Tonicstar Limited v. Lovegreen Turbine ( 2008 )


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  •                       United States Court of Appeals
    FOR THE EIGHTH CIRCUIT
    ___________
    No. 06-3503
    ___________
    Tonicstar Limited,                     *
    *
    Appellee,                 *
    *
    v.                              * Appeal from the United States
    * District Court for the
    Lovegreen Turbine Services, Inc.,      * District of Minnesota.
    *
    Appellant,                *
    *
    Flint Hills Resources LP,              *
    *
    Defendant.                *
    ___________
    Submitted: May 17, 2007
    Filed: August 1, 2008
    ___________
    Before BYE, BEAM, and SMITH, Circuit Judges.
    ___________
    BYE, Circuit Judge.
    A cloth rag remaining in an oil refinery compressor caused several million
    dollars in business interruption damages. Tonicstar Limited, one of the insurers of
    Lovegreen Turbine Services, the company who serviced the compressor, brought this
    declaratory judgment action claiming it had no duty to defend or indemnify Lovegreen
    in an action for damages brought by the owner of the oil refinery. The district court1
    granted Tonicstar's motion for summary judgment, concluding the insurer did not owe
    Lovegreen a duty to defend or indemnify. We affirm.
    I
    Lovegreen is a service provider which is in the business of servicing turbines,
    generators, and compressors. Flint Hills Resources, LP, is the owner of a crude oil
    refinery near Rosemount, Minnesota (the Pine Bend facility). In 2003, Flint Hills
    hired Lovegreen to overhaul a compressor at the Pine Bend Facility. It asked
    Lovegreen to be "responsible for the disassembly, cleaning, inspection, repairs as
    necessary, . . . reassembly of the compressor[, and] inspection of the gear box." App.
    147. Lovegreen worked on the compressor around the clock from September 8
    through September 24. In connection with the work, a large container of cloth rags
    were used to wipe the compressor during the overhaul.
    After Lovegreen's work was complete, Flint Hills placed the compressor back
    into service. Initially, the compressor ran as designed. One week later, however, Flint
    Hills shut down the compressor because a charge pump at the refinery failed. When
    Flint Hills restarted it the same day, it vibrated excessively and created a large volume
    of unusual noise. Flint Hills again shut down the compressor, inspected it, and found
    a cloth rag and cloth fragments lodged inside. Flint Hills instructed its own employees
    to remove the cloth rag and fragments, repair the compressor, and place it back in
    operation as quickly as possible. It documented its inspection and repair with
    photographs and saved the cloth fragments found inside the compressor. The
    compressor was out of service for five days, causing Flint Hills to incur loss of
    business damages exceeding $6.5 million.
    1
    The Honorable John R. Tunheim, United States District Judge for the District
    of Minnesota.
    -2-
    After returning the compressor to service, Flint Hills began pursuing
    Lovegreen's liability insurers to recoup its damages. Lovegreen had $2 million in
    primary insurance coverage through Liberty Mutual Fire Insurance Company. A
    commercial umbrella policy issued by a syndicate of six insurers through Lloyd's of
    London provided additional coverage in excess of $2 million. Liberty Mutual and five
    of the six subscribing Lloyd's of London syndicate agreed to pay their share of the
    business loss. The holdout – Tonicstar – refused to pay. As a result, Flint Hills
    brought suit against Lovegreen raising claims of negligence and breach of contract
    premised on its failure to perform the overhaul in a workmanlike manner by leaving
    the cloth rag inside the compressor. Flint Hills claimed loss of business damages in
    the amount of $1.7 million (the part remaining unpaid), as well as $29,500 for the cost
    of repairs to the compressor.
    The insurance policy issued to Lovegreen by Tonicstar generally provided
    coverage "for Bodily Injury and Property Damage arising from the rendering of or
    failure to render Professional Services," App. 49, but contained several exclusions.
    As relevant, Exclusion D.2.f. excluded coverage for "Property Damage to . . . that
    particular part of any property that must be restored, repaired or replaced because
    Your Work was incorrectly performed on it." An exception to Exclusion D.2.f.
    restored coverage for "Property Damage included in the Products-Completed
    Operations Hazard." 
    Id. at 43.
    The policy defined Property Damage as:
    1.     Physical injury to tangible property, including all resulting loss of
    use of that property. All such loss of use shall be deemed to occur
    at the time of the physical injury that caused it; or
    2.     Loss of use of tangible property that is not physically injured. All
    such loss shall be deemed to occur at the time of the Occurrence
    that caused it.
    -3-
    
    Id. at 61.
    The policy defined Your Work as:
    1.     Work or operations performed by you or on your behalf; and
    2.     Materials, parts or equipment furnished in connection with such
    work or operations.
    
    Id. at 62.
    Endorsement No. 1 added the following definition of Work: "The entire
    completed construction or the various separately identifiable parts required to be
    furnished under the contract documents." 
    Id. at 51.
    After Flint Hills sued Lovegreen, Tonicstar brought this declaratory judgment
    action against Lovegreen and Flint Hills asking the district court to declare Tonicstar
    had no duty to defend or indemnify Lovegreen in the action brought by Flint Hills.
    Tonicstar moved for summary judgment arguing Flint Hills' damages were excluded
    pursuant to several of the policy's exclusions, including Exclusion D.2.f. The district
    court granted Tonicstar's motion for summary judgment, concluding Exclusion D.2.f.
    applied. The district court further concluded the exception to Exclusion D.2.f. for
    property damage included in the Products-Completed Operations Hazard did not apply
    because such coverage excluded "Property Damage arising out of . . . the existence
    of tools, uninstalled equipment or abandoned or unused materials." 
    Id. at 61.
    The
    district court concluded the cloth rag left in the compressor constituted "abandoned
    or unused materials."
    Lovegreen filed a timely appeal. On appeal, it contends the district court erred
    in three respects. First, the argument about keeping a rag out of the compressor was
    not part of its "work" within the meaning of the policy. Second, it is contended the
    district court erred in concluding the cloth rag was "abandoned or unused materials,"
    and Flint Hills' loss of business damages should have been covered under the policy's
    Products-Completed Operations Hazard provisions. Finally, Lovegreen argues that,
    even if Exclusion D.2.f. applies to exclude coverage, the exclusion does not apply to
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    the $1.7 million in loss of business damages, but only to the $29,500 in repairs to the
    compressor itself.
    II
    Both the district court's grant of summary judgment, and its interpretation of the
    terms of the insurance policy, are reviewed de novo. Macheca Transport Co. v. Phila.
    Indem. Co. , 
    463 F.3d 827
    , 831 (8th Cir. 2006).
    We agree with the district court that Exclusion D.2.f., which excludes coverage
    for property damage to property which must be repaired because the insured's work
    was incorrectly performed, applies. Cloth rags were part of the materials Lovegreen
    furnished in connection with the overhaul of the compressor. In addition, using the
    cloth rags to wipe the compressor during the overhaul was part of the work or
    operations performed by Lovegreen. As a consequence, leaving a cloth rag inside the
    compressor falls within the policy's definition of work. Such conduct triggers
    Exclusion D.2.f. because it indicates Lovegreen's work was incorrectly performed, and
    the compressor required repair as a result. Furthermore, the $6.5 million in business
    interruption damages Flint Hills suffered while the compressor was being repaired is
    excluded from coverage because the policy's definition of property damage
    encompassed not only physical injury to the property affected by the defective work,
    i.e., the cost of the compressor repairs, but also the resulting loss of use of the
    property. See, e.g., TGA Dev., Inc. v. N. Ins. Co. of New York, 
    62 F.3d 1089
    , 1091
    (8th Cir. 1995) (interpreting a "loss of use" provision under Minnesota law, and
    explaining that loss of use of property resulting from defective work falls "outside the
    coverage" of such policies).
    Lovegreen contends, however, that keeping a rag out of the compressor was not
    part of its "work" as defined by the policy. It relies upon the additional definition of
    "work" under Endorsement No. 1 which, as stated above, provided in part that "work"
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    is "the various separately identifiable parts required to be furnished under the contract
    documents." App. 51. It contends a final inspection to remove foreign material from
    the compressor was not part of the work it was required to furnish under the contract
    documents.
    Even assuming arguendo a final inspection to remove foreign material was not
    specifically mentioned in the contract, Lovegreen's argument nonetheless fails. The
    definition of "work" in Endorsement No. 1 does not replace the definition of "Your
    Work" in the main body of the policy. Endorsement No. 1 specifically provides "that
    the following additional Definitions shall apply." 
    Id. (emphasis added).
    In other
    words, both the definition of "Your Work" and the definition of "Work" in
    Endorsement No. 1 apply. Thus, leaving a cloth rag in the compressor could
    constitute Lovegreen's "work" under either definition. After all it provided a large
    container of cloth rags to the Pine Bend facility, the purpose of which was to wipe the
    compressor during the overhaul. Lovegreen then used the cloth rags during the
    overhaul and left one inside the compressor. This conduct clearly falls within the
    policy's definition of "[w]ork or operations performed by [Lovegreen]," as well as
    "[m]aterials . . . furnished in connection with such work or operations." 
    Id. at 62.
    Lovegreen further contends the loss involved here should have been included
    in the Products-Completed Operations Hazard coverage, which was excepted from
    Exclusion D.2.f. The policy provided, however, that there was no Products-
    Completed Operations Hazard coverage for property damage arising out of the
    existence of tools, uninstalled equipment or abandoned or unused materials, and the
    district court concluded the cloth rag constituted abandoned or unused materials. We
    agree. This interpretation of the policy is consistent with the conclusion reached by
    the few courts which appear to have interpreted this exception for "abandoned or
    unused materials." See U.S. Sanitary Specialties Corp. v. Globe Indem. Co., 
    204 F.2d 774
    , 777 (7th Cir. 1953) (recognizing the provision applied to "tools, equipment and
    materials which on completion of an operation should have been removed by the
    -6-
    assured from the premises where the operation occurred but which, instead, were
    abandoned there by the insured and later were instrumental in causing an accident.");
    see also Liberty Mut. Ins. Co. v. Am. Home Assurance Co., Inc., 
    858 N.E.2d 530
    ,
    538-39 (Ill. App. Ct. 2006) (concluding a temporary ramp the insured left at the
    worksite fell within the exception for "abandoned" materials); Shelter Mut. Ins. Co.
    v. DeShazo, 
    955 S.W.2d 234
    , 238 (Mo. Ct. App. 1997) (adopting the reasoning from
    Sanitary Specialties in interpreting the "abandoned or unused materials" provision).
    Finally, Lovegreen contends, even if Exclusion D.2.f. applies, it only excludes
    the cost of restoring the compressor to operation, that is, the $29,500 Flint Hills spent
    to repair the compressor, but does not exclude the $6.5 million Flint Hills lost in
    business while the compressor was out of service for five days. As we explained
    above, this policy's definition of property damage included not only the physical
    injury to the property which required repairs because of incorrectly performed work,
    but also specifically encompassed the "resulting loss of use of that property." App.
    61. As a consequence, the exclusion of the $6.5 million in business interruption
    damages is "compelled by the plain words of the polic[y]." TGA 
    Development, 62 F.3d at 1091
    .
    III
    We affirm the judgment of the district court.
    BEAM, Circuit Judge, dissenting.
    Lovegreen contracted with Flint Hills Resources (FHR or Flint Hills) to be
    "responsible for the disassembly, cleaning, inspection, repairs as necessary [of the
    compressor] and reassembly of the compressor . . . [and] inspection of the gear box."
    This was the "work" agreed upon and was "Your [Lovegreen's] Work" as defined in
    the coverage clauses of the insurance policy at issue here. In completing this work
    -7-
    (and it was clearly a completed operation contemplated by the insurance contract
    language), Lovegreen negligently left a cleaning rag inside the compressor which act
    led to property damage, i.e., loss of use of the compressor, a covered loss. The court
    majority's conclusion to the contrary is error. Thus, I dissent.
    Under Endorsement No. 12, Appendix at 39, Lovegreen was a named insured
    under the insurance policy in force here. Liberty Mutual was the primary underwriter
    under the contract. A six-member syndicate organized by Lloyd's of London provided
    bumbershoot (umbrella) coverage above the limits of the primary policy, which limits
    were exceeded in this case. There can be no dispute that Lovegreen was negligent and
    that the loss was in excess of $6.5 million. Liberty Mutual and five of the six
    members of the syndicate recognized their coverage obligations and agreed to pay a
    contractually designated share of the loss. Tonicstar, on the other hand, refused to do
    so and now mounts a convoluted and unsupportable coverage defense involving
    unrelated and incongruent portions of the policy, which defense the district court and
    the court majority adopt, at least in part.
    Liberated from Tonicstar's misdirecting hyperbole, the policy language
    applicable to this loss is relatively straightforward.2 In consideration of the premium
    paid, Lovegreen purchased "Products-Completed Operations Hazard" coverage under
    the policy. Item 3, Limits of Insurance, Appendix at 52. The Products-Completed
    Operations Hazard
    includes all Bodily Injury and Property Damage occurring away from
    premises you own or rent and arising out of Your Product or Your
    Work except:
    2
    If ambiguous, "it [should] be construed against [Tonicstar], as drafter of the
    contract." Progressive Specialty Ins. Co. v. Widness, 
    635 N.W.2d 516
    , 518 (Minn.
    2001) (citing Current Tech. Concepts, Inc. v. Irie Enters., Inc. 
    530 N.W.2d 539
    , 543
    (Minn. 1995)).
    -8-
    a.               products that are still in your physical possession; or
    b.               work that has not yet been completed or abandoned.
    Policy, § IV.J.l.a-b. Neither a. nor b. above are pertinent to the facts of this case.
    "Your Work," in turn, is defined, in relevant part, as
    1.    Work or operations performed by [Lovegreen] or on [Lovegreen's]
    behalf; and
    2.     Materials, parts or equipment furnished in connection with such
    work or operations.
    Policy, § IV.N.1-2.3 In this environment, this can only mean, as the contract specifies,
    the disassembly, cleaning, inspection, repair and reassembly of the compressor or
    furnishing materials, parts or equipment in connection with these specified
    obligations. By clear language and any reasonable implication therefrom, the agreed
    upon work did not include negligently leaving a cleaning rag alien to the effective use
    of the compressor within the machine. One strains to understand how an exotic item
    such as this piece of cloth can possibly be defined as "materials, parts or equipment
    furnished [to Flint Hills] in connection with such [contract-specific] work or
    operations."
    3
    A policy endorsement provides an additional "Your Work" definition that
    states that work is "the various separately identifiable parts required to be furnished
    under the contract documents." Endorsement No. 1. This, of course, would not place
    an errant cleaning rag among the parts required by the work agreement.
    -9-
    "Property Damage" is
    1.     Physical injury to tangible property [the compressor], including all
    resulting loss of use of that property [the compressor]. . . . ; or
    2.     Loss of use of tangible property that is not physically injured.
    Policy, § IV.K.1-2. Accordingly, absent other policy language to the contrary,
    Lovegreen's negligence in completing its work led to loss of use of the compressor,
    a species of property damage insured under the Products-Completed Operations
    Hazard.
    But, posits Tonicstar,
    This hazard does not include Bodily Injury or Property Damage
    arising out of:
    a.                the transportation of property, unless the
    injury or damage arises out of a condition
    in or on a vehicle created by the loading or
    unloading of it;
    b.                the existence of tools, uninstalled
    equipment or abandoned or unused
    materials.
    Policy, § IV.J.3.a-b.
    Tonicstar and the court majority contend the above J.3.b. language excludes the
    loss of use damages claimed by Flint Hills from the completed operations coverage
    because the errant cleaning rag was "abandoned or unused material[]."
    -10-
    The problem with this slippery slope is that the lost rag was not "abandoned or
    unused material[]," and the language of b. and case precedent establish such an
    interpretation.
    The majority cites in support of its contentions U.S. Sanitary Specialties Corp.
    v. Globe Indemnity. Co., 
    204 F.2d 774
    (7th Cir. 1953). This particular case, however,
    runs almost wholly in the opposite direction.
    A Sanitary Specialties salesman had placed, but did not remove, a circle of wax
    on the courthouse floor as a sales tool to be used in selling Sanitary's floor wax to
    county officials. The next day after the sale, Annie Peek slipped on this spot and fell.
    Peek sued Sanitary and its salesman for damages and Sanitary tendered the claim to
    Globe Indemnity who denied coverage. Sanitary brought suit against Globe seeking
    a determination of coverage under the policy. The district court and the Seventh
    Circuit first determined that the underlying allegations fell within the Products-
    Completed Operations Hazard in Globe's policy. 
    Id. at 776.
    But then, the courts
    further determined that Sanitary Specialties had not purchased such coverage. 
    Id. at 777.
    On appeal, Sanitary argued that the exclusion announced in J.3.b., (i.e., that "'the
    existence of tools, uninstalled equipment and abandoned or unused materials'" was
    "except[ed]" from Globe's Products-Completed Operations Hazard) permitted it to
    seek coverage under another hazard in Globe's policy that it had purchased. 
    Id. at 776-77.
    The Seventh Circuit rejected this contention. In doing so, it noted that the
    "exception to completed operations" articulated by Sanitary "refers only to tools,
    equipment and materials which on completion of an operation should have been
    removed by [Sanitary] from the premises where the operation occurred but which,
    instead, were abandoned there by [Sanitary] and later were instrumental in causing
    an accident." 
    Id. at 777
    (emphasis added). The court noted that the wax was not
    abandoned and unused material. Neither was Lovegreen's cloth, and while it
    gradually caused the compressor to malfunction, it did not cause a later premises
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    accident involving FHR or anyone else. Had the used cleaning rag at issue here been
    left on the floor by Lovegreen, later causing a slip, trip or fall, actionable damages
    arising from this act would have been excluded under the Products-Completed
    Operations Hazard under the Seventh Circuit's interpretation. The occurrence
    activating Lovegreen's completed operations coverage was the negligent act of leaving
    the rag inside the compressor when completing the work it was hired to do. And, of
    course, Lovegreen was not hired to leave a deviant piece of cloth inside the
    compressor it was employed to service.
    The other cases cited by the court are likewise unhelpful, indeed they reenforce
    the proper interpretation of the exclusion from the Products-Completed Operations
    Hazard. Liberty Mutual Insurance Co. v. American Home Assurance Co., Inc., 
    858 N.E.2d 530
    , 533 (Ill. App. Ct. 2006), involved a temporary ramp the insured left at the
    work site over which Ms. Palcowski, the underlying claimant, tripped and fell. Shelter
    Mutual Insurance Co. v. DeShazo, 
    955 S.W.2d 234
    (Mo. Ct. App. 1997) (per curiam),
    dealt with a dispute over the collapse of a deck DeShazo had earlier completed at a
    residence in Christian County, Missouri. The case proves nothing about whether a
    negligently placed cleaning rag can serve to displace completed operations coverage.
    Like Sanitary Specialties, DeShazo did not purchase completed operations coverage
    and, as a result, attempted to place the deck collapse outside that particular hazard.
    In support, DeShazo's expert engineers opined that two pieces of uninstalled
    equipment caused the collapse, arguing that this was the "uninstalled equipment"
    mentioned in the J.3.b. clause set forth above. 
    Id. at 237.
    The Missouri Court rejected
    this argument, adopting the Sanitary Specialties definition and finding the loss to be
    within the Products-Completed Operations Hazard that had not been purchased by
    DeShazo. 
    Id. -12- Finally,
    Tonicstar argues that a general exclusion found in section V.D.,
    Appendix 62, as modified by Endorsement No. 9, Appendix at 43, removes Flint Hills'
    property damage from coverage. The cited policy language says
    V.     Exclusions
    This insurance does not apply to:
    ...
    D. 2. Property Damage to
    ...
    f. That particular part
    of any property that
    must be restored,
    repaired or replaced
    because Your Work
    was incorrectly
    performed on it.
    Appendix at 43, 62. Unfortunately for Tonicstar, the Endorsement further states
    "paragraph f. does not apply to Property Damage included in the Products-
    Completed Operations Hazard." And, of course, Flint Hills' property damage (loss
    of use in this case) fell within the Products-Completed Operations Hazard purchased
    by Lovegreen. Tonicstar's fellow syndicate members were correct. The property
    damage sustained by Flint Hills represents a covered loss under the insurance policy.
    The court's determination to the contrary is error. Indeed, if the Products-Completed
    Operations Hazard does not provide risk abatement under the facts and circumstances
    of this case, it is difficult to envision what benefit an insured receives in return for the
    substantial premium that insurers such as Tonicstar collect for their purported
    coverage.
    The district court should be reversed. Accordingly, I dissent.
    ______________________________
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