagnie,
the insured’s cessation of production, while deliberate, was a reaction to an unanticipated defect in its equipment, which defect the insured was unaware of until after the damage occurred.
Compagnie,
Similarly, plaintiff relies on
Insurance Co. of N. Am. v. U.S. Gypsum Co., Inc.,
We have not overlooked the fact that had defendant wanted to exclude coverage for this contingency, namely, the removal of asbestos in buildings soon to be demolished, it could easily have done so. However, although we expect an insurer to be explicit about exclusions from its coverage, we believe it is an unreasonable burden to require defendant to anticipate every business decision an insured might make that could produce costs unanticipated at the time the policy was entered.
By affirming the district court’s decision, we do not hold, as plaintiff suggests, that “any loss that is an incidental and unavoidable consequence of an insured’s voluntary use of its property” is excluded from coverage despite the fact that the loss is “neither intended nor desired by the insured.” Appellant’s Brief at 14.
4
Instead, we conclude that inasmuch as the state courts in Ohio have adopted a definition of fortuitous events that limits such events to those “which so far as the parties to the contract are aware, [are] dependent on chance,”
Derby,
B.
Because of our disposition of the first issue in this case, we find it unnecessary to review plaintiffs remaining issue, that the district court erred in denying plaintiffs motion for summary judgment, or defendant’s other arguments, setting forth alternative grounds for affirming the district court’s grant- of defendant’s motion for summary judgment.
We would also point out that it is difficult to understand how plaintiff sustained any
III.
For the reasons stated, the judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The 1985 policy was a first-party property insurance policy effective from July 1, 1985, to July 1, 1988 (the “1985 policy”). The 1988 policy was a first-party property insurance policy effective from April 1, 1988, to April 1, 1991 (the “1988 policy”). Appellee's Brief at 3.
. The early removal of the ACMs alleviates ■ the risk that large quantities of asbestos fibers will be released into the air during demolition. Such a release would pose a significant health risk to the public. >
. Plaintiff now appears to be proceeding under only the 1988 policy and furthermore, appears to claim only that the removal of the ACMs from Sander Hall, not their mere presence in the building, caused the damages plaintiff sustained.
. In order to illustrate its point, plaintiff argues that the district court’s holding would preclude insurance coverage for business losses sustained if a manufacturer temporarily halted production ■ to repair damage to its equipment or if a business voluntarily summoned the. fire department to a fire at its facilities, which resulted in water damage to the insured property. In neither of these cases, however, is the insured's voluntary action the cause of the damage; the insured parties in these examples. are reacting to unplanned, unanticipated events causing unintentional damage to their property.
