United States Court of Appeals
For the First Circuit
No. 13-1172
VERMONT MUTUAL INSURANCE COMPANY,
Plaintiff, Appellant,
v.
ANDREW ZAMSKY ET AL.,
Defendants, Appellees.
APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS
[Hon. Nathaniel M. Gorton, U.S. District Judge]
[Hon. Robert B. Collings, U.S. Magistrate Judge]
Before
Howard, Selya and Lipez,
Circuit Judges.
Peter C. Kober, with whom Murphy & Riley, P.C. was on brief,
for appellant.
James T. Scamby, with whom Michael W. Reilly, Tommasino &
Tommasino, and Heifetz Rose LLP were on brief, for appellees Andrew
Zamsky and Massachusetts Property Insurance Underwriting
Association (FAIR Plan).
David W. White, Jr., with whom Breakstone, White & Gluck was
on brief, for appellee Renata Ivnitskaya.
Kara Thorvaldsen, with whom George C. Rockas and Wilson,
Elser, Moskowitz, Edelman & Dicker LLP were on brief, for appellee
Scottsdale Insurance Company.
October 9, 2013
SELYA, Circuit Judge. It seems self-evident that a story
that involves throwing gasoline on a smoldering fire is unlikely to
have a happy ending. That is true here, but the parties to this
appeal have sifted through the embers and identified what some
might regard as an oxymoron: an interesting insurance coverage
question. After careful consideration, we conclude that the
district court properly construed the relevant insurance contracts
and proceeded to answer the coverage question correctly.1
Accordingly, we affirm.
Defendant-appellee Andrew Zamsky is an insured under
three homeowners' policies issued to his parents by plaintiff-
appellant Vermont Mutual Insurance Company (Vermont Mutual). Each
of these policies covered a separate parcel of residential real
estate owned by the Zamskys. In relevant part, they require
Vermont Mutual to defend and indemnify all persons insured
thereunder, including Andrew Zamsky, against claims stemming from
"bodily injury" caused by a covered "occurrence," subject, however,
to various exclusions. One such exclusion appearing in all three
policies, which we shall refer to as the "UL exclusion," pretermits
coverage for injuries "[a]rising out of a premises" owned by an
insured but not itself an "insured location." The Zamskys owned a
1
The case was decided below on summary judgment. In entering
the dispositive order, the district judge adopted the report and
recommendation of a magistrate judge. For ease in exposition, we
take an institutional view and refer only to "the district court,"
without distinguishing between the two judicial officers.
-2-
fourth piece of residential real estate, not insured by Vermont
Mutual. The case before us concerns an accident that occurred
there and turns on the applicability vel non of the UL exclusions
contained in the Vermont Mutual policies.
The background facts are susceptible to succinct summary.
On the night of November 27, 2008, Zamsky, defendant-appellee
Renata Ivnitskaya, and several friends drove to a house in
Falmouth, Massachusetts owned by Zamsky's parents. It is
undisputed that the Falmouth house was not an "insured location" as
defined in the policies.
At some point after their arrival, Zamsky retrieved from
a shed on the property a portable fire pit that he had purchased
earlier that year. The fire pit was somewhere around 30 inches
wide and about 18 inches high. It weighed between 30 and 40
pounds.
The group positioned the fire pit on a deck attached to
the house. They tried to start a fire, but the wood that they had
collected for that purpose was damp and would not burn readily.
One member of the group, Aaron Bronstein, told Zamsky
that he wanted to get something to help the fire along. Zamsky
suggested that Bronstein look in either the garage or the shed.
Bronstein retrieved a container of gasoline and poured it on the
fire.
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The consequent conflagration set at least three of the
assembled persons aflame. One of these individuals — Ivnitskaya —
suffered especially severe burns.
In due course, Ivnitskaya sued Zamsky for bodily injuries
in a Massachusetts state court, alleging a golconda of negligent
acts and omissions. That suit is still pending; Vermont Mutual and
defendant-appellee Massachusetts Property Insurance Underwriting
Association (FAIR Plan) have been sharing the cost of defending
Zamsky. Vermont Mutual, however, has done so pursuant to a
reservation of rights. Defendant-appellee Scottsdale Insurance
Company (Scottsdale) has been keeping a watchful eye on the
proceedings because it provides umbrella coverage (i.e., excess
liability coverage) to the Zamsky family.
After Ivnitskaya's state court suit was brought, Vermont
Mutual filed this declaratory judgment action in the federal court.
It named as defendants Zamsky, FAIR Plan, Ivnitskaya, and
Scottsdale; premised federal jurisdiction on diversity of
citizenship and the existence of a controversy in the requisite
amount, see 28 U.S.C. § 1332(a)(1); and prayed for a declaration
that the UL exclusions in its policies pretermitted any obligation
either to continue to defend Zamsky in the negligence suit or to
indemnify him against any damage award.2
2
In pertinent part, the text of the UL exclusion (which is
identical in all three Vermont Mutual policies) reads as follows:
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Once answers were filed and discovery completed, the
parties cross-moved for summary judgment. The district court
denied Vermont Mutual's motion and granted the appellees' motions,
holding that the UL exclusion did not apply and that Vermont Mutual
owed Zamsky a duty to defend. See Vt. Mut. Ins. Co. v. Zamsky, 916
F. Supp. 2d 156, 159 (D. Mass. 2012); see also Vt. Mut. Ins. Co. v.
Zamsky, No. 11-11869, 2012 WL 6864702 (D. Mass. Dec. 17, 2012).
This timely appeal followed.
The question before us is a limited one. Vermont Mutual
asked the district court to declare nonexistent any duty on its
part either to defend or to indemnify. The district court did not
take the bait but, rather, restricted its judgment to the duty to
defend. See Zamsky, 916 F. Supp. 2d at 159. This makes sense as,
in the ordinary course, "the duty of an insurance carrier to defend
the insured is broader than its duty to indemnify." B & T Masonry
Constr. Co. v. Pub. Serv. Mut. Ins. Co., 382 F.3d 36, 39 (1st Cir.
2004) (construing Massachusetts law). Had the appellees been
1. Coverage E — Personal Liability and Coverage F —
Medical Payments to Others do not apply to "bodily
injury" or "property damage":
. . .
e. Arising out of a premises:
(1) Owned by an "insured";
(2) Rented to an "insured"; or
(3) Rented to others by an "insured";
that is not an "insured location" . . . .
It is conceded that if the occurrence which caused Ivnitskaya's
injuries arose out of the Falmouth premises, the exclusion should
be given effect.
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intent on securing a more complete declaration of their rights
(extending, say, to the duty to indemnify), they could have cross-
appealed. They did not do so. In the absence of a cross-appeal,
only the duty to defend is properly before us. See Haley v. City
of Boston, 657 F.3d 39, 53 (1st Cir. 2011) ("It is black-letter law
that even though an appellee can argue in support of a lower
court's ruling in his favor on any ground made manifest in the
record . . ., he cannot, without a cross-appeal, argue against a
judgment in his favor in an endeavor either to expand his rights or
to diminish the appellant's rights."). We proceed accordingly.
This is a diversity case and, with respect to the limited
question before us, the law of Massachusetts supplies the
substantive rules of decision. See B & T Masonry, 382 F.3d at 38;
U.S. Liab. Ins. Co. v. Selman, 70 F.3d 684, 688 (1st Cir. 1995).
In Massachusetts, the duty to defend arises when "the facts alleged
in the complaint and those facts which are known by the insurer,"
Bos. Symph. Orch., Inc. v. Commercial Union Ins. Co., 545 N.E.2d
1156, 1158 (Mass. 1989), demonstrate "a possibility that the
liability claim falls within the insurance coverage," B & T
Masonry, 382 F.3d at 39 (internal quotation marks omitted). The
initial burden is on the insured to demonstrate that the overall
coverage provisions apply. If the insured successfully makes that
showing, the burden then shifts to the insurer to demonstrate that
some exclusion defeats coverage. See id. At all times, ambiguity
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in the language of the policy must be construed in favor of
coverage or, put another way, in favor of the insured. See id.
In this instance, the parties agree that, based on the
allegations in Ivnitskaya's complaint and facts known to Vermont
Mutual, coverage attaches unless some exclusion operates to defeat
it. We thus proceed directly to the second stage of the inquiry
and ask whether Vermont Mutual has identified such an exclusion.
To this end, Vermont Mutual says that the UL exclusion
carries the day. The district court disagreed. See Zamsky, 916 F.
Supp. 2d at 158-59. Our task is to determine the accuracy of the
district court's conclusion that the UL exclusion does not apply.
Our standard of review is familiar. We examine district
court rulings on summary judgment de novo. See Certain Interested
Underwriters at Lloyd's, London v. Stolberg, 680 F.3d 61, 65 (1st
Cir. 2012). This standard dovetails with the proposition, time-
honored in Massachusetts, that the interpretation of an insurance
policy typically embodies a question of law for the court. See
id.; Cody v. Conn. Gen. Life Ins. Co., 439 N.E.2d 234, 237 (Mass.
1982).
In the case at hand, there is no genuine dispute as to
any material fact.3 These undisputed facts tee up a question about
3
The parties make a considerable racket about whether Zamsky
and his friends decided to light a fire before or after they drove
to Falmouth. As we explain infra, this disputed fact is not
material to the resolution of the coverage question.
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the meaning and effect of the UL exclusion. This is a question
that the highest court of Massachusetts — the Supreme Judicial
Court (SJC) — has yet to answer. In such a situation, it is our
obligation to make an informed prophecy as to how that court, if
confronted with the question, would be likely to rule. See Andrew
Robinson Int'l, Inc. v. Hartford Fire Ins. Co., 547 F.3d 48, 51
(1st Cir. 2008). When making such a prediction, we may look to a
variety of sources, including decisions of the lower courts in
Massachusetts, persuasive adjudications by other courts, scholarly
works, and considerations touching upon public policy. See
Blinzler v. Marriott Int'l, Inc., 81 F.3d 1148, 1151 (1st Cir.
1996).
We start close to home. "While decisions of a state's
intermediate appellate court are not binding on a federal court
sitting in diversity, such opinions are entitled to some weight."
Andrew Robinson, 547 F.3d at 55. Two decisions of the
Massachusetts Appeals Court, each of which construes the UL
exclusion, are instructive here.
The first of these cases is Callahan v. Quincy Mutual
Fire Insurance Co., 736 N.E.2d 857 (Mass. App. Ct. 2000). There,
an insured's dog had bitten a third party at premises owned by the
insured but not covered by Quincy Mutual. See id. at 858. The
victim sued the insured for personal injuries. In the ensuing
coverage dispute, the court held that the UL exclusion in Quincy
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Mutual's policy did not pertain because the dog "was not a
condition of the . . . premises." Id. at 859. Thus, while the
occurrence "happened [at the uninsured location], . . . it did not
'arise out of'" the premises. Id.
The second case is Commerce Insurance Co. v. Theodore,
841 N.E.2d 281 (Mass. App. Ct. 2006). There, a third party entered
premises owned by the insured but not covered by Commerce in order
to minister to a dying tree. See id. at 282. Due to the insured's
alleged negligence, the third party fell from a ladder and
sustained injuries. See id. He subsequently brought suit against
the insured. In the ensuing coverage dispute, the court held that
the UL exclusion in Commerce's policy applied. It reasoned that
"where . . . a third person is on the property to repair a
condition of the property . . . [t]here is a sufficiently close
relationship between the injury and the premises" such that the
injury should be understood to have arisen out of the premises.
Id. at 285. (internal quotation marks omitted).
These bookend cases set the parameters of our inquiry.
In both of them, the Appeals Court interpreted the UL exclusion's
ambiguous "arising out of a premises" language to mean arising out
of a condition of a premises. See id. at 284-85; Callahan, 736
N.E.2d at 859. Read together, the cases establish a dichotomy: if
the covered occurrence arises out of a condition of the premises
and the exclusion's other requirements are satisfied, the exclusion
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applies; otherwise, it does not. This dichotomy is faithful to an
interpretive principle long hallowed by the SJC: ambiguities in
insurance policies are to be construed in favor of affording
coverage to the insured. See, e.g., Hakim v. Mass. Insurers'
Insolvency Fund, 675 N.E.2d 1161, 1165 (Mass. 1997); Rocci v. Mass.
Accident Co., 110 N.E. 972, 974 (Mass. 1916). This venerable
principle underpins, and is fully consistent with, the SJC's
unwavering insistence that exclusions from coverage should be
strictly construed. See Hakim, 675 N.E.2d at 1165.
In an effort to alter the trajectory of the debate,
Vermont Mutual suggests that this principle is trumped (or at least
neutralized) by the SJC's instruction that the phrase "arising out
of" should be construed broadly, regardless of whether that phrase
appears in an exclusion or an insuring agreement. See, e.g.,
Bagley v. Monticello Ins. Co., 720 N.E.2d 813, 816 (Mass. 1999)
(construing the phrase in the context of a policy exclusion);
Rischitelli v. Safety Ins. Co., 671 N.E.2d 1243, 1245 (Mass. 1996)
(construing the phrase in the context of an insuring agreement).
This suggestion fails because the "arising out of" language only
comes into play if there is some causal link between the covered
occurrence and a condition of the premises. Here, there is no such
linkage.
The bookend cases illustrate this sequencing. In
Callahan, the court found no causal link between the occurrence and
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a condition of the premises, see 736 N.E.2d at 859, and thus did
not separately address any ambiguity inherent in the interstitial
"arising out of" language. As the court said, the question before
it was "less one of reach than it [was] of fit." Id.
In Theodore, however, the court determined that a
condition of the premises — a diseased tree — had a sufficient link
with the occurrence. See 841 N.E.2d at 285 ("[I]t is
incontrovertible that the insured asked [the victim] to help him
because of the dying tree on the . . . property."). Only after it
had made that determination did the court proceed to construe
broadly the phrase "arising out of" and conclude that the UL
exclusion applied. See id. This second step gave force to the
exclusion even though a more direct cause of the victim's injuries
(the insured's alleged negligence in failing to steady the ladder)
existed. See id. at 282, 285.
Vermont Mutual has a fallback position. It seizes upon
the Theodore court's reference to the victim's purpose in order to
argue that if Zamsky and his cohorts went to the Falmouth house
with the pre-formed intention of lighting a fire, the occurrence at
issue must have arisen out of the premises. This is linguistic
legerdemain. The victim's purpose in Theodore was material because
it was inextricably intertwined with a condition of the premises.
Here, however, the group's reason for going to Falmouth was not
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material because that purpose was not related to a condition of the
premises. That makes all the difference.4
In the last analysis, we think that the dichotomy
delineated by the Appeals Court in Callahan and Theodore — a
dichotomy that focuses the inquiry, in the first instance, on
whether or not the occurrence arose out of a condition of the
premises — is sensible and conforms to general principles long
embedded in Massachusetts jurisprudence. Moreover, reading the UL
exclusion in this way coincides with the weight of authority
elsewhere. See, e.g., Kitchens v. Brown, 545 So. 2d 1310, 1311-12
(La. Ct. App. 1989); Westfield Ins. Co. v. Hunter, 948 N.E.2d 931,
932-33 (Ohio 2011); see also Callahan, 736 N.E.2d at 859-60 & n.5
(describing and collecting cases from other jurisdictions).5 Such
a reading also comports with sound public policy. After all, the
dichotomy draws an easily administered line and enhances
4
Vermont Mutual invites us to set aside the judgment because
the district court erred in stating that Zamsky and his friends did
not decide to light a fire until after their arrival in Falmouth.
See Zamsky, 916 F. Supp. 2d at 157. We decline the invitation.
Since the timing of the decision to light a fire is immaterial, the
district court's statement, even if erroneous, is harmless. See
Roche v. John Hancock Mut. Life Ins. Co., 81 F.3d 249, 253 (1st
Cir. 1996) ("[A] fact is 'material' only when it possesses the
capacity . . . to alter the outcome of the lawsuit under the
applicable legal tenets.").
5
This is not to say that courts outside Massachusetts are
unanimous in this view. They are not. See, e.g., Maroney v. N.Y.
Cent. Mut. Fire Ins. Co., 839 N.E.2d 886, 889-90 (N.Y. 2005);
Schinner v. Gundrum, 833 N.W.2d 685, 703-04 (Wis. 2013). But we
conclude that the SJC — like the Appeals Court — would be apt to
follow the weight of authority.
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predictability of results — a laudable objective from the vantage
point of both insurers and insureds. See Langill v. Vt. Mut. Ins.
Co., 268 F.3d 46, 49 (1st Cir. 2001) ("What seems preeminent in
this insurance context, for both insurer and insured, is
predictability."); Bos. Gas Co. v. Century Indem. Co., 910 N.E.2d
290, 311 (Mass. 2009) (taking "stability and predictability in the
insurance market" to be an important consideration).
We add a coda. Insurance policies should be construed,
where possible, to conform to the reasonable expectations of the
parties. See Hazen Paper Co. v. U.S. Fid. & Guar. Co., 555 N.E.2d
576, 583 (Mass. 1990) (explaining that it is "appropriate, in
construing an insurance policy, to consider what an objectively
reasonable insured, reading the relevant policy language, would
expect to be covered"). Vermont Mutual drafted the policies at
issue here. If it wanted to exclude from coverage all injuries
occurring at an owned premises that it did not insure, it would
have been child's play to say so. But Vermont Mutual eschewed this
straightforward course and chose instead to sound an uncertain
trumpet. Under such circumstances, we do not believe that the SJC
would countenance the insurer's revisionist attempt to make a
policy exclusion sweep more broadly than its language dictates.
See, e.g., Makrigiannis v. Nintendo of Am., Inc., 815 N.E.2d 1066,
1071 (Mass. 2004) (observing that if the insurer "intended to
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exclude coverage" under certain conditions "it could have expressly
stated such an exclusion").
To say more on this point would be supererogatory. We
conclude that when squarely confronted with a case that hinges on
the UL exclusion, the SJC will follow the path demarcated by the
Massachusetts Appeals Court. Using this interpretive model, we
hold that the UL exclusion does not apply here.
Although we leave for another day the exact contours of
the phrase "a condition of the premises," it is nose-on-the-face
plain that this portable fire pit — stored on the property for a
matter of months and used just once prior to the occurrence (in a
different location) — was not a condition of the Falmouth premises.
The fact that the fire pit was easily movable is a significant
consideration. See 9 Steven Plitt et al., Couch on Insurance 3d
§ 126:8 (2008); see also Callahan, 736 N.E.2d at 859. Unlike the
tree in Theodore, 841 N.E.2d at 285, the fire pit was not a part of
the premises. Unlike the electric fence that the Callahan court
hypothesized would be considered a condition of the premises, 736
N.E.2d at 859, the fire pit was not erected on the property. Nor
did the fire pit constitute a defect in some part of the premises,
such as "the loose board, the falling roof slate, the defect in the
walkway, [or] the failure of outdoor lighting" mentioned by both
the Theodore and Callahan courts. See Theodore, 841 N.E.2d at 284
(quoting Callahan, 736 N.E.2d at 860). Rather, the fire pit was a
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portable item of personal property that happened to be stored in a
building on the Falmouth premises.
It follows inexorably, as night follows day, that the
occurrence at issue here did not arise out of a condition of the
premises. Consequently, the court below did not err in determining
that the UL exclusion did not apply.
We need go no further. For the reasons elucidated above,
the judgment is
Affirmed.
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