Rite Aid Corporation v. ACE American Insurance Company ( 2020 )


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  •              IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE
    RITE AID CORPORATION; RITE AID      )
    HDQTRS. CORP.; and RITE AID OF      )
    MARYLAND, INC. d/b/a MID-ATLANTIC   )
    CUSTOMER SUPPORT CENTER,            )
    )
    Plaintiffs,        )
    )
    v.                        )
    )               C.A. No. N19C-04-150 EMD CCLD
    ACE AMERICAN INSURANCE COMPANY; )
    JURY TRIAL ILLINOIS UNION INSURANCE )
    COMPANY; DEMANDED ACE PROPERTY      )
    & CASUALTY COMPANY; FEDERAL         )
    INSURANCE COMPANY; LEXINGTON        )
    INSURANCE COMPANY; NATIONAL         )
    UNION FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY OF     )
    PITTSBURGH, PA; AMERICAN            )
    GUARANTEE & LIABILITY INSURANCE     )
    COMPANY; AMERICAN ZURICH            )
    INSURANCE COMPANY; CONTINENTAL      )
    INSURANCE COMPANY; ENDURANCE        )
    AMERICAN INSURANCE COMPANY;         )
    GREAT AMERICAN ASSURANCE            )
    COMPANY; GREAT AMERICAN             )
    INSURANCE COMPANY OF NEW YORK;      )
    GREAT AMERICAN SPIRIT INSURANCE     )
    COMPANY; LIBERTY INSURANCE          )
    UNDERWRITERS, INC.; ST. PAUL FIRE   )
    AND MARINE INSURANCE COMPANY; and )
    XL INSURANCE AMERICA, INC.,         )
    )
    Defendants.        )
    )
    )
    Submitted: June 5, 2020
    Decided: September 22, 2020
    Upon Plaintiffs Rite Aid Corporation, Rite Aid Hdqtrs. Corp., and Rite Aid of Maryland Inc.’s
    Motion for Partial Summary Judgment,
    GRANTED
    Upon Defendants ACE American Insurance Company, Illinois Union Insurance Company, ACE
    Property & Casualty Insurance Company, and Federal Insurance Company’s Motion for Partial
    Summary Judgment,
    DENIED
    Jody C. Barillare, Esquire, Morgan, Lewis & Bockius LLP, Wilmington, Delaware, Gerald P.
    Konkel, Esquire, Christopher Popecki, Esquire, Morgan, Lewis & Bockius LLP, Washington,
    D.C. Attorneys for Plaintiffs Rite Aid, Corporation, Rite Aid Hdqtrs. Corp., and Rite Aid of
    Maryland Inc.
    Marc S. Casarino, Esquire, White and Williams LLP, Wilmington, Delaware, Paul R. Koepff,
    Esquire, Clyde & Co US LLP, New York, New York, Robert Mangino, Esquire, Clyde & Co US
    LLP, Florham Park, New Jersey. Attorneys for Defendants ACE American Insurance Company,
    Illinois Union Insurance Company, ACE Property & Casualty Insurance Company, and Federal
    Insurance Company
    Robert J. Katzenstein, Esquire, Robert K. Beste, Esquire, Smith, Katzenstein & Jenkins LLP,
    Wilmington, Delaware, Mitchell J. Auslander, Esquire, Christopher J. St. Jeanos, Esquire,
    Willkie Farr & Gallagher LLP, New York, New York. Attorneys for Defendants Lexington
    Insurance Company and National Union Fire Insurance Company of Pittsburgh, Pa.
    Deirdre M. Richards, Esquire, Fineman Krekstein & Harris P.C., Wilmington, Delaware, Hema
    Patel Mehta, Esquire, Chartwell Law, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Attorneys for Defendant
    Endurance American Insurance Company
    David J. Soldo, Esquire, Morris James LLP, Wilmington, Delaware. Attorney for Great
    American Assurance Company, Great American Insurance Company of New York, and Great
    American Spirit Insurance Company
    DAVIS, J.
    I. INTRODUCTION
    This insurance coverage dispute is assigned to the Complex Commercial Litigation
    Division of the Court. Plaintiffs Rite Aid Corporation, Rite Aid Hdqtrs. Corp., and Rite Aid of
    Maryland Inc. d/b/a Mid-Atlantic Support Center (collectively, “Rite Aid”) have been sued in
    over 1,143 lawsuits by governmental entities, third-party payors of medical care, and individuals
    seeking damages for costs arising out of Rite Aid’s distribution of opioids (“Opioid Lawsuits”).1
    1
    Rite Aid’s Op. Br. in Supp. of Its Mot. for Partial Summ. J. Requiring Def. ACE American Insurance Company to
    Pay or Reimburse Rite Aid’s Defense Cost for Opioid Lawsuits (“Rite Aid’s Motion”) at 1.
    2
    The Opioid Lawsuits allege that Rite Aid knowingly distributed opioids to its own local
    pharmacies, and separately allege that local Rite Aid pharmacies improperly dispensed
    prescription opioids to its customers, which contributed and perpetuated drug abuse, addiction
    and resulting injuries or death.2 Rite Aid sought coverage for the Opioid Lawsuits under ACE
    policy XSL G27390900 (the “Policy” or the “2015 Policy”) issued by Defendant ACE American
    Insurance Company (“ACE”).3 Chubb (as defined below) denied coverage under the Policy for
    any of Rite Aid’s costs incurred in defending any of the Opioid Lawsuits. In response, Rite Aid
    initiated this action on April 16, 2019.
    On July 19, 2019, Rite Aid filed its Motion for Partial Summary Judgment Requiring
    Defendant ACE American Insurance Company to Pay or Reimburse Rite Aid’s Defense Costs
    for Opioid Lawsuits (“Rite Aid’s Motion”). On January 31, 2020, ACE filed ACE’s
    Memorandum of Law in Opposition to Rite Aid’s Motion for Partial Summary Judgment.
    Also, on January 31, 2020, two group of non-Chubb insurers filed responses to Rite Aid’s
    Motion: (i) Defendants Great American Assurance Company, Great American Insurance
    Company of New Yok, Great American Spirit Insurance Company (“Great American
    Defendants”); and (ii) Defendants Endurance American Insurance Company (“Endurance”) and
    National Union Fire Insurance Company of Pittsburgh, Pa., (“National Union” and, with
    Endurance, “Certain Excess Insurer Defendants”). The Great American Defendants filed the
    Response of Great American Assurance Company, Great American Insurance Company of New
    Yok, Great American Spirit Insurance Company to Rite Aid’s Motion for Partial Summary
    Judgment Requiring Defendant ACE American Insurance Company to Pay or Reimburse Rite
    Aid’s Defense Costs for Opioid Lawsuits (“Great American Defendants’ Response”). The
    2
    Memorandum of Law in Supp. Of Chubb’s Mot. for Partial Summ. J. (“Chubb’s Mot.”) at 1.
    3
    Rite Aid’s Mot. at 2.
    3
    Certain Excess Insurer Defendants filed the Certain Excess Insurer Defendants’ Memorandum in
    Connection with and in Opposition to Plaintiffs’ Motion for Partial Summary Judgment
    Requiring Defendant ACE to Pay Defense Costs (“Certain Excess Insurer Defendants’
    Response”).
    On February 21, 2020, Rite Aid filed Rite Aid’s Reply Brief in Further Support of its
    Motion for Partial Summary Judgment Requiring ACE to Pay or Reimburse Rite Aid’s Defense
    Costs for Opioid Lawsuits and Rite Aid’s Reply to Certain Insurers’ Response to Rite Aid’s
    Motion for Partial Summary Judgment Requiring ACE to Pay or Reimburse Rite Aid’s Defense
    Costs for Opioid Lawsuits (“Rite Aid’s Reply to Certain Insurers’ Response”). The Reply to
    Certain Insurers’ Response addressed both the Certain Excess Insurer Defendants’ Response and
    the Great American Defendants’ Response.
    On January 31, 2020, Defendants ACE, Illinois Union Insurance Company, ACE
    Property & Casualty Insurance Company (i/p/a ACE Property & Casualty Company), Federal
    Insurance Company (collectively, “Chubb”)4 submitted a Motion for Partial Summary Judgment
    (“Chubb’s Motion”). On February 21, 2020, Rite Aid filed Rite Aid’s Memorandum of Law in
    Opposition to Chubb’s Motion for Partial Summary Judgment. On March 9, 2020, Chubb filed
    its Reply Memorandum in Support of Chubb’s Motion for Partial Summary Judgment.
    The Court held a hearing on Rite Aid’s Motion and Chubb’s Motion on April 20, 2020.
    At the hearing, the Court asked the parties to provide supplemental information regarding recent
    developments in the MDL Opioid Lawsuits (as defined below). After that, the Court took the
    4
    For purposes of this Opinion and to avoid confusion, the Court will use Chubb to mean multiple parties, including
    ACE. Any references to Chubb in this Opinion will also mean ACE, Illinois Union Insurance Company, ACE
    Property & Casualty Insurance Company (i/p/a ACE Property & Casualty Company) and Federal Insurance
    Company. This is because Chubb is handling these claims on behalf of ACE, Illinois Union Insurance Company,
    ACE Property & Casualty Insurance Company (i/p/a ACE Property & Casualty Company) and Federal Insurance
    Company. Affidavit of Ron Chima (“Chima Aff.”), at Ex. E.
    4
    matters under advisement. This is the Court’s opinion on the motions. For the reasons set forth
    below, the Court GRANTS Rite Aid’s Motion and DENIES Chubb’s Motion.
    II. BACKGROUND
    Rite Aid is the third largest retail drugstore chain in the United States, operating nearly
    2,500 stores across the country.5 On December 5, 2017, the United States Judicial Panel on
    Multidistrict Litigation began to consolidate federal Opioid Lawsuits “involv[ing] common
    questions of fact” into a multi-district litigation before the United States District Court for the
    Northern District of Ohio (the “MDL Opioid Lawsuits”) after governmental entities, third-party
    payors of medical care, and other plaintiffs began filing suit against manufacturers and suppliers
    of opioids.6 The governmental entities seek to recover billions in governmental and economic
    costs allegedly incurred in providing a wide array of public services in response to the influx of
    opioids into their communities such as increased expenses for first responders, autopsies,
    morgues, drug rehabilitation, foster care, and drug-related criminal activity.7
    The MDL Opioid Lawsuits include the “Track One” bellwether litigation suits (the
    “Track One Lawsuits”), which consist of claims by governmental entities alleging that Rite Aid
    chased profits while turning a blind eye to the devastating epidemic.8 The Track One Lawsuits
    initially involved County of Summit, Ohio v. Purdue Pharma L.P., Case No. 18-OP-45090 (N.D.
    Ohio) (the “Summit” lawsuit), County of Cuyahoga, Ohio v. Purdue Pharma L.P., Case No. 17-
    OP-45004 (N.D. Ohio) (the “Cuyahoga” lawsuit), and City of Cleveland, Ohio v. Purdue
    5
    Chubb’s Mot. at 1; ACE’s Memorandum of Law in Opp. to Rite Aid’s Mot. for Partial Summ. J. (“ACE’s Opp.”)
    at 1.
    6
    In re Nat’l Prescription Opiate Litig., 
    290 F. Supp. 3d 1375
    , 1378 (J.P.M.L. 2017); see also Declaration of Gerald
    P. Konkel (“Konkel Decl.”), Ex. F, In re Nat’l Prescription Opiate Litig., 1:17-MD-2804-DAP, Doc. (“MDL Doc.”)
    3151 (N.D. Ohio Feb. 5, 2020) (stating nearly 2,000 Opioid Lawsuits transferred to MDL since 2017).
    7
    
    Id.
     at 1–2.
    8
    Id. at 2.
    5
    Pharma L.P., Case No. 18-op-45132 (N.D. Ohio) (the “Cleveland” lawsuit).9 On February 25,
    2019, the Cleveland lawsuit and the City of Akron—a plaintiff in the Summit lawsuit—were
    dropped from the trial.10
    On April 27, 2018, two days after being named a defendant of the Track One Lawsuits,
    Rite Aid tendered and provided timely notice of the Opioid Lawsuits, including the Track One
    Lawsuits, to its insurers, including under the 2015 Policy.11
    A. THE CHUBB POLICIES
    Unlike Rite Aid’s Motion, which only involves the 2015 Policy, Chubb’s Motion
    involves nineteen policies (the “Chubb Policies”) issued by the Chubb Companies that contain
    “identical or materially similar terms.”12 Chubb argues that none of the Chubb Policies provide
    coverage for the defense costs in the Track One Lawsuits.
    i. The 2015 Policy
    The 2015 Policy provides:
    a. We will pay those sums that the insured becomes legally obligated to pay as
    damages because of “personal injury” or “property damage” to which the insurance
    applies. We will have the right and duty to defend the insured against any “suit”
    seeking those damages. However, we will have no duty to defend the insured
    against any “suit” seeking damages for “personal injury” or “property damage” to
    which this insurance does not apply.
    ...
    e. Damages because of “personal injury” include damages claimed by any person
    or organization for care, loss of services or death resulting at any time from the
    “personal injury.”13
    9
    See Konkel Decl., ¶¶ 5–6.
    10
    Chima Aff. ¶ 25.
    11
    Rite Aid’s Mot. at 2.
    12
    Chubb’s Motion at 4–5; Declaration of Paul R. Koepff (“Koepff Decl.”) ¶¶ 4–20, Exs. A–Q; see Chima Aff. Ex.,
    A.
    13
    Chima Aff., Ex. A.
    6
    The Policy “applies” to “personal injury” that “occurs during the policy period” and “is caused
    by an ‘occurrence,’” but also defines “personal injury” to include “any continuation, change, or
    resumption of that ‘personal injury’. . . after the end of the policy period.”14
    “Personal injury” is defined in part as “bodily injury.”15 “Bodily injury” is further
    defined as “bodily injury, sickness or disease sustained by a person, including death resulting
    from any of these at any time.”16 Such damages are covered so long as they were “caused by an
    occurrence.17 An “occurrence,” with respect to “bodily injury,” is “an accident, including
    continuous or repeated exposure to substantially the same general harmful conditions.”18 The
    Policy states “[d]amages because of ‘personal injury’ include damages claimed by any person or
    organization for care, loss of services or death resulting at any time from the ‘personal injury.’”19
    It also states that Chubb has a “duty to defend the insured against any ‘suit’ seeking those
    damages.”20
    The Policy provides that the duty to defend “will attach only when the entire amount of
    the ‘Retained Limit’ has been paid and then only in excess of the ‘Retained Limit.’”21 The
    Policy further states that there will be “no reduction of the ‘Retained Limit’ because of payment
    of claims or ‘suits’ arising from claims or ‘suits’ for which coverage is not afforded.”22 The
    Policy has a $3,000,000 “Retained Limit” that is “the most an insured will pay for . . . [d]amages
    and Supplementary Payments under Coverage A because of all ‘personal injury’ . . . arising out
    14
    Id.
    15
    Id. at RA0002535.
    16
    Id. at RA0002532.
    17
    Id. at RA0002519.
    18
    Id. at RA0002535.
    19
    Id. at RA0002520.
    20
    Id. at RA0002519.
    21
    Id. at RA0002573.
    22
    Id.
    7
    of any one occurrence.”23 The Policy characterizes “Supplementary Payments” as the expenses
    incurred in the defense of such suits.24
    ii. The 2018 Policy’s Unique Governmental Entity Suit Exclusion
    ACE also issued a primary policy to Rite Aid, policy XSL G27874642, for the 2018
    policy period after the first Opioid Lawsuits were filed (“2018 Policy”).25 The 2018 Policy has
    the same standard insuring agreement as the other ACE American policies. The Court notes,
    however, that it contains a unique endorsement that “changes” the scope of coverage provided
    under ACE’s standardized insuring agreement supports Rite Aid’s understanding of the 2015
    Policy’s coverage. The endorsement states that it “CHANGES THE POLICY” and thus instructs
    the insured to “PLEASE READ IT CAREFULLY.”26 The endorsement excludes “opioid and
    narcotics liability” claims brought by “any ‘governmental entity,’ health or group insurer” under
    “COVERAGE A. PERSONAL INJURY AND PROPERTY DAMAGE LIABILITY”27 Chubb
    issued the 2018 Policy with this exclusion after the first Opioid Lawsuits were asserted in 2017.28
    No Chubb policy subject to Chubb’s Motion contains a similar “opioid” and/or “governmental
    entity” suit exclusion.
    B. THE TRACK ONE LAWSUITS
    Rite Aid’s Motion concerns the allegations in the complaints of the Summit, Cuyahoga,
    and Cleveland lawsuits.29 Rite Aid alleges that those three lawsuits, like the other MDL Opioid
    Lawsuits, include substantively similar allegations that Rite Aid acted negligently in distributing
    23
    Id. at RA0002572.
    24
    Id. at RA0002519, RA0002525.
    25
    Chima Aff., Ex. C.
    26
    Id. at RA0004349–50.
    27
    Id.
    28
    Chima Aff., ¶ 7.
    29
    Rite Aid’s Submission Regarding Impact of Sixth Circuit’s Mandamus Decision and Judge Polster’s April 16,
    2020 Order Regarding Track 1b And Track Three on Pending Summary Judgment Motions (“Rite Aid’s
    Submission”) at 2.
    8
    opioids, resulting in damages including for costs of medical care for addicted individuals and for
    opioid overdose deaths. Rite Aid’s Motion seeks declarations that Rite Aid satisfied the per
    occurrence retention and ACE has a duty to defend based on the Track One Lawsuits’ pleadings
    and defense costs incurred as of July 19, 2019—the date when its Motion was filed.30
    On July 19, 2019, the operative pleadings in the Track One Lawsuits were the Summit
    and Cuyahoga Third Amended Complaints.31 These Third Amended Complaints included
    causes of action for negligence, statutory and common law public nuisance, and other claims
    against opioid “supply chain” entities including Rite Aid, all arising out of their alleged failure to
    prevent diversion and oversupply of opioids.32 This allegedly caused a “public health epidemic”
    of “addiction, abuse, overdose and death,” and proximately caused governmental entities’ “costly
    responses” including emergency services, medical care, and morgue operations.33 Specifically,
    the negligence cause of action alleged:
            Breaches of duties through “Distributing by distributors” and their
    “Choosing not to effectively monitor for suspicious orders” and related
    failures;
            “Defendants were negligent by marketing, distributing, and selling opioids”
    leading to illicit diversion;
            “Defendants had control over their conduct in Plaintiffs’ communities” by
    “controll[ing] the systems they developed to prevent diversion . . . .”;
            “As a direct and proximate result of Defendants’ negligence,” Plaintiffs
    “have suffered and will continue to suffer economic damages including, but
    not limited to, significant expenses for…emergency, health, . . . and other
    services”;
    30
    Id.
    31
    Rite Aid’s Memorandum of Law in Opp. to Chubb’s Mot. for Partial Summ. J. at 7.
    32
    Chima Aff., Ex. L, ¶ 9 (hereinafter, “Summit TAC”); Ex. N, ¶ 9 (hereinafter, “Cuyahoga TAC”). On August 19,
    2019, the plaintiffs in the Track One Lawsuits dismissed their causes of action for negligence, common law fraud,
    injury through criminal acts, and unjust enrichment. Konkel Decl., Ex. B, MDL Doc. 2487 (N.D. Ohio Aug. Aug.
    19, 2019).
    33
    Summit TAC, ¶¶ 18, 20, 725; Cuyahoga TAC, ¶¶ 17, 19, 677.
    9
            Defendants’ misconduct is “ongoing and persistent”; and
            Defendants’ conduct “does not concern a discrete event or discrete
    emergency….”34
    The common law public nuisance counts are premised on the same alleged inactions and
    inadequate actions as the negligence cause of action. While the Track 1B Plaintiffs dismissed
    the negligence counts in the Track 1B operative complaints on August 19, 2019, the public
    nuisance counts remain unchanged.35
    On November 20, 2019, the plaintiffs in the Track One Lawsuits filed Amendments by
    Interlineation.36 The Amendments by Interlineation were substantively identical.37 The
    Amendments by Interlineation filed in the Summit and Cuyahoga lawsuits made revisions to the
    preexisting public nuisance count and alleged new details regarding National Retail Pharmacies’
    alleged “distributing and dispensing” conduct.38 When the plaintiffs were granted permission to
    amend their Third Amended Complaints, MDL District Court Judge pointed out that “although
    some additional discovery will be necessary to address dispensing claims, much of the
    foundational discovery and virtually all of the discovery regarding Plaintiffs has already been
    done [with respect to the dispensing claims].”39
    Chubb’s Motion was filed on January 31, 2020. At that time, the operative complaints
    were the Third Amended Complaints as amended by the Amendments by Interlineation.40
    34
    Rite Aid’s Reply Brief in Further Support of its Motion for Partial Summary Judgment Requiring ACE to Pay or
    Reimburse Rite Aid’s Defense Costs for Opioid Lawsuits (“Rite Aid’s Reply Br.”) at 6–7 (citing Summit TAC at ¶¶
    1046, 1050, 1054, 1063, 1066 & 1067; Cuyahoga TAC at ¶¶ 1089, 1093, 1097, 1106, 1109, & 1110).
    35
    Rite Aid’s Submission at 4 n.10.
    36
    In re Nat’l Prescription Opiate Litig., No. 1:17-MD-2804 (“Opioid MDL”) (Nov. 20, 2019) ECF Nos. 2943,
    2944. F.R.C.P. 15(c)(1)(B) provides that amendments “relate back” when the newly asserted claim arises out of the
    “conduct, transaction or occurrence set out or attempted to be set out” in the pleading being amended. See, e.g.,
    Bensel v. Allied Pilots Ass’n, 
    387 F.3d 298
    , 310 (3d Cir. 2004). Moreover, these Amendments are “interlineated”
    such that they are part and parcel of the original Third Amended Complaints.
    37
    See, e.g., Summit TAC, ¶ 168; Cuyahoga TAC, ¶ 156.
    38
    
    Id.
    39
    Opioid MDL (Nov. 19, 2019) ECF No. 2940, p. 3.
    40
    Chubb’s Mot. at 5.
    10
    Chubb’s Motion is based on the pleadings in the Summit and Cuyahoga pleadings, consisting of
    Second Amended Complaints, Third Amended Complaints, and the Amendments by
    Interlineation.41 Chubb’s Motion concerns whether the Summit and Cuyahoga lawsuits allege
    claims for “damages” “because of” “personal injury.”
    On April 15, 2020, the Sixth Circuit issued an opinion overruling the MDL District Court
    Judge’s November 2019 decision,42 which permitted the counties to amend their complaints to
    assert the dispensing claims timely.43 Specifically, the Sixth Circuit stated that [t]he petition for
    a writ of mandamus is granted, and the cases are remanded with instructions to strike each
    County’s November 2019 “Amendment by Interlineation.”44 As a result of the Sixth Circuit’s
    decision, in his April 16 Order, the MDL District Court Judge created a new litigation track to
    resolve: “(1) only public nuisance claims (2) against only the pharmacy defendants (3) in their
    roles as distributors and dispensers.”45
    Given this, the Court will not consider the new allegations made in the Amendments by
    Interlineation. Instead, the Third Amended Complaints remain the operative complaints.46 As
    the negligence counts and the public nuisance counts in the Third Amended Complaints allege
    the same source of Rite Aid’s alleged liability and as between the two, the public nuisance
    counts remain pending, resolving Rite Aid’s Motion and the Chubb’s Motion calls for
    consideration of the Third Amended Complaints’ public nuisance counts.47
    As pled from their inception and currently, the Track One Lawsuits:
    41
    
    Id.
     (citing In re Nat’l Prescription Opiate Litig., No. 1:17-MD-2804 (“Opioid MDL”) (N.D. Ohio Dec. 23, 2019)
    ECF No. 3044 p. 1 FN1, ECF No. 3045 p. 1 n.1.).
    42
    In re: National Prescription Opiate Litig., case no. 20-3075, dkt no. 50–53 (6th Cir. April 15, 2020) (“Mandamus
    Order”).
    43
    Id. at 9.
    44
    Id.
    45
    See Rite Aid’s Submission, Ex. C, April 28, 2020 Pharmacy Defendants’ Position Statement and Objection.
    46
    Rite Aid’s Submission at 3.
    47
    Id. at 3–4.
    11
    take[] aim at the two primary causes of the opioid crisis: (a) a marketing scheme
    [by Marketing Defendants]…; and (b) a supply chain scheme, pursuant to which
    the various entities in the supply chain failed to design and operate systems to
    identify suspicious orders of prescription opioids, maintain effective controls
    against diversion, and halt suspicious orders when they were identified, thereby
    contributing to the oversupply of such drugs and fueling an illegal secondary
    market.48
    The Track One Lawsuits also have consistently pled:
    [o]n the supply side, the crisis was fueled and sustained by . . . manufacturers,
    distributors, and pharmacies (together “Defendants”), who failed to maintain
    effective controls over the distribution of prescription opioids . . . .49
    i. The Cuyahoga Action
    The second and third amended complaints in the Cuyahoga action assert claims against
    Rite Aid seeking to recover specific costs borne by Cuyahoga resulting from alleged conduct by
    Rite Aid entities operating in, or directly impacting Cuyahoga.50 Cuyahoga alleges that as a
    “direct and proximate result” of Rite Aid’s failure to “effectively prevent diversion” and
    “monitor, report, and prevent suspicious orders,” it “suffered and will continue to suffer
    economic damages.”51 Cuyahoga claims that Rite Aid’s actions “fell far short of legal
    requirements” and “contributed significantly to the opioid crisis by enabling, and failing to
    prevent, the diversion of opioids.”52 Cuyahoga alleges that as a “practical and financial matter”
    it was “saddled with an enormous economic burden,” with “several departments [incurring]
    direct and specific response costs that total tens of millions of dollars.”53 The financial strain
    was allegedly evidenced in “annual costs associated with treatment, criminal justice, and lost
    48
    Summit TAC, ¶ 9; Chima Aff., Ex. M (hereinafter, “Summit SAC”), ¶ 9; Cuyahoga TAC, ¶ 9; Chima Aff., Ex. O
    (hereinafter, “Cuyahoga SAC”), ¶ 9.
    49
    Summit TAC, ¶ 14; Summit SAC, ¶ 14; Cuyahoga TAC, ¶ 14; Cuyahoga SAC at ¶ 14.
    50
    See Cuyahoga SAC ¶¶ 715–75; Cuyahoga TAC ¶¶ 729–89.
    51
    See Cuyahoga SAC ¶¶ 621, 1053, 1092; Cuyahoga TAC ¶¶ 635, 1067, 1106.
    52
    Cuyahoga SAC ¶¶ 620–21; Cuyahoga TAC ¶¶ 634–35.
    53
    Cuyahoga SAC ¶ 693; Cuyahoga TAC ¶ 707.
    12
    productivity.”54 These costs include the costs of forming an Opiate Task Force in 2010.55
    Cuyahoga claims that the damages sought are “of a different kind and degree than Ohio citizens
    at large,” “can only be suffered by [Cuyahoga],” and “are not based upon or derivative of the
    rights of others.”56 Cuyahoga states that it “[does] not seek damages for death, physical injury to
    person, emotional distress, or physical damages to property.”57 Cuyahoga alleges that the
    damages sought are for “abatement, recovery of abatement costs, injunctive relief, and to prevent
    injury and annoyance from any nuisance.”58
    ii. The Summit Action
    Summit asserts claims against entities in the opioid distribution “supply chain,” including
    Rite Aid, that allegedly “failed” or “refus[ed] to monitor and restrict the improper distribution of
    [opioid] drugs.”59 Summit alleges in detail the opioid-related bodily injury, sickness, disease,
    and death fueled by the “proliferation of opioid pharmaceuticals [since] the late 1990s.”60
    Summit alleges how taking opioids “produce[s] multiple effects on the human body, the most
    significant of which are analgesia, euphoria, and respiratory depression.”61 Summit claims that
    users develop tolerance and take “progressively higher doses,” which risks “arrest[ing]
    respiration altogether” and causes “more severe” withdrawal symptoms. Withdrawal symptoms
    54
    Cuyahoga SAC ¶ 694; Cuyahoga TAC ¶ 708.
    55
    Cuyahoga SAC ¶ 684; Cuyahoga TAC ¶ 698.
    56
    Cuyahoga SAC ¶¶ 1060–61; Cuyahoga TAC ¶¶ 1074–75.
    57
    Cuyahoga SAC ¶ 1066; Cuyahoga TAC ¶ 1080.
    58
    Cuyahoga SAC ¶ 1023; Cuyahoga TAC ¶ 1037.
    59
    Summit TAC ¶¶ 1, 9, 14; accord Summit SAC ¶¶ 1, 9, 14; Cuyahoga TAC ¶¶ 1, 9, 14; Cuyahoga SAC ¶¶ 1, 9, 14;
    Chima Aff., Ex. P (“Cleveland SAC”) ¶¶ 1, 9, 14.
    60
    Summit TAC ¶7; accord Summit SAC ¶ 7; Cuyahoga TAC ¶7; Cuyahoga SAC ¶ 7; Cleveland SAC ¶ 7.
    61
    Summit TAC ¶124; accord Summit SAC ¶ 130; Cuyahoga TAC ¶ 112; Cuyahoga SAC ¶ 98; Cleveland SAC ¶
    99.
    13
    allegedly include “severe anxiety, nausea, vomiting, headaches, agitation, insomnia, tremors,
    hallucinations, delirium, pain, and other serious symptoms . . . .”62
    Summit contends that the spread of opioids has resulted in “skyrocketing” rates of opioid
    “addiction, overdose and death,” as well as “black markets” for diverted prescription opioids that
    cause heroin and fentanyl abuse.63 These trends allegedly caused extensive “[i]njury and illness
    in Ohio” and across the country, including not only the foregoing overdose deaths and
    withdrawal symptoms, but also, inter alia, “an increase in Hepatitis C…tied to intravenous
    injection of opioids”; potential “suicides believed to be related to opioid withdrawal”; and
    “neonatal abstinence syndrome,” a “painful condition” for “drug-exposed infants.”64
    1. Costs incurred
    Summit alleges that Rite Aid caused this “public health epidemic” and gave rise to the
    “extraordinary costs” for overdose deaths, medical care, and other public health, safety, and
    criminal justice services, for which it seeks redress.65 Summit alleges that the consequences of
    Rite Aid’s actions burdened it with “severe and far-reaching public health, social services, and
    criminal justice consequences” that “are not the normal or typical burdens of government
    programs and services.”66 Summit avers, “necessary and costly responses to the opioid crisis
    include,” inter alia, “handling of emergency responses to overdoses,” “providing addiction
    treatment,” “treating opioid-addicted newborns in neonatal intensive care units,” and “burying
    62
    Summit TAC ¶137; accord Summit SAC ¶ 143; Cuyahoga TAC ¶ 125; Cuyahoga SAC ¶ 111; Cleveland SAC ¶
    112.
    63
    Summit TAC ¶ 138; accord Summit SAC ¶ 144; Cuyahoga TAC ¶ 126; Cuyahoga SAC ¶112; Cleveland SAC ¶
    113.
    64
    Summit TAC ¶ 18; see id. ¶¶ 4–6, 16; accord Summit SAC ¶ 18; Cuyahoga TAC ¶17; Cuyahoga SAC ¶ 17;
    Cleveland SAC ¶ 17.
    65
    Summit TAC ¶¶ 1, 18, 20–21, 28, 30, 34–37; see id. ¶¶ 715–746; accord Summit SAC ¶¶ 1, 18, 20–21; Cuyahoga
    TAC ¶¶ 1, 17; Cuyahoga SAC ¶¶1, 17, 19–20; Cleveland SAC ¶¶ 1, 17, 19–20.
    66
    See Summit SAC ¶¶ 20–21; Summit TAC ¶¶ 20–21.
    14
    the dead.”67 Summit alleges that for the period between 2012 and 2016, it incurred
    approximately $66 million in costs for “special programs over and above [Summit’s] ordinary
    public services.”68
    These costs include “significant expenses for police, emergency, health, prosecution,
    corrections, rehabilitation, and other services.”69 For example, “[f]rom 2012 to 2017 . . . the
    County’s Children Services Board . . . incurred nearly $24 million in costs, and the County’s
    Alcohol, Drug Addiction, and Mental Health Services Board [ ] more than $10 million [in] costs
    related directly to the opioid epidemic.”70 Summit alleges that the harms were “of a different
    kind and degree than Ohio citizens at large,” “can only be suffered by [Summit],” and “are not
    based upon or derivative of the rights of others.”71 Summit claims “National Retail Pharmacies”
    including Rite Aid “were or should have been aware” or “knew or reasonably should have
    known” of multiple breaches of duties of care with respect to opioid distribution, including
    alleged “fail[ure] to: (a) control the supply chain; (b) prevent diversion [of drugs for illicit uses];
    (c) report suspicious orders; and (d) halt shipments of opioids in quantities they knew or should
    have known could not be justified and were indicative of serious problems of overuse of opioids.
    Plaintiffs allege such “actions and omission[s]…have contributed significantly to the opioid
    crisis[.]” 72
    Like Cuyahoga, Summit alleges that it “[does] not seek damages for death, physical
    injury to person, emotional distress, or physical damages to property.”73 Summit similarly seeks
    67
    Summit TAC ¶ 20; accord Summit SAC ¶ 20; Cuyahoga TAC ¶ 19; Cuyahoga SAC ¶ 19; Cleveland SAC ¶ 19.
    68
    See Summit SAC ¶¶ 744, 993; Summit TAC ¶¶ 745, 994.
    69
    Summit SAC ¶¶ 1024, 1062; Summit TAC ¶¶ 1025, 1063.
    70
    Summit SAC ¶ 734; Summit TAC ¶ 735.
    71
    Summit SAC ¶¶ 1031–32; Summit TAC ¶¶ 1032–33.
    72
    Summit TAC ¶¶ 17, 518, 656–58; accord Summit SAC ¶¶ 517, 656–58; Cuyahoga TAC ¶¶ 502, 632–34;
    Cuyahoga SAC ¶¶ 488, 581–88; Cleveland SAC ¶¶ 487, 619–21.
    73
    Summit SAC ¶ 1037; Summit TAC ¶ 1038.
    15
    “abatement, recovery of abatement costs, injunctive relief, and to prevent injury and annoyance
    from any nuisance.”74
    2. Rite Aid as a “Wholesale Distributor”
    As a “wholesale distributor,” Rite Aid allegedly “reaped enormous financial rewards by
    refusing to monitor and restrict the improper distribution of drugs.”75 Rite Aid’s actions
    purportedly “fell far short of legal requirements” and “contributed significantly to the opioid
    crisis.”76 Summit specifically identified Rite Aid’s alleged failure to: “control the supply chain,”
    “prevent diversion,” “report suspicious orders,” and “halt shipments of opioids in quantities [it]
    knew or should have known could not be justified and were indicative of serious problems of
    overuse of opioids.”77 Summit asserts that the “distribution” of opioids “created the foreseeable
    opioid crisis and opioid public nuisance for which [it] seeks relief.”78
    3. Rite Aid’s Alleged Pre-2015 Knowledge
    Rite Aid allegedly “distribut[ed] far greater quantities of prescription opioids than [it]
    [knew] could be necessary for legitimate medical uses.”79 Summit contends that between 2010
    and 2016, the average number of opioids “distributed” annually into Summit exceeded 67 per
    person, and based on this amount, Rite Aid was, or reasonably should have been “fully aware
    that the quantity of opioids being distributed . . . was untenable, and in many areas patently
    absurd.”80
    Summit also asserts that “from the catbird seat of [its] retail pharmacy operations,” Rite
    Aid “knew or reasonably should have known about the disproportionate flow of opioids into
    74
    Summit SAC ¶ 995; Summit TAC ¶ 996.
    75
    Summit SAC ¶ 1; Summit TAC ¶ 1.
    76
    Summit SAC ¶ 659; Summit TAC ¶ 658.
    77
    Summit SAC ¶ 518; Summit TAC ¶ 518.
    78
    Summit SAC ¶ 36; Summit TAC ¶ 58.
    79
    Summit SAC ¶ 14; Summit TAC ¶ 14.
    80
    Summit SAC ¶¶ 626, 689; Summit TAC ¶¶ 627, 690.
    16
    [Summit] and the operation of ‘pill mills’ that generated opioid prescriptions that, by their
    quantity or nature, were red flags for if not direct evidence of illicit supply and diversion.”81
    Summit specifically contended that “information was provided by news reports,” including a
    2011 article in the Columbus Dispatch titled 16 Charged in “Pill Mill” Pipeline.82 Summit
    claims that “[i]n 2009, as a result of a multi-jurisdictional investigation by the DOJ, [Rite Aid]
    and nine of its subsidiaries in eight states were fined $5 million in civil penalties for its violations
    of the [Controlled Substances Act].”83 Summit states that the investigation revealed that “from
    2004 onwards, [Rite Aid] pharmacies across the country had a pattern of non-compliance with
    the requirements of the [Controlled Substances Act] and federal regulations that [led] to the
    diversion of prescription opioids in and around the communities of the [Rite Aid] pharmacies
    investigated.”84
    C. CHUBB’S DENIAL OF ITS COVERAGE AND DEFENSE OBLIGATIONS
    Beginning with its July 23, 2018 letter, Chubb reserved its rights without making a
    coverage determination regarding the MDL Opioid Lawsuits and other Opioid Lawsuits.85 In
    that letter, Chubb admitted that the “governmental plaintiffs claim they directly and foreseeably
    sustained economic damages related to provision of medical care for people of all ages,
    including infants born addicted to opioids, drug treatment, counseling and rehabilitation services,
    social services, childcare for children whose guardians are addicted, law enforcement, public
    safety, and morgues.”86 Chubb stated it had no “current” obligation to defend any Opioid
    Lawsuit but did not yet deny coverage.87
    81
    Summit SAC ¶ 656; Summit TAC ¶ 657.
    82
    Summit SAC ¶ 663 n.177; Summit TAC ¶ 664 n.178.
    83
    Summit SAC ¶ 651; Summit TAC ¶ 652.
    84
    Summit SAC ¶ 652; Summit TAC ¶ 653.
    85
    Chima Aff., Ex. E.
    86
    Id. at 2.
    87
    Id. at 1; accord Chima Aff., Ex. F.
    17
    On October 9, 2018, Rite Aid advised Chubb that the applicable per occurrence Retained
    Limit had been satisfied by over $3,000,000 in defense cost payments.”88 Through a December
    21, 2018 letter, notwithstanding its prior acknowledgements that the Opioid Lawsuits seek
    damages from Rite Aid for “medical care,” “medical services,” and operating “morgues,” Chubb
    denied that it had an obligation to defend the Opioid Lawsuits brought by governmental entities
    and third-party payors of medical services.89 Chubb now contends that those claimants did not
    suffer the underlying injuries themselves but only alleged “economic losses” for paying others’
    care.90
    Following this letter, Chubb’s subsequent correspondence adopted the positions taken in
    their previous letters, including the July 23, 2018 letter describing the Opioid Lawsuits and the
    December 21, 2018 coverage denial letter.91
    III. PARTIES’ CONTENTIONS
    A. RITE AID’S MOTION
    i. Rite Aid’s Contentions
    On April 16, 2019, Rite Aid filed its complaint. On July 19, 2019, with the other parties’
    consent, Rite Aid filed its amended and supplemental complaint. In the amended and
    supplemental complaint, Rite Aid asserts claims against ACE92 for breach of contract (Count I),
    declaratory judgment on the duty to pay or reimburse defense costs (Count II), and for statutory
    remedies under 42 Pa. Cons. Stat. Ann. § 8371 for refusing to defend without good cause (Count
    III). Rite Aid brings this motion regarding Count II. Rite Aid’s Motion was filed before the
    88
    Chima Aff., Ex. G at 3.
    89
    Chima Aff., Ex. E.
    90
    Id., Ex. H at 2–3.
    91
    Id., Exs. I–K.
    92
    Although Chubb is handling the claims on behalf of numerous insurers, Rite Aid is moving for judgment against
    ACE on the 2015 Policy.
    18
    Amendments by Interlineation were made to the Third Amended Complaint, the negligence
    counts were dropped, and the Sixth Circuit’s decision to strike the Amendments by Interlineation
    concerning dispensing claims.
    In Rite Aid’s Motion, Rite Aid states that it selected the 2015 Policy to cover its defense
    out of all the potentially applicable primary policies. Rite Aid argues that the Track One
    Lawsuits allege potentially covered claims because the injuries occurred during the Policy
    period, making Rite Aid’s Defense Costs “Supplementary Payments.” Rite Aid contends that
    ACE’s denial of coverage under the Policy was without “good cause” because the Track One
    Lawsuits allege a claim for potentially covered damages “because of” “bodily injury.” As such,
    ACE’s defense coverage is implicated, and Rite Aid’s payment of defense costs qualifies as
    “Supplementary Payments” under the Policy. Rite Aid claims that it satisfied the Policy’s per
    occurrence retention for the Track One Lawsuits and all Opioid Lawsuits with these
    Supplementary Payments. Rite Aid explains the retention has been satisfied because: (i) the
    Track One Lawsuits and all Opioid Lawsuits that allege Rite Aid is liable as an opioid distributor
    arise out of a single occurrence; and (ii) Rite Aid’s payment of defense costs for the MDL
    Lawsuits has exceeded the Policy’s Retained Limit. Rite Aid argues that the Track One
    Lawsuits are one occurrence because the allegations concern one proximate, uninterrupted and
    continuing cause.
    Accordingly, Rite Aid seeks declarations establishing that: (i) the Track One Lawsuits
    (and all Opioid Lawsuits alleging similar claims) are “potentially covered” by the Policy as
    required for a duty to defend; (ii) such suits are caused by one “occurrence”—the allegedly
    tortious distribution of opioids; (iii) Rite Aid’s defense cost payments for such suits has satisfied
    the “per occurrence” Retained Limit; and thus (iv) ACE has a present obligation to pay or
    19
    reimburse defense costs (“Supplementary Payments”) for the Track One Lawsuits and all Opioid
    Lawsuits alleging similar claims, which lasts “until such time [if ever] when it is determined that
    [each] claim [in the suits] is confined to a recovery that the policy does not cover,” or until ACE
    pays the Policy’s limits in judgments or settlements.
    ii. ACE’s Contentions
    ACE93 argues that it has no duty to defend because of issues of material fact with respect
    to whether Rite Aid properly exhausted retention. ACE claims these issues of material fact
    include the number of occurrences, the reliability of Chima’s affidavit, and the proper exhaustion
    of the retention. ACE further asserts that is has no duty to defend because prior to January 1,
    2015, any alleged personal injury had already manifested, Rite Aid had knowledge of personal
    injury, and the opioid epidemic was a known loss or loss-in-progress. ACE contends that Rite
    Aid lacks the right to pick and choose a policy to provide coverage. ACE argues that this Court
    cannot rule on Rite Aid Motion with respect to other purportedly “similar” Opioid Lawsuits
    without identifying each one and explaining how these other Opioid Lawsuits are similar to the
    allegations and claims in the Counties’ actions.
    iii. Great American Defendants’ Contentions
    In their response filed before the Amendments by Interlineation were stricken, the Great
    American Defendants argue that the Track One Lawsuits’ pleadings as amended by interlineation
    in November 2019 do not arise out of one occurrence nor seek “damages because of personal
    injury.” The Great American Defendants also argue that no “duty to indemnify” future
    settlements or judgments in the Opioid Lawsuits is at issue in the two pending motions.
    iv. Certain Excess Insurer Defendants’ Contentions
    93
    ACE issued the 2015 Policy. Chubb, however, is handling Rite Aid’s claims relating to the MDL Opiate Lawsuits
    on numerous insurance policies.
    20
    In their response, Certain Excess Insurer Defendants request that any rulings on Rite
    Aid’s Motion be narrowly and explicitly tailored to address only those matters at issue in that
    Motion. They contend that the Court need not make any determinations on issues that (i) relate to
    whether or not Rite Aid is entitled to a defense from any other excess insurer, or indemnity for
    any future settlement or judgment, in connection with any other MDL Opioid Lawsuit pending
    against Rite Aid or (ii) could implicate policies other than the single ACE policy at issue, such as
    the number of Occurrences, whether the future abatement costs sought by plaintiffs in connection
    with their nuisance claims are covered, or when the harm at issue in plaintiffs narrowed claims
    was first known to Rite Aid. Further, Rite Aid’s Motion for partial summary judgment should be
    denied, according to Certain Excess Insurer Defendants, because there are issues of fact that can
    only be resolved after discovery.
    B. CHUBB’S MOTION
    i. Chubb’s Contentions
    Chubb’s Motion was filed when the operative complaint was the Third Amended
    Complaint as amended by the Amendments by Interlineation. For purposes of Chubb’s Motion,
    all of the Chubb Policies at issue contain identical or materially similar terms.
    Chubb’s Motion seeks a declaration that Chubb has no obligation to provide coverage for
    the Track One Lawsuits on the grounds that those lawsuits do not seek “damages” “because of”
    or “for bodily injury” or “property damage.” Chubb asserts that summary judgment is proper
    because the issue is one that involves a pure question of law, because there is no dispute that
    Cuyahoga and Summit are not seeking damages because of or for bodily injury, nor is there a
    dispute about the pertinent terms of the Chubb Policies. Chubb additionally argues that
    21
    Pennsylvania law governs and fully supports Chubb’s position that there is no coverage for the
    Summit and Cuyahoga lawsuits.
    ii. Rite Aid’s Contentions
    Rite Aid contends that the Chubb Policies unambiguously cover liability claimed by
    governmental entities resulting from bodily injury to other persons. Rite Aid claims that
    Pennsylvania and Delaware law supports finding that the Track One Lawsuits seek “damages
    because of” bodily injury.
    IV. STANDARD OF REVIEW
    Summary judgment is appropriate where the record demonstrates that “there is no
    genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a
    matter of law.”94 On a motion for summary judgment, a movant must establish that the
    “undisputed facts support [its] claims or defenses,” after which the burden “shifts to the non-
    moving party to demonstrate that there are material issues of fact to be resolved” at trial.95
    Where no such material facts exist, the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.96
    V. DISCUSSION
    The principles governing the interpretation of an insurance contract are well-settled. In
    attempting to resolve a dispute over the proper interpretation of an insurance policy, “a court
    should first seek to determine the parties’ intent from the language of the insurance contract
    itself.”97 In reviewing the terms of an insurance policy, the Court considers “the reasonable
    94
    Super. Ct. Civ. R. 56(c); Burkhart v. Davies, 
    602 A.2d 56
    , 58–59 (Del. 1991).
    95
    Petroleum v. Magellan Terminals Holdings, L.P., 
    2015 WL 3885947
    , at *3 (Del. Super. June 23, 2015).
    96
    
    Id.
    97
    Alstrin v. St. Paul Mercury Ins. Co., 
    179 F. Supp. 2d 376
    , 388 (D. Del. 2002); see also Emmons v. Hartford
    Underwriters Ins. Co., 
    697 A.2d 742
    , 745 (Del. 1997) (“The scope of an insurance policy's coverage . . . is
    prescribed by the language of the policy.”) (citing Rhone–Poulenc Basic Chems. Co. v. American Motorists Ins. Co.,
    
    616 A.2d 1192
    , 1195–96 (Del. 1992)); Playtex FP, Inc. v. Columbia Cas. Co., 
    622 A.2d 1074
    , 1076–77 (Del. Super.
    1992) (citing E.I. du Pont de Nemours v. Shell Oil Co., 
    498 A.2d 1108
    , 1113 (Del. 1985)); Kaiser Alum. Corp. v.
    Matheson, 
    681 A.2d 392
    , 395 (Del. 1996).
    22
    expectations of the insured at the time of entering into the contract to see if the policy terms are
    ambiguous or conflicting, contain a hidden trap or pitfall, or if the fine print takes away that
    which has been provided by the large print.”98 Ambiguity exists when the disputed term “is
    fairly or reasonably susceptible to more than one meaning.”99 Absent any ambiguity, contract
    terms should be accorded their plain, ordinary meaning.100
    If an insurance policy contains an ambiguous term, then the policy is to be construed in
    favor of the insured to further the contract’s purpose and against the insurer, as the insurer drafts
    the policy and controls coverage.101 An “insurer has an obligation to defend its insured, even if
    the action against the insured is groundless, whenever the complaint . . . may potentially come
    within the coverage of the policy.”102 As long as the complaint “‘might or might not’ fall within
    . . . coverage, the [insurer] is obliged to defend.”103 Although the Court looks to the allegations
    of the underlying Counterclaim, the Court is not “limited to the plaintiff’s unilateral
    98
    See E.I. du Pont de Nemours & Co. v. Admiral Ins. Co., 
    1996 WL 111205
    , at *2 (Del. Super. Jan. 30, 1996); see
    also Steigler v. Ins. Co. of N. Am., 
    384 A.2d 398
    , 401 (Del. 1978) (“[A]n insurance contract should be read to accord
    with the reasonable expectations of the purchaser so far as the language will permit.”) (quoting State Farm Mutual
    Auto. Ins. Co. v. Johnson, 
    320 A.2d 345
     (Del. 1974)).
    99
    
    Id.
    100
    Alta Berkeley VIC. V. v. Omneon, Inc., 
    41 A.3d 381
    , 385 (Del. 2012); see also Goggin v. Nat'l Union Fire Ins.
    Co. of Pittsburgh, 
    2018 WL 6266195
    , at *4 (Del. Super. Nov. 30, 2018); IDT Corp. v. U.S. Specialty Ins. Co., 
    2019 WL 413692
    , at *7 (Del. Super. Jan. 31, 2019).
    101
    See Alstrin, 
    179 F. Supp. 2d at 390
     (“Generally speaking, however, Delaware . . . courts continue to strictly
    construe ambiguities within insurance contracts against the insurer and in favor of the insured in situations where the
    insurer drafted the language that is being interpreted regardless of whether the insured is a large sophisticated
    company.”); Rhone–Poulenc Basic Chems. Co., 
    1992 WL 22690
    , at *8 (“Application of the [contra proferentem]
    doctrine turns not on the size or sophistication of the insured, but rather on the fact that the policy language at issue
    is drafted by the insurer and is not negotiated.”); Pennsylvania Nat. Mut. Cas. Ins. Co. v. St. John, 
    630 Pa. 1
    , 23, 
    106 A.3d 1
    , 14 (2014).
    102
    Gedeon v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co., 
    188 A.2d 320
    , 321–22 (Pa. 1963).
    103
    Jerry’s Sport Center, 2 A.3d at 541 (citation omitted); see also Stidham v. Millvale Sportsmen’s Club, 
    618 A.2d 945
    , 953–54 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1993) (“If coverage depends upon the existence or nonexistence of undetermined facts
    outside the complaint, until the claim is narrowed to one patently outside the policy coverage, the insurer has a duty
    to defend….”) (citations omitted); DecisionOne Corporation v. ITT Hartford Ins. Group, 
    942 F. Supp. 1038
    , 1042
    & 1044 (E.D. Pa. 1996) (“If a single claim in a multi-claim lawsuit has potential for coverage, the insurer must
    defend all claims until it is obvious that no possibility of recovery exists as to claims within the policy provisions.”).
    23
    characterization of the nature of [its] claims.”104 The Court considers “all reasonable inferences
    that may be drawn from the alleged facts.”105 The Court then determines “whether the
    allegations of the complaint, when read as a whole, assert ‘a risk within the coverage of the
    policy.’”106
    Under the Policy, Chubb has a “duty to defend” suits “seeking” damages to which the
    Policy applies by paying “expenses” “incur[red]” in the defense of such suits.107 Chubb’s duty to
    defend and its other coverage obligations are subject to Rite Aid first paying $3,000,000 in
    “Supplementary Payments” caused by one occurrence.108 Both Rite Aid’s and Chubb’s Motions
    ask the Court to resolve whether Rite Aid’s payment of over $3,000,000 in defense costs for the
    MDL Lawsuits since May 2018 constitute “Supplementary Payments” that satisfied the Policy’s
    Retained Limit, triggering ACE’s duty to defend and pay “Supplementary Payments.”
    To arrive at its decision, the Court must determine whether the complaints in the Track
    One Lawsuits allege claims that (i) seek damages potentially within the scope of the Policy’s
    coverage, and (ii) arise out of a single occurrence.
    A. PENNSYLVANIA OR DELAWARE LAW GOVERNS THE POLICIES.
    In contract interpretation disputes, absent a choice of law provision, Delaware courts
    apply the law of the state that “has the most significant interest in applying its law to the
    104
    Verizon Commc'ns Inc. v. Illinois Nat'l Ins. Co., 
    2017 WL 1149118
    , at *6 (Del. Super. Ct. Mar. 2, 2017), rev'd
    and remanded sub nom. In re Verizon Ins. Coverage Appeals, 
    222 A.3d 566
     (Del. 2019) (finding that the same law
    applies in Delaware and New York regarding the duty to defend and to advance defense expenses); IDT Corp, 
    2019 WL 413692
    , at *10.
    105
    See Blue Hen Mech., Inc. v. Atl. States Ins. Co., 
    2011 WL 1598575
    , at *2 (Del. Super. Apr. 21, 2011) (“The
    Court may review the complaint as a whole, considering all reasonable inferences that may be drawn from the
    alleged facts.”), aff'd, 
    29 A.3d 245
     (Del. 2011).
    106
    Verizon Commc'ns, 
    2017 WL 1149118
    , at *7 (citing Cont'l Cas. Co. v. Alexis I. DuPont Sch. Dist., 
    317 A.2d 101
    ,
    103 (Del. 1974).
    107
    Chima Aff., Ex. A at RA0002519, RA0002525.
    108
    Chima Aff., Ex. A at RA0002572; see also Chima Aff., Ex. B at RA0002791 (ACE P&C 2015 umbrella policy
    stating “Defense costs are included in the limit” of underlying Self-Insured Retention).
    24
    interpretation of the insurance scheme and its terms as a whole in a consistent and durable
    manner that the parties can rely on.”109 Delaware and Pennsylvania each have significant
    interests in this contract interpretation dispute. Delaware is Rite Aid Corporation’s state of
    incorporation and this forum’s location, while Pennsylvania is the place of the contracting, the
    place of contract performance, Rite Aid’s and ACE’s principal place of business, and ACE’s
    state of incorporation.110
    Although both states have significant interests, the Court does not need (at this stage of
    the litigation) make a determination as to which state’s law applies to the Policy. The Court
    notes that Pennsylvania and Delaware law do not conflict or are materially different with respect
    to the Motions’ relevant issues.111 As such, the Court may consider both states’ shared legal
    principles to resolve the Motions.
    B. THE PLAINTIFFS IN THE TRACK ONE LAWSUITS SEEK DAMAGES “BECAUSE OF BODILY
    INJURY.”
    The Policy covers “sums” that Rite Aid “becomes legally obligated to pay as damages
    because of ‘personal injury’….”112 “Personal injury” includes “bodily injury,” which in turn
    means “means bodily injury, sickness or disease sustained by a person, including death resulting
    109
    See Certain Underwriters at Lloyd’s London v. Chemtura Corp., 
    160 A.3d 457
    , 460 (Del. 2017) (applying
    Restatement (Second) of Conflict of Laws Section 188 factors to determine the state with most significant interest in
    insurance contract dispute). The Section 188 factors are: (a) the place of contracting, (b) the place of negotiation of
    the contract, (c) the place of performance, (d) the location of the subject matter of the contract, and (e) the domicile,
    residence, nationality, place of incorporation and place of business of the parties. See 
    id. at 465
    .
    110
    See Chima Aff., Ex. A at RA0002512 (“ACE American Insurance Company[,] 436 Walnut Street Philadelphia,
    PA 19106-3703 . . . NAMED INSURED[,] Rite Aid Corporation 30 Hunter Lane Camp Hill PA 17011); 
    id.
     at
    RA0002518 (“By signing and delivering the policy to you, we state that it is a valid contract . . . ACE AMERICAN
    INSURANCE COMPANY. . . 436 Walnut Street, P.O. Box 1000, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19106-3703); Ex. E
    (July 23, 2018 letter from Chubb LTE Claims, Scranton, Pennsylvania); Ex. G (October 9, 2018 letter from Rite Aid
    Corporation, Camp Hill, Pennsylvania); Ex. V ¶¶ 5–6, 9–10, 12, 50, 52–53.
    111
    See Valley Forge Ins. Co. v. Nat’l Union Fire Ins. Co., 
    2012 WL 1432524
    , at *6–9 (Del. Super. Mar. 16, 2012)
    (applying Delaware law to determine number of occurrences because Delaware applies “substantially the same
    ‘cause’ test” as Pennsylvania and Massachusetts); Smith, 201 A.3d at 560–61 (reciting Delaware’s “potential” for
    coverage standard for duty to defend); Jerry’s Sport Ctr., 2 A.3d at 541–543 (same under Pennsylvania law).
    112
    Chima Aff., Ex. A at RA0002519.
    25
    from any of these at any time.”113 The parties do not dispute that physical harm from opioid
    addiction constitutes “bodily injury” under the Policy. The dispute centers on whether plaintiffs
    in the Track One Lawsuits were the ones that suffered the injury. Chubb argues that because
    plaintiffs in the underlying Track One Lawsuits are not the individuals who suffered from opioid
    addiction, plaintiffs are not seeking damages “because of bodily injury,” but rather are “instead
    are “seek[ing] to recover solely economic losses.”114
    As alleged, Summit and Cuyahoga claim these damages as their own “unique harms” and
    disavow asserting claims “derivative of others.”115 Summit and Cuyahoga “seek all legal and
    equitable relief as allowed by law” for their significant health, emergency, and other expenses
    “as a direct and proximate result” of such persons’ opioid-related injuries or deaths.116 Although
    Summit and Cuyahoga in the Track One Lawsuits distinguish their own “economic damages”
    from harms and damages of injured Ohioans, they do not disavow that the harms and injuries
    caused the economic damages.117
    Indeed, Summit and Cuyahoga only make the distinction that their claims purportedly are
    not “product liability claim[s]” on behalf of citizens that sustained opioid-related injuries or
    death. As represented by the parties, this is likely due to the Ohio Product Liability Act
    (“OPLA”) which abrogates “product liability claims.”118 In the Track One Lawsuits, the MDL
    District Court Judge ruled that the plaintiffs’ public nuisance claims are not “product liability”
    claims, relying on a distinction between (i) claims seeking compensatory damages for “harm,”
    113
    Id. at RA0002532, RA0002535.
    114
    Chima Aff., Ex. H at 2–3.
    115
    Konkel Decl., Ex. D ¶¶ 138–139, 144; Ex. E ¶¶ 153–154, 159.
    116
    Konkel Decl., Ex. D ¶¶ 113, 131, 145; Ex. E ¶¶ 127, 146, 160.
    117
    See In re: Nat’l Prescription Opiate Litig., 
    2018 WL 6628898
    , at *12 (N.D. Ohio Dec. 19, 2018) (“MDL
    Order”).
    118
    Id.; Konkel Decl., Ex. D ¶¶ 138–139, 144; Ex. E. ¶¶ 153–154, 159.
    26
    which OPLA abrogates, and (ii) claims seeking solely “economic loss,” which OPLA does not
    abrogate.119
    OPLA provides that “harm” includes “death [and] physical injury to person,” and
    “[e]conomic loss is not ‘harm.’”120 OPLA, however, does not abrogate all claims “as a result of”
    such “death” or “physical injury.” By definition, such “economic loss” encompasses:
    All expenditures for medical care or treatment, rehabilitation services, or other care,
    treatment, services, products, or accommodations incurred as a result of an injury,
    death, or loss to person that is a subject of a tort action . . . [and] [a]ny other
    expenditures incurred as a result of an injury, death, or loss to person or property
    that is a subject of a tort action . . . .121
    Although the MDL District Court Judge ruled that the Track One Lawsuits plaintiffs’ public
    nuisance claims do not seek damages for what OPLA defines as “harm,” the MDL District Court
    Judge did hold that the defendants remained at least liable for “economic loss” which, by
    definition, includes “direct, incidental, or consequential pecuniary loss” apart from the initial
    “harm” itself.122 OPLA thus only abrogates claims seeking compensatory damages directly for
    one’s “death” or “physical injury.”
    The parties have identified a number of insurance coverage cases arising out of similar
    issues presented in the Motions. The Court first addresses in Medmarc Casualty Insurance Co.
    v. Avent America Inc.123 In Medmarc, the Seventh Circuit considered the plaintiff insurance
    company’s duty to defend under Illinois law in relation to a suit against the defendant, a
    manufacturer of baby bottles and other accessories that had been sued regarding possible toxic
    contamination of those products.124 The insurance policy at issue in Medmarc provided that the
    119
    MDL Order at *14.
    120
    
    Ohio Rev. Code Ann. § 2307.71
    (A)(7).
    121
    
    Ohio Rev. Code Ann. § 2307.011
    (C); see In re: Nat’l Prescription Opiate Litig., 
    2019 WL 4194272
    , at *3 n.5
    (N.D. Ohio Sept. 4, 2019) (quoting same).
    122
    
    Ohio Rev. Code Ann. § 2307.71
    (A)(2).
    123
    
    612 F.3d 607
     (7th Cir. 2010).
    124
    
    Id.
    27
    insurer would cover damages “because of bodily injury.”125 There was no claim of bodily injury
    as a result of the insured’s conduct in the underlying lawsuit.126 Rather, the manufacturer
    contended that allegations in the underlying lawsuits that plaintiffs would not use the products
    out of fear of bodily injury was sufficient to allege a claim for damages “because of bodily
    injury,” pursuant to the insurance policies.127 As such, the court found that the plaintiffs
    sustained purely economic damages unrelated to bodily injury.128
    This Court recognizes a critical distinction between the plaintiffs of the underlying
    lawsuit in Medmarc and the governmental entities in the Track One Lawsuits. The Medmarc
    plaintiffs alleged they bought “dangerous” but “unusable products” that never actually injured
    their children.129 In the Track One Lawsuits, however, plaintiffs allege their citizens used
    opioids, their citizens were extensively injured by such usage and, therefore, plaintiffs suffered
    their own damages for handling emergency responses to overdoses, providing addiction
    treatment, holding opioid related investigations, arrests and alike.130
    The application of Medmarc was further expanded in Cincinnati Ins. Co. v. Richie
    Enterprises LLC.131 In Richie, the district court considered whether an opioid distributor was
    entitled to coverage under a policy that covered damages “because of bodily injury.”132 The
    insured in Richie argued that West Virginia, the governmental plaintiff, “should be deemed an
    organization seeking damages ‘because of bodily injury’ because of the opioid epidemic.”133
    125
    
    Id. at 608
    .
    126
    
    Id.
    127
    
    Id.
    128
    
    Id.
    129
    
    Id.
    130
    Summit TAC ¶¶ 2–24; Cuyahoga TAC ¶¶ 2–23; Cuyahoga SAC ¶¶ 2–23; Ex. P ¶ 2–23.
    131
    
    2014 WL 3513211
    , *3–5 (W.D. Ky. 2014).
    132
    
    Id.
     at *5–6.
    133
    Id. at *6.
    28
    The Richie court disagreed and held that West Virginia was seeking damages solely for
    economic loss.134
    The Richie court explained there was an important distinction between an organization
    seeking damages “because of” a citizen’s bodily injury versus damages due to a defendant’s
    “alleged distribution of drugs in excess of legitimate medical need.”135 The Richie court
    reasoned that West Virginia did not need to prove “bodily injury” to establish that the
    distributors violated the statutes, caused a public nuisance, or were negligent in their distribution
    of controlled substances. The Richie court held that West Virginia “is not seeking damages
    ‘because of’ the citizens’ bodily injury; rather, it is seeking damages because it has been required
    to incur costs due to drug distribution companies’ alleged distribution of drugs in excess of
    legitimate medical need.”136 Importantly, West Virginia had dropped a medical monitoring
    claim when it amended its complaint.137 The Richie court found that, in the absence of the
    medical monitoring claim, there was no duty to defend because the insured was not potentially
    responsible for a covered claim.138
    Travelers Property Casualty Co. v. Anda also analyzes the insurance policy of a different
    pharmaceutical drug company sued in the same underlying complaint in Richie.139 Relying upon
    the Richie court’s analysis in part, the Anda court found no coverage for the defense costs
    incurred in the opioid lawsuits.140 The Anda court explained that the underlying plaintiffs did not
    “assert claims on behalf of individual citizens for the physical harm sustained personally by
    those citizens” and that “[a]ny reference to the drug abuse and physical harm to West Virginia
    134
    Id. at *5.
    135
    Id. at *6.
    136
    Id.
    137
    Id. at *2, *5.
    138
    Id. at *5–6.
    139
    90 F. Supp.3d 1308, 1314–1315 (S.D. Fla. 2015), aff’d, 
    658 Fed. Appx. 955
     (11th Cir. 2016).
    140
    
    Id.
    29
    citizens merely provides context explaining the economic loss to the state.”141 Further, on
    appeal, the Eleventh Circuit “decline[d] to reach” the “damages because of bodily injury” issue
    and held that “the better conclusion” is that a “Products Exclusion” barred coverage.142
    Unlike in Richie and Anda, Delaware and Pennsylvania courts recognize that the duty to
    defend test extends past the mere labels of a claim, inquiring into whether the factual allegations
    in the underlying complaint potentially support a covered claim.143 These courts generally
    acknowledge that the duty to defend arises whenever the underlying complaint alleges facts that
    fall within the scope of coverage and construe this duty broadly in favor of the policyholder.144
    It is undisputed that the Track One Lawsuits allege in fact that there was physical harm from
    opioid addiction and that such harm constitutes bodily injury under the Policy.145
    Although the Eleventh Circuit in Anda did not directly address the scope of the phrase
    “damages because of bodily injury,” several courts since have interpreted the phrase broadly as it
    relates to insurance policies and have declined to apply the reasoning in Richie. For instance, the
    Seventh Circuit opted for a broader interpretation of the phrase in Cincinnati Ins. Co. v. H.D.
    Smith, L.L.C.146 In H.D. Smith, the plaintiff sought coverage for defense costs incurred in the
    underlying action brought against it by West Virginia for the cost of care for its drug-addicted
    citizens.147 The policy defined “damages because of bodily injury” as including “damages
    claimed by any person or organization for care, loss of services or death resulting at any time
    141
    
    Id.
    142
    See 658 Fed. App’x 955, 958 (11th Cir. 2016).
    143
    Verizon Commc'ns, 
    2017 WL 1149118
    , at *6; IDT, 
    2019 WL 413692
    , at *10; D'Auria v. Zurich Ins. Co., 
    352 Pa. Super. 231
    , 234, 
    507 A.2d 857
    , 859 (1986).
    144
    Verizon Commc'ns, 
    2017 WL 1149118
    , at *6; AR Capital, LLC v. Xl Specialty Ins. Co., 
    2018 WL 6601184
    , at *8
    (Del. Super. Dec. 12, 2018) ; Prudential Prop. & Cas. Ins. Co. v. Sartno, 217, 
    903 A.2d 1170
    , 1177 (2006); Kurach
    v. Truck Ins. Exch., 
    2020 WL 4760092
    , at *8 (Pa. Aug. 18, 2020); Gen. Acc. Ins. Co. of Am. v. Allen, 
    692 A.2d 1089
    , 1095 (1997).
    145
    Summit TAC ¶¶ 2–24; Cuyahoga TAC ¶¶ 2–23; Cuyahoga SAC ¶¶ 2–23; Ex. P ¶ 2–23.
    146
    
    829 F.3d 771
    , 773 (7th Cir. 2016).
    147
    
    Id.
    30
    from the bodily injury.”148 This definition is substantially the same as the definition provided in
    Chubb’s Policy.149
    Chubb’s interpretation of the Policy is similar to the insurer’s interpretation of its
    insurance policy in H.D. Smith. In that underlying complaint, West Virginia alleged that it
    “incurred ‘excessive costs related to diagnosis, treatment and cure of addiction,’ and has
    ‘provide[d] necessary medical care, facilities, and services for treatment of citizens’ who cannot
    afford their own care.”150 The insurer advanced an argument that West Virginia was seeking its
    own damages, not damages on behalf of its citizens, in its suit against a pharmaceutical company
    for money spent addressing the opioid epidemic.151 The H.D. Smith court responded “[b]ut so
    what?” to the insurer’s argument.152 Based on the same policy language as in the 2015 Policy,
    the insurer conceded that its policy would cover a mother’s cost of “care” for her son’s opioid-
    related injuries, though those are “her own” damages. As the H.D. Smith court observed, under
    the policy language, “the result is no different merely because the plaintiff is a state, instead of a
    mother.”153
    The H.D. Smith court also noted that West Virginia sought “reimbursement for such
    ‘damages and losses sustained as a proximate result’ of [the insured’s] negligence.”154 In other
    words, under the plain meaning of the policy, coverage depends on the causal connection
    between those damages and “bodily injury” or “property damage.”155 Accordingly, the H.D.
    Smith court held that “because of bodily injury” included claims brought by West Virginia to
    148
    
    Id.
    149
    See Chima Aff., Ex. A.
    150
    H.D. Smith, 829 F.3d at 775.
    151
    Id. at 774.
    152
    Id.
    153
    Id.
    154
    Id. at 775.
    155
    See id.
    31
    recover damages sustained due to the opioid epidemic, and so that insurer had a duty to defend
    against the underlying suit.156 Although the H.D. Smith court applied Illinois law, this reasoning
    comports with the principles of Delaware and Pennsylvania law.
    The Ohio First District Court of Appeals’ recent decision in Acuity v. Masters
    Pharmaceutical Inc. provides additional guidance supporting this Court’s application of H.D.
    Smith.157 Initially, the trial court determined as a matter of law that the counties did not seek
    “damages because of bodily injury” from the pharmaceutical wholesale distributor.158 Rather,
    the trial court found that the governmental entities lacked standing and could not “usurp citizens’
    right to recover their “damages because of bodily injury.”159 On appeal, the Acuity court
    reversed, declining to follow the reasoning in Richie due to its reliance on Medmarc and found
    the reasoning in H.D. Smith persuasive.160 The Acuity court explained “that there is arguably a
    causal connection between [the insured pharmaceutical wholesale distributor’s] alleged conduct
    and the bodily injury suffered by individuals who became addicted to opioids, overdosed, or
    died, and the damages suffered by the governmental entities (money spent on services like
    emergency, medical care, and substance-abuse treatment).”161 Although the governmental
    entities were seeking their own economic losses, the Acuity court found that some of those losses
    were arguably because of bodily injury.162
    The Court agrees with the reasoning set out in Acuity and H.D. Smith. The decisions in
    Richie and Medmarc either view the alleged facts too narrowly or do not involve claims similar
    156
    Id.
    157
    
    2020 WL 3446652
     (Ohio Ct. App. June 24, 2020).
    158
    Acuity v. Masters Pharm., Inc., No. A1701985 (Ohio C.P. 2019), attached as Keopff Decl., Ex. R (hereinafter,
    Acuity, Court of Common Pleas Decision), at 3–6.
    159
    Id. at 5.
    160
    Acuity, 
    2020 WL 3446652
    , ¶ 24.
    161
    Id. ¶ 28.
    162
    Id. ¶ 29.
    32
    to those asserted in the Track One Lawsuits. The Court has analyzed the allegations in the Track
    One Lawsuits and finds that some of the economic losses sought by the governmental entities are
    arguably because of bodily injury. Construing this duty to defend “broadly in favor of the
    policyholder,” the Court finds that the Track One Lawsuits and all Opioid Lawsuits alleging
    similar claims are potentially covered under the Policy, triggering ACE’s duty to defend.
    C. THERE ARE NO DISPUTED ISSUES OF MATERIAL FACT BECAUSE THE TRACK ONE
    LAWSUITS AND SIMILAR OPIOID LAWSUITS ALLEGE ONE OCCURRENCE.
    Rite Aid argues that it properly satisfied the per occurrence retention. Rite Aid asserts
    that the Track One Lawsuits and all “similar” Opioid Lawsuits arise from one occurrence, which
    is described as only “the tortious distribution of opioids.”163 Chubb disagrees and contends that
    the Track One Lawsuits plead that there were two separate occurrences created when the
    Amendments by Interlineation included allegations regarding the disbursement of opioids: an
    occurrence for distribution and an occurrence for dispensing.
    As set forth above, the Sixth Circuit struck the Amendments by Interlineation. The Court
    finds that this moots the multiple occurrence argument and there is no dispute that the claims in
    the Track One Lawsuits arise from one occurrence. Moreover, no genuine dispute exists on
    whether Rite Aid has paid more than $3,000,000 in defense costs in the Track One Lawsuits.
    The Policy has a $3,000,000 “Retained Limit” that is “the most an insured will pay for …
    [d]amages and Supplementary Payments under Coverage A because of all ‘personal injury’ …
    arising out of any one occurrence.” 164 Thus, the retention is satisfied.
    The remaining dispute is whether the Track One Lawsuits and all “similar” lawsuits
    alleging “tortious distribution and/or dispensing of opioids” arise from a single occurrence. Rite
    163
    Chima Aff. ¶ 31.
    164
    Chima Aff., Ex. A. at RA0002572.
    33
    Aid argues that ACE must defend each Opioid Lawsuit alleging similar and/or consistent claims
    to the Track One Lawsuits. For purposes of similar litigation where dispensing claims are
    alleged, is still relevant to determine if dispensing and distribution claims would be considered
    the same occurrence. Indeed, the MDL District Court Judge noted that “dispensing-related
    claims are at issue in many of the nearly 2,500 cases in the MDL.”165
    Rite Aid explains that distribution and dispensing should be one occurrence where it
    involves the “movement of opioid products from (for example) a warehouse to a specific
    pharmacy, while ‘dispensing’ refers to the ‘final step’ in the distribution process, from the
    pharmacy to an individual patient.” Chubb contends that there are separate causes present that
    could result in economic loss. For example, Summit contended Rite Aid’s misconduct as a
    distributor included: (i) Rite Aid’s participation in industry organizations that worked with
    “Marketing Defendants” (the manufacturers) to devise methods of deceptive advertising; 166 (ii)
    Rite Aid’s failure to control the supply chain;167 (iii) Rite Aid’s failure to “prevent diversion”;168
    (iv) Rite Aid’s failure to “report suspicious” orders;169 and (v) Rite Aid’s failure to halt
    shipments of opioids in quantities it “knew . . . could not be justified and were indicative of
    serious problems of overuse of opioids.”170 Chubb contends that each of these activities could
    result in a separate “cause” of the Counties’ economic losses.
    Chubb also contends that the arguments by Rite Aid reveal that the dispensing and
    distribution claims are separate causes. As argued by Rite Aid in the MDL Opioid Lawsuits,
    165
    Opioid MDL (Nov. 19, 2019) ECF No. 2940 pp. 2–3.
    166
    E.g., Summit TAC ¶¶ 534, 545.
    167
    Id. at ¶¶ 518, 580.
    168
    Id. at ¶¶ 101, 518.
    169
    Id. at ¶ 518.
    170
    See, e.g., Summit SAC ¶¶ 518, 534–35; Summit TAC ¶¶ 518, 534–35.
    34
    there are significant differences between the distribution and the dispensing of prescription
    opioids:
            “Plaintiffs’ new [dispensing] claims target the conduct of completely
    different corporate functions and employees . . . are based on entirely
    different legal duties.”171
            “While Plaintiffs’ distribution claims focused on a handful of distribution
    centers, their proposed dispensing claims implicate the work of hundreds of
    pharmacists at dozens of locations filling innumerable prescriptions written
    by doctors across the region for any number of patients.”172
            Rite Aid pointed out to the Sixth Circuit that “[p]rescriptions filled in
    Honolulu are irrelevant in Houston. . . . Dispensing related claims are
    inherently jurisdiction-specific, as they concern particular prescriptions in
    particular states and can implicate state-specific statutes and legal
    principles.” Opioid MDL (Jan. 17, 2020) ECF No. 3084-1 pp. 24-25. This
    is exactly the point ACE is making with respect to the dispensing claims.
    “Plaintiffs previously asserted claims against the Pharmacy Defendants
    only for the conduct of their distribution centers in monitoring orders placed
    by their own pharmacies.”173
            “Plaintiffs’ proposed new claims, in contrast, challenge the conduct of the
    individual pharmacists employed by the Pharmacy Defendants in filling
    individual prescriptions . . . on behalf of individual patients.”174
            “These are new and different claims in every possible respect – including
    as a matter of the governing legal obligations and facts at issue. The
    regulatory provisions applicable to the new claims are entirely different.”175
    Chubb misconstrues the cause test. Under Pennsylvania law, in order for there to be one
    occurrence, there must be “one proximate, uninterrupted and continuing cause which resulted in
    all of the injuries and damage.”176 Furthermore, the Policy defines “Occurrence” to mean
    “[w]ith respect to injury within subparagraph a. of the definition of ‘personal injury’ (that is,
    171
    ACE’s Opp. at 16 (citing Rite Aid Opposition to Motion to Amend at 2).
    172
    Id. at 16–17 (citing Rite Aid Opposition to Motion to Amend at 6).
    173
    Id. at 17 (citing Rite Aid Opposition to Motion to Amend at 5).
    174
    Id.
    175
    Id.
    176
    Sunoco, Inc. v. Illinois Nat. Ins. Co., 
    226 Fed. Appx. 104
    , 107 (3d Cir. 2007).
    35
    ‘bodily injury’) or ‘property damage,’ an accident, including continuous or repeated exposure to
    substantially the same general harmful conditions.”177 Under this cause test, there can be
    multiple instances that constitute a single cause. Two District Court for the District of Nevada
    cases––Insurance Company of the State of Pennsylvania v. National Fire & Marine Insurance
    Co.178 and Century Surety Co. v. Casino West, Inc.179–– aptly demonstrate this important
    distinction concerning independent causes in applying the cause test.
    The National Fire court considered whether independent defects in the structural
    components and electrical and plumbing systems of a condominium building constituted
    multiple occurrences such that the primary insurance provider’s aggregate limit applied to the
    damage.180 The National Fire court held that the various causes constituted multiple occurrences
    under the insurance policy because the expert reports identified independent defects in the
    structure, electrical system, and plumbing system, “all of which independently caused
    damages.”181 The defects in question each contributed some degree of damage that was
    identifiable and measurable.182 The defects in the roof led to water intrusion resulting in damage
    to the substrates and building interiors, the defects in the electrical installations resulted in faulty
    wiring and code violations, and the faulty plumbing led to the improper installation of toilets,
    bathtubs, and showers.183 The court concluded that the alleged damage could not be attributed to
    “one common cause.”184
    177
    Koepff Decl. Ex. J at RA0002519–2520.
    178
    
    2012 WL 4482674
     (D. Nev. Sept. 26, 2012).
    179
    
    99 F. Supp. 3d 1262
    , 1266 (D. Nev. 2015).
    180
    National Fire, 
    2012 WL 4482674
    , at *3.
    181
    Id. at *4.
    182
    Id.
    183
    Id.
    184
    Id.
    36
    Unlike the damages in National Fire that arose from independent causes, Century Surety
    Co. presented one common cause of the victims’ deaths—carbon monoxide poisoning.185 The
    fact that the fatal conditions in this case were the result of more than one contributing cause does
    not undermine that conclusion. Unlike the structural, electrical, and plumbing issues discussed
    in National Fire that each produced a separate harm, the various causes of the carbon monoxide
    identified in Century Surety Co. did not result in damage independent and apart from one
    another.186 On the contrary, the faulty heater, the missing ventilation, and the sealed vents
    together produced the fatal conditions.187 Had even one of these elements been absent, there is
    no evidence that lethal levels of carbon monoxide would have spilled into the victims’ room.188
    Similarly, the over distribution and improper dispensing produced injuries to opioid
    users, the costs of which ultimately fell upon the government. There is no evidence that the
    opioids could have caused the personal injuries alleged in the complaint had there not been both
    the improper distribution and dispensing of the opioids. It is not possible to identify independent
    damages from each respective cause of distribution and dispensing. Thus, the distribution and
    dispensing claims should be deemed to be one occurrence under the policy. This finding is
    consistent with Pennsylvania law. The Pennsylvania Supreme Court in Donegal Mutual
    Insurance Co. v. Baumhammers held that when an insured’s alleged liability is premised on
    alleged negligent inaction or inadequate action that permits others’ intervening conduct resulting
    in harm, liability arises from one occurrence.189 Specifically the court found:
    Parents liability . . . is premised on their negligence in failing to confiscate
    Baumhammers’ weapon and/or notify law enforcement or Baumhammers’ mental
    health care providers of his unstable condition. Because coverage is predicated on
    185
    Century Sur. Co., 99 F. Supp. 3d at 1266.
    186
    Id.
    187
    Id.
    188
    Id.
    189
    
    938 A.2d 286
    , 295 (Pa. 2007).
    37
    Parents’ inaction, and the resulting injuries to the several victims stem from that
    one cause, we hold that Parents’ alleged single act of negligence constitutes one
    accident and one occurrence.190
    Because the injuries alleged resulted from the inadequate action in both the distribution and
    dispensing stages, whereby if there had been proper controls in place in either stage the injury
    could have been prevented, the alleged act should constitute one occurrence.
    D. ACE HAS A DUTY TO DEFEND THE TRACK ONE LAWSUITS UNDER THE “MULTIPLE
    TRIGGER” THEORY.
    ACE argues in its Opposition that it does not have a duty to defend because any alleged
    personal injury first manifested prior to 2015. ACE argues that under Pennsylvania law, the only
    potentially applicable policy is the policy in effect when the injurious effects of an alleged
    occurrence first manifest themselves to the Counties. The Court disagrees with this
    characterization of Pennsylvania law. The Court reads Pennsylvania law to provide certain
    exceptions in latent injury cases. In a case relied upon by ACE, Pennsylvania National Mutual
    Casualty Ins. Co. v. St. John,191 the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania quoted the Pennsylvania
    Superior Court in Consulting Engineers, Inc. v. Ins. Co. of North American192 to determine where
    the “multiple trigger theory” should apply and where the “single trigger theory” should apply.
    The Superior Court in Consulting Engineers stated, in relevant part:
    The “multiple trigger” theory is applied in latent disease cases, like asbestosis or
    mesothelioma, because such injuries may not manifest themselves until a
    considerable time after the initial exposure causing injury occurs. The overriding
    concern in latent disease cases is that application of the D'Auria “first
    manifestation” rule would allow insurance companies to terminate coverage during
    the long latency period (of asbestosis); effectively shifting the burden of future
    claims away from the insurer to the insured (manufacturers of asbestos), even
    though the exposure causing injury occurred during periods of insurance coverage.
    190
    
    Id.
     at 288–89.
    191
    
    106 A.3d 1
    , 15–23 (Pa. 2014).
    192
    
    710 A.2d 82
    , 87–88 (Pa. Super. 1998).
    38
    Based upon this reasoning, the Superior Court declined to apply the multiple trigger
    theory to determine coverage under various policies of CGL insurance for injuries
    arising from the wrongful use of civil proceedings, as these injuries did not lie
    dormant for extended periods prior to manifesting.193
    The Supreme Court of Pennsylvania then distinguished the latent injury circumstances of
    Consulting Engineers from the facts in St. John:
    The justification advanced in [ ] Consulting Engineers for utilizing the multiple
    trigger theory is absent with respect to Appellants' action seeking coverage under
    the Penn National policies. Here, the damage sustained by Appellants’ dairy herd,
    occasioned by LPH Plumbing's negligent installation of the plumbing system, did
    not lay dormant for an extended period. The record indicates that damage to
    Appellants’ dairy herd first manifested in April 2004, less than a year after the dairy
    herd first began ingesting the contaminated drinking water. Moreover, unlike
    asbestos bodily injury claims which insurers could predict with near certainty, there
    was no indication of probable injury to Appellants’ dairy herd prior to manifestation
    that would cause Penn National to anticipate a future claim. Accordingly, this case
    does not present the problematic scenario where a risk averse insurer takes steps to
    limit or terminate coverage, in anticipation of future claims that have not yet
    materialized but can be predicted with near certainty.194
    The personal injury of opioid abuse and opioid used disorder would plainly fall into the category
    of a “latent injury” because, similar to asbestosis or mesothelioma, “such injuries may not
    manifest themselves until a considerable time after the initial exposure causing injury occurs.”195
    The record also does not indicate when the injury first manifested.
    Even under ACE’s “first manifestation” trigger theory, the complaints do not establish
    when any one or all persons’ alleged bodily injury caused by Rite Aid occurred. ACE must
    defend a “suit” if even one claim seeks potentially covered damages. The Policy’s coverage
    “applies” to “bodily injury” that is “sustained by a person” during the policy period that also is
    “caused by” an “occurrence.”196 Because some of the alleged bodily injuries to “person[s]”
    193
    
    Id.
    194
    St. John, 106 A.3d at 23.
    195
    Consulting Engineers, 
    710 A.2d at
    87–88.
    196
    See 
    id.
     Chima Decl., Ex. A at RA0002519–RA0002532.
    39
    “caused” by Rite Aid potentially took place during 2015, ACE has a duty to defend under the
    Policy.
    E. ACE’S PRIOR KNOWLEDGE AND KNOWN LOSS/LOSS-IN-PROGRESS DEFENSES ALSO FAIL.
    ACE raises two separate defenses related to Rite Aid’s knowledge. First, the 2015 Policy
    includes a “prior knowledge” provision, which is not an exclusion, but rather a prerequisite to
    establishing coverage.197 The provision states, in relevant part:
    This insurance applies to “personal injury” and “property damage” only if . . .
    [p]rior to the policy period, no insured . . . knew that the “personal injury” or
    “property damage” had occurred, in whole or in part.198
    ACE contends that it has no duty to defend under this “prior knowledge” provision.
    Second, in addition to ACE’s “prior knowledge” defense, there is a separate and distinct
    defense under Pennsylvania law providing that an insurer has no obligation to defend (or
    indemnify) a known loss/loss-in-progress that exists prior to a policy’s inception date (the
    “known loss doctrine”).199 ACE argues there was also “a known loss/loss-in-progress with
    respect to opioids” before 2015 and therefore it owes no defense obligations.200 This “known
    loss” ACE contends existed “was the opioid epidemic that started in the early 2000s . . . .”201
    In the Acuity case relied on by ACE, the Ohio trial court had originally granted
    summary judgment on the ground that the insurer had no duty to defend or indemnify
    based on the “loss-in-progress” provision of the insurance policy.202 This provision
    stated in relevant part:
    197
    
    Id.
     at RA0002519.
    198
    
    Id.
    199
    See, e.g., Rohm & Haas Co. v. Cont’l Cas. Co., 
    781 A.2d 1172
    , 1176 (Pa. 2001) (the known loss doctrine
    precludes an insured from insuring against a loss that has already occurred or is ongoing); Appalachian Ins. Co. v.
    Liberty Mut. Ins. Co., 
    676 F.2d 56
    , 63 (3d Cir. 1982) (a “contrary result . . . would contravene the rule that an
    insured cannot insure against something which has already begun”).
    200
    ACE’s Opp. at 30.
    201
    
    Id.
    202
    Acuity, Court of Common Pleas Decision at 2, 4.
    40
    (3) Prior to the policy period, no insured * * * knew that bodily injury or property
    damage had occurred, in whole or in part. If insured * * * knew, prior to the policy
    period, that the bodily injury or property damage occurred, then any continuation,
    change or resumption of such bodily injury or property damage during or after the
    policy period will be deemed to have been known prior to the policy period.203
    Considering this provision and the underlying complaints, the Ohio trial court found that the
    opioid epidemic existed years before the relevant policy period, the insured allegedly filled
    suspicious orders prior to the policy period, and the insured allegedly knew that its actions
    created or assisted in the creation of the alleged public nuisance.204 As stated above, this
    decision was recently reversed.205 The Ohio First District Court of Appeals held, in relevant
    part:
    A loss-in-progress provision is included in an insurance contract because insurance
    policies are only meant to cover fortuitous events, not losses that are certain to
    occur. The awareness that there is a risk that an insured’s conduct might someday
    result in damages is not equivalent to knowledge of the damages.
    In this case, it is unclear at this stage in the proceedings whether some of the
    governmental entities’ damages, such as increased costs for medical and addiction
    treatment, were due to diversion of [the insured’s] products or were known to [the
    insured] prior to the policy period. We agree that [the insured] may have been aware
    there was a risk that if it filled suspicious orders, diversion of its products could
    contribute to the opioid epidemic, thus causing damages to the governmental
    entities. But, we hold that mere knowledge of this risk is not enough to bar coverage
    under the loss-in-progress provision.206
    This Court finds the Ohio First District Court of Appeals’ reasoning persuasive. Indeed, ACE
    concedes that the “same pre-2015 allegations” made in the underlying complaints in Acuity are
    alleged against Rite Aid in the Track One Lawsuits.207 The language in this “loss-in-progress”
    provision is also substantively the same as the “prior knowledge” provision cited by ACE.
    Accordingly, the Court finds the pre-2015 allegations made by the plaintiffs in the Track One
    203
    Acuity, 
    2020 WL 3446652
    , ¶ 32.
    204
    Acuity, Court of Common Pleas Decision at 9–10.
    205
    See generally Acuity, 
    2020 WL 3446652
    .
    206
    
    Id.
     ¶¶ 49–50 (citations omitted).
    207
    ACE’s Opp. at 31–32.
    41
    Lawsuits cited by ACE might show, at most, the mere knowledge of a risk on the part of Rite
    Aid, which is not sufficient to bar coverage under this “prior knowledge” provision.208 Here,
    Rite Aid also contends that the Policy “applies” to each separate person’s bodily injury occurring
    during the policy period. Construing the Policy in favor of the policyholder, the Court finds that
    this is a reasonable interpretation of the plain language of the Policy. Thus, even if it the
    plaintiffs in the Track One Lawsuits or other Opioid Lawsuits eventually show Rite Aid knew it
    injured certain persons before 2015, this does not necessarily demonstrate that it also knew it
    injured different persons in 2015.
    As for ACE’s known loss doctrine defense, relevant “losses” “for purposes of applying
    the known loss doctrine . . . [are] not simply the [bodily injuries or] the property damage itself,
    but the insured’s liability for the [bodily injuries or] the property damage.”209 The fact people
    abused opioids before 2015 does not make it a “known loss.” For the known loss doctrine to
    apply, there must be evidence showing the insured is charged with knowledge, before the
    Policy’s inception date, which reasonably shows that it was, or should have been aware of “a
    likely exposure to losses which would reach the level of coverage.”210 The governmental entities
    in the Track One Lawsuits began advancing this recently developed, novel legal theory in 2017,
    and only against Rite Aid in 2018.211 Accordingly, the complaints’ allegations in the Track One
    Lawsuits do not constitute evidence of Rite Aid’s knowledge.
    208
    See id.; Cuyahoga TAC ¶¶ 14, 627, 628, 632, 715; Summit TAC ¶¶ 14, 627, 652, 653, 690.
    209
    State v. Hydrite Chemical Co., 
    695 N.W.2d 816
    , 828 (Wis. 2005) (describing “majority view” for applying the
    known loss doctrine) (citing, inter alia, Rohm and Haas Co., 781 A.2d at 1177).
    210
    Rohm and Haas Co., 781 A.2d at 1177.
    211
    Rite Aid’s Reply Br. at 21–22.
    42
    VI. CONCLUSION
    For the foregoing reasons, Rite Aid’s Motion is GRANTED and Chubb’s Motion is
    DENIED with respect to the 2015 Policy. Because the Court finds there is coverage under the
    2015 Policy, Chubb’s Motion is also DENIED as moot with respect to the other 18 policies. In
    regard to the Responses from the Great American Defendants and the Certain Excess Insurers
    Defendants, this is not a ruling on their obligations under their respective policies, but the Court
    is not limiting any of the implications of this decision.
    Dated: September 22, 2020
    Wilmington, Delaware
    /s/ Eric M. Davis
    Eric M. Davis, Judge
    cc: File&ServeXpress
    43
    

Document Info

Docket Number: N19C-04-150 EMD CCLD

Judges: Davis J.

Filed Date: 9/22/2020

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 9/22/2020

Authorities (21)

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General Accident Insurance Co. of America v. Allen , 547 Pa. 693 ( 1997 )

Playtex FP, Inc. v. Columbia Casualty Co. , 622 A.2d 1074 ( 1992 )

D'Auria v. Zurich Insurance , 352 Pa. Super. 231 ( 1986 )

DecisionOne Corp. v. ITT Hartford Insurance Group , 942 F. Supp. 1038 ( 1996 )

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