Lead Opinion
This is another in what appears to be a growing series of cases involving the duty of an insurance company to defend its insured under a policy of products liability insurance in an action arising out of1 the purchase and sale of defective merchandise where, there is no personal or property damage in the classic tort sense. In 1971, plaintiff manufactured and sold
As a result of said defect, numerous bindings were allegedly returned iby customers to Americana’s distributor, which in turn returned the bindings to Americana and canceled an order for 10,000 additional units. Americana sued plaintiff on theories of breach of warranty and negligent manufacture, claiming damages for the returned bindings, the loss of the distributor’s order for 10,000 units, and damage to Americana’s firm name and good will. Plaintiff demanded that defendant appear and defend under the products liability policy. Defendant declined, contending that there was no coverage. Plaintiff thereupon commenced the instant declaratory judgment action, and, after trial, the court held that there could not be any coverage under the policy, ¡wherefore there was no duty to defend. It is from this determination that the present appeal is taken.
As we recognized in Advanced Refrigeration & Appliance Co. v. Insurance Co. of North Amer. (42 A D 2d 484), the insurer’s obligation to defend, which is of necessity broader than-its obligation to pay, arises whenever the complaint “ alleges facts and circumstances, some of which would, if proved, fall within the risk covered by the policy” (Great Amer. Ins. Co. v. London Records, 35 A D 2d 661, 662; see Prashker v. United States Guar. Co., N Y 2d 1584). We take the view here, as we did there, “ that plaintiff was not exposed to any risk of products liability within any reasonable interpretation of the policy and the pleadings ” (Advanced Refrigeration & Appliance Co. v. Insurance Co. v. North Amer., supra, p. 485).
Although it can be acknowledged that ski bindings ordinarily are not used ¡without runaway straps, it was not alleged in Americana’s complaint against plaintiff that the former’s bindings were rendered defective or inoperable such that they could not have ¡been used with straps procured from another source. .The only damage was u damage to the named insured’s products ”, for which the insurance was expressly declared to be inapplicable by exclusion (1) of the policy. We are also in accord with the view taken by the trial court that Americana’s claim against plaintiff was based upon an alleged deficiency in the
The case at bar is distinguishable from Thomas J. Lipton, Inc. v. Liberty Mut. Ins. Co. (71 Misc 2d 199, affd. 41 A D 2d 1029), where the insured’s products- were ingredients in soup mixes prepared by the customer by whom it was -being sued, and the soup mixes could not be sold when it was found that the insured’s ingredients were contaminated.
The judgment should be affirmed, with costs.
. Runaway straps are attached to the ski binding and to the skier’s boot to prevent the ski from running away if and when the skier’s boot is released from the binding.
. The Lipton decision was ultimately based upon interpretation of an exclusion provision which is not invoked in the case at bar, and, therefore, we express no opinion as to the correctness of the basis for decision in that case,
Dissenting Opinion
Although this is a particularly close issue, I must vote to reverse the judgment and direct defendant to defend plaintiff in the action brought by Americana. Common experience informs one that a runaway strap may break without necessarily causing injury to the remainder of the binding to which it had been attached. Nevertheless, Americana’s complaint alleges that its distributor “ returned -the ski bindings as damaged ”. It is apparent that the insurer in Advanced Refrigeration & Appliance Co. v. Insurance Co. of North Amer. (supra) would have, been required to defend in that case if the hotel had alleged spoilage of its foodstuffs placed in the insured refrigeration system instead of simply claiming, as it did, that
More troublesome is policy exclusion (k) restricting coverage for damages resulting from the product’s failure to serve its intended function when the failure is due to a design or specification deficiency, but not when damage results from the product’s il active malfunctioning.” Americana avers damage to its bindings “ due to the breakage of the strap stitching when put in use ”. It is certainly possible that this occurrence could be attributed to a thread or material design defect for which coverage would not be available under defendant’s policy. Yet it seems equally possible that proof could be adduced to show that, though properly designed, the stitching failure was the result of active malfunctioning. Although this distinction will be vital from defendant’s standpoint of coverage, it should be remembered that we are here dealing only with its broader duty to defend the underlying action. I am not presently prepared to say that Americana will be unable to establish, under any theory of proof, actual damage to its bindings from the active malfunctioning of plaintiff’s component runaway straps for which defendant’s coverage could be available (cf. Lionel Freedman, Inc. v; Glens Falls Ins. Co., 27 N Y 2d 364).
Accordingly, Special Term should have granted partial declaratory judgment to plaintiff requiring respondent to defend against Americana’s action at least until such time as the evidence dispelled any substantial possibility of coverage for the damage alleged.
-Staley, Jb., J. P., Sweeney and Reynolds, JJ., concur with Gbeenblott, J.; Bane, J., dissents and votes to reverse in an opinion.
Judgment affirmed, with costs.
