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PUBLISHED OPINION
COURT OF APPEALS

DECISION

DATED AND FILED

NOTICE

November 19, 1998

This opinion is subject to further editing. If published, the official version will appear in the bound volume of the Official Reports.

Marilyn L. Graves

Clerk, Court of Appeals

of Wisconsin

A party may file with the Supreme Court a petition to review an adverse decision by the Court of Appeals. See § 808.10 and Rule 809.62, Stats.

BACKGROUND

DISCUSSION

Standard of Review.

Pollution Exclusion.

The principle underlying the doctrine is straightforward. As the drafter of the insurance policy, an insurer has the opportunity to employ expressive exactitude in order to avoid a misunderstanding of the policy's terms. Because the insurer is the party best situated to eliminate ambiguity in the policy, the policy's terms should be interpreted as they would be understood from the perspective of a reasonable person in the position of the insured.

Id. (further citations omitted).

POLLUTANT S - means any solid, liquid, gaseous, or thermal irritant or contaminant, including smoke, vapor, soot, fumes, acids, alkalis, chemicals and waste. Waste includes materials to be recycled, reconditioned or reclaimed. The term POLLUTANTS, as used herein, is not defined to mean potable water, agricultural water, water furnished to commercial users or water used for fire suppression.

....

Contamination includes any unclean, unsafe, damaging, injurious or unhealthful condition, either actual or potential, which arises out of the presence in the environment of any POLLUTANT, whether permanent or transient.

Environment includes any person, any man-made object or feature, animals, crops and vegetables, land, bodies of water, underground water, or water table or aquifer, air and any other natural feature of the earth and its atmosphere, whether or not altered, developed or cultivated.

Further, the policy states:

It is the intent and effect of this exclusion to exclude any and/or all coverages afforded by this policy for any CLAIM, action, judgment, liability, settlement, defense or expenses, if any, arising out of the discharge, dispersal, release or escape of POLLUTANTS.

The definitions of "contamination" and "pollutants" are related and must be interpreted together. The appellants argue that the sewage was not a pollutant, even though the definition of pollutant contained in the policy includes waste, because the human waste in the sewage was combined with a lot of water. The appellants also point out that the policy's definition of pollutants does not include "potable water, agricultural water, water furnished to commercial users or water used for fire suppression." Although those terms describe different types of water quality used in different situations, i.e., domestic, agricultural, industrial, and emergency, none of the terms describes sewer water, i.e., water which is currently not suited for any type of use. The combination of fecal matter, mud and sludge suspended in the water that flooded the Guenthers' basement could be considered a pollutant under the policy definition. However, even if it were, our inquiry does not end because the pollution exclusion does not apply unless the sewage caused damage by "contaminating" the basement.

In Beahm, we interpreted a pollution exclusion4 similar to the one at issue here. In that case, smoke from fires set by the insured to burn off winter grass obscured the vision of motorists on a nearby highway causing an accident. The insurer refused coverage for the accident based on the pollution exclusion contained in its policy. Id. at 579, 510 N.W.2d at 704. We concluded that a reasonable insured would understand that the pollution exclusion clause excluded coverage only where the damage was caused by the toxic nature of the smoke which the insured allowed to escape into the environment. Id. at 584-85, 510 N.W.2d at 706-07. However, because the harm resulted from the inherent opacity of smoke, and not from any of smoke's toxic properties, such as its ability to corrode property or to injure a person's eyes, skin or respiratory system, we concluded that the damage which occurred was not contamination by a pollutant; and therefore, it was covered under the insurance policy. Id.

CONCLUSION

1 We cannot determine from the affidavits submitted in support of and in opposition to Mutual Insurance's motion for summary judgment whether there were toxic properties to this domestic sewage and whether any damages resulted from such toxic properties, if such were present. Those are questions of fact that are not appropriate for resolution on summary judgment.

2 The pollution exclusion in the policy is broad, containing language which excludes coverage "whether or not the contamination is introduced into the environment intentionally or accidentally or gradually or suddenly and whether or not the INSURED and/or any other person or organization is responsible for the contamination." The policy also states that coverage is excluded "whether such results from the INSURED's and/or any other person's or organization's activities, whether or not such is sudden, gradual, intended, foreseeable, expected, fortuitous, inevitable and wherever or however such occurs." See Just v. Land Reclamation, Ltd., 155 Wis.2d 737, 456 N.W.2d 570, modified, 157 Wis.2d 507 (1990) (holding that the terms "sudden and accidental" in a pollution exclusion clause means unexpected and unintended, thus excluding coverage even if pollution occurs over a period of time).

3 Q... Do you have an opinion whether or not, if this had been clean water, whether you would have still suffered some damages?

AOh, we would have certainly.

4 The policy in Beahm did not apply to damages which resulted directly or indirectly from:

the discharge, dispersal, release or escape of smoke, soot, fumes, acids, alkalis, toxic chemicals, liquids or gases, waste materials or other irritants, contaminants or pollutants into or upon the land, the atmosphere or a water course, body of water, bog, marsh, swamp or wetland.

Beahm v. Pautsch, 180 Wis.2d 574, 580, 510 N.W.2d 702, 705 (Ct. App. 1993).

5 We do not hold that sewage can never be a pollutant which contaminates an environment. We merely conclude that there may be unresolved factual issues regarding the characterization of domestic sewage sludge, as there are here. Several courts in other jurisdictions have recognized a distinction between toxic industrial sewage and non-toxic, non-hazardous domestic sewage. See Incorporated Village of Cedarhurst v. Hanover Ins. Co., 675 N.E.2d 822 (N.Y. 1996) (municipal sewage which flooded basements, not pollutant); United States Fidelity & Guar. Co. v. Armstrong, 479 So.2d 1164 (Ala. 1985) (pollution exclusion refers to industrial pollution, not natural city sewage); Minerva Enters., Inc. v. Bituminous Cas. Corp., 851 S.W.2d 403 (Ark. 1993) (definition of "pollutants" intended to exclude industrial wastes, not common household wastes). Thus, even though the insurance policy lists "wastes" and "fumes" in its definition of "pollutants," Mutual Insurance, by showing that the basement smelled bad, did not meet its burden of showing that the toxic properties of the waste and fumes caused the damage. See City of Bremerton v. Harbor Ins. Co., 963 P.2d 194 (Wash. Ct. App. 1998) ("noxious and toxic fumes" and "foul and toxic odors and gases" are "pollutants" within the meaning of pollution exclusion); City of Englewood v. Commercial Union Assurance, 940 P.2d 948 (Colo. Ct. App. 1996) (unresolved legal and factual question about nature of recycled sewage precluded insurers' reliance on pollution exclusion to avoid duty to defend).