In Re CVS Opioid Insurance Litigation ( 2023 )


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  •       IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE
    IN RE: CVS OPIOID                          )     Consol. C.A. No. N22C-02-045
    INSURANCE LITIGATION                )                      PRW CCLD
    Submitted: July 24, 2023
    Decided: August 25, 2023
    OPINION AND ORDER
    Upon Insurers’ and Joining Insurers’ Motions for Partial Summary Judgment
    GRANTED
    Garrett B. Moritz, Esquire, and R. Garret Rice, Esquire, ROSS ARONSTAM & MORITZ
    LLP, Wilmington, Delaware; Michael S. Shuster, Esquire, Daniel M. Sullivan,
    Esquire, Blair E. Kaminsky, Esquire, and Daniel M. Horowitz, Esquire, HOLWELL
    SHUSTER & GOLDBERG LLP, New York, New York, Attorneys for ACE Property
    and Casualty Insurance Company, Federal Insurance Company, Indemnity
    Insurance Company of North America, Vigilant Insurance Company, and
    Westchester Fire Insurance Company.
    Robert J. Katzenstein, Esquire, and Julie M. O’Dell, Esquire, SMITH KATZENSTEIN
    & JENKINS LLP, Wilmington Delaware; Christopher J. St. Jeanos, Esquire, WILLKIE
    FARR & GALLAGHER LLP, New York, New York, Attorneys for American Home
    Assurance Company, Lexington Insurance Company, National Union Fire
    Insurance Company of Pittsburgh, P.A., and New Hampshire Insurance Company.
    Bruce W. McCullough, Esquire, BODELL BOVÉ, LLC, Wilmington, Delaware; Karen
    M. Dixon, Esquire, SKARZYNSKI MARICK & BLACK LLP, Chicago, Illinois,
    Attorneys for American Zurich Insurance Company, Zurich American Insurance
    Company, and American Guarantee & Liability Insurance Company.
    Joseph B. Cicero, Esquire, CHIPMAN BROWN CICERO & COLE, LLP, Wilmington,
    Delaware; Adam H. Fleischer, Esquire, R. Patrick Bedell, Esquire, and Allyson C.
    Spacht, Esquire, BATESCAREY LLP, Chicago, Illinois, Attorneys for Great American
    Alliance Insurance Company, Great American Insurance Company of New York,
    Great American Insurance Company, and Tamarack American, Inc.
    Louis J. Rizzo, Jr., Esquire, REGER RIZZO & DARNALL LLP, Wilmington, Delaware;
    Monica T. Sullivan, Esquire, Matthew J. Fink, Esquire, Leena Soni, Esquire, and
    Stephanie M. Flowers, Esquire, NICOLAIDES FINK THORPE MICHAELIDES SULLIVAN
    LLP, Chicago, Illinois, Attorneys for Endurance American Insurance Company, and
    North American Capacity Insurance Company.
    Sean J. Bellew, Esquire, BELLEW LLC, Wilmington, Delaware; Michael A. Kotula,
    Esquire, RIVKIN RADLER LLP, Attorneys for Allianz Insurance Company, Fireman’s
    Fund Insurance Company, Interstate Indemnity Company, and National Surety
    Company.
    Loren R. Barron, Esquire, WEBER GALLAGHER, Wilmington, Delaware, Attorney for
    Gemini Insurance Company, and Berkley National Insurance Company.
    Wade A. Adams, III, Esquire, LAW OFFICES OF WADE A. ADAMS, III, Newark,
    Delaware; Bryce L. Friedman, Esquire, and Matthew C. Penny, Esquire, SIMPSON
    THACHER & BARTLETT LLP, New York, New York, Attorneys for Discover Property
    and Casualty Company, St. Paul Fire and Marine Insurance Company, Gulf
    Underwriters Insurance Company, United States Fidelity and Guaranty Company,
    and The Travelers Indemnity Company.
    Thad J. Bracegirdle, Esquire, Sarah T. Andrade, Esquire, and Emily L. Skaug,
    Esquire BAYARD, P.A., Wilmington, Delaware; Edward B. Parks, II, Esquire, and
    Sara Hunkler, Esquire, RUGGERI PARKS WEINBERG LLP, Washington, D.C.,
    Attorneys for First State Insurance Company, and Twin City Fire Insurance
    Company.
    Peter B. Ladig, Esquire, Elizabeth A. Powers, Esquire, BAYARD, P.A., Wilmington,
    Delaware; Kevin T. Coughlin, Esquire, Suzanne C. Midlige, Esquire, and Patrick K.
    Coughlin, Esquire, Tanya M. Mascarich, Esquire, Zachary M. Sherman, Esquire,
    COUGHLIN MIDLIGE & GARLAND LLP, Morristown, New Jersey, Attorneys for
    Arrowood Indemnity Company.
    Kevin. J. Connors, Esquire, MARSHALL DENNEHEY WARNER COLMAN & GOGGIN
    P.C., Wilmington, Delaware; Cheryl P. Vollweiler, Esquire, SKARZYNSKI MARICK &
    BLACK LLP, New York, New York, Attorneys for AXIS Insurance Company.
    Philip Trainer, Jr., Esquire, and Marie M. Degnan, Esquire, ASHBY & GEDDES,
    Wilmington, Delaware; Robert A. Kole, Esquire, and Caroline M. Trusty, Esquire,
    -2-
    CHOATE, HALL & STEWART LLP, Boston, Massachusetts, Attorneys for Liberty
    Insurance Underwriters, Inc., Liberty International Underwriters, and The Ohio
    Casualty Insurance Company.
    Marc S. Casarino, Esquire, KENNEDYS CMK LLP, Wilmington, Delaware;
    Christopher R. Carroll, Esquire, Jillian D. Dennehy, Esquire, and Joshua S.
    Wirtshafter, Esquire, KENNEDYS CMK LLP, Basking Ridge, New Jersey, Attorneys
    for TIG Insurance Company.
    Kathleen M. Miller, Esquire, and Robert K. Beste, Esquire, SMITH KATZENSTEIN &
    JENKINS LLP, Wilmington Delaware; Keith Moskowitz, Esquire, DENTONS US LLP,
    Chicago, Illinois; Kathryn Guinn, Esquire, DENTONS US LLP, Denver, Colorado;
    Deborah J. Campbell, Esquire, DENTONS US LLP, St. Louis, Missouri, Attorneys for
    XL Insurance America, Inc., Greenwich Insurance Company, and The Continental
    Insurance Company.
    David J. Baldwin, Esquire, Peter C. McGivney, Esquire, and Zachary J. Schnapp,
    Esquire, BERGER HARRIS LLP, Wilmington, Delaware; Kirk Pasich, Esquire, PASICH
    LLP, Los Angeles, California; Jeffrey L. Schulman, Esquire, and Peter A. Halprin,
    Esquire, Tae E. Andrews, Esquire, PASICH LLP, New York, New York, Attorneys
    for CVS Health Corporation.
    WALLACE, J.
    -3-
    I. INTRODUCTION
    The opioid crisis in the United States has produced countless lawsuits brought
    by governmental entities against suppliers, manufacturers, and distributors of
    opioids (the “Opioid Lawsuits”). To recoup the costs of defending against and
    settling these lawsuits, those defendants have sought coverage from various
    insurance companies.       Early last year, the Delaware Supreme Court in ACE
    American Insurance Co. v. Rite Aid Corp. (“Rite Aid”) issued a key ruling in the
    insurance landscape for opioid litigation by finding that claims seeking generalized
    economic damages to redress the opioid crisis are not claims seeking “damages
    because of bodily injury.”1 This Court applies that decision today to retail pharmacy
    giant CVS Health Corporation (“CVS”).
    With respect to Plaintiffs Chubb and AIG (the “Insurers”), at issue are nine
    Opioid Lawsuits where CVS Health has been named as a defendant. Two of the
    lawsuits (Summit and Cuyahoga) are “Track One Suits” that are part of the
    consolidated multi-district litigation styled In Re: National Prescription Opioid
    Litigation, 17-md-2804 (N.D. Ohio) (the “MDL”).2             Seven of them (Florida,
    Philadelphia, Cherokee, Lake, Trumbull, Suffolk, and Nassau) are the Insurers’
    1
    
    270 A.3d 239
     (Del. 2022).
    2
    Chubb and AIG’s Motion for Partial Summary Judgment (the “Insurers’ Motion”) at 6 (D.I.
    279).
    -4-
    Additional Representative Suits (the “Additional Representative Suits”).3 This
    Court has carefully reviewed each underlying complaint in those suits.
    Present before the Court is Insurers’ motion for partial summary judgment,
    seeking a declaration that they owe no duty to defend CVS for the Track One Suits
    and the Additional Representative Suits (the “Insurers’ Motion”).4 Additionally,
    Defendant Insurers named in CVS’s Third-Party complaint (the “Joining Insurers”)
    have joined in the Insurers’ Motion (the “Joinder Motion”).5 They seek a declaration
    that they have no duty to defend or indemnify CVS for the Track One Suits and the
    Additional Representative Suits.6
    For the reasons explained below, the Insurers’ Motion is GRANTED, and
    Joining Insurers’ Motion is also GRANTED.
    II. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    A. THE PARTIES
    There are a significant number of parties to this consolidated action. The
    relevant parties are referred to generally as the Insurers, the Joining Insurers, and
    3
    Insurers’ Motion at 4.
    4
    Id. at 4-5.
    5
    Joining Insurers’ Motion for Partial Summary Judgment and Joinder in the Insurers’ Motion
    for Partial Summary Judgment (the “Joinder Motion”) at 3-4 (D.I. 286). The Joinder Motion in
    essence adopts in whole the Insurers’ Motion. Therefore, this Memorandum Opinion will typically
    discuss the Insurers’ Motion, which encompasses both the Insurers’ and Joining Insurers’
    arguments.
    6
    Id. at 3-4.
    -5-
    CVS. The parties from the original complaint include Insurers Chubb7 and AIG, 8
    as well as CVS. CVS is a Delaware corporation with its principal place of business
    in Woonsocket, Rhode Island.9 CVS also filed a Third-Party Complaint against a
    number of insurers,10 included among them are the Joining Insurers. 11
    B. THE OPIOID LAWSUITS
    It is well-known that the United States has grappled with the opioid addiction
    crisis for many years. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has described
    it as a “national epidemic,”12 and states, counties, municipalities, and Native
    American tribes have filed thousands of Opioid Lawsuits against opioid
    manufacturers, distributors, and retailers.13           Many of the Opioid Lawsuits are
    consolidated in the MDL; others are pending in state courts around the country.14
    On November 2, 2022, CVS announced it had reached an agreement in principle to
    “substantially resolve all opioid lawsuits” brought “by states, political subdivisions,
    7
    The Chubb Plaintiffs are ACE Property and Casualty Insurance Company, Federal Insurance
    Company, Indemnity Insurance Company of North America, Vigilant Insurance Company, and
    Westchester Fire Insurance Company. See Insurers’ Motion at 1 n.1.
    8
    The AIG Plaintiffs are National Union Fire and Insurance Company of Pittsburgh, Pa.,
    American Home Insurance Company, and New Hampshire Insurance Company. See id. n.2.
    9
    Complaint (“Compl.”) ¶ 15 (D.I. 1).
    10
    See generally Third-Party Complaint (“CVS Compl.”) (D.I. 220).
    11
    The Joining Insurers are listed in the Joinder Motion. See Joinder Motion at 1 n.1.
    12
    Insurers’ Motion, Ex. 1.
    13
    Insurers’ Motion at 6.
    14
    Id.
    -6-
    such as counties and cities, and tribes in the United States.”15
    1. The Track One Suits
    The MDL court designated two Opioid Lawsuits—the Track One Suits—as
    bellwether cases for purposes of discovery and trial.16 Those plaintiffs, which
    include the Ohio Counties of Summit and Cuyahoga, seek to recover from retail
    pharmacies (among other defendants) losses allegedly incurred in responding to the
    opioid crisis.17 Both the Cuyahoga and Summit complaints make clear that the
    plaintiffs, in their assertion of common law nuisance claims, “do not seek damages
    for death, physical injury to person, emotional distress, or physical damages to
    property, as defined under the Ohio Product Liability Act.”18 The complaints instead
    allege those plaintiffs suffered “unique harms” that “are of a different kind and
    degree than Ohio citizens at large…[and that] [t]hese…harms…can only be suffered
    by [Cuyahoga and Summit counties].”19 Additionally, the complaints “assert[] their
    own rights and interests and [their] claims are not based upon or derivative of the
    15
    CVS Health reaches agreement in principle for global opioid settlement, CVS HEALTH (Nov.
    2, 2022), www.cvshealth.com/news/community/cvs-health-reaches-agreement-in-principle-for-
    global-opioid.html)); Insurers’ Motion at 7.
    16
    Insurers’ Motion at 8.
    17
    Id.; see also CVS’s Opposition Brief to the Insurers’ Motion (“CVS Opp’n to Insurers’
    Motion”) at 11 (D.I. 327).
    18
    Insurers’ Motion, Ex. 2 (“Summit Compl.”) ¶ 1038; Ex. 3 (“Cuyahoga Compl.”) ¶ 1080.
    19
    Id. ¶ 1074; Summit Compl. ¶ 1032.
    -7-
    rights of others.”20
    a. The Summit suit
    The Summit complaint contains allegations that “national retail pharmacy
    chains earned enormous profits by flooding the country with prescription
    opioids…and instead of taking any meaningful action to stem the flow of opioids
    into communities, they continued to participate in the oversupply and profit from
    it.”21 Moreover, according to the Summit plaintiffs, defendants “disregarded their
    reporting and due diligence obligations,”22 and cite to increased government
    expenditures for emergency, medical and social services in response to increased
    rates of opioid addiction, overdose deaths, and other opioid-related fatalities.23 To
    illustrate, those plaintiffs allege that:
    • 1,053 residents died from drug overdoses between mid-August 2017
    and 2022;24
    • overdoses spiked to 19 a day in July 2016;25
    • from 2012 to 2017, the County’s Children Services Board incurred
    nearly $24 million in costs;26 and
    20
    Id. ¶ 1033; Cuhayoga Compl. ¶ 1075.
    21
    Id. ¶ 608.
    22
    Id. ¶ 714.
    23
    Id. ¶¶ 715-746.
    24
    Id. ¶ 722.
    25
    Id. ¶ 731.
    26
    Id. ¶ 735.
    -8-
    •    the Alcohol, Drug, Addiction, and Mental Health Services Board
    incurred more than $10 million in costs.27
    The Summit plaintiffs assert a variety of tort and statutory-based claims, including
    statutory and common law nuisance and negligence claims.28
    b. The Cuyahoga suit
    The Cuyahoga complaint contains substantively identical allegations and
    claims.29 It identifies increased levels of overdose deaths, and other opioid-related
    fatalities as well as increased county expenditures in the form of emergency, medical
    and social services, addiction-related treatment, and incarceration costs.30 It further
    identifies specific providers, and gives data on the number of opioids distributed in
    the county from 2006 and 2014.31 In terms of costs to the county, it alleges that
    Cuyahoga has spent “approximately $1.45 billion” in its annual budget to address
    the opioid crisis,32 and provides illustrative examples including:
    • treatment in 2016 of 1,440 individuals for opioid-use disorder or
    dependence;33
    27
    Id.
    28
    See id. ¶¶ 975-1072, 1091-1138.
    29
    See Cuyahoga Compl.
    30
    Id. ¶¶ 700-710, 752-773.
    31
    Id. ¶¶ 715-728.
    32
    Id. ¶ 729.
    33
    Id. ¶ 730.
    -9-
    • increased budget expenditures of $39.4 million by Cuyahoga’s
    Alcohol, Drug Addiction and Mental Health Services;34
    • increased costs of providing treatment beds from $4.9 million in
    2014 to $9.9 million in 2017;35
    • administration by Cuyahoga County EMS of 1,903 doses of
    naloxone in 2015, 5,100 doses in 2016, and 6,643 doses in 2017;36
    • treatment and recovery services for 82 patients “at a cost of
    $10,190 per patient (a cost of more than $835,000);37
    • participation of 105 patients in addiction counseling at a rate of
    $87.28 an hour;”38
    • an estimated “$185,000 a year for medication assisted treatments for
    jail inmates;”39
    • “$100,000 in vivitrol shots” in 2017;40 and
    • a “$3.5 million contract in 2017 for the county’s more than
    2,300 inmates.”41
    And the Cuyahoga complaint sets out liability claims similar to those in the Summit
    complaint.42
    34
    Id. ¶ 731.
    35
    Id. ¶ 734.
    36
    Id. ¶ 739.
    37
    Id. ¶ 750.
    38
    Id.
    39
    Id. ¶ 765.
    40
    Id. ¶ 770.
    41
    Id. ¶ 764.
    42
    See id. ¶¶ 1017-1115, 1134-1179.
    -10-
    2. The Additional Representative Suits
    There are seven Additional Representative Suits.           Two are brought by
    counties in Ohio—Lake and Trumbull Counties (“Track Three Suits.”).43 Two are
    brought by counties in New York—Nassau and Suffolk Counties.44 And the three
    other lawsuits are brought by the Cherokee Nation, the City of Philadelphia, and the
    State of Florida.45 Like the Track One Suits, each Additional Representative Suit is
    brought by a governmental entity and seeks to recover from CVS (and other
    defendants) losses allegedly incurred in responding to the opioid crisis.46 Some of
    the Additional Representative Suits have been settled by CVS;47 others went to
    trial.48
    a. The Track Three Suits
    The Track Three Suits largely mirror the allegations in the Track One Suits.
    Plaintiffs in the Track Three Suits raise common law nuisance claims against
    distributors and pharmacies, and seek “abatement of the nuisance” they allege
    defendants created.49 These suits take:
    43
    CVS Opp’n to Insurers’ Motion at 10.
    44
    Id.
    45
    Id. at 8-9.
    46
    Insurers’ Motion at 9.
    47
    Id.
    48
    Id. at 10.
    49
    Insurers’ Motion, Ex. 4 (“Lake Compl.”) ¶ 607; Ex. 12 (“Trumbull Compl.”) ¶ 607.
    -11-
    “aim at a primary cause of the opioid crisis: a supply chain scheme,
    pursuant to which distributors and pharmacies 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, and instead actively contributed to the
    oversupply of such drugs and fueled an illegal secondary market.”50
    The Track Three plaintiffs allege defendants’ conduct has resulted in a variety
    of costs, including “handling of emergency services to overdoses, providing
    addiction treatment, handling of opioid related investigations, arrests, adjudications,
    and incarceration, treating opioid-addicted newborns in neonatal intensive care
    units, burying the dead, and placing thousands of children in foster care
    placements.”51 The complaints allege county-specific facts such as the number of
    opioid deaths, increase in opioid cases, data on the number of opioids prescribed in
    the county, and identification of “problematic” prescribers.52 For example, in Lake
    County, 240 deaths due to heroin or fentanyl overdoses occurred from 2013 to 2017,
    and opioid cases increased from 296 to 863 during that time period.53
    b. The New York suits
    The New York suits provide the least-particularized county-specific
    information in comparison to the Track One and rest of the Track Three Suits, but
    50
    Id. ¶ 9; Lake Compl. ¶ 9.
    51
    Id. ¶ 15; Trumbull Compl. ¶ 15.
    52
    Id. ¶ 569; Lake Compl. ¶ 569.
    53
    Id. ¶¶ 571, 582.
    -12-
    nonetheless allege the same general pattern of misconduct. The New York plaintiffs
    allege distributors at the retail level “flooded [the] county with opioids, failed to
    detect suspicious orders, and failed to prevent diversion of these dangerous
    products.”54 These plaintiffs say that the retail pharmacies “earned enormous profits
    by flooding the country with prescription opioids,”55 and caused “a public health
    and law-enforcement crisis.”56 And the New York plaintiffs assert a variety of tort
    and statutory claims, including nuisance and negligence claims.57
    c. The Cherokee suit
    The Cherokee complaint is brought by the Cherokee Nation against retail
    pharmacies and includes allegations that defendants’ distribution and dispensing of
    prescription opioids on and around the Cherokee nation have significantly harmed
    its citizens.58 The Cherokee plaintiff alleges damages ranging from increased costs
    of medical care, law enforcement measures, rehabilitation services, welfare and
    property damage and public blight.59 Plaintiff states “costs were incurred . . . to
    address public harm caused by a persistent course of deceptive and unlawful conduct
    54
    Insurers’ Motion, Ex. 14 (“Suffolk Compl.”) ¶ 7; Ex. 15 (“Nassau Compl.”) ¶7.
    55
    Id. ¶ 148; Suffolk Compl. ¶ 148.
    56
    Id. ¶ 150; Nassau Compl. ¶ 150.
    57
    Insurers’ Motion, Ex. 13 (“New York Short Form Compl.”) ¶¶ 784-846; Suffolk Compl. ¶ 234;
    Nassau Compl. ¶ 234.
    58
    Insurers’ Motion, Ex. 5 (“Cherokee Compl.”) ¶ 13.
    59
    Id. ¶ 14.
    -13-
    by defendants.”60 And the Cherokee plaintiff alleges that:
    • CVS shipped 8,456,500 dosage units of prescription opioids from
    2006 to 2014;61
    • between 2012 and 2014, 484 deaths occurred from unintentional
    overdoses in Cherokee Nation;62 and
    • there were 5,700 opioid related visits to Cherokee Nation’s Behavior
    Health Department “in recent years.”63
    This plaintiff brings claims of nuisance, negligence/gross negligence, unjust
    enrichment and conspiracy.64 The damages sought are for “harm to Cherokee Nation
    as a tribal sovereign, including recovery of the funds Cherokee Nation had to spend
    on opioid-related care.”65 But, as explained in the Cherokee complaint, the claims
    asserted do not “belong to individual Cherokee citizens,” nor does the Cherokee
    plaintiff seek “to recover on behalf of individual citizens based on those individuals’
    personal injuries or wrongful deaths.”66
    d. The Philadelphia suit
    In the Philadelphia complaint, the City of Philadelphia asserts claims against
    defendants to “redress the hazard to public health and safety,” “abate the nuisance,”
    60
    Id. ¶ 15.
    61
    Id. ¶ 157.
    62
    Id. ¶ 34.
    63
    Id. ¶ 47.
    64
    Id. ¶¶ 320-70.
    65
    Id. ¶ 18.
    66
    Id.
    -14-
    and “recoup . . . monies that have been spent” as a result of the opioid epidemic and
    the alleged misconduct of defendants in unlawfully diverting prescription opioids.67
    The City of Philadelphia asserts claims on behalf of itself and argues they are
    “wholly independent of any claims that individual users of opioids may have against
    defendants.”68          Philadelphia further alleges the following city-specific opioid-
    related statistics:
    • 963 opioid-related overdose deaths in 2019;69
    • identification of specific CVS pharmacies and purchase rates;70
    • treatment of approximately 14,000 people for opioid disorder from
    October 2015 through September 2016;”71
    • 651 hospitalizations due to opioid poisoning in 2018;72
    • administration of naloxone over 4,000 times by the Philadelphia Fire
    Department, 200 times by the Philadelphia Police Department,
    5,000 in 2018 and 3,000 in 2019 by Philadelphia emergency medical
    services (EMS);73
    • 1,161 cases of Hepatitis C virus, which is an adverse effect common
    to opioids with treatment costs of approximately $84,000 per patient
    in 2016;74
    67
    Insurers’ Motion, Ex. 16 (“Philadelphia Compl.”) ¶ 1.
    68
    Id. ¶ 24.
    69
    Id. ¶ 557.
    70
    Id. ¶¶ 292-300.
    71
    Id. ¶ 554.
    72
    Id. ¶ 555.
    73
    Id. ¶ 561.
    74
    Id. ¶¶ 572, 601.
    -15-
    • increased homelessness, and arrests related to opioids;75
    • treatment of 17,500 people in the publicly-funded health system for
    opioid-use disorder in 2019, which incur costs from the
    administration of methodone ($150 per month per person),
    suboxone ($450 per month per person), and Vivitrol ($1,000 per
    month per person).76
    The Philadelphia complaint contains claims of public nuisance, statutory
    violations, and unjust enrichment.77
    e. The Florida Suit
    In the Florida complaint, the State of Florida asserts statutory and tort-based
    claims, including public nuisance and gross negligence, against manufacturer and
    distributor defendants that plaintiff alleges “cooperated to sell and ship ever-
    increasing quantities of opioids into Florida.”78 The State of Florida seeks “to hold
    Defendants accountable for having created and exacerbated the opioid crisis,”79 and
    having “caus[ed] the devastating public health and financial effects that have
    followed.”80 The complaint alleges 779 heroin overdose deaths in Florida in 2015,81
    75
    Id. ¶¶ 584, 582.
    76
    Id. ¶¶ 590, 595, 596.
    77
    Id. ¶¶ 656 -720.
    78
    Insurers’ Motion, Ex. 17 (“Florida Complaint”) ¶ 1.
    79
    Id.
    80
    Id. ¶ 10.
    81
    Id. ¶ 420.
    -16-
    and 21,700 opioid-related emergency department visits in 2014.82 The complaint
    additionally avers these “societal and economic injuries incurred by the State of
    Florida” were foreseeable to the defendants.83
    C. THE POLICIES84
    CVS seeks indemnification and/or defense costs in connection with the
    Opioid Lawsuits under the policies at issue in this action. CVS says 229 policies are
    implicated between the Insurers’ Motion and the Joinder Motion.85 This dispute
    centers on whether the just-described governmental plaintiffs’ lawsuits allege harms
    resulting in damages because of bodily injury or property damage and trigger duty-
    to-defend and/or indemnification coverage under those policies.
    1. The Chubb Policies
    Chubb issued annual insurance policies to CVS from 1993 to 2005 and
    2008 to 2018 (the “Chubb Policies”).86 CVS purchased at least 26 Chubb Policies
    82
    Id. ¶ 422.
    83
    Id. ¶ 428.
    84
    CVS complained that Insurers failed to provide the Court with complete copies of the Policies.
    CVS Opp’n to Insurers’ Motion at 12. The Court requested supplemental submissions during an
    earlier status conference, and the parties have since provided all relevant pleadings and policies at
    issue in the Motions. D.I. No. 357; see also CVS’s Supplemental Memorandum in Further
    Opposition to the Insurers’ Motion for Partial Summary Judgment (“CVS Supp. Mem.”) at 1 n.1.
    85
    See CVS Opp’n to Insurers’ Motion at 4 (stating the Insurers sold “at least 62 primary, umbrella
    and excess liability insurance policies” to CVS); CVS’s Opposition Brief to the Joinder Motion
    (“CVS Opp’n to Joinder Motion”) at 1 (D.I. 326) (stating the Joining Insurers “seek[] summary
    judgment with respect to an additional 167 policies for which CVS” paid).
    86
    See Insurers’ Motion at 10; id., Exs. 18-43.
    -17-
    during the relevant period.87 And the parties have now identified the relevant
    provisions of the Chubb Policies.
    Chubb promised to pay on behalf of CVS “those sums in excess of the
    ‘retained limit’ that [CVS] becomes legally obligated to pay as damages because of
    ‘bodily injury’ [or] ‘property damage.’”88 Under the Chubb policies “[d]amages
    because of ‘bodily injury’ include damages claimed by any person or organization
    for care, loss of services or death resulting at any time from the ‘bodily injury.’”89
    “Bodily injury” means “bodily injury, sickness, or disease sustained by a person,
    including death resulting from any of these at any time.”90 It can include “mental
    anguish or mental injury resulting from bodily injury.”91 “Property damage” is
    defined as “[p]hysical injury to tangible property, including all resulting loss of use
    of that property,” and “[l]oss of use of tangible property that is not physically injured.
    All such loss of use will be deemed to occur at the time of the physical injury that
    caused it.”92
    If the bodily injury or property damage is caused by an “occurrence” during
    87
    CVS Opp’n to Insurers’ Motion at 5.
    88
    E.g., Insurers’ Motion, Ex. 21 § I.A; CVS Opp’n to Insurers’ Motion, Ex. 22 § I.A.
    89
    Insurers’ Motion, Ex. 21 § I.D; CVS Opp’n to Insurers’ Motion, Ex. 22 § I.D.
    90
    Insurers’ Motion, Ex. 21 § VII.C; CVS Opp’n to Insurers’ Motion, Ex. 22 § VII.C.
    91
    Id.; Insurers’ Motion, Ex. 21 § VII.C.
    92
    Id. § VII.U; CVS Opp’n to Insurers’ Motion, Ex. 22 § VII.U.
    -18-
    the “policy period,” the insurance will apply.93 An “occurrence” means “an accident,
    including continuous or repeated exposure to substantially the same general harmful
    conditions. All such exposure to substantially the same general conditions shall be
    considered as arising out of the same ‘occurrence,’ regardless of the frequency or
    repetition thereof, or the number of claimants.”94
    Certain policies also contain the “Pharmacist . . . Liability Endorsement.”
    (“Pharmacist Liability Endorsement”).95 The Pharmacist Liability Endorsement
    states in relevant part that Chubb agrees to pay on behalf of CVS “all sums in excess
    of the Schedule of Insured’s Retained Limits that [CVS] shall become legally
    obligated to pay as damages because of ‘bodily injury’ arising out of a ‘pharmacist
    liability incident.’”96 A “pharmacist liability incident” is an “actual or alleged
    negligent act, error or omissions, . . . in the performance of a ‘pharmacist
    professional service.’” 97 A “pharmacist professional service” includes the
    “preparation, selling, handling or distribution of drugs.”98 Under this Endorsement,
    “occurrence” “does not include any ‘pharmacist liability incident.’”99
    93
    Id. § I.A.1; Insurers’ Motion, Ex. 21 § I.A.1.
    94
    Id. § VII.O; CVS Opp’n to Insurers’ Motion, Ex. 22 § VII.O.
    95
    E.g., Insurers’ Motion, Ex. 21 at End 27; CVS Opp’n to Insurers’ Motion, Ex. 22 at End. 24.
    96
    Id.; Insurers’ Motion, Ex. 21 at End. 27.
    97
    Id.; CVS Opp’n to Insurers’ Motion, Ex. 22 at End. 24.
    98
    Id.; Insurers’ Motion, Ex. 21 at End. 27.
    99
    Id.; CVS Opp’n to Insurers’ Motion, Ex. 22 at End. 24.
    -19-
    2. The AIG Policies
    The AIG Policies mirror the Chubb Policies in many respects. AIG issued
    annual policies to CVS from 1995 to 2000 and 2002 to 2017 (the “AIG Policies”).100
    CVS purchased 36 policies from AIG.101 AIG promised to pay:
    “those sums that [CVS] becomes legally obligated to pay as damages
    because of ‘bodily injury’ or ‘property damage’ to which this insurance
    applies. [AIG] will have the right and duty to defend [CVS] against
    any ‘suit’ seeking those damages. However, [AIG] will have no duty
    to defend [CVS] against any ‘suit’ seeking damages for ‘bodily injury’
    or ‘property damage’ to which insurance doesn’t apply.”102
    “Bodily injury” is defined as “bodily injury, sickness or disease sustained by
    a person, including death resulting from any of these at any time.”103 “Property
    damage” is defined as “[p]hysical injury to tangible property, including all resulting
    loss of use of that property.”104 “Property damage” is further defined to mean “[l]oss
    of use of tangible property that is not physically injured.”105
    The AIG Policies apply to “bodily injury” and “property damage” only if the
    “bodily injury” or “property damage” is caused by an “occurrence” during the policy
    100
    See Insurers’ Motion at 10; see Chubb and AIG’s Reply Brief (“Insurers’ Reply”) Exs. 81-115
    (D.I. 334).
    101
    CVS Opp’n to Insurers’ Motion at 6.
    102
    E.g., Insurers’ Reply, Ex. 107 § I.1(a).
    103
    Id. § V.3.
    104
    Id. § V.17(a).
    105
    Id. § V.17(b).
    -20-
    period.106       An “occurrence” is “an accident, including continuous or repeated
    exposure to substantially the same general harmful conditions.”107 Further,
    “[d]amages because of ‘bodily injury’ include damages claimed by any person or
    organization for care, loss of services or death resulting at any time from the ‘bodily
    injury.’”108
    CVS additionally points to a “Druggists – Broadened Coverage” Endorsement
    (the “Druggist Endorsement”). The Druggist Endorsement reads that “‘[b]odily
    injury’ or ‘property damage’ arising out of the rendering of or failure to render
    professional health care services as a pharmacist shall be deemed to be caused by an
    ‘occurrence.’”109
    Separately, the Insurers point to 24 AIG Policies with a “Self-Insured
    Retention Endorsement” that says AIG will pay on behalf of CVS “those sums in
    excess of the ‘Retained Limit’ that [CVS] becomes legally obligated to pay as
    damages because of ‘bodily injury’ or ‘property damage’ to which this insurance
    applies. [AIG] will have the right but not the duty to defend any ‘suit’ seeking those
    106
    Id. § I.1(b).
    107
    Id. § V.13.
    108
    Id. § I.1(e).
    109
    Id. at Druggist End.
    -21-
    damages.”110
    3. The Joining Insurers’ Policies
    The Joining Insurers issued 167 policies to CVS during the relevant period
    (the “Joining Insurers’ Policies” and together with the Chubb Policies and the AIG
    Policies, the “Policies”).111 CVS purchased these policies from 37 Joining Insurers,
    and the Joining Insurers’ Policies include primary, umbrella, and excess coverage.112
    The Joining Insurers say their policies include “terms substantially similar to those
    in the Chubb and AIG Policies.”113 CVS says “[a]t least some of [the Joining
    Insurers’ Policies] impose a defense obligation and all of them impose a duty to
    indemnify CVS.”114
    D. OUR SUPREME COURT’S DECISION IN ACE INSURANCE V. RITE AID
    Last year, the Delaware Supreme Court reversed this Court’s decision
    interpreting policy language similar to that here.115 In Rite Aid, the Supreme Court
    110
    Insurers’ Reply, Ex. 95 at Self-Insured Retention End. The Insurers say this Endorsement
    applies to the AIG Policies attached as Exhibits 89, 91-92, 95-114 in Insurers’ Reply. See id. at
    11.
    111
    CVS Opp’n to Joinder Motion at 1.
    112
    Id.
    113
    Joinder Motion at 2.
    114
    CVS Opp’n to Joinder Motion at 1 (citing Joinder Motion, Exs. B1-B3, C1-C4, D2, F1-F6,
    H12-H20, N, R1-R5, W7-W20, X1-X2); see also id. (citing Notice of Joinder (D.I. 287), Exs. 5-
    6, 8, 10-13)).
    115
    Ace Am. Ins. Co. v. Rite Aid Corp., 
    270 A.3d 239
     (Del. 2022), rev’g, Rite Aid Corp. v. ACE
    Am. Ins. Co., 
    2020 WL 5640817
     (Del. Super. Ct. Sept. 22, 2020).
    -22-
    held that underlying claims seeking non-derivative economic loss did not allege
    damages because of bodily injury and therefore were not subject to coverage under
    the relevant insurance policies.116
    The action arose after insurers denied coverage to Rite Aid for the thousands
    of lawsuits seeking damages for costs arising out of Rite Aid’s distribution of
    opioids.117 Given the multiplicity of lawsuits, the Supreme Court focused on the
    claims asserted in the Track One Lawsuits to determine whether the claims alleged
    damages because of bodily injury.118 The insurance policies provided that the
    Insurer 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.”119 “Personal injury” was defined in part as “bodily injury.”120 The policy
    defined “[d]amages because of ‘personal injury’ [to] include damages claimed by
    any person or organization for care, loss of services, or death resulting at any time
    from the ‘personal injury.’”121
    116
    Rite Aid, 270 A.3d at 241, 250.
    117
    Id. at 242.
    118
    Id. at 242-43.
    119
    Id. at 243.
    120
    Id.
    121
    Id. The 2015 policy was also substantially similar to the terms in the other policies additional
    insurers had submitted in connection with Rite Aid’s motion for partial summary judgment. This
    Court also considered a 2018 policy, which differed from the 2015 Policy in that it contained an
    endorsement that excluded opioid and narcotics liability claims from coverage. Rite Aid Corp.,
    
    2020 WL 5640817
     at *3-4.
    -23-
    Accordingly, coverage for damages because of personal injury was only
    available to (a) the person injured, (b) a person recovering on behalf of the person
    injured, or (c) people or organizations that treated the person injured or deceased,
    who demonstrate the existence of and cause of the injuries.122 The Supreme Court
    found that the plaintiffs in the Track One Lawsuits did not fall under category (a)
    because the governmental entities themselves could not claim damages for bodily
    injury.123 They also did not fall under category (b) because the institutional opioid-
    litigation plaintiffs disclaimed they were asserting claims on behalf of others.124
    And, with respect to category (c), the Court found that the plaintiffs were not
    seeking to recover for damages for the care or death of a person resulting from bodily
    injury, because the claims were “not directed to an individual injury but to a public
    health crisis.”125 To qualify for coverage then, the organization, “must show that it
    treated an individual with an injury, how much that treatment cost, and that the injury
    was caused by the insured.”126 In short, the alleged damages must “depend on proof
    of bodily injuries,” and could not be for general, non-derivative economic loss.127
    The Supreme Court further explained it was insufficient for claims to merely
    122
    
    Id. at 247
    .
    123
    
    Id. at 248
    .
    124
    
    Id. at 247
    .
    125
    
    Id. at 253
    .
    126
    
    Id. at 252
    .
    127
    
    Id. at 250, 254
    .
    -24-
    allege a “causal connection between the counties’ economic damages and the
    injuries to their citizens from the opioid epidemic.”128 “There must be more than
    some linkage between the personal injury and damages to recover ‘because of’
    personal injury: namely, bodily injury to the plaintiff, and damages sought because
    of that specific bodily injury.”129 The bodily injuries alleged in a given complaint
    must do more than “explain and support” any economic loss the counties suffered.130
    The individual physical injury must be “the basis of the claims,” “independently
    proven, and shown to be caused by the insured.”131 Hence, the Supreme Court found
    that “the Track One [Suits] have no claims for personal injury—just facts that
    support the economic loss claims.”132
    E. THIS LITIGATION
    Beginning in October 2017, CVS notified the Insurers of thousands of Opioid
    Lawsuits, including the Track One Suits and Additional Representative Suits in
    which CVS is named as a defendant.133 CVS has sought defense and indemnification
    under the Policies.134 The Insurers in return sent coverage position letters wherein
    128
    
    Id. at 241
    .
    129
    
    Id. at 250
    .
    130
    
    Id.
    131
    
    Id. at 250-51
    .
    132
    
    Id. at 250
    .
    133
    Insurers’ Motion at 11-12.
    134
    
    Id.
    -25-
    they reserved their “rights” to deny coverage under the Policies and explained why
    they believe the Opioid Lawsuits aren’t covered by the Policies.135
    In the wake of Rite Aid, indeed, less than a month after that decision, Chubb
    filed its complaint in this action seeking three declarations: (1) that Chubb has no
    duty to defend CVS against the Opioid Lawsuits; (2) that Chubb has no duty to
    indemnify CVS for the Opioid Lawsuits; and, (3) of rights and obligations, if any,
    of other insurers if Chubb is found to have a duty to defend or indemnify CVS.136
    Within days, AIG filed a similar action against CVS seeking declarations that AIG
    had no duty to defend or indemnify CVS for the Opioid Lawsuits.137 The Court then
    consolidated the Chubb and AIG actions.138
    Thereafter, the Court denied CVS’s motion to dismiss or stay this
    consolidated action; that motion argued forum non conveniens.139 The Court noted
    that there was likely no true conflict between Delaware and Rhode Island law, but
    concluded it did not need to choose between the two states’ law on the motion to
    dismiss.140
    The next month, CVS filed its third-party complaint, counterclaims, and
    135
    
    Id.
    136
    Compl. ¶¶ 45-53.
    137
    Id. ¶¶ 38-45 (D.I. 1) (N22C-02-056 PRW CCLD).
    138
    D.I. 93.
    139
    In re CVS Opioid Ins. Litig., 
    2022 WL 3330427
     (Del. Super. Ct. Aug. 12, 2022) (D.I. 198).
    140
    Id., at *9-10.
    -26-
    cross-claims. CVS asserts causes of action for (1) breach of contract, (2) breach of
    the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing, (3) statutory bad faith under
    Rhode Island statutory law, and (4) a declaration that CVS has a right to have its
    losses covered by the Insurers and Joining Insurers.141
    Now before the Court is the Insurers’ motion seeking partial summary
    judgment suggesting that under Rite Aid they have no duty to defend CVS for the
    Opioid Lawsuits. The Joining Insurers, too, seek partial summary judgment that
    they have no duty to defend or indemnify CVS on the same grounds. CVS opposes
    both motions.
    III. STANDARD OF REVIEW
    Superior Court Civil Rule 56 governs a motion for summary judgment.142 The
    Court may grant summary judgment only when “the record demonstrates that ‘there
    is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to
    judgment as a matter of law.’”143 At the summary judgment stage the Court
    determines whether genuine issues of material fact exist, but the Court does “not
    decide such issues.”144 To achieve summary judgment, the movant must carry its
    141
    CVS Compl. ¶¶ 79-96.
    142
    See Del. Super. Ct. Civ. R. 56.
    143
    Parexel Int’l (IRL) Ltd. v. Xynomic Pharms., Inc., 
    2020 WL 5202083
    , at *4 (Del. Super. Ct.
    Sept. 1, 2020) (quoting Del. Super. Ct. Civ. R. 56(c)).
    144
    Merrill v. Crothall-American Inc., 
    606 A.2d 96
    , 99 (Del. 1992) (citation omitted); see also
    Oliver B. Cannon & Sons, Inc. v. Dorr-Oliver Inc., 
    312 A.2d 322
    , 325 (Del. Super. Ct. 1973).
    -27-
    burden to demonstrate its motion is supported by undisputed material facts. 145 If the
    movant is successful, then the burden shifts to the non-movant to demonstrate a
    “genuine issue for trial” still exists.146 The Court views the facts and draws all
    reasonable inferences in the light most favorable to the non-movant.147
    IV. PARTIES’ CONTENTIONS
    The Insurers rely on the Supreme Court’s decision in Rite Aid as grounds for
    partial summary judgment. They insist they have no duty to defend or indemnify
    CVS for the Track One Suits and Additional Representative Suits because the
    Policies cover damages incurred “because of bodily injury,” whereas the Opioid
    Lawsuits seek generalized economic damages.148 And the Insurers say Rite Aid
    controls because CVS has failed to identify any real or relevant conflict between
    Rhode Island and Delaware law.149
    CVS makes five primary arguments that coverage is due under the Policies.
    First, CVS contends Rhode Island law controls, and that under Rhode Island, claims
    seeking damages because of bodily injury extend to the nine Opioid Lawsuits
    145
    Envolve Pharmacy Sols., Inc. v. Rite Aid Headquarters Corp., 
    2023 WL 2547994
    , at *7 (citing
    Moore v. Sizemore, 
    405 A.2d 679
    , 680 (Del. 1979)).
    146
    Del. Super. Ct. Civ. R. 56(e).
    147
    Judah v. Del. Tr. Co., 
    378 A.2d 624
    , 632 (Del. 1977) (citations omitted).
    148
    Insurers’ Motion at 4.
    149
    Insurers’ Reply at 5-8.
    -28-
    here.150 Second, the Policies at issue in this action contain the Pharmacist Liability
    and Druggist Endorsements, which “broadened coverage” and were triggered
    because the Track One Suits and Additional Representative Suits allege “pharmacist
    liability incidents” and “wrongful rendering of services as a pharmacist.”151 Third,
    the “property damage allegations” in these suits independently trigger coverage
    under the Policies.152 Fourth, CVS argues coverage is triggered for the nine Opioid
    Lawsuits because damages “because of bodily injury” include damages “claimed”
    by any person or organization for the bodily injury or death “sustained” by a person,
    and here, governmental entities are claiming damages for bodily injury “sustained
    by a person.”153 Fifth, Track One Suits and Additional Representative Suits assert
    “derivative claims” and are thus covered.154
    V. DISCUSSION
    A. DELAWARE OR RHODE ISLAND LAW?
    The first step in a conflict-of-law analysis is “to decide whether a conflict truly
    exists, comparing ‘the competing jurisdictions to determine whether the laws
    150
    CVS Opp’n to Insurers’ Motion at 23-29.
    151
    Id. at 13-16.
    152
    Id. at 16-18.
    153
    Id. at 2, 19-20.
    154
    Id. at 18-19.
    -29-
    actually conflict on a relevant point.’”155 “In determining whether there is an actual
    conflict, Delaware state courts . . . answer a single and simple inquiry: does
    application of the competing laws yield the same result?”156 If the answer is “yes,”
    then the Court “should avoid the choice-of-law analysis altogether.”157 Moreover,
    the competing laws must actually conflict to require a choice-of-law analysis.158
    When one state’s laws do not address a particular issue, “it cannot conflict with the
    laws of another state.”159 “Where one state fails to address a particular issue, the
    Court should apply the settled law.”160
    Rite Aid is the precedential Delaware decision interpreting whether claims
    seeking damages because of bodily or personal injury extend to generalized
    economic losses suffered by governmental entities in seeking to abate the opioid
    crisis. CVS attempts to avoid application of Rite Aid here by identifying certain
    dicta in Rhode Island cases that are in seeming conflict with the Rite Aid decision.
    155
    In re CVS Opioid Ins. Litig., 
    2022 WL 3330427
    , at *8 (quoting Arch Ins. Co. v. Murdock, 
    2018 WL 1129110
    , at *8 (Del. Super. Ct. Mar. 1, 2018), aff’d sub. nom., RSUI Indem. Co. v. Murdock,
    
    248 A.3d 887
     (Del. 2021)). Sometimes, an initial inquiry for a choice-of-law analysis is
    “determining if the parties made an effective choice of law through their contract.” See Certain
    Underwriters at Llyods, London v. Chemtura Corp., 
    160 A.3d 457
    , 464 (Del. 2017). The Policies
    contain no choice-of-law provisions, so that inquiry is fruitless here.
    156
    Arch Ins. Co., 
    2018 WL 1129110
    , at *8 (alterations in original) (quoting Laguelle v. Bell
    Helicopter Textron, Inc., 
    2013 WL 5460164
    , at *2 (Del. Super. Ct. Oct. 1, 2013)).
    157
    Vichi v. Koninklijke Philips Elecs., N.V., 
    85 A.3d 725
    , 773 (Del. Ch. 2014).
    158
    Arch Ins. Co., 
    2018 WL 1129110
    , at *8.
    159
    
    Id.
     (citing Mills Ltd. P’ship v. Liberty Mut. Ins. Co., 
    2010 WL 8250837
    , at *4 (Del. Super. Ct.
    Nov. 5, 2010)).
    160
    
    Id.
    -30-
    CVS argues McEvoy v. Amica Mutual Insurance Company is controlling law
    in Rhode Island and in conflict with Rite Aid on this point of damages.161 In McEvoy,
    the defendant insurer issued an automobile policy to the plaintiff.162 The McEvoy
    plaintiff’s minor daughter died from injuries sustained in a car accident. The little
    girl was a passenger in one of the plaintiff’s cars covered by the policy, and the
    plaintiff sought damages for both the wrongful death claim that survived the
    deceased child and a loss-of-consortium claim.163       The Court found that the
    automobile policy’s “each person” liability limit applied—and not the higher, “each
    accident” liability limit—because in the wrongful death claim and loss-of-
    consortium claim, the bodily injury occurred to only one person (the deceased child),
    as oppose to two people (the deceased child and parent).164 The Court explained that
    the loss-of-consortium claim was derivative of the wrongful death claim because “all
    damages for such bodily injury” include “derivative and consequential damages
    payable to persons other than the one who sustains the bodily injury,” and the loss
    of the deceased’s society to plaintiff derived from the wrongful death. 165 Thus, the
    “each person” limit of liability applied.166
    161
    
    1991 WL 789913
     (R.I. Super. Ct. Nov. 12, 1991).
    162
    McEvoy, 
    1991 WL 789913
    , at *1.
    163
    Id. at *2-3.
    164
    Id. at *3.
    165
    Id.
    166
    Id.
    -31-
    CVS misreads McEvoy as holding that all “derivative and consequential
    damages payable to persons other than the one who sustains the bodily injury” are
    damages because of bodily injury. The trial court in McEvoy wrote “all damages for
    bodily injury” include derivative and consequential damages, not “all derivative and
    consequential damages” are damages for bodily injury.167 More importantly, the
    claims in McEvoy are the very type of derivative claims that “depend on proof of
    personal injury” that the Supreme Court in Rite Aid distinguished from claims by
    governmental entities seeking generalized economic losses in responding to the
    opioid crisis.168 In McEvoy, the plaintiff parent brought a claim on behalf of the
    deceased daughter that was directly related to and predicated upon the individual
    injury of the daughter. Under Rite Aid, coverage for damages because of bodily
    injury extended to these types of personal injury claims asserted on behalf of other
    individuals. The governments in Rite Aid simply had not brought such particularized
    claims. CVS fails to demonstrate an actual conflict exists between Rite Aid and
    McEvoy.169
    167
    Id.
    168
    Rite Aid, 270 A.3d at 254.
    169
    CVS also cites American Universal Insurance Co. v. Costello for the proposition that Rhode
    Island construes insurance policies broadly. 
    185 A.2d 447
     (R.I. 1962). The Rhode Island Supreme
    Court in Costello construed an automobile insurance policy that contained the language “damages
    for bodily injury” and noted the “coverage afforded by this type of policy was clearly intended to
    be broad.” Id. at 192, 196. The inference CVS draws is that the Delaware Supreme Court
    construes insurance policies narrowly. Not so. Simply because the Rhode Island Supreme Court
    stated an auto insurance policy should be broadly construed does not mean it conflicts with
    Delaware law. Nowhere in Rite Aid does the Supreme Court make any mention it is construing
    -32-
    For the Court to engage in the choice-of-law analysis, the competing laws
    must actually conflict.170 CVS has not shown the two states’ laws conflict. So, the
    Court applies Delaware law.171
    B. THE POLICIES AND “BODILY INJURY”
    Whether the Policies fall within the scope of Rite Aid depends on the language
    of the Policies and a reasonable reading of the complaints in the Track One Suits and
    the Additional Representative Suits.
    “In construing the language of [an insurance policy,] the Court should
    interpret the language in the same manner as it would be understood by an objective,
    reasonable third party.”172 The Court first should “seek to determine the parties’
    intent from the language of the insurance contract itself—the ‘mutual intent at the
    the policy narrowly. And no doubt, Delaware law on this point seems to be in harmony with our
    sister. See, e.g., Monzo v. Nationwide Property and Casaulty Ins. Co., 
    249 A.3d 106
    , 118 (Del.
    2021) (“[I]f there is more than one reasonable interpretation of an insurance policy, Delaware
    courts apply the interpretation that favors coverage.”); Northrop Grumann Innovation Systems,
    Inc. v. Zurich Am. Ins. Co., 
    2021 WL 347015
    , at *9 (Del. Super. Ct. Feb. 2, 2021) (“[A] truly
    ambiguous insurance contract will be construed most strongly against the insurer and in favor of
    the insured.”), app. refused, 
    2021 WL 1043988
     (Del. Mar. 18, 2021).
    170
    Arch Ins. Co., 
    2018 WL 1129110
    , at *8.
    171
    CVS argues that Rhode Island prohibits the consideration of extrinsic evidence, citing a
    Verdict Form and Abatement Order, as well as insurers’ subjective intent. CVS Opp’n to Insurers’
    Motion at 29-31. The Court does not rely on any extrinsic evidence or insurers’ subjective intent
    to reach its decision here.
    172
    Rite Aid, 270 A.3d at 245 (alteration in original) (quoting IDT Corp. v. U.S. Specialty Ins. Co.,
    
    2019 WL 413692
    , at *7 (Del. Super. Ct. Jan. 31, 2019)); Osborn ex rel. Osborn v. Kemp, 
    991 A.2d 1153
    , 1159 (Del. 2010) (“Delaware adheres to the ‘objective’ theory of contracts, i.e., a contract’s
    construction should be that which would be understood by an objective, reasonably third party.”)
    (quoting NBC Universal v. Paxson Commc’ns Corp., 
    2005 WL 1038997
    , at *5 (Del. Ch. Apr. 29,
    2005)).
    -33-
    time of contracting.’”173 “Absent ambiguity, contract terms should be accorded their
    plain, ordinary meaning.”174
    The duty to defend is “broad.”175 “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.’”176 This is true “even
    when the complaint has only ‘one allegation that falls within the scope of the policy’s
    coverage . . . [and] even if an insured is ultimately found to be not liable.’”177
    Furthermore, “when the complaint alleges ‘facts which would support a recovery
    that is covered by the policy, it is the duty of the insurer to defend until such time as
    the claim is confined to a recovery that the policy does not cover.’”178
    173
    Rite Aid, 270 A.3d at 245 (quoting Alstrin v. St. Paul Mercury Ins. Co., 
    179 F. Supp. 2d 376
    ,
    388 (D. Del. 2002)); Goggin v. Nat’l Union Fire Ins. Co. of Pittsburgh, 
    2018 WL 6266195
    , at *4
    (Del. Super. Ct. Nov. 30, 2018); 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. Am. Motorists Ins. Co., 
    616 A.2d 1192
    , 1195-96 (Del. 1992)).
    174
    Rite Aid, 270 A.3d at 245 (citing Alta Berkeley VI C.V. v. Omneon, Inc., 
    41 A.3d 381
    , 385
    (Del. 2012)).
    175
    Id. at 246.
    176
    Id. (quoting Heffernan & Co. v. Hartford Ins. Co. of Am., 
    614 A.2d 295
    , 298 (1992)).
    177
    
    Id.
     (alteration in original) (quoting Nationwide Mut. Ins. Co. v. Garzone, 
    2009 WL 2996468
    ,
    at 10 (E.D. Pa. Sept. 17, 2009)).
    178
    
    Id.
     (quoting Erie Ins. Exch. V. Transamerica Ins. Co., 
    533 A.2d 1363
    , 1368 (Pa. 1987)).
    -34-
    1. Insurers Have No Duty to Defend CVS for The Track One Suits
    Because The Plaintiffs Do Not Seek Damages “Because of Bodily
    Injury.”
    Under Rite Aid, the Track One Suits are not subject to coverage.
    First, the Cuyahoga and Summit complaints are substantively identical. Both
    assert claims against CVS based on CVS’s alleged role in distributing and dispensing
    opioids, and both provide allegations illustrating the harm and costs incurred in each
    county in responding to the crisis.179 Both also assert similar statutory and common
    law nuisance and negligence claims.180 While the Rite Aid court focused on the
    Cuyahoga complaint, that complaint provided more particularized allegations than
    Summit. And so, the Rite Aid holding that applied to Cuyahoga applies just as well
    to Summit—if not with greater force.               For example, while Summit includes
    allegations of the specific number of deaths, overdoses and overall costs incurred by
    county departments, Cuyahoga goes further and provides the specific costs of
    treatments and the number of individuals treated for opioid-related use.181
    Second, the policy language the Supreme Court interpreted in Rite Aid is
    substantively identical to the policy language at-issue here. In Rite Aid, the insurers
    contracted to pay damages “because of ‘personal injury’” or “property damage.”182
    179
    See generally Summit Compl., and Cuyahoga Compl.
    180
    See Summit Compl. ¶¶ 975-1072, 1091-1138; Cuyahoga Compl. ¶¶ 1017-1115, 1134-1179.
    181
    Supra notes 24-27; cf., 33-41.
    182
    Rite Aid, 270 A.3d at 243.
    -35-
    Too, covered damages “because of ‘personal injury’ include[d] damages by any
    person or organization for care, loss of services or death resulting at any time from
    the ‘personal injury.’”183 And “personal injury” was defined as “bodily injury”
    meaning “bodily injury, sickness or disease sustained by a person, including death
    resulting from any of these at any time.”184
    Here, the Chubb and AIG Policies (and Joining Insurers’ Policies) contain
    nigh-on identical language. They cover damages “because of ‘bodily injury’ or
    ‘property damage,’” and in some cases, “‘bodily injury’, ‘property damage’, or
    ‘personal or advertising injury.’”185 “Bodily Injury” is consistently defined across
    the Policies as “bodily injury, sickness or disease sustained by a person, including
    death resulting from any of these at any time,” and may “include mental anguish or
    mental injury resulting from bodily injury.”186 Given that “personal injury” is
    defined as “bodily injury” under the policies in Rite Aid, the Policies here are in all
    substantive respects identical with those in Rite Aid. For these reasons, Rite Aid
    extends to the Track One Lawsuits asserted against CVS.
    Under Rite Aid, damages for bodily injury are covered losses only when
    183
    Id.
    184
    Id.
    185
    See, e.g., Insurers’ Motion, Exs. 21, 22; Insurers’ Reply, Ex. 107. “Personal or advertising
    injury” is not a term at issue.
    186
    E.g., Insurers’ Motion, Ex. 21 § VII.C.
    -36-
    asserted by (a) the person injured, (b) a person recovering on behalf of the person
    injured, or (c) people or organizations that treated the person injured or deceased,
    who demonstrate the existence of and a cause of the injuries.187 The claims in the
    Cuyahoga and Summit complaints are brought by governmental entities seeking
    recovery of economic losses in responding to the opioid crisis. They are not claims
    brought by the person injured, because the governmental entities do not claim they
    themselves have suffered bodily injury. They also are not bringing claims on behalf
    of an individual person injured. Indeed, they disclaim personal injury claims and do
    not base the claims on the injuries of others.188 Finally, the claims are not seeking
    to recover for the care incurred in treating a person injured or deceased because they
    seek general economic losses in responding to the opioid crisis. Though the
    Plaintiffs in Rite Aid highlighted county-specific statistics in the Cuyahoga
    complaint to try to demonstrate that the claims were seeking recovery for the costs
    incurred in the treatment of the individual citizens, a close examination of the
    allegations in the Track One Suits reveals that the most particularized allegations are
    intended only to illustrate the economic losses suffered by the counties. They are
    not, in fact, the “basis of the claims.”189
    187
    Rite Aid, 270 A.3d at 247.
    188
    Summit Compl. ¶ 1038, Cuyahoga Compl. ¶ 1080.
    189
    See generally Summit Compl. and Cuyahoga Compl.; id. at 250-51; Rite Aid, 270 A.3d at 250-
    51.
    -37-
    2. Insurers Have No Duty to Defend CVS for the Additional
    Representative Suits Because the Plaintiffs Do Not Seek Damages
    “Because of Bodily Injury.”
    A review of the Additional Representative Suits shows there are no substantial
    differences from the Track One Suits. Each Additional Representative Suit alleges
    similar misconduct by CVS in its failure to properly distribute and/or dispense
    opioids. Thus, Rite Aid extends to the Additional Representative Suits.
    Like the Track One Suits, the claims in the Additional Representative Suits
    do not fall under any of Rite Aid’s three categories of coverage. They are claims
    brought by governmental entities seeking a combination of common law or statutory
    negligence or nuisance claims. They do not seek to recover for personal injury those
    entities themselves have suffered. And, they either specifically disclaim that they
    seek to recover on behalf of others.190 Or, if they do not, the nature of the allegations
    and the specific damages they seek again impart that they are seeking to recover
    generalized economic losses in responding to the opioid crisis.191
    What’s more, though each Additional Representative Suit makes allegations
    190
    See Summit Compl. ¶ 1032-33, Cuyahoga Compl. ¶ 1074-75; Cherokee Compl. ¶ 13;
    Philadelphia Compl. ¶ 24.
    191
    CVS attempts to contort certain complaints as asserting derivative claims under (b). For
    instance, CVS argues that the Florida and Summit complaints are derivative actions brought on
    behalf of individuals suffering bodily injury relaying the basis of a single allegation that certain of
    the claims were brought “on behalf of” the residents. CVS Opp’n at 11, 18-19. But CVS provides
    no additional explanation and fails to demonstrate that those exemplative claims actually rely on
    proof of any individual’s bodily injury.
    -38-
    specific to each governmental entity, even the most detailed of those allegations
    move the needle no further in showing that the claims fall under any one of the three
    categories defined in Rite Aid.192 For example, CVS highlights allegations in the
    Philadelphia complaint that specify the number of people the city treated with opioid
    disorders year-over-year; the number of doses of naloxone administered and the
    approximate cost per dose; and the cost per person per month for certain drugs
    Philadelphia provided.193 But our Supreme Court in Rite Aid rejected the notion that
    such allegations of aggregate costs in the Cuyahoga complaint transformed the
    prayers pled into personal injury claims.194 Just so here.                The basis of each
    underlying claim in the Philadelphia complaint, as well as the other Additional
    Representative Suits, is not “connected to [ ] personal injury, independently proven,
    and shown to be caused by the insured.”195
    In sum, none of the Additional Representative Suits comprise the personal
    injury claims Rite Aid would recognize as triggering coverage under the requirement
    that such claims must truly be seeking damages because of bodily injury to an
    192
    The Philadelphia Complaint alleges the most particularized facts when compared to the other
    Additional Representative Suits, whereas the New York suits provides the barest county-specific
    allegations. See, e.g., Philadelphia Compl. ¶¶ 292-300, 554-557, 561, 572, 582, 584, 590, 595-96,
    601; cf., Suffolk and Nassau Compls.
    193
    CVS Opp’n to Insurers’ Motion at 9; see also Philadelphia Compl. ¶¶ 590, 595-96, 606.
    194
    See Rite Aid, 270 A.3d at 246.
    195
    See id. at 251.
    -39-
    individual.
    3. Inclusion of Pharmacist Liability Endorsement and Druggist
    Endorsement Is of No Moment; The Threshold Requirement That
    Damages Must Be Because of Bodily Injury or Property Damage
    Adheres Thereto.
    CVS contends the Pharmacist Liability Endorsement in the Chubb Policies
    and the Druggist Endorsement in the AIG Policies broaden coverage.                             The
    Pharmacist Liability Endorsement states in relevant part that Chubb agrees to pay
    on behalf of CVS “all sums in excess of the Schedule of Insured’s Retained Limits
    that [CVS] shall become legally obligated to pay as damages because of ‘bodily
    injury’ arising out of a ‘pharmacist liability incident.’”196 A “pharmacist liability
    incident” is an “actual or alleged negligent act, error or omissions, . . . in the
    performance of a ‘pharmacist professional service.197’” A “pharmacist professional
    service” includes the “preparation, selling, handling or distribution of drugs.”198
    CVS says the “arising out of” language should be construed broadly under
    Delaware law.199 Additionally, give CVS argues it made allegations related to the
    preparation, selling, handling or distribution of prescription drugs, it believes the
    Chubb Policies are triggered.200
    196
    Insurers’ Motion, Ex. 21 at End. 27; CVS Opp’n to Insurers’ Motion, Ex. 22 at End. 24.
    197
    Id.
    198
    Id.
    199
    CVS Opp’n to Insurers’ Motion at 2, 13-14.
    200
    Id. at 14.
    -40-
    Yet the problem with CVS’s construction is that the claims must first satisfy
    the threshold requirement that they seek “damages because of bodily injury.” If the
    claims ab initio seek damages because of bodily injury, then the next question is
    whether the damages arose from “an occurrence.”            The Pharmacist Liability
    Endorsement modifies the “occurrence” requirement. It does not expand the scope
    of—nor in any other way alters—the separate threshold requirement that claims
    must seek damages because of bodily injury. Because the Track One Suits and
    Additional Representative Suits don’t assert claims seeking damages because of
    bodily injury, the inclusion of the Pharmacist Liability Endorsement changes
    nothing.
    The same with respect to the Druggist Endorsement. That Endorsement
    allows “‘[b]odily injury’ or ‘property damage’ arising out of the rendering of or
    failure to render professional health care services as a pharmacist shall be deemed
    to be caused by an ‘occurrence.’”201 Again, the “occurrence” must be causation of
    specific identified individualized bodily injury or property damage, not generalized
    governmental economic loss. In this regard, the Druggist Endorsement is and acts
    no differently than the Pharmacist Liability Endorsement.
    201
    Insurers’ Reply, Ex. 107 at Druggist End.
    -41-
    4. CVS Fails to Demonstrate That the Policies’ Language Warrants a
    Departure from Rite Aid.
    In a last-breath attempt to draw distinctions in the policy language, CVS
    makes poorly developed arguments that the differences in language such as
    “sustain,” “claim” and the inclusion or omission of words such as “any,” “a” and
    “the” have transformative significance here.202 The Policies define bodily injury to
    include “bodily injury, sickness or disease sustained by a person” and “damages
    claimed by any person or organization for care, loss of services, or death resulting at
    any time from the ‘bodily injury.’”203 CVS argues that “damages ‘claimed’” by any
    person or organization cannot mean the same thing as “damages ‘sustained’” by a
    person.204 But CVS does little to explain why this difference is significant. It says
    blithely that the phrasing just cannot mean the same thing.
    It is unclear what exactly CVS is arguing, but in an effort to address CVS’s
    objections, one point: to the extent CVS is arguing that the difference in the policy
    language shows that the policies were intended to extend to the Opioid Lawsuits
    where governmental entities “claim” damages for bodily injury that they did not
    themselves “sustain,” CVS is essentially describing derivative claims. Those claims,
    however, must directly relate to and be predicated upon a particular bodily injury.
    202
    CVS Opp’n to Insurers’ Motion at 19-20.
    203
    See, e.g., Insurers’ Motion, Ex. 21 § VII.C; CVS Opp’n to Insurers’ Motion, Ex. 22 § VII.C.
    204
    CVS Opp’n to Insurers’ Motion at 19.
    -42-
    None of the complaints seek to recover for damages because of the individual
    injuries sustained by a person. Indeed, the complaints expressly belie such as their
    grounds—they seek redress for the communal economic losses suffered.
    CVS also argues the omission of “the” preceding “bodily injury” is significant
    because it suggests no “direct link” between the bodily injury and the person is
    required.205 CVS then claims the Policies’ grants have no such link.206 But that’s
    not true. Damages for bodily injury include “damages claimed by any person or
    organization for care, loss of services, or death resulting at any time from the ‘bodily
    injury.’”207 In addition, CVS says the omission of “the” in damages that “include
    mental anguish or mental injury resulting from bodily injury” also suggests that no
    direct link is needed.208 But CVS is not contending the complaints seek recovery of
    damages for mental anguish or mental injury.
    C. THE POLICIES AND “PROPERTY DAMAGE”
    The property damage allegations in the Track One Suits and Additional
    Representative Suits do not independently trigger coverage under the Policies.209
    The rationale in Rite Aid concerning the requirement to assert claims that seek
    205
    Id. at 20.
    206
    Id.
    207
    See Insurers’ Motion, Ex. 21 § I.D; CVS Opp’n to Insurers’ Motion, Ex. 22 § I.D.
    208
    CVS Opp’n to Insurers’ Motion at 20.
    209
    Id. at 16-17.
    -43-
    recovery of damages because of bodily injury is the same when it comes to property
    damage. In Rite Aid the Supreme Court held that “[t]here must be more than some
    linkage between the personal injury and damages to recover ‘because of’ personal
    injury.”210 Here, “bodily injury” and “property damage” appear side-by-side in the
    Policies, and there is no reason why claims based on property damage require less
    of a causal relationship than that required for claims because of bodily injury.211 Just
    as the individual physical injury must be “the basis of the claims,” so must the
    property damage be the basis of claims for loss because of “property damage.”212
    The Court is not alone here. In West National Insurance v. Quest
    Pharmaceuticals,213 the Sixth Circuit analyzed its earlier decision in Lenning v.
    Commercial Union Insurance214 that “purely economic damages” are “too
    attenuated from a specific covered injury” to trigger coverage “‘because of’ . . .
    property damage.”215               Under the opioid-related claims pled in Quest, the
    governmental entities did not need to prove the underlying injury to the property in
    order to recover for the costs associated in repairing the damaged property.216
    210
    Rite Aid, 270 A.3d at 250.
    211
    See, e.g., Insurers’ Motion, Ex. 21 § I.A.
    212
    Rite Aid, 270 A.3d at 250-51.
    213
    
    57 F.4th 558
     (6th Cir. 2023).
    214
    
    260 F.3d 574
     (6th Cir. 2001).
    215
    57 F.4th at 566; 
    260 F.3d at 582-83
    .
    216
    57 F.4th at 567.
    -44-
    Accordingly, the court determined the plaintiffs were seeking “purely economic
    damages that related to but did not directly implicate the covered injury of property
    damage.”217
    Same here. The Opioid Lawsuits seek nothing more than economic damages
    that relate to but do not directly implicate the covered injury of property damage.
    Consequently, there is no duty to provide coverage.
    D. JOINING INSURERS DO NOT OWE A DUTY TO INDEMNIFY
    To be sure, the duty to defend “may be broader than the duty to ultimately
    indemnify.”218 The Insurers argue that if there is no duty to defend CVS for the
    Track One and Additional Representative Lawsuits, there is necessarily no
    corresponding duty to indemnify.219 CVS responds that only the Joining Insurers’
    moved for partial summary judgment on the duty to indemnify, and that moving for
    summary judgment is premature.220
    As has been shown, the nature of the claims and the relief plaintiffs seek in
    the Track One and Additional Representative Suits do not depend on proof of
    217
    Id.
    218
    ConAgra Foods, Inc. v. Lexington Ins. Co., 
    21 A.3d 62
    , 72-73 (citing Am. Ins. Grp. V. Risk
    Enter. Mgmt., Ltd. 
    761 A.2d 826
    , 830 (Del. 2000)).
    219
    Insurers’ Supplemental Memorandum in Further Support of Chubb and AIG’s Motion for
    Partial Summary Judgment and the Joining Insurers’ Motion for Partial Summary Judgement
    (“Insurers’ Supp. Motion”) at 5-6.
    220
    CVS Supp. Opp’n at 5-6.
    -45-
    personal injury. It is therefore unclear how development of the facts as it relates to
    any alleged individual’s personal injury in the underlying nine Opioid Lawsuits
    would happened or could trigger the Insurers’ duty to indemnify. Indeed, the cases
    relied upon by CVS demonstrate this point.
    For example, CVS cites to Premcor Refining Group, Inc. v. Matrix Service
    Industrial Contractors, Inc., for the proposition that “indemnification is ultimately
    determined upon the facts as revealed during discovery or are ultimately presented
    at trial.”221 In Premcor, plaintiff operated a refinery where two workers died from
    an accident.222 The workers were hired out to an independent contractor which had
    entered into a service agreement with the refinery’s operator.223 The insurance
    contract provided that the independent contractor must obtain insurance for the
    benefit of itself and that operator.224 To that end, the independent contractor entered
    into an insurance agreement with the defendant insurance company with respect to
    any liability arising out of the contractor’s operations or work.225 After an accident
    caused the death of two workers, plaintiffs in the underlying complaints brought
    wrongful death claims against the refinery operators of the refinery, but none against
    221
    CVS Supp. Opp’n at 5-6 (citing 
    2009 WL 960567
    , at *12 (Del. Super. Ct. Mar. 19, 2009)).
    222
    Id. at *1.
    223
    Id.
    224
    Id.
    225
    Id.
    -46-
    the contractor.226 The operator of the refinery then brought claims against the
    insurance company seeking duty-to-defend coverage and indemnification.227 In
    response, the insurance company denied that the deaths were caused by the
    independent contractor’s work—i.e., the basis for the duty to defend and indemnify
    the operator of the refinery.228 The court granted the insurance company’s motion
    for summary judgment on the duty to defend, but denied it on the duty to
    indemnify.229
    On the duty to defend, the court found no allegations in the underlying
    complaints tying the contractor’s work to potential liability, and without that
    allegation, the insurance company had no duty to defend the lawsuits raised against
    the refinery operator.230 But with respect to the duty to indemnify, it denied
    summary judgment because later discovery could show the extent of the contractor’s
    involvement.231
    There, reserving a ruling for indemnification later in the proceedings made
    sense because the estates of the deceased workers were bringing individual
    derivative claims and sought damages directly based on the personal injuries and
    226
    Id. at *4.
    227
    Id. at *2.
    228
    Id.
    229
    Id. at *13.
    230
    Id. at *11.
    231
    Id. at *12.
    -47-
    deaths of the workers. But here, the development of allegations illustrating the
    extent of the opioid crisis will not change the fact that the plaintiffs in the underlying
    complaints have asserted claims for general, economic losses to respond to the
    opioid epidemic, not personal injury claims. In other words, nothing can come about
    that will transmute or transform the various governmental claims into those for
    bodily injury or property damage covered by the Policies. Accordingly, because
    there is no duty to defend the Track One and Additional Representative lawsuits,
    there is also no corresponding duty to indemnify.
    VI. CONCLUSION
    For the reasons stated above, the Insurers’ Motion for Partial Summary
    Judgment is GRANTED, and Joining Insurers’ Motion for Partial Summary
    Judgment is also GRANTED.
    IT IS SO ORDERED.
    Paul R. Wallace, Judge
    -48-