Asbestos BI Claims All Separate Occurrences

Bad news for a primary insurance company and good news for the excess insurers comes from the trial court’s decision finding multiple occurrences on remand in the Kaiser Cement case (Truck Ins. Exchg. v. Kaiser Cement, et al., Los Angeles Superior Court, Case No. BC249550 [Order 1/24/08]).  The number of occurrence issue is of major importance to insurers and their insureds in asbestos, construction, sexual abuse, and other multiple-claimant coverage disputes.  

The California Court of Appeal (Second Appellate District [Los Angeles]) in 2007 ruled that Truck Insurance Exchange was wrong in asserting that its payment of claims had exhausted its policies’ occurrence limits because, the court held, the occurrence under Truck’s policies was the injurious exposure to asbestos, not the manufacture and distribution of products containing asbestos. London Market Insurers v. Superior Court (Truck Ins. Exchg.) (2007) 146 Cal.App.4th 648 (review denied). Truck’s position had been that all asbestos-related claims in any given year arose from a single occurrence because all the claims had the same underlying cause, i.e., “the design, manufacture and distribution by Kaiser and its subsidiaries of asbestos-bearing products.” The appellate court also concluded that, given its ruling, it could not make a decision on the number of occurrences based on the record before it and remanded the case to the trial court for further proceedings.

On remand, the trial court held that, based on the policies’ language and in light of the stipulated facts, Truck failed to prove the claims could be aggregated and, thus, each claim of asbestos bodily injury was a separate and distinct occurrence under Truck's 19 policies.

Truck’s policies had two different occurrence definitions and aggregating clauses. From 1964 to 1974 the policies had a “one lot” clause which provided that “all damages arising out of one prepared or acquired lot of goods or products” arose out of one occurrence. Truck argued that under this provision, claims from exposure to products produced at the same manufacturing facility should be deemed one occurrence. Based on the appellate court’s decision, the trial court held the focus had to be on the exposure rather than the manufacturing process. Truck had stipulated that the number of product lines was not known and that individual claims could not be connected with particular product lines. Therefore, Truck failed to meet its burden to demonstrate that the “one lot” clause aggregated particular claims.

From 1974 to 1983, the Truck policies had a “premises deemer” clause which provided that exposure to substantially the same general conditions “at or emanating from each premises location” was one occurrence. Truck argued all claims were one occurrence as they arose from exposure to products produced at the same Kaiser manufacturing facility or, alternatively, because them were due to the same corporate decision (or multiple corporate decisions from the same location) to place asbestos in products.  The trial court was not persuaded. Relying on Judge Ira Brown’s decisions from the coordinated asbestos proceedings in 1990, the court held that the premises location in a deemer clause could not refer to the plant from which the products were shipped or distributed since that is not where the exposure to asbestos occurred. Furthermore, Truck stipulated that it could not connect the claimant’s injuries to a particular plant. As to the corporate decision argument, the appellate court already decided that was not the correct focus, since it was not the exposure to asbestos. Besides, there was no evidence of one decision to incorporate asbestos into all Kaiser products.

Truck had stipulated that if the court found Truck’s aggregation arguments unpersuasive, then each asbestos bodily injury claimant must be treated as a separate occurrence. Thus, that is what the trial court concluded.

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