Wisconsin Power & Light Cоmpany brought this diversity suit (governed, all agree, by Wisconsin common law) against several insurance companies seeking a declaration that the policies which the utility has bought from these companies cover certain environmental clean-up costs that the utility has incurred or expects to incur. The district judge granted summary judgment for the defendants on the utility’s claims of coverage for the incurred costs but refused to rule on the remaining claims. One she thought nonjusticiable, and with regard to the other she decided that in the exercise of her discretion she would withhold declaratory relief.
A clause in the popular comprehensive general liability policy (CGL) indemnifies the insured for “damages because of injury to ... property” that the insured “may sustain by reason of the liability imposed upon [it] by law.” The principal question presented by the appeal is whether any of Wisconsin Power & Light’s clean-up costs are “damages.” The Wisconsin courts interpret the word “damages” in the CGL clause narrowly to mean damages at law as distinct from costs incurred in complying with an injunction or other equitable decree, including an order by an environmental agency to
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clean up contaminated property.
City of Edgerton v. General Casualty Co.,
There are two sites, one at Beaver Dam and the other at Beloit. Decades ago the utility, which had manufactured gas at those sites, sold them to Kraft Foods and to the City of Beloit, respectively. It turns out that the utility’s manufacturing operations had caused contamination of soil and groundwater. The utility has incurred investigative costs at both sites to determine the extent of the contamination. It has also been sued by the City of Beloit, though the suit has not yet moved beyond the earliest stage; it has agreed to pay Krаft $1.65 million; and it fears future claims by Kraft. All these incurred and expected expenses it contends are “damages.” The district judge limited her ruling on coverage to the investigative costs and the $1.65 million, that is, to the costs that have already been incurred, which she held are response costs and therefore not covered; and we begin our analysis thеre.
The question whether the insurance policies cover the investigative costs is identical for the two sites. The district judge thought it clear that the utility had incurred these costs not because of any claims against it by the current owners of the properties in question, the City of Beloit and Kraft Foods, but because as the polluter the utility was legally responsible, along with the current owners, for cleaning up the sites. True, when it incurred the investigative costs it had not yet been ordered to clean up the sites, but seeing the handwriting on the wall it had begun trying to figure out what it would have to do in order to clean them up. And in formulating its plans for cleaning up it had consulted the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources, the agency that would be ordering it, if necessary, to clean up the two sites. The absence of clean-up orders bears on the issue of coverage only insofar as it might seem to undermine the judge’s belief that the utility was acting under the compulsion of environmental law, which prescribes equitable relief, rather than in response to a сlaim under tort or contract law for damages. Were there no claim for damages the absence of an order to clean up a polluted site would not help the utility’s argument that it has insurance coverage. The world of expense does not divide neatly into damages on the one hand and costs incurred to comply with an order by a public agency on the other hand. Costs incurred in anticipation of an order would be neither class of expense, and as only damages are covered by the insurance policy the incurring of such costs would not bring the insured within the scope of the policy.
The complicating factor is that the current owners of the sites are also legally responsible for the pollution, along with the utility, and they might have claims for indemnification by or contribution from the utility, especially since the latter was the actual polluter and the former are merely the innocent purchasers of the polluted property. We know from
General Casualty Co. v. Hills,
Another way of looking at the investigative costs, however, is that they are not defense costs at all — that is, cоsts incurred to ward off or reduce a legal sanction, like the environmental investigation costs in
Domtar, Inc. v. Niagara Fire Ins. Co., supra,
That clearly was the situation at the Beloit site. Before the Wisconsin Supreme Court decided the Edgerton ease, it was widely believed — and, more to the point, was believed by Wisconsin Power & Light — that response costs were damages under the CGL policy. So the utility conducted the investigation at its own expense, hoping to recoup the expense from its insurers. True, it was being pestered by the City of Beloit to investigate and clean up the site. But the City could not make a claim for damages until it incurred its own costs in dealing with the contamination, or sustained some other monetizable harm. The City had not yet incurred any clean-up costs; and, so far as appears, it either had not experienced or had not discovered any harm from the pollution. When Edgerton came dowm, the utility stopped investigating, so naturally the City of Beloit became even more edgy and began claiming that the utility had a legal duty to clean up the site, and eventually sued. It still had not incurred its own costs of cleaning up, but the complaint alleges nuisance-type damages, that is, harm to the City from the contamination. The suit and the claim that underlay it were filed after the utility incurred its investigative expense, however; they did not precipitate the expense. And although the nuisance-type harm might well have begun before the utility began its investigation, there is no evidence that the investigation was undertaken even in part in оrder to limit, by cleaning up the contamination, the amount of nuisance-type damages that might accrue in the future. (The clean up could not cure harm already incurred by the *792 City, for example pollution damage to buildings owned by the City.)
The situation at Beaver Dam is only a little less clear. It is true that the $1.65 million that the utility paid Kraft was pursuant to an agrеement that contains a clause in which Kraft waives any claims it might have against the utility relating to groundwater contamination at the site. The utility argues that the $1.65 million was in effect the price it paid in settlement of Kraft’s claims. A more natural reading has the utility agreeing to pay Kraft to perform the utility’s equitable duty of cleaning up the site, which was easier for Kraft to do because it was in possession of the site. That is a detail. The important point is that the agreement came two years after the Department of Natural Resources had ordered the utility to clean up the site. Costs that the utility incurred after the order, either directly or in hiring Kraft to clean up the site, were response сosts, which the utility was required to incur by virtue of governmental command. Only if the utility disobeyed the command, forcing Kraft to shoulder the expense of the clean up, would Kraft have a damages claim against it.
“Only if the utility disobeyed the command. ...” Suppose the $1.65 million agreement really was a settlement of Kraft’s potential damages claims against the utility. Those claims would have arisen only if the utility had dragged its heels in complying with the DNR’s order to clean up the Kraft site, for there is no suggestion that any of the claims were for nuisance-type damages resulting from the harm caused by the existing contamination. Had the utility complied promptly with the DNR’s order, the $1.65 million would be response costs and the insurance company would be off the hook. The utility is thus claiming a right to transform response costs into legal damages by sheer stonewalling. If the utility flouts its duty to clean up a contaminated site, forcing others who bear that duty to sue it for its fair share of the expense, and as a result is able to shift that cost from its own shoulders to those of its insurers, the consequence is to reward wrongdoing. That is something insurance contracts are never interpreted to do. They invariably and for obvious reasons refuse coverage of intentional wrongdoing. And just as in “murdering heir” cases, see, e.g.,
In re Estate of Safran,
We do not believe that either the insurers or Wisconsin would authorize such a tactic. In cases in which the polluter has prevailed against the insurance company in respect of damages claims by site owners or other eo-liable parties, the polluter had not been ordered to clean up the site. See
General Casualty Co. v. Hills, supra,
Let us move to the future costs. Kraft’s waiver of claims was limited to groundwater contamination at the Beaver Dam site itself. The utility is worried that Kraft may assert claims against it for contamination of soil at the site or of soil or groundwater in adjacent areas. The district judge thought the possibility of such claims too remote to make the dispute over coverage a justiciable dispute between the utility and its insurers. A suit for declaratory judgment must satisfy the requirement of justiciability. E.g.,
In re VMS Securities Litigation,
The insurers have disclaimed liability for all costs incurred by the utility in cleaning up these two sites together with any adjacent areas that might be brought within them by the long arm of the environmental agencies. The disclaimer of a contractual duty is a breach of contract even if the time specified in the contract for performing the duty has not yet arrived. It is what is called anticipatory breach.
C.L. Maddox, Inc. v. Coalfield Services, Inc.,
In fact it is just the kind of case for which declaratory relief is designed. See
Associated Indemnity Corp. v. Fairchild Industries, Inc.,
The district judge declined to declare the rights of the utility against its insurers with regard to damages in the City of Beloit’s suit. This ruling was based on the uncertainty of state law concerning the City’s right to reсover the cost to it of cleaning up the site should that cost be less than the value to it of the clean up. In that event it would be goldplating for the City to incur that cost. If the utility persists in its refusal to bear the clean-up costs — its position being, as we have noted, “Sue me, so I can get the insurance companies to pay” — the City will have a chоice between, on the one hand, doing the cleaning up itself and suing the utility for the expense and, on the other hand, forgoing the cleaning up and suing for the harm caused by the contamination for which the utility is responsible. That choice may depend on whether the City can insist on what we’ve called goldplating, a matter on which Wisconsin law is in doubt.
The gеneral rule is clear enough. A plaintiff whose property has been damaged receives the lesser of the cost of repairing the damage and the reduction in the value of the property caused by the damage.
Jacob v. West Bend Mutual Ins. Co.,
If all that the utility wanted to know was whether its insurance covers an award of
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damages that it might be forced to make to the City of Beloit should it refuse to clean up the site, there would be no reason to refuse a declaratory judgment. Indeed, we have pretty much answered that question in our disсussion of stonewalling at the Kraft site. But the utility was seeking more; it was seeking a ruling on the measure of damages to which the City would be entitled in such a suit. To make such a ruling would have been a bizarre exercise of federal declaratory relief. The City’s suit against Wisconsin Power & Light was filed in a state court and is not removable to federal court, because it is based purely on state law and there is no diversity of citizenship. The utility wanted the federal court in effect to preempt the state-law suit by deciding the dispositive issues in this diversity suit. That would be a clear abuse of the diversity jurisdiction.
Nationwide Ins. v. Zavalis, supra,
This was a compelling reason to refuse to make this particular ruling that the utility wanted. But that was not the only thing it wanted. It also wаnted a ruling on whether it was entitled to insurance coverage for any damages that it might be forced to pay the City whether those damages took the form of reimbursing the City for clean-up costs incurred by the City or of compensating the City, perhaps in some much lesser amount, for injury caused by the pollution. Although it seems reasonably clear that thе utility is entitled to coverage for the latter but not the former form of damages, we shall remand this part of the case to the district court for further and more focused consideration of the issue.
The judgment is modified to make the dismissal of the plaintiffs claim relating to possible future claims by Kraft on the merits rather than for lack of jurisdiction, is vacated with respect to the denial of declaratory relief regarding Wisconsin Power & Light’s potential liability to the City of Beloit, and is otherwise affirmed.
