Thermo Terratech v. GDC Enviro-Solutions, Inc.

Court: Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
Date filed: 2001-09-24
Citations: 265 F.3d 329, 2001 WL 1025791
Copy Citations
1 Citing Case
Combined Opinion
                 UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
                      FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT


                           No. 00-30723


THERMO TERRATECH formerly known as THERMO PROCESS SYSTEMS, INC.;
                     TPS TECHNOLOGIES, INC.,

                     Plaintiffs-Appellants,

                                v.

               GDC ENVIRO-SOLUTIONS, INC., et al.,

                           Defendants,

                               and

KATHLEEN ELNAGGAR, Individually, as successor of Hameed Elnaggar
  and as Trustee of the Tarek Elnaggar Testamentary Trust, the
Sarif J. Elnaggar Testamentary Trust, and the Jeanne M. Elnaggar
      Testamentary Trust as Successors of Hameed Elnaggar,

            Defendant-Third Party Plaintiff-Appellee.

                                v.

                  SCOTTSDALE INSURANCE COMPANY,

                 Third Party Defendant-Appellee.

          Appeal from the United States District Court
               for the Middle District of Louisiana

                       September 24, 2001

Before DAVIS and JONES, Circuit Judges, and BARBOUR,* District

Judge.

BARBOUR, District Judge:




    *
       District Judge of the Southern District of Mississippi,
sitting by designation.
     Plaintiff-Appellants filed suit in the United States District

Court for the Middle District of Louisiana to recover attorneys’

fees and costs incurred in defending a civil action brought by

Boston Old Colony Insurance Company (“Boston Old Colony”), the

subrogee of GDC Enviro-Solutions, Inc. (“GDC”).                United States

Magistrate Judge Stephen C. Riedlinger found that Appellants,

pursuant    to   the   indemnification    clause        and    the   “Personal

Guarantees” clause contained in the sales agreement entered between

GDC and TPS Technologies, Inc. (“TPST”), were entitled to recover

from the Elnaggar defendants           reasonable attorneys’ fees and

expenses incurred in defending the claims of Boston Old Colony.

Appellants also sought to recover these attorneys’ fees and costs

from Appellee Scottsdale Insurance Company (“Scottsdale”), the

general liability insurer of GDC.       Scottsdale did not dispute that

the attorneys’ fees and costs sought by Appellants were covered

under the terms of a comprehensive general liability insurance

policy (“CGL policy”) issued to GDC by Scottsdale.             The magistrate

judge, however, found that two exclusions contained in the CGL

policy barred recovery by Appellants against Scottsdale.               In this

diversity   case   involving   interpretation      of    the    comprehensive

general liability policy under Louisiana law, Plaintiffs-Appellants

Thermo Terratech (“Terratech”) and TPST appeal from the grant of

judgment to Defendant-Appellee Scottsdale.         We reverse.



            I.   Factual Background and Procedural History


                                   2
      GDC entered a contract with Rubicon, Inc. (“Rubicon”) to

incinerate hazardous materials at the Rubicon plant located in

Geismar, Louisiana.      To facilitate this contract, GDC and its sole

shareholders Hameed A. Elnaggar and Kathleen Elnaggar entered a

sales and service agreement with Terratech and TPST whereby TPST

agreed to design, develop, manufacture, and deliver a portable

hazardous waste incinerator for the Rubicon plant.                 The sales

agreement also required TPST to provide two “lead operators,” the

primary duty of whom was to train the employees of GDC to operate

the incinerator. Ron Waligora (“Waligora”), a mechanical engineer,

was one of the lead operators assigned to the Rubicon plant

pursuant to the sales agreement.

      The liquid waste incinerator provided by TPST for the Rubicon

plant was equipped with three redundant systems, the purpose of

which was to provide an emergency flow of water to cool the system

in the event that temperatures in the incinerator exceeded normal,

a power failure occurred, or the main induce draft fan was not

functioning.     In January of 1991, a problem developed with one of

the   variable   speed   control   drivers    (“driver”),     an   electrical

component of the incinerator.             GDC contacted I.D.M. Controls

(“I.D.M.”) of Baton Rouge, Louisiana, to repair the driver.              At the



request   of   GDC,   I.D.M.   Controls    dispatched   one   of   its   field

technicians, Dan Lee (“Lee”) who disconnected power to the control

panel in which the driver was housed, removed the driver, and


                                     3
transported it to Baton Rouge for repair.            Upon completion of the

repairs,    the   driver    was    returned   to    the   Rubicon   plant   and

reinstalled by Lee.

     On February 21, 1991, GDC discovered a problem with another of

the drivers in the control panel.          I.D.M. was again contacted to

repair the driver, but GDC decided to use its own employees to

remove and transport the driver to Baton Rouge.                 GDC operator

George Daher contacted Waligora, stated that he was going out-of-

town, and requested that Waligora remove the driver the following

morning.    It is undisputed that other non-engineer GDC operators

had received training with regard to the procedure to be utilized

when disconnecting the power supply to the control panel.               It is

further undisputed that several non-engineer GDC employees had the

training necessary to remove the damaged driver.

     On    February   22,   1991,    Waligora      initially   consulted    the

incinerator log book which indicated that cooling water was being

supplied by the recirculating pumps.            Waligora then assessed the

control panel and, upon finding that the recirculating pump light

was not illuminated,1 assumed that the recirculating pumps had been

turned off and that one of the alternate water supply systems was

cooling the incinerator.          Although Waligora knew that two of the

redundancies, the Hale fire pump and John Deere emergency diesel,

were either not functioning or not enabled respectively, he was



    1
       Waligora did not test the lights on the control panel to
determine whether the bulbs functioned.

                                       4
unaware that the third, the solenoid valve to the emergency supply,

had been closed by the GDC operators because it had developed a

leak.   Therefore, the only devices providing cooling water to the

incinerator were the recirculating pumps which would cease to

function at the time power to the control panel was disconnected to

facilitate removal of the damaged driver.

     Christopher Covert (“Covert”), an associate engineer employed

by GDC to supervise construction of the primary furnace for the

Rubicon plant, was present at the process control panel of the

incinerator.    Prior to the time Waligora disconnected power to the

control panel, he informed Covert that the disruption would cause

certain readings on the panel to remain constant while others would

read zero.     Waligora then disrupted power to the control panel

thereby disconnecting the recirculating pumps.            Although several

alarms signaled on the control panel, they were silenced by Covert

as it was his belief, based on Waligora’s statement, that abnormal

readings were to be expected and could be ignored.           A fire in the

incinerator ensued shortly after power to the control panel was

disconnected.

     GDC and TPST entered an Agreement of Settlement, Release,

Transaction and Compromise to resolve all claims then existing

between the parties including claims that arose because of the

fire.   GDC indicated that its primary purpose in entering the

settlement     was   to   obtain   insurance   proceeds    to   effectuate

replacement of the damaged incinerator and to resume operations.


                                     5
Thereafter, Boston Old Colony, the fire insurer and subrogee of

GDC, filed suit against TPST and its parent corporation Terratech,

in part to recover the insurance proceeds paid to GDC.                   The case

was heard by United States Chief District Judge John V. Parker who,

after a trial and consideration of the post-trial briefs submitted

by the parties, found that: “The sole cause of the fire was the

negligence of Waligora in removing the [driver] for the main induce

fan without making sure that it was safe to do so, i.e. without

making       sure   that    the     cooling    water   supply    would      not   be

interrupted.”2           Judge Parker additionally found that under the

terms of the sales agreement entered by TPST and GDC, the latter

agreed to indemnify and hold TPST harmless from claims of the

nature asserted in the complaint thereby precluding the ability of

Boston Old Colony, as subrogee of GDC, to recover on those claims.3

Judgment was entered in favor of TPST and Terratech and the case

was dismissed on January 5, 1995.               The decision of the district

court was affirmed on appeal.4

       On January 8, 1997, Terratech and TPST (“Appellants”) filed

suit against GDC and Kathleen Elnaggar in her individual and

representative capacities (“Elnaggar”) to recover the attorneys’

fees       and   costs   incurred    in   defending    the   Boston   Old    Colony


       2
        Boston Old Colony Ins. Co. v. Thermo Process, et al., No.
91-905-A, slip op. at 6-7 (M.D. La. Jan. 5, 1995).
       3
            Id. at 19.
       4
       See Boston Old Colony Ins. Co. v. Thermo Process et al., 95
F.3d 54 (5th Cir. 1996).

                                           6
litigation.5 During the period relevant to the underlying dispute,

GDC and Elnaggar had in effect a comprehensive general liability

insurance policy (“CGL policy”), the insurer of which was Appellee

Scottsdale.    On June 26, 1997, GDC and Elnaggar filed a third party

complaint against Scottsdale after Scottsdale refused their tender

of defense.     On December 31, 1997, Appellants filed an amended

complaint whereby Scottsdale was named as a principle defendant in

the case.6    The parties consented to have the case heard by United

States Magistrate Judge Stephen C. Riedlinger.

     On May 1, 1998, Appellants moved for summary judgment on the

issue of liability against Elnaggar an Scottsdale.       In response,

Scottsdale argued that the claims asserted by the Appellants were

excluded from coverage under the “Contractual Liability Coverage”

exclusion     (“Contractual   Liability   exclusion”)7   and/or   the


     5
        Sometime after the lawsuit was filed, GDC filed a petition
for bankruptcy relief.    On April 8, 1998, all proceedings with
regard to GDC were stayed pending order of the bankruptcy court.
     6
         Scottsdale was named a defendant pursuant to the Louisiana
direct action statute which provides, in relevant part:
      The injured [party] ... at their option, shall have a
      right of direct action against the insurer within the
      terms and limits of the policy; and, such action may be
      brought against the insurer alone, or against both the
      insured and insurer jointly and in solido, in the parish
      in which the accident or injury occurred or in the parish
      in which an action could be brought against either the
      insured or the insurer under the general rules of venue
      prescribed by Code of Civil Procedure Art. 42 only.
LA. REV. STAT. ANN. § 22:655(B)(1) (West 1995).

     7
          The CGL policy provides, in relevant part:
     I.    Contractual Liability Coverage
            ....

                                  7
“Engineers,   Architects    or   Surveyors   Professional   Liability

exclusion (“Professional Liability exclusion”).8      The magistrate

judge granted summary judgment in favor of Appellants against

Elnaggar, and found that TPST could recover reasonable attorneys’

fees and costs from Elnaggar pursuant to the indemnification clause

and the personal guarantee clause contained in the sales agreement.

With regard to Scottsdale, the magistrate judge found that the

Contractual Liability exclusion did not bar recovery but denied

summary judgment on the issue of whether the Professional Liability

exclusion was applicable.

     The case was heard by the magistrate judge on November 12,

1998.    At the close of Appellants’ case, Scottsdale moved for a

judgment on partial findings pursuant to Rule 52(c) of the Federal

Rules of Civil Procedure.    The magistrate judge, at that time and



     (B) The insurance afforded with respect to liability assumed
     under an incidental contract is subject to the following
     additional exclusions:
          ....
     (3) if the indemnitee of the insured is an architect, engineer
     or surveyor, to the liability of the indemnitee, his agents or
     employees, arising out of
          ....
     (b) the giving of or the failure to give directions or
     instructions by the indemnitee, his agents or employees,
     provided such giving or failure to give is the primary cause
     of the bodily injury or property damage.
     8
        The CGL policy provides, in relevant part:
     It is agreed that the insurance does not apply to bodily injury
or property damage arising out of the rendering of or the failure
to render any professional services by or for the named insured,
including
          ....
     (2) supervisory, inspection or engineering services.

                                  8
contrary to his prior ruling on the motion for summary judgment,

found that coverage under the CGL policy was excluded under both

the Contractual Liability exclusion and the Professional Liability

exclusion.    Judgment was entered in favor of Scottsdale on the

claims asserted by Appellants in their amended complaint and on the

third party claims asserted by Elnaggar.9             This timely appeal

followed.

                             II.       Analysis

     The    interpretation   by    a   district   court   of   an   insurance

contract and the exclusions contained therein is a question of law

and, therefore, subject to de novo review.           See Jarvis Christian

Coll. v. National Union Fire Ins. Co. of Pittsburgh, Pa., 197 F.3d

742, 746 (5th Cir. 2000).    As the subject CGL policy was delivered

in the State of Louisiana, we interpret the provisions of the

subject policy in accordance with the law of that state.            See Adams

v. Unione Mediterranea Di Sicurta, et al., 220 F.3d 659, 677 (5th

Cir. 2000).    Under Louisiana law, interpretation of an insurance

policy is subject to the general rules of contract interpretation

which requires judicial determination of the common intent of the

parties to the contract.          See Louisiana Ins. Guar. Ass’n v.

Interstate Fire & Cas. Co., 630 So. 2d 759, 763 (La. 1994).               The



     9
        Judgment was entered in favor of Appellants and against
Elnaggar in the amount of $245,215.69 which represents the
reasonable attorneys’ fees and costs incurred by Appellants in
defending the lawsuit brought by Boston Old Colony and in bringing
the lawsuit against Elnaggar to recover those fees and costs.
Appellants did not appeal the judgment against Elnaggar.

                                        9
intent of the parties, “as reflected by the words in the policy[,]

determine the extent of coverage.”      Id.   We construe the words of

an insurance policy by applying their “general, ordinary, plain,

and proper meaning ... unless [they] have acquired a technical

meaning.”     Id.   See also South Cent. Bell Tel. Co. v. Ka-Jon Food

Stores of La, Inc., 644 So. 2d 357, 360 (La. 1994).

     Exclusions to coverage contained in an insurance policy must

be clearly and expressly set forth.     See Omiga v. Rodriguez, 799 F.

Supp. 626, 630 (M.D. La. 1992).     When the language of an insurance

policy is clear, it must be enforced as written.        See Reynolds v.

Select Props. Ltd., 634 So. 2d 1180, 1183 (La. 1994).      If, however,

the terms of the policy are ambiguous, they must be construed

against the drafter of the policy.      See Oaks v. Dupuy, 633 So. 2d

165, 168 (La. App. 2 Cir. 1995).    Therefore, in the event the words

contained in an exclusionary clause are susceptible to greater than

one reasonable interpretation, we must adopt the interpretation

that provides coverage to the insured.        See Tulley v. Blue Cross

Blue Shield of La., 760 So. 2d 1193, 1195 (La. App. 3 Cir. 2000).

     Before     determining   whether   the   exclusions   upon   which

Scottsdale relies are applicable, we must first determine whether

the sales agreement entered by GDC and TPST is within the coverage

clause of the policy.     See Adams, 220 F.3d at 678.    The CGL policy

provides coverage for incidental contracts which are defined by the

policy as “any oral or written contract or agreement relating to

the conduct of the named insured’s business.”        We find that the


                                   10
sales agreement entered by GDC and TPST is an “incidental contract”

as that term is defined by the CGL policy.

       Scottsdale     first      contends    that     the    claims    asserted    by

Appellants are excluded from coverage under the Contract Liability

exclusion.     Under this exclusion, coverage is excluded for:

             [L]iability   assumed  under   an   incidental
             contract ... if the indemnitee of the insured
             is an ... engineer ... to the liability of the
             indemnitee, his agents or employees, arising
             out of ... the giving of or the failure to
             given directions or instructions by the
             indemnity, his agents or employees, provided
             that such giving or failure to give is the
             primary cause of the ... property damage.

We note that for this exclusion to apply the instruction given by

Waligora to Covert, which prompted the latter to silence the alarms

that    signaled    on     the    control     panel     after    the    power     was

disconnected, must be the “primary cause” of the fire and resulting

property damage.

       The term “primary” is defined to mean “first in importance;

chief; principle.”        WEBSTER’S UNABRIDGED DICTIONARY 1429 (3d ed. 1983).

Judge Parker, in the Boston Old Colony litigation, after citing to

multiple negligent acts and/or omissions on the part of Waligora,

concluded that: “The sole cause of the fire was the negligence of

Waligora in removing the [driver] for the main induce fan without

making sure that it was safe to do so, i.e. without making sure

that the cooling water supply would not be interrupted.”                           We

acknowledge    that      Waligora’s    instruction      to    Covert    and/or    his

failure to give instructions to other GDC employees to ensure that


                                        11
the incinerator redundancies were operational are factors that

contributed to his negligent act of failing to ensure that the

incinerator was supplied with an alternate source of cooling water

during the period of time in which power was disconnected to the

control panel. We conclude, however, that the primary or principle

cause of the fire was Waligora’s negligent act of disconnecting

power to the control panel,      thereby disrupting power to the main

induce fan which was the only device providing cooling water to the

incinerator at that time.         Given the facts of this case, we

conclude that the instructions given, or failed to be given by

Waligora were not the primary cause of the fire, and that the

Contract Liability exclusion does not apply to bar coverage.

Accordingly, we reverse the decision of the magistrate judge that

the   Contractual    Liability   exclusion       barred   recovery   by    the

Appellants under the CGL policy.

      Scottsdale    also   contends    that   the    claims     asserted   by

Appellants   are    excluded   from   coverage    under   the   Professional

Liability exclusion.       Under this provision, coverage is excluded

for “property damage arising out of the rendering or the failure to

render any professional services by or for the insured including

... engineering services.”        “Professional services” are defined

under Louisiana law

“as ‘services performed by one in the ordinary course of the

practice of [one’s] profession, on behalf of another.’” Jensen v.

Snellings, 841 F.2d 600, 613 (5th Cir. 1988) (quoting Aker v.


                                      12
Sabatier, 200 So. 2d 94, 94 (La. App. 1st Cir. 1967)).                  To

determine whether services are professional in nature, we look:

           [T]o the character of the services performed,
           such   as  whether   special   knowledge   and
           technical expertise are required, rather than
           the title or character of the party performing
           the services. Acts which could have been done
           by an unskilled or untrained employee are not
           subject to a professional services exclusion.
           Professional   services   involve   discretion
           acquired by special training and the exercise
           of special judgment.

Abramson v. Florida Gas Transmission Co., 908 F. Supp. 1389, 1394

(E.D. La. 1995) (quoting Natural Gas Pipeline Co. of America v.

Odom Offshore Surveys, Inc., 697 F. Supp. 921, 928 (E.D. La. 1988),

aff’d, 889 F.2d 633 (5th Cir. 1989)).        See also American Cas. Co.

v. Hartford Ins. Cas. Co., 479 So. 2d 577 (La. App. 1st Cir. 1985).

Therefore, for the Professional Liability exclusion to apply, the

fire and resulting property damage must have arisen from Waligora’s

rendering, or his failure to render, an engineering service.

     We   find    that   the   actions   taken   by   Waligora   were   not

professional services as that term is defined under Louisiana law.

It is undisputed that all of the GDC operators, none of whom were

professional engineers, had been trained by Waligora to assess the

incinerator logs and control panel prior to disconnecting power to

the system.      We acknowledge that the actions taken by Waligora

could not have been performed by an individual not trained to

operate the incinerator.       It is clear, however, that the actions

taken by Waligora could have been performed by individuals who had

neither engineering training, nor the ability to exercise special

                                    13
judgement unique to the field of engineering.           We conclude, from

the facts of the case, that the actions taken by Waligora were not

engineering services and, therefore, fall outside the scope of the

Professional Liability exclusion contained in the CGL policy.               See

e.g. Abramson, 908 F. Supp. at 1394-94 (applying Louisiana law)

(finding   that   professional   liability      exclusion     did   not   apply

because there was no evidence demonstrating that the removal and

replacement of pipeline covering required the special training of

an engineer or the exercise of his professional judgment).

     Scottsdale contends that in the event the actions taken by

Waligora were not professional services, by application of the

prior decision of this Court in Natural Gas Pipeline Co. of America

v. Odom Offshore Surveys, Inc., 889 F.2d 633 (5th Cir. 1989),

coverage under the CGL policy is nevertheless excluded.               In that

case, Odom Offshore Survey, Inc. (“Odom”) was hired by Natural Gas

Pipeline Company of America (“NGPL”) to survey a pipeline and plot

proposed anchor locations to be used to guide a dive vessel over

designated pipeline locations. Two Odom employees were to use data

generated by a Hydrotrac computer system to facilitate placement of

the anchors in such a manner as to not damage the pipeline.                The

employees directed the positioning of four anchors, one of which

collided with the pipeline causing serious damage.              The district

court found that the employees of Odom were negligent in the manner

in which the anchors were positioned but, as the employees were

performing   surveying   services    at   the    time   the    anchors     were


                                    14
positioned, the property damage resulting from their negligence was

excluded from coverage under a professional liability exclusion

contained in the insurance policy.

      We find Odom distinguishable on its facts.        First, in Odom

there was a substantial amount of evidence to show that the

services being performed by the Odom employees were of the type

“generally recognized as surveying services.”       Id. at 635.   By the

facts before us, we have already concluded that the actions taken

by Waligora were not professional engineering services. Second, in

Odom we found that because the damage to the pipeline arose from

the   performance   of   professional   surveying   services   Odom   had

contracted to perform for NGPL, the actions taken by the Odom

employees were within the category of “professional services.”         We

acknowledge that under the sales agreement entered by GDC and TPST,

the latter was obligated to provide engineering services including

the design, development, manufacture and delivery of a system to

incinerate wastes.       The sales agreement also required TPST to

furnish non-engineering services including the placement of two

lead operators, neither of which was required to be an engineer, at

the Rubicon plant in part to train GDC operators to operate the

incinerator.   The facts show that the actions taken by Waligora

were not required to satisfy the engineering portion of the sales

agreement as, at the time the actions were taken, he was not in the

process of designing, developing, or otherwise acting within the

course of the practice of his engineering profession on behalf of


                                  15
TPST.    We   conclude    that    Waligora’s    acts   of   assessing   the

incinerator system prior to disconnecting power to the control

panel and disconnecting the power were not professional engineering

services which would implicate application of the Professional

Liability exclusion.     Accordingly, we reverse the decision of the

magistrate judge that the Professional Liability exclusion barred

recovery under the CGL policy.

                           III.    Conclusion

     We hold that neither the Contractual Liability exclusion nor

the Professional Liability exclusion contained in the CGL policy at

issue in this case apply to bar coverage on the claims asserted by

Appellants.   We REVERSE the decision of the district court and

REMAND this case for entry of judgment against Scottsdale for

reasonable attorneys’ fees and expenses due under this policy.




                                    16