Visteon Corporation v. National Union Fire Insurance , 777 F.3d 415 ( 2015 )


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  •                             In the
    United States Court of Appeals
    For the Seventh Circuit
    ____________________
    No. 14-2725
    VISTEON CORPORATION, et al.,
    Plaintiffs-Appellants,
    v.
    NATIONAL UNION FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY OF PITTSBURGH,
    PA,
    Defendant-Appellee.
    ____________________
    Appeal from the United States District Court for the
    Southern District of Indiana, Indianapolis Division.
    No. 1:11-cv-00200-RLY-TAB—Richard L. Young, Chief Judge.
    ____________________
    ARGUED JANUARY 7, 2015 — DECIDED JANUARY 23, 2015
    ____________________
    Before WOOD, Chief Judge, and POSNER and EASTERBROOK,
    Circuit Judges.
    POSNER, Circuit Judge. Visteon, a large manufacturer of
    automotive parts, with manufacturing facilities scattered
    around the world but its headquarters in Michigan, brought
    this diversity suit for breach of contract against the National
    Union insurance company. Visteon had bought a liability
    2                                                   No. 14-2725
    insurance policy from National Union providing worldwide
    liability coverage between 2000 and 2002. The policy con-
    tains an exclusion for liability resulting from pollution
    caused by Visteon, but the exclusion is expressly made in-
    applicable to liability arising from a “Completed Operations
    Hazard.” National Union has refused to indemnify or de-
    fend Visteon from suits arising from pollution caused by one
    of Visteon’s plants.
    Although we call this Visteon’s suit, there actually are
    two plaintiffs, the parent company and the subsidiary that
    held title to the plant that created the liability. But for sim-
    plicity we’ll pretend there’s only one plaintiff and call it Vis-
    teon, and we’ll suppress other irrelevant complications as
    well.
    The plant in question was in Connersville, Indiana. In
    2001, and thus during the insurance coverage period, the
    powerful toxic solvent TCE that was used to clean machin-
    ery in the plant was discovered to have leaked into the soil
    and groundwater. Neighboring landowners sued Visteon for
    damages caused by the leakage. Visteon expended millions
    of dollars to settle the suits and additional millions to clean
    up the pollution that the leakage had caused. When National
    Union refused either to defend Visteon or to reimburse it for
    any of the costs it had incurred, Visteon filed this suit in an
    Indiana state court; National Union removed the case to fed-
    eral district court.
    A dispute soon arose between the parties over whether
    Indiana or Michigan law governed the substantive issues in
    the case. Visteon wanted Indiana law to apply because Indi-
    ana does not enforce standard pollution-exclusion clauses,
    and the insurance policy included as we noted such a clause;
    No. 14-2725                                                     3
    Indiana requires that for such a clause to be enforceable the
    policy must “specify what falls within its pollution exclu-
    sion.” State Automobile Mutual Ins. Co. v. Flexdar, Inc., 
    964 N.E.2d 845
    , 851 (Ind. 2012). TCE is one of the pollutants that
    must be specified, and it was not specified in the policy that
    National Union had sold to Visteon. Michigan law, however,
    does enforce the more general kind of pollution-exclusion
    clause found in the policy, City of Grosse Pointe Park v. Michi-
    gan Municipal Liability & Property Pool, 
    702 N.W.2d 106
    , 114
    (Mich. 2005), and so Michigan was National Union’s pre-
    ferred choice for the governing law. The district court ruled
    that Michigan law governed.
    A second question addressed by the district court was
    whether, under Michigan law, Visteon’s liability from the
    TCE leak was within the scope of the Completed Operations
    Hazard clause of the insurance policy, an exception as we
    mentioned to the pollution-exclusion clause. The district
    court ruled that Visteon was not entitled to coverage under
    that clause and so dismissed Visteon’s entire suit. Having
    thus struck out in the district court, Visteon has appealed to
    us.
    The parties agree as they must that the district judge was,
    and we are, required to apply the choice of law rules of the
    state in which the suit was brought, thus Indiana. Klaxon Co.
    v. Stentor Electric Mfg. Co., 
    313 U.S. 487
    , 496–97 (1941). The
    object in picking the state whose law is to govern is to identi-
    fy the state that has the closest relation to the transaction, ac-
    tivity, or event that gave rise to the litigation. In the case of
    the suits against Visteon—suits alleging nuisance, negli-
    gence, and related torts arising from the leakage of TCE—the
    closest relation was to Indiana. The plant, along with the
    4                                                     No. 14-2725
    persons and properties affected by the leakage, were entirely
    within Indiana and Indiana had a compelling interest in a
    legal or regulatory solution whereby the plant would still be
    able to operate profitably, yet without harming its neigh-
    bors.
    But the present litigation, though unthinkable without
    the tort suits, is of a different character. It arises from the in-
    surance contract between Visteon and National Union, and
    the contract is not limited to Visteon’s Connersville plant—it
    covers all of Visteon’s plants, the world over. The Indiana
    Supreme Court has decided that in the case of an alleged
    breach of a contract insuring against liability for environ-
    mental contamination that could occur at different sites, In-
    diana will follow what is called the “uniform-contract-
    interpretation approach,” which “applies the law of a single
    state to the whole contract even though [the contract] covers
    multiple risks in multiple states,” and the single state that is
    chosen will usually be “the state having more insured sites
    than any other.” National Union Fire Ins. Co. of Pittsburgh, PA
    v. Standard Fusee Corp., 
    940 N.E.2d 810
    , 813, 815–16 (Ind.
    2010) (emphasis added).
    That approach would bind us even if we didn’t think it
    sensible. But we think it eminently sensible. Visteon manu-
    factures and sells its automotive parts all over the world;
    and any of its plants, or for that matter any of its products,
    can give rise to liabilities against which it wants to insure. It
    wants the law governing its insurance rights against Nation-
    al Union (which remember had insured Visteon against lia-
    bility arising anywhere in the world) to be determined by
    the law of the state or province or nation or other jurisdic-
    tion in which it incurs liability, and so in this case it wants
    No. 14-2725                                                  5
    Indiana law to govern its rights under the policy. The impli-
    cation (which cannot be intended), given the uniform-
    contract-interpretation approach, is that Indiana law would
    govern all subsequent pollution damages caused by Visteon,
    wherever they occurred. Anyway it would be immensely
    difficult, and maybe impossible as a practical matter, for Na-
    tional Union to calculate a single premium for risks made so
    diverse by the worldwide scope of Visteon’s operations.
    Suppose some country in which Visteon has a plant refuses,
    like Indiana, to enforce the kind of pollution-exclusion
    clause found in National Union’s policy. That would expand
    Visteon’s rights against its insurer. And so National Union
    would insist on charging a higher premium to Visteon to
    cover pollution caused by Visteon in that country than it
    would in states like Michigan that do enforce such clauses.
    Instead of charging a single premium to Visteon, National
    Union might end up charging hundreds of different premi-
    ums—all to the same insured.
    Visteon misses this point, arguing that National Union
    knew, or at least had reason to foresee based on its substan-
    tial litigation experience with related claims, the additional
    risk posed by the Connersville Facility arising from its his-
    toric use of exceptionally large volumes of TCE.” The impli-
    cation is that National Union should have charged a higher
    premium for covering liabilities caused by operation of the
    Connersville plant in the insurance policy it issued to Viste-
    on, because the insurer’s risk in insuring that plant was
    greater than its average risk of insuring Visteon’s plants. The
    result would be multiple different premiums to the same in-
    sured for the same insurance.
    6                                                  No. 14-2725
    Since there are compelling reasons for National Union’s
    charging a uniform premium to an insured despite the great
    variety of risks that it is insuring, and similarly compelling
    reasons for a single jurisdiction’s law to govern disputes
    over terms in National Union’s insurance contract, and the
    only choice of jurisdictions offered to the district court was
    between Indiana and Michigan, the court was right to
    choose Michigan. Fourteen of Visteon’s manufacturing
    plants were located there (and no greater number in any
    other jurisdiction in which Visteon does business), and only
    three of its plants were in Indiana. Michigan is also the juris-
    diction in which Visteon’s headquarters is located and in
    which the personnel who administer its insurance contracts
    and negotiated the contract with National Union are sta-
    tioned.
    Simplest of all solutions would be for National Union to
    negotiate with its insureds for the designation of the jurisdic-
    tion whose laws would govern any litigation arising out of
    its insurance contracts. But the parties tell us that insurance
    companies are reluctant to negotiate such clauses. They ap-
    parently want the flexibility to pick the most favorable law
    after the risk has materialized, and in addition some states
    refuse to enforce choice of law clauses in insurance contracts
    on the ground (though hardly applicable to a large enter-
    prise such as Visteon) that it is against public policy to allow
    insureds to waive protections intended for them. (Both these
    points are explained at length in Eugene Anderson et al., In-
    surance Coverage Litigation § 6.03[A] (2d ed. 2013).) In any
    event the only choice in this case was between Michigan and
    Indiana and the district court’s choice of Michigan was clear-
    ly the superior choice, given Indiana choice of law principles
    No. 14-2725                                                     7
    as articulated in the Standard Fusee case (and other cases, un-
    necessary to cite, as well).
    The traditional rules of choice of law were simple, but,
    whether rightly or wrongly, have given way to multifactor
    tests—a bane of modern jurisprudence. (For apt criticism,
    see Lexmark Int’l, Inc. v. Static Control Components, Inc., 134 S.
    Ct. 1377, 1391–92 (2014).) Even in the Standard Fusee case, the
    court, having designated Maryland as the lead candidate
    under Indiana’s choice of law rules to supply the governing
    law, felt compelled to trudge through other factors, mainly
    the state where the risk insured against had materialized
    and the state where the insurance contract had been made.
    In the present case the risk materialized in Indiana, but that
    could not have been foreseen. Furthermore, the Indiana vic-
    tims of the TCE leak were compensated by Visteon, and it is
    unclear what benefit the state would have derived from re-
    imbursement of Visteon’s costs by National Union.
    A complication is that Louis Heeb, one of the landowners
    who sued Visteon over the pollution, entered into a settle-
    ment agreement with Visteon whereby Heeb’s compensation
    under the settlement increases if Visteon obtains damages
    from National Union. Visteon argues that Indiana has an in-
    terest in seeing its citizen receive additional compensation,
    and Heeb is a citizen of Indiana. But if Heeb’s speculative
    interest were deemed an interest of Indiana, then Visteon
    could select the state whose law would govern any dispute
    with its insurer simply by making a speculative contract
    with a citizen of its preferred state—promising to pay that
    citizen some amount of money in the event that Visteon in-
    curred a liability in that state. Such an approach would make
    8                                                  No. 14-2725
    it impossible to determine which jurisdiction’s law applies
    before the risk materializes.
    As for where the contract was made, which is the only
    other factor (drawn from the governing multifactor ap-
    proach to choice of law) that is relevant in this case, no state
    can be designated as “the” state in which the insurance con-
    tract was made. The negotiations, ultimate signing of the in-
    surance contract, and receipt of premiums by National Un-
    ion occurred in Michigan, Illinois, and New York, but not in
    Indiana. This factor in the multifactor test falls out.
    We’re left with Michigan. Its law, as the district court
    found, determines whether National Union is liable to Viste-
    on for the liabilities that Visteon incurred as a result of the
    contamination resulting from the leak of TCE from its Indi-
    ana plant.
    The insurance policy excludes coverage for damages
    caused by “the actual or threatened discharge, dispersal,
    seepage, migration, release or escape of pollutants anywhere
    in the world”—which obviously encompasses the TCE leak.
    With Michigan enforcing pollution-exclusion clauses, Viste-
    on is left to argue that what happened in Connersville is
    within an exception (part of the Completed Operations Haz-
    ard clause that we mentioned) to the pollution-exclusion
    clause for damages “occurring away from premises you own
    or rent and arising out of … Your Work except … work that
    has not yet been completed or abandoned.” So the question
    is whether the TCE leaked by the Connersville plant was a
    result of completed “work.” Visteon argues that its “work”
    was “completed” each time a contract to supply products
    made at the plant was performed. In response National Un-
    ion points out that operations continued at the plant until
    No. 14-2725                                                  9
    2007, long after the insurance policy expired, when Visteon
    ceased manufacturing at the plant.
    Visteon’s interpretation can’t be right, because it erases
    the line between completed and ongoing operations. True,
    the definition of “complete” in the Completed Operations
    Hazard clause is murky: “when all of the work called for in
    your contract has been completed”; “when all of the work to
    be done at the site has been completed if your contract calls
    for work at more than one site”; or “when that part of the
    work done at a job site has been put to its intended use by
    any person or organization other than another contractor or
    subcontractor working on the same project”—whichever is
    earliest. The first definition could as a semantic matter em-
    brace pollution occurring after the completion of each con-
    tract to sell parts manufactured at the Connersville plant.
    The problem is that such an interpretation apparently would
    erase the pollution exclusion for all the pollution caused by
    the plant. For Visteon doesn’t acknowledge that the pollu-
    tion expenses resulting from the TCE leak have to be appor-
    tioned between products that the Connersville plant made
    under contract and products that it made hoping to sell but
    not yet having a contract to sell. It thinks the Completed Op-
    erations Hazard clause entitles it to reimbursement for the
    entire costs it incurred as a result of the pollution claims
    made against it. It thus interprets that clause as swallowing
    the entire pollution-exclusion clause—the exception becom-
    ing the rule. But is it plausible that National Union would
    have issued an insurance policy that vitiated the pollution-
    exclusion clause of an insurance policy that covers liabilities
    incurred by Visteon anywhere in the world?
    10                                                No. 14-2725
    Visteon’s argument from the Completed Operations
    Hazard clause is wrong for another reason. Visteon doesn’t
    explain why it should make a difference to coverage wheth-
    er a fuel injection component (say) is sold pursuant to a con-
    tract, or is shipped to some distribution facility owned by
    Visteon where it is then offered for sale. The difference has
    nothing to do with pollution, so why should it affect the
    scope of an insurance policy that has a pollution-exclusion
    provision? The contract-completion exception is more plau-
    sibly read as referring to the end of a relationship with a
    buyer. Visteon doesn’t address this possibility.
    Most courts have interpreted “completed operations
    hazard” narrowly—more narrowly indeed than required to
    decide this case in favor of the insurance company. For ex-
    ample, in Liberty Mutual Ins. Co. v. Triangle Industries, Inc.,
    
    957 F.2d 1153
    , 1158 (4th Cir. 1992) (New Jersey law), the
    court read that “the term ‘completed operations hazard’ re-
    fers to [a] … form of protection offered for the benefit of
    those policyholders who provide a service in addition to or
    instead of a particular product. (‘Commentators are in com-
    plete agreement that this exclusion refers to accidents caused
    by defective workmanship which arise after completion of
    work by the insured on construction or service contracts.’)”
    (citations omitted). See also West Bend Mutual Ins. Co. v.
    United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co., 
    598 F.3d 918
    , 924–26
    (7th Cir. 2010) (Indiana law); Hydro Systems, Inc. v. Continen-
    tal Ins. Co., 
    929 F.2d 472
    , 474–77 (9th Cir. 1991) (California
    law); Gregory v. Tennessee Gas Pipeline Co., 
    948 F.2d 203
    , 207–
    08 (5th Cir. 1991) (Louisiana law); CPS Chemical Co. v. Conti-
    nental Ins. Co., 
    489 A.2d 1265
    , 1270 (N.J. Law Div. 1984), re-
    versed on other grounds, 
    495 A.2d 886
    (N.J. App. Div. 1985);
    Buckeye Union Ins. Co. v. Liberty Solvents & Chemicals Co., 477
    No. 14-2725                                               
    11 N.E.2d 1227
    , 1236–37 (Ohio App. 1984), abrogated on other
    grounds by Hybud Equipment Corp. v. Sphere Drake Ins. Co.,
    
    597 N.E.2d 1096
    (Ohio 1992); Jeffrey W. Stempel, Stempel on
    Insurance Contracts § 14.07[A][2] (3d ed. 2013 supplement).
    All these cases hold that pollution arising from ongoing op-
    erations (including manufacturing, as in several of the cases
    cited above) isn’t covered by the Completed Operations
    Hazard clause, even though these are cases in which the in-
    sureds were completing their performance of particular sales
    contracts with customers.
    We note finally that the pollution-exclusion clause is un-
    ambiguous, and therefore National Union had no duty to
    defend Visteon against the suits brought against it by neigh-
    boring landowners who experienced losses because of the
    leak of TCE from Visteon’s Connersville plant.
    Visteon has failed to make a case. The judgment in favor
    of National Union is therefore
    AFFIRMED.