GRE Insurance Group v. Metropolitan Boston Housing Partnership, Inc.

                  United States Court of Appeals
                      For the First Circuit
                                           

No. 94-2004

                       GRE INSURANCE GROUP 
            D/B/A ATLAS ASSURANCE COMPANY OF AMERICA,

                       Plaintiff, Appellee,

                                v.

          METROPOLITAN BOSTON HOUSING PARTNERSHIP, INC.,

                      Defendant, Appellant.

                                           

           APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

                FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS

          [Hon. Richard G. Stearns, U.S. District Judge]
                                                                 

                                           

                              Before

                        Cyr, Circuit Judge,
                                                    
            Coffin and Bownes, Senior Circuit Judges.
                                                              

                                           

  Joseph G.  Blute with whom Jonathan  Z. Pearlson  and Robert Quinn
                                                                              
were on brief for appellant.
  Daniel P.  Carter with  whom Michael  R. Luongo  and Jayne  Conroy
                                                                              
were on brief for appellee.

                                           

                          July 25, 1995
                                           


     COFFIN,  Senior  Circuit  Judge.   This  appeal  raises  the
                                              

question  whether an insurance carrier  has a duty  to defend and

indemnify  its  insured  against  lawsuits currently  pending  in

Massachusetts  courts under  two Comprehensive  General Liability

insurance policies.  The  district court granted summary judgment

in favor of the carrier, and the insured appeals.  Concluding, on

the  present state of the  record, that the  carrier must fulfill

the first of these duties, i.e., the duty to defend the lawsuits,

we reverse and remand.

                          I. Background
                                                 

     Appellee GRE Insurance Group (GRE)  sold the two policies at

issue here to appellant Metropolitan Boston Housing  Partnership,

Inc.   (Metropolitan),  and  one  of  its  predecessor  entities,

Metropolitan Housing, Inc. (MHI).   Metropolitan, like MHI before

it,   disburses   federal   and  state   housing   subsidies   to

participating   landlords  and  tenants.1    Metropolitan  issues

Certificates  of  Participation  to  eligible tenants,  who  then

search  the private rental housing market.  Once a tenant locates

a suitable unit,  Metropolitan steps in  and negotiates the  rent

with the property's landlord.  Metropolitan and the landlord then

enter into an agreement regarding the payment of  rent subsidies,

and the tenant  and landlord  sign a lease.   Metropolitan  never

                    
                              

     1  MHI  and  Metropolitan   were  formed  to  privatize  the
functions  previously  performed   by  the  Metropolitan  Housing
Assistance  Program  of  the  Massachusetts  Executive  Office of
Communities and Development.

                               -2-


becomes  a  party  to  the  lease,  nor  acquires  any possessory

interest in the apartments.

     Before  agreeing   to  subsidize  a   particular  apartment,

Metropolitan inspects the premises to insure that federal Housing

Quality Standards  are satisfied.   A Metropolitan representative

visits the  apartment and,  after visual inspection,  completes a

checklist  confirming  the number  and  types  of rooms,  whether

sinks, stoves,  and refrigerators  are in working  order, and  so

forth.  Metropolitan's inspectors never  test for the presence of

lead  paint.   Instead,  they simply  note  whether the  paint is

chipped  or peeling,  and whether  the landlord  has a  Letter of

Compliance from a licensed lead paint inspector attesting to lead

paint safety.  If no letter is on file, the landlord is told that

one is required before the subsidy will be given.

     Despite  this rather  limited  role,  Metropolitan has  been

named  as  a   defendant  or  third   party  defendant  in   five

Massachusetts state lawsuits alleging personal injury due to lead

paint exposure  of minors at  Metropolitan-subsidized apartments.

These suits  assert a number of different  legal theories against

Metropolitan, many of which  are based on its alleged  failure to

inspect adequately  for lead  paint before agreeing  to subsidize

the apartments.

     GRE  filed  this  diversity  action  seeking  a  declaratory

judgment  that it  had  no  obligation  to  defend  or  indemnify

Metropolitan against the lawsuits, and the district court granted

summary judgment in its favor.  Metropolitan now appeals.

                               -3-


                           II. Analysis
                                                 

     We  review de  novo the  district court's  interpretation of
                                  

these insurance contracts, St.  Paul Fire and Marine Ins.  Co. v.
                                                                        

Warwick  Dyeing Corp., 26 F.3d 1195, 1199 (1st Cir. 1994), guided
                               

by  several familiar rules of  construction.2  We  begin with the

actual language of the policies and consider "what an objectively

reasonable insured, reading the  relevant policy language,  would

expect to be  covered."   Trustees of Tufts  Univ. v.  Commercial
                                                                           

Union  Ins. Co.,  415 Mass. 844,  849, 616  N.E.2d 68,  72 (1993)
                         

(quoting  Hazen Paper  Co. v. United  States Fidelity  & Guaranty
                                                                           

Co., 407 Mass.  689, 700, 555  N.E.2d 576,  583 (1990)).   Absent
             

ambiguity,  we  give  policy  language  its  plain  and  ordinary

meaning.   E.g., Cody v.  Connecticut General Life  Ins. Co., 387
                                                                      

Mass.  142, 146,  439 N.E.2d  234, 237  (1982).   Ambiguities are

resolved against  the insurer,  who drafted  the  policy, and  in

favor  of  the  insured.    Thus,  if  "there  are  two  rational

interpretations of  policy language,  the insured is  entitled to

the benefit of the one that is more favorable to it."  Hazen, 407
                                                                      

Mass.  at 700, 555 N.E.2d at 583.   The insured bears the initial

burden  of proving  that  a  claim  falls  within  the  grant  of

coverage,  which, once  established, shifts  the burden  onto the

insurer to show the applicability of any exclusion.  Camp Dresser
                                                                           

& McKee, Inc. v. Home Ins.  Co., 30 Mass. App. Ct. 318, 321,  568
                                         

N.E.2d 631, 633 (1991).

                    
                              

     2 The parties agree that Massachusetts law controls.

                               -4-


     To determine if  a liability policy  obligates a carrier  to

defend claims  made against  its insured,  we simply  compare the

underlying complaint  to the policy;  "if the allegations  of the

complaint are `reasonably susceptible' of an  interpretation that

they state or adumbrate a claim  covered by the policy terms, the

insurer  must undertake the defense."   Liberty Mut.  Ins. Co. v.
                                                                        

SCA  Services, Inc., 412 Mass. 330, 331-32, 588 N.E.2d 1346, 1347
                             

(1992)  (quoting Continental Cas.  Co. v. Gilbane  Bldg. Co., 391
                                                                      

Mass. 143, 146,  461 N.E.2d 209, 212  (1984)) (internal quotation

omitted).   At issue here are two  combined comprehensive general

liability  and commercial  property insurance  policies.   In the

Insuring Agreement  of the  general liability coverage  part, GRE

promised to:

     pay those sums that [Metropolitan] becomes legally obligated
     to pay as damages because of `bodily injury' . .  . to which
     this insurance applies. . . .  The `bodily injury'. . . must
     be caused  by an `occurrence.'   The `occurrence'  must take
     place in the `coverage  territory.'  We will have  the right
     and duty to defend any `suit' seeking those damages.

There  is no  question that  the terms  `occurrence'  and `bodily

injury' are defined in such a way as to cover personal injury due

to  lead paint  exposure,  and that  the  occurrences took  place

within the relevant  coverage territory.   Thus, unless a  policy

exclusion  effectively defeats  this  grant of  coverage, GRE  is

obligated to defend and indemnify the underlying lawsuits against

Metropolitan.

     The district  court relied upon  two grounds, both  of which

GRE urges upon us, for holding that there is no  coverage: first,

that  the  policies  are   restricted  to  liability  arising  at

                               -5-


Metropolitan's  home  office;  and second,  that  the  underlying

claims  fall within  a  policy exclusion  relating to  inspection

services.  We examine these propositions in turn.

A.   Was Coverage Limited to Metropolitan's Office?
                                                            

     GRE argues that the  policy does not apply to  liability for

claims arising from Metropolitan's  activities away from its home

office, relying  upon language in the  policy's Declarations form

and  two  supplemental schedules,  and  upon  the  amount of  the

premium, which the district court found to be too low conceivably

to reflect the parties' intent to cover additional risks.   

     As for the policy  language, the "Common Policy Declarations

Form"  lists certain basic information about  the policy, such as

the types of  coverage purchased, the  premium for each  coverage

part, the coverage period, the name, address and type of business

of the  insured,  the  policy number,  and  so forth.    It  also

contains the operative  sentence: "In return  for the payment  of

the premium,  and subject to  all the  terms of  this policy,  we

agree  with  you  to provide  the  insurance  as  stated in  this

policy."  GRE seizes on  the fact that the next line of  the form

calls  for a  "business  description" of  the  insured, which  is

listed as "office," as evidence that only liability  arising from

Metropolitan's  office operations was covered.   The flaw in this

reasoning is that  the question  calls for a  description of  the

insured's type of business, not the premises or building to which
                        

insurance was to be limited.  The fact that Metropolitan operated

as  an office, rather than a hockey rink, manufacturing plant, or

                               -6-


boarding  house, was obviously relevant to coverage.  But it does

not show a clear understanding  to restrict coverage to liability

arising out of Metropolitan's office only.

     A  somewhat closer  question is  presented by  language that

appears in  the insurance schedules.   The "Comprehensive General

Liability Coverage  Declarations  Form"  directs  the  reader  to

"refer to [the] common policy premises schedule for a description

and location of all  premises owned, rented or controlled  by the

named insured."  The "Common Policy Premises Schedule," under the

heading "Premises," lists "434 Massachusetts Avenue, Boston, MA,"

i.e., the  location of  Metropolitan's office.   Further,  on the

"Comprehensive    General   Liability    Insurance   Supplemental

Schedule,"  the "Description of Hazards Classification" is listed

as "Buildings  or  Premises --  Office,"  and the  "Exposure"  is

listed   as   "15,000"  square   feet,   roughly   the  area   of

Metropolitan's  office.   GRE  argues that  this shows  that only

those risks arising out  of Metropolitan's office activities were

covered.

     Based  on a recent decision of the Supreme Judicial Court of

Massachusetts, however,  we cannot agree.   In Trustees  of Tufts
                                                                           

University v.  Commercial Union  Ins. Co., the  insurance carrier
                                                   

argued that the failure to include a certain risk on the schedule

of hazards to a  comprehensive general liability insurance policy

removed  any coverage  for  that risk.    The SJC  rejected  that

argument,  holding   simply   that  "nowhere   does  the   policy

unambiguously provide  that coverage  is limited to  the specific

                               -7-


hazards listed in the schedule."  415 Mass. at 856, 616 N.E.2d at

76.

     In  the instant  case, there  is no  language in  the policy

clearly indicating that liability  insurance is limited to claims

arising from occurrences at the premises listed  on the schedules

from  which we  have  quoted.3   This absence  is made  even more

probative  when compared to the presence of such language on both

the  coverage grant description and the declarations form for the

property coverage  part of the policy.   The grant of coverage on
                  

the property part states  that: "We will pay for  direct physical

loss of or damage  to Covered Property at the  premises described
                                                                           

in the Declarations caused by or resulting from any Covered Cause
                             

of Loss" (emphasis added).  The property declarations form, under

the  heading "Coverages  Provided,"  states  that  the  insurance

"applies  only to the premises  shown below, and  with respect to

those premises, only for the coverages, causes of loss and limits

shown."    By reference  to  the  common  premises schedule,  the

"premises  shown  below" is  Metropolitan's  office  space.   The

failure  to  include  such  language anywhere  in  the  liability
                                                                           

coverage  part, under  Tufts, is  fatal to  GRE's claim  that its
                                      

comprehensive liability  insurance was converted into a premises-

                    
                              

     3  We  reject  GRE's  citation  to  the  "products-completed
operations   hazard"  exclusion  as  a  sufficiently  unambiguous
statement  of such  a  limitation.   As  GRE recognized  at  oral
argument, that provision applies  when a completed product causes
injury  or property  damage  after it  leaves  the hands  of  its
manufacturer.   It excludes  from coverage liability  that arises
after an insured's  operations are completed, not, as  here, from
the insured's operations themselves.

                               -8-


only  liability policy simply by listing a certain premise on the

schedule of hazards.

     Several other considerations support our conclusion that the

liability  insurance   was   not  limited   to   occurrences   at

Metropolitan's  office.    First,  for  an  additional   premium,

Metropolitan  purchased  a  so-called "Broad  Form  Comprehensive

Liability"  endorsement  for  the   1990-91  policy,  which   was

incorporated into the 1991-92  policy.  This endorsement expanded

the  coverage territory to "anywhere in the world with respect to
                                                           

[injuries]  arising  out  of  the activities  of  [the]  insured"

(emphasis added).   We find  it quite unlikely  that parties  who

intended  coverage only  for  activities at  Metropolitan's  home

office at 434  Massachusetts Avenue in  Boston would have  bought

and  sold  such  an  endorsement.    Certainly,  an  "objectively

reasonable insured, reading [this]  policy language, would expect

to  be covered"  for liability  beyond that  arising at  its home

office.  Tufts, 415 Mass. at 849, 616 N.E.2d at 72.
                        

     Second,  as   part   of  its   application  for   insurance,

Metropolitan,  through  its  broker,  made a  specific  point  of

telling  GRE  that it  hired outside  "inspectors"  to go  to the

apartments  and  determine  whether they  satisfied  the relevant

federal  standards  so as  to qualify  for  the subsidy.   Having

received this  information, GRE sold Metropolitan  policies that,

as  their titles  made clear,  purported to  cover "comprehensive

general liability."  Thus, absent express  exclusionary language,

                               -9-


it was  reasonable for Metropolitan to believe  that its coverage

included the inspectors' activities.

     Indeed,  as we  find  infra, there  was an  endorsement, the
                                          

professional services exclusion, which may indeed have been added

in an attempt to exclude from the grant of coverage any liability

arising  from the  inspectors' activities.   Among  other things,

that  endorsement  expressly  excluded from  coverage  any claims

"arising  out  of   the  rendering  or  failure  to   render  any

professional services  . .  . including  . . .  inspection .  . .

services."  If coverage were given only to Metropolitan's  office

activities in the first place, there would have been no reason to

add this exclusion. 

     The district court  also gave weight to the relatively small

amount  of   the   premium  as   evidence  that   no  more   than

Metropolitan's  office activities  were covered.   While  we also

find the  premium to  be relatively  low, we  do not  believe the

amount of the premium to be dispositive.  First, if GRE wanted to

press  this argument  seriously, it  could have  submitted expert

testimony  regarding  the  premium  amount  here  versus premiums

charged  for comparable risks.  Instead, on this record, there is

no  factual basis  whatsoever  upon which  to assess  whether the

premium is low or high for the covered risks.

     More  importantly, we can  speculate as to  many reasons for

the  low premium.  GRE may have concluded that Metropolitan faced

very  little  liability exposure  because  it  was essentially  a

disbursing agent for government  funds, which, even including the

                               -10-


apartment inspections, may  not have been  seen as an  enterprise

generating large risks.   Or, GRE's calculus of low  exposure may

have been  influenced by a  Massachusetts statute, Mass.  Gen. L.

ch. 231   85K, which limits liability of non-profit organizations

to  a $20,000 per  claim cap.   Or, it could  have calculated the

premium erroneously, overlooking  the apartment inspection aspect

of Metropolitan's operations.   Thus, without  a fact finding  on

the  circumstances  surrounding  premium  calculation   based  on

competent  evidence, our general view  is that the  amount of the

premium will  rarely be dispositive in determining  the extent of

coverage, for such a rule would allow  poor estimates of risk, or

calculations of risk based  upon mathematical error, to supersede

the actual coverage to which parties agreed.

     Neither of the cases relied upon by the district court is to

the  contrary.  In Chesapeake  Physicians Prof. Ass.  v. The Home
                                                                           

Ins. Co., 92  Md. App. 385,  608 A.2d 822  (1992), the court  was
                  

faced  with a question similar to ours -- whether a comprehensive

general liability insurance  policy was in fact  limited to cover

only certain  premises -- and determined  that it was.   But that

court's  holding was based upon the fact that the policy language

itself clearly limited coverage to the premises in question.  The

"key language" was  the carrier's promise to indemnify and defend

all  claims "arising out of the ownership, maintenance, or use of
                                                                           

the insured premises and all operations incidental thereto."  Id.
                                                                           

at  394, 608  A.2d at 826  (emphasis added).   As  we have noted,

GRE's  liability policies have a conspicuous lack of such express

                               -11-


language limiting coverage to Metropolitan's office.  It is  true

that  the Chesapeake  court  went  on  to  discuss  a  number  of
                              

considerations that buttressed its decision, one of which was the

fact, also present in  our case, that the premium  was calculated

based  on  the  square  footage of  the  properties  and premises

covered.   But,  as this  was  in the  context of  a policy  that

unambiguously limited coverage to certain premises by its express

terms, it  has  little, if  any,  relevance to  interpreting  the

meaning  of the  instant  policy --  particularly  after the  SJC

decision in Tufts.
                           

     The second case, Rumford Property  and Liability Ins. Co. v.
                                                                        

Carbone, 590 A.2d  398 (R.I. 1991), is even  less persuasive.  In
                 

Rumford, the insurance company had argued that the relatively low
                 

premium and the use  of only certain square footage  to calculate

the  premium showed that only certain premises were covered.  The

trial  court  rejected that  argument,  a ruling  from  which the
                                

insurance company did not  even appeal.  Instead, the  only issue

on  appeal  was the  insurance  company's  alleged bad  faith  in

refusing to provide coverage.   In the context of  resolving that

issue,  the Supreme  Court of  Rhode Island  stated that  the low

premium  and the square footage calculation  created "at least an

arguable  basis  for  denying  coverage."   Since  the  insurance

company's  contention was "not  a frivolous one,"  its conduct of

refusing to defend and indemnify, "while certainly not exemplary,

. . . failed to  reach the level of  bad faith."  Id. at  400-01.
                                                               

                               -12-


Thus, neither Rumford nor Chesapeake persuade us that the  amount
                                              

of the premium is highly probative in this case.

B.   The Professional Services Exclusion
                                                  

     Each  policy contains  a  professional  services  exclusion,

which  removes  from  coverage  liability  "arising  out  of  the

rendering or  failure to render  any professional services  by or

for you, including .  . . supervisory, inspection  or engineering

services."    The  district  court found  that  this  endorsement

"plainly  omits  coverage  for any  inspection  service  (however
                                            

`professional'  it might  be)."  GRE  Ins. Group  v. Metropolitan
                                                                           

Boston Housing Part., Inc.,  No. 93-11727-RGS, slip op. at  6 (D.
                                    

Mass. Aug. 11, 1994).

     We disagree.    By  its own  plain  terms,  the  endorsement

excludes coverage for a broad category -- professional services -

- and then specifies  types of excluded professional services  as

examples.  The  examples themselves  cannot be  broader than  the

category  they exemplify; they  are nothing more  than subsets of

"professional  services."    Thus,  only  inspections   that  are

"professional," as opposed to "nonprofessional," fall within  the

endorsement.  See Atlantic  Mut. Ins. Co. v. McFadden,  413 Mass.
                                                               

90,  92, 95, 595 N.E.2d  762, 764, 765  (1992) (employing similar

reasoning  in finding  that lead  paint exposure  was  not within

pollution exclusion, which defined pollutant as "any contaminant,

including smoke, vapor,  soot, fumes,  acids, alkalis,  chemicals

and waste,"  because  of additional  requirement  of  "discharge,

dispersal, release or escape" of pollutant).

                               -13-


     In  Roe v. Federal  Ins. Co., 412  Mass. 43, 587  N.E.2d 214
                                           

(1992),  the Supreme  Judicial  Court applied  a formulation  for

assessing the applicability of a  professional services exclusion

that  we find instructive in the instant  case.  To be engaged in

professional services, 

     "[s]omething more  than an act flowing  from mere employment
     or vocation is  essential.  The act or  service must be such
     as  exacts  the use  or application  of special  learning or
     attainments of some  kind.   The term `professional'  . .  .
     means   something  more   than  mere   proficiency  in   the
     performance of a task and implies intellectual skill . . . .
     A  `professional' act  or service  is one  arising out  of a
     vocation,  calling,  occupation,  or   employment  involving
     specialized  knowledge, labor,  or  skill and  the labor  or
     skill  involved  is  predominantly mental  or  intellectual,
     rather  than physical  or  manual. .  .  .   In  determining
     whether a particular act  is . . . a  `professional service'
     we must  look not  to the title  or character  of the  party
     performing the act, but to the act itself." 

412 Mass. at 48, 587 N.E.2d at 217 (quoting Marx v. Hartford Acc.
                                                                           

&  Indem.  Co., 183  Neb.  12, 13,  157  N.W.2d  870, 872  (1968)
                        

(citations omitted)).  The cases collected in Roe all analyze the
                                                           

applicability of professional  services exclusions by determining

whether the relevant  activity was "professional" in nature.  See
                                                                           

Harad v. Aetna Cas. & Sur. Co., 839 F.2d 979,  984 (3d Cir. 1988)
                                        

(professional   services   exclusion   applies    to   attorney's

preparation and filing of pleadings); Curtis Ambulance v. Shawnee
                                                                           

County  Bd. of County Comm'rs., 811 F.2d 1371, 1379-84 (10th Cir.
                                        

1987)  (professional  services  exclusion  applies  to  ambulance

personnel's provision  of emergency  medical  services); Bank  of
                                                                           

California,  N.A. v. Opie, 663  F.2d 977, 981-82  (9th Cir. 1981)
                                   

(professional  services exclusion  applies  to mortgage  broker's

management of loan proceeds).  Therefore, we reverse the district

                               -14-


court's decision  that all inspections were  necessarily excluded

under  this  endorsement,  and  remand  for  a  determination  of

whether,  under  Massachusetts  law,   Metropolitan's  inspectors

performed professional services.

     Even  if   Metropolitan's  inspections  are   found  to   be

professional in nature, however,  GRE would still have to  defend

the  underlying lawsuits  --  at least  initially.   This  is  so

because,   after   reviewing   the   complaints   filed   against

Metropolitan,  we  find  that  some of  the  claims  raise  legal

theories of recovery broader  than inadequate inspections.  Taken

collectively,   the   claims   include    negligence,   negligent

misrepresentation,  negligently  creating   a  lead  paint  risk,

failing to require an owner to take corrective action, failing to

correct  a lead paint  hazard, failure to  obtain certificates of

compliance with the lead paint law, and breach of contract and/or

the implied covenant of habitability.

     At  least  on  their  face,  these  claims  are  "reasonably

susceptible" of  being read to  "state or adumbrate"  claims that

are beyond  the inspection  services exclusion.   Liberty Mutual,
                                                                          

412 Mass. at 330,  588 N.E.2d at 1347 (quoting  Continental Cas.,
                                                                          

391 Mass. at  146, 461 N.E.2d at 212).   For example, the claimed

failure  to  correct a  lead paint  risk appears  to rest  on the

theory  that the very provision of rent subsidies carried with it

the   responsibility   to  make   whatever   lead   paint  safety

improvements  were necessary.  Other claims might be based on the

theory  that the  inspections  were all  perfectly adequate,  but

                               -15-


Metropolitan's  follow up  with the landlords  was lacking.   See
                                                                           

Sterilite Corp. v. Continental  Cas. Co., 17 Mass. App.  Ct. 316,
                                                  

318,  458  N.E.2d  338, 341  (1983)  ("[T]he  process  is one  of

envisaging  what kind of losses may be proved as lying within the
                                             

range  of  the  allegations  of the  complaint,  and  then seeing

whether  any  such  loss   fits  the  expectation  of  protective

insurance  reasonably generated  by  the terms  of the  policy.")

(emphasis  added); cf.  Complaint of  Stone Petroleum  Corp., 961
                                                                      

F.2d 90,  91-92 (5th Cir.  1992) (general liability  insurer must

defend  suits  because   they  contain  claims  that,   liberally

construed, are  beyond the professional services  exclusion).  We

express  no view  on whether  such expansive  theories ultimately

will be successful against Metropolitan, and thus GRE.4 

     Therefore, because certain of the claims are  not within the

professional services  exclusion, GRE is obligated  to defend the

underlying  suits  notwithstanding the  possibility  that certain

other claims might be found to be excluded.  See Camp Dresser, 30
                                                                       

Mass. App.  Ct. at  323, 568  N.E.2d at 634  (imposing a  duty to

defend despite  the fact that "many of  the complaint allegations

fell within the exclusion"); see also Aetna Cas. & Surety  Co. v.
                                                                        

Continental Cas. Co., 413 Mass. 730,  732 n.1, 604 N.E.2d 30,  32
                              

n.1  (1992) (noting that "the weight of authority places the duty

to defend all  counts on an insurer which has a duty to defend at

least one  count of  a complaint").   As  the Camp Dresser  court
                                                                    
                    
                              

     4 Nor need  we, for GRE  agreed to defend  suits within  the
grant  of coverage  "even  if the  allegations  of the  suit  are
groundless, false or fraudulent." 

                               -16-


indicated, an insurer in this position may "undertake the defense

of  the  underlying action  with  a  reservation of  rights  with

respect  to the  excludable  claims" or  it may  share respective

defense  responsibilities with co-counsel.   30 Mass. App. Ct. at

323 n.4, 568 N.E.2d at 634 n.4.

                         III. Conclusion
                                                  

     If the inspections are found to fall within the professional

services  exclusion, GRE would  be obligated to  defend the suits

against   Metropolitan  until   the  non-excludable   claims  are

resolved,5  or an  arrangement such as  contemplated by  the Camp
                                                                           

Dresser court is established, and would have to indemnify only if
                 

Metropolitan were found liable on a non-excludable claim.  If the

inspections are found  not to be professional services, GRE would

have to  defend  the suits  and  indemnify Metropolitan  for  any

successful claims.

     The  judgment of  the  district court  in  favor of  GRE  is
                                                                           

reversed.  The case is remanded for entry of judgment in favor of
                                                                           

Metropolitan  on the  duty  to defend,  and  for a  determination
                                                                           

consistent   with  this   opinion   of   whether   Metropolitan's
                                                                           

                    
                              

     5 In  this case,  we would imagine  that GRE could  test the
viability of those claims that do not rely exclusively on alleged
inadequate inspections by way  of early motion to dismiss  or for
summary  judgment in the underlying state cases.  If those claims
were removed,  it  appears that  GRE's obligation  to defend  the
underlying cases  would terminate.  See Sterilite,  17 Mass. App.
                                                           
Ct. at 323-24 (the duty to  defend ceases if and when the insurer
demonstrates that no claim asserted  within the grant of coverage
can be successful in the underlying  action); see also Lumbermans
                                                                           
Mut.  Cas. Co. v. Belleville  Ind., Inc., 407  Mass. 675, 685-86,
                                                  
555  N.E.2d 568, 575  (1990) (citing Sterilite  approvingly).  Of
                                                        
course, we are not faced with these questions.

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inspections were professional in nature.
                                                 

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