Andrew Sabric v. Lockheed Martin Corp , 532 F. App'x 286 ( 2013 )


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  •                                                      NOT PRECEDENTIAL
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT
    ___________
    Nos. 12-2692 and 12-2780
    ___________
    ANDREW SABRIC, Co-Executor of the Estate of Deborah Bachak;
    GENEVIEVE SABRIC, Co-Executor of the Estate of Deborah Bachak,
    Appellants in No. 12-2692
    v.
    LOCKHEED MARTIN; U.S. SECURITY ASSOCIATES, INC.,
    Lockheed Martin,
    Appellant in No. 12-2780
    _______________________
    On Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Middle District of Pennsylvania
    D.C. Civil Action No. 3-09-cv-02237
    (Honorable A. Richard Caputo)
    ______________
    ARGUED
    March 5, 2013
    Before: SCIRICA, JORDAN, and ROTH, Circuit Judges.
    (Filed: July 24, 2013)
    Vincent S. Cimini, Esq. [ARGUED]
    Sal Cognetti, Jr., Esq.
    Foley, Cognetti, Comerford, Cimini & Cummins
    507 Linden Street
    7th Floor
    Scranton, PA 18503
    Counsel for Appellants/Cross-Appellees Andrew Sabric and Genevieve Sabric
    Barbara S. Magen, Esq.
    Post & Schell
    1600 John F. Kennedy Boulevard
    Four Penn Center, 14th Floor
    Philadelphia, PA 19103
    Joseph F. McNulty, Jr., Esq.
    Jonathan B. Sprague, Esq. [ARGUED]
    Post & Schell
    1245 South Cedar Crest Boulevard
    3rd Floor
    Allentown, PA 18103
    Counsel for Appellee/Cross-Appellant Lockheed Martin Corp
    Jill Cantor-Burns, Esq. [ARGUED]
    Jay L. Edelstein, Esq.
    Edelstein Law
    230 South Broad Street
    Suite 900
    Philadelphia, PA 19102
    Counsel for Appellee US Security Associates Inc.
    _________________
    OPINION OF THE COURT
    _________________
    2
    SCIRICA, Circuit Judge.
    This case arises out of the deadly shooting of Deborah Bachak, a Lockheed Martin
    Corporation employee, by her former paramour, George Zadolnny. Zadolnny was a
    security guard with U.S. Security Associates and worked at the Lockheed facility.
    Bachak’s parents and estate brought suit against Lockheed and U.S. Security, alleging
    defendants’ negligence caused Bachak’s death. Lockheed asserted a cross-claim against
    U.S. Security for indemnification.
    We will affirm the District Court’s order insofar as it granted summary judgment
    to Lockheed and U.S. Security on plaintiffs’ negligence claims. We will reverse as to
    Lockheed’s cross-claim and remand to the District Court with instructions that summary
    judgment be entered for Lockheed.
    I.
    Pursuant to a security services contract, U.S. Security provided uniformed security
    guards to the Lockheed facility. One guard per shift was armed. In May 2004, U.S.
    Security hired Zadolnny as the first-shift armed security officer for the Lockheed facility.
    Bachak was a long-time Lockheed employee working in the Document Control
    Department. Bachak and Zadolnny entered into a romantic relationship in late 2007. They
    moved in together in early 2008 and became engaged that spring. Bachak terminated the
    relationship between August and October of 2008.
    On December 16, 2008, while on duty, Zadolnny left the guardhouse under the
    guise of going to the restroom. He walked over to the Document Control Room,
    encountered Bachak, and asked if she would speak with him in the mailroom. Once
    3
    Bachak met Zadolnny in the mailroom, he shot her five times. Zadolnny took his own life
    immediately after killing Bachak.
    Bachak’s parents (the “Sabrics”) brought suit individually and as co-executors of
    Bachak’s estate in the Lackawanna County Court of Common Pleas. Against Lockheed,
    plaintiffs asserted claims for negligence, vicarious liability, wrongful death, and a
    survival action. Against U.S. Security, plaintiffs asserted claims for negligence, assault
    and battery, vicarious liability, wrongful death, and a survival action. Lockheed removed
    the action to the District Court for the Middle District of Pennsylvania, where both
    Lockheed and U.S. Security moved to dismiss the action for various reasons. The District
    Court largely denied their motions. Lockheed then brought a cross-claim against U.S.
    Security, contending U.S. Security was contractually obligated to indemnify it.
    After discovery, defendants moved for summary judgment against plaintiffs. The
    District Court granted defendants’ motion, finding Lockheed and U.S. Security did not
    owe Bachak any duty and therefore could not be held liable under a negligence theory. 1
    Lockheed also moved for summary judgment on its indemnification claim against U.S.
    Security. The District Court denied this motion and dismissed the cross-claim because
    U.S. Security was adjudicated non-negligent. The Sabrics appeal, asserting both
    Lockheed and U.S. Security owed Bachak a duty and breached it. Lockheed cross-
    appeals the denial of its claim for indemnification.
    1
    The District Court also granted summary judgment to U.S. Security on the vicarious
    liability claim (finding plaintiffs abandoned it) and the assault and battery claim (finding
    no evidence that U.S. Security had reason to suspect Zadolnny would act violently or that
    U.S. Security would have been able to control his conduct). Plaintiffs do not appeal these
    rulings.
    4
    II.2
    To establish a claim for negligence, the plaintiff must show: (1) the defendant
    owed a duty of care to the plaintiff; (2) the defendant breached that duty; (3) there is a
    causal connection between the defendant’s breach and the plaintiff’s injury; and (4) the
    plaintiff incurred actual loss. Feeney v. Disston Manor Personal Care Home, Inc., 
    849 A.2d 590
    , 594 (Pa. Super. Ct. 2004). Whether the defendant owed a duty of care under
    the first element is a question of law. Matharu v. Muir, 
    29 A.3d 375
    , 384 (Pa. Super. Ct.
    2011). The inquiry involves “weigh[ing] several discrete factors, including: (1) the
    relationship between the parties; (2) the social utility of the actor’s conduct; (3) the nature
    of the risk imposed and foreseeability of the harm incurred; (4) the consequences of
    imposing a duty upon the actor; and (5) the overall public interest in the proposed
    solution.” Lindstrom v. City of Corry, 
    763 A.2d 394
    , 397 (Pa. 2000).
    Plaintiffs assert defendants owed Bachak a duty under three theories: (A) Section
    317 of the Restatement (Second) of Torts; (B) Section 323 of the Restatement; and (C)
    non-Restatement Pennsylvania common law. We will address each theory in turn.
    A.
    2
    The District Court had diversity jurisdiction under 
    28 U.S.C. § 1332
    (a)(1), as the
    Sabrics are residents of Pennsylvania; U.S. Security is a corporate citizen of Delaware;
    Lockheed is a corporate citizen of Maryland; and the amount in controversy exceeds
    $75,000. We have jurisdiction under 
    28 U.S.C. § 1291
    , as this is an appeal from final
    judgment. We review the grant of summary judgment de novo, applying the same
    standard as the District Court. DeHart v. Horn, 
    390 F.3d 262
    , 267 (3d Cir. 2004).
    Summary judgment is appropriate “when there is no genuine issue of material fact to be
    resolved at trial and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” 
    Id.
    5
    Plaintiffs assert that under § 317 of the Restatement (Second) of Torts, defendants
    had a duty to exercise reasonable care so as to control Zadolnny because defendants knew
    of his propensity for violent behavior.3 The District Court found the Pennsylvania
    Supreme Court’s decision in Dempsey v. Walso Bureau, Inc., 
    246 A.2d 418
     (Pa. 1968),
    was on point and precluded a duty under § 317 because Zadolnny’s allegedly dangerous
    disposition was never reported to the management or human resources department of
    either defendant.4 On appeal, plaintiffs contend the trial court erred in failing to consider
    evidence establishing that both Lockheed and U.S. Security knew or should have known
    of the risk of harm Zadolnny posed to Bachak.
    3
    Section 317 states the following:
    A master is under a duty to exercise reasonable care so to control his
    servant while acting outside the scope of his employment as to prevent him
    from intentionally harming others or from so conducting himself as to
    create an unreasonable risk of bodily harm to them, if
    (a) the servant
    (i) is upon the premises in possession of the master or upon
    which the servant is privileged to enter only as his servant, or
    (ii) is using a chattel of the master, and
    (b) the master
    (i) knows or has reason to know that he has the ability to
    control his servant, and
    (ii) knows or should know of the necessity and opportunity
    for exercising such control.
    Restatement (Second) of Torts § 317 (1965); see also Dempsey v. Walso Bureau, Inc.,
    
    246 A.2d 418
    , 419-20 (Pa. 1968) (approving the use of § 317 as an accurate statement of
    Pennsylvania law).
    4
    Although Zadolnny was a U.S. Security employee, for the purpose of the analysis, the
    District Court assumed Zadolnny was also an employee of Lockheed, as opposed to an
    independent contractor. We make the same assumption for the purpose of our analysis.
    6
    In Dempsey, Steinberg, a bus terminal security guard employed by Walso Bureau,
    attacked dispatcher Dempsey and pinned him to the ground. Id. at 419. Dempsey brought
    a personal injury suit against Walso Bureau, contending the company knew or should
    have known of Steinberg’s dangerous propensity for violence and should not have
    continued to employ him.
    The record reveal[ed] the following prior actions of Steinberg: (a)
    Williams, a bus driver, had seen Steinberg push drunken persons out of the
    bus terminal but had never seen him use his night stick on them; (b)
    Vincent, a bus driver, had seen Steinberg bang his night stick on walls and
    doors of the terminal but never in any other manner, had seen Steinberg
    grab and push terminal employees in ‘horse-play’, although such actions
    did not appear to Vincent to be injurious; (c) Burnett, a porter, stated that
    Steinberg had jabbed him in the back with his night stick which Steinberg
    seemed to think was a joke but did not seem so to Burnett; (d) Alston, an
    express and baggage agent, saw Steinberg grab employees, jab them with
    his night stick and, on one occasion, put his night stick between Alston’s
    legs while he was bending over and, on this occasion, Alston told Steinberg
    that he would punch him if such action was repeated and Steinberg never
    did it again; (e) Sigman, a bus driver, saw Steinberg hit, with his night
    stick, the soles of the shoes of a man sleeping in the terminal; (f) Svtser, a
    ticket agent, saw Steinberg strike, with his night stick, the feet of persons
    sleeping in the terminal and put such persons out of the terminal by pushing
    them in the back with his stick.
    Id. at 422-23. The Pennsylvania Supreme Court found Steinberg’s prior actions
    constituted annoying horseplay but “did not show a propensity on the part of Steinberg
    which was vicious or dangerous and which indicated that he intended to inflict injury
    upon others.” Id. at 423. Nor, the court found, should Walso Bureau have known of any
    dangerous propensities of Steinberg because the supervisor never received any report of
    Steinberg’s actions. Id.
    7
    Dempsey’s reasoning extends beyond contexts involving horseplay. In drawing the
    conclusion that Walso Bureau did not owe Dempsey a duty under § 317, the court relied
    on Fletcher v. Baltimore & Potomac R.R. Co., 
    168 U.S. 135
     (1897), which preceded the
    Restatement (Second) of Torts. In Fletcher, the Court held that
    if by reason of neglect to perform its duty to see that its employees do not
    act in a manner dangerous to other persons, an act is performed by an
    employee outside the scope of his employment and such act is one of a
    series of the same kind of acts of which the employer had knowledge and in
    which it acquiesced and, if such act of the employee is in its nature
    dangerous, then the employer is liable to one injured by its employee.
    Dempsey, 246 A.2d at 422 (emphasis added) (citing Fletcher, 
    168 U.S. 135
    ).
    Thus, while a wayward employee need not have committed the exact same act in
    the past (e.g., murder) in order to hold the employer liable under § 317, the wayward
    employee must have committed prior acts of the same general nature as the one for which
    the plaintiff brings suit—acts that show the employee is “vicious or dangerous and . . .
    intended to inflict injury upon others.” Id. at 423. Compare Hutchison ex rel. Hutchison
    v. Luddy, 
    742 A.2d 1052
    , 1059 (Pa. 1999) (finding that diocese had a duty under § 317 to
    prevent priest from molesting more children where diocese knew that priest had engaged
    in pedophilic behavior in the past) with R.A. ex rel. N.A. v. First Church of Christ, 
    748 A.2d 692
    , 698-99 (Pa. Super. Ct. 2000) (finding church was not liable under § 317 for
    minister’s sexual abuse of child, where the only warning signs were an unsubstantiated
    rumor that minister was having an extramarital affair and a statement by minister to
    church members that he had an excessive interest in pornography as a young man).
    8
    Viewing the facts in the light most favorable to plaintiffs, and drawing all
    inferences in their favor, MD Mall Associates, LLC v. CSX Transp., Inc., 
    715 F.3d 479
    ,
    485 n.6 (3d Cir. 2013), we find the evidence insufficient to establish a duty under § 317
    on the part of either defendant. Supervisors at Lockheed and U.S. Security knew, at best,
    that Zadolnny had sometimes become agitated and angry, had verbally lashed out, and
    harbored a vendetta toward his ex-fiancée. This knowledge was insufficient to place
    defendants on notice that Zadolnny would one day physically harm Bachak.5 See also
    5
    We have carefully considered plaintiffs’ allegations and evidence regarding what
    supervisors knew about Zadolnny prior to the shooting.
    Plaintiffs contend that U.S. Security knew or should have known that Zadolnny
    was dangerous because supervisors were aware that Zadolnny had dated Bachak, wanted
    to single her out for “random” searches, and occasionally argued with his fellow guards.
    Plaintiffs also cite the fact that two U.S. Security guards stated they warned a U.S.
    Security supervisor that Zadolnny should not be permitted to carry a gun. In Lockheed’s
    Final Report of the shooting incident, U.S. Security guard Kathy Calabrese said that she
    reported to U.S. Security site supervisor Captain Frank Capobianco that “Zadolnny had a
    temper and should not be carrying a gun.” J.A. vol. III, 311. Calabrese also said that she
    told first-shift supervisor Sergeant Robert Peterlin that Zadolnny smelled like alcohol and
    that someone needed to talk to Anthony Sacco, U.S. Security’s Regional Supervisor,
    about Zadolnny because she was concerned he was “drained and exhausted.” Id. at 310.
    In the same report, U.S. Security guard William Toms stated that he predicted to
    Capobianco that the Zadolnny-Bachak relationship would “end in a tragedy.” Id. at 326.
    Toms also stated that he told Capobianco, “This guy should not carry a gun or someone
    will get hurt.” Id.
    We first note that under Dempsey, the § 317 inquiry focuses on whether the
    employer knew of prior acts by the employee—not conclusory opinions from his
    coworkers—that evince the employee’s propensity for violence. Thus, even though
    Calabrese and Toms stated they shared concerns with their supervisor, their opinions,
    conveyed without any supporting facts, were insufficient to put U.S. Security on notice of
    the risk Zadolnny posed to Bachak. Moreover, the prior acts of which U.S. Security
    supervisors were aware—including Zadolnny’s arguments with fellow guards and desire
    to single out Bachak for searches—did not, by their nature, suggest a propensity for
    violent behavior.
    Plaintiffs’ evidence with respect to Lockheed is even more tenuous. Plaintiffs
    contend that Lockheed knew or should have known that Zadolnny was dangerous
    9
    Davis v. Weyerhaeuser Co., 
    373 P.2d 985
    , 994 (Or. 1962) (finding that where employee
    was known to be ornery, quarrelsome, and a bully, there was still no evidence that
    employee had a reputation for being vicious or dangerous).
    In their briefs, plaintiffs highlight additional instances of Zadolnny’s problematic
    behavior but fail to establish that reports of these instances were made to defendants’
    management or human resources personnel. In Dempsey, the court explained that because
    no supervisor had ever been given a report concerning Steinberg’s actions, it could not
    find that Walso Bureau should have known of Steinberg’s violent tendencies. 246 A.2d at
    423. The same is true here. As the District Court explained,
    Decedent and her co-workers did not find Zadolnny’s conduct necessary to
    warrant the lodging of a complaint with Lockheed’s Human Resources
    Department. And, without such a complaint, the Court cannot avoid the
    inevitable conclusion that the necessity to control Zadolnny’s conduct did
    not exist because he was not known, nor was he believed to be prior to the
    date of the shooting, to present an unreasonable risk of harm to Decedent.
    Sabric v. Lockheed Martin Corp., No. 3:09-2237, 
    2012 WL 1952197
    , at *9 (M.D. Pa.
    May 30, 2012).
    Given the lack of evidence suggesting Zadolnny was vicious or dangerous or that
    Lockheed or U.S. Security should have known of the risk he posed, the District Court
    because Charles Hughes, Lockheed’s Director of Human Resources, received a report
    that Zadolnny once angrily confronted a coworker for speeding. Plaintiffs also seize on
    statements made by Document Control Room Supervisor Ann Marie Juris: in Lockheed’s
    Final Report, Juris stated that she witnessed Zadolnny yell at Bachak, and that Bachak
    told her that she did not like the way Zadolnny yelled at her.
    At most, these incidents demonstrate that Zadolnny had some propensity toward
    yelling when agitated; these incidents were again insufficient to put one on notice that
    Zadolnny had a propensity toward violent behavior.
    10
    found that defendants did not owe Bachak a duty under § 317 of the Restatement. We
    agree.
    B.
    Plaintiffs assert that by instituting certain policies, defendants undertook to
    provide a protective service to Bachak, and thereby acquired a duty under § 323 of the
    Restatement (Second) of Torts to implement these policies with reasonable care.6
    Plaintiffs contend the District Court erred in failing to consider all of the policies that
    defendants had in place, including Lockheed’s Workplace Security policy, Harassment-
    Free Workplace policy, and Post Orders/Standard Operating Procedures for Contract
    Guard Force.7 Plaintiffs also bring our attention to U.S. Security’s internal rule
    6
    Section 323 states the following:
    One who undertakes, gratuitously or for consideration, to render services to
    another which he should recognize as necessary for the protection of the
    other’s person or things, is subject to liability to the other for physical harm
    resulting from his failure to exercise reasonable care to perform his
    undertaking, if
    (a) his failure to exercise such care increases the risk of such harm,
    or
    (b) the harm is suffered because of the other’s reliance upon the
    undertaking.
    Restatement (Second) of Torts § 323 (1965); see also Morena v. S. Hills Health Sys., 
    462 A.2d 680
    , 684 (Pa. 1983) (approving the use of § 323 of the Restatement as an accurate
    statement of Pennsylvania law).
    7
    The Workplace Security policy states Lockheed’s goal of providing a workplace free
    from threats and acts of violence. It discusses employees’ responsibility to report and
    management’s responsibility to appropriately respond to any threatened or actual harm to
    persons or property. The Harassment-Free Workplace policy prohibits harassment and
    outlines procedures for reporting it. The Post Orders discuss what Lockheed requires of
    its guard staff, including the duties to abide by Lockheed rules, respond to threat
    situations, and report violent acts to supervisors or the human resources department.
    11
    prohibiting guards from fraternizing with client-employees. But even assuming that (1)
    by instituting these policies, defendants undertook to protect Bachak from the harm that
    occurred here, and (2) at least some of these policies were negligently implemented by
    Lockheed and U.S. Security personnel, we nonetheless agree with the District Court that
    these policies did not constitute actionable undertakings under either prong of § 323.
    We have said that for § 323(a) to apply, “the defendant’s negligent performance
    must somehow put the plaintiff in a worse situation than if the defendant had never begun
    the performance.” Turbe v. Gov’t of Virgin Islands, 
    938 F.2d 427
    , 432 (3d Cir. 1991); see
    also Unglo v. Zubik, 
    29 A.3d 810
    , 815 (Pa. Super. Ct. 2011) (finding where decedent was
    suicidal before and after diocese intervened and offered counseling services, diocese was
    free to discontinue services at any time because it did not put decedent in a worse
    position than before services began).
    No policy that plaintiffs assert defendants negligently implemented caused Bachak
    to be placed in a worse position than she would have been in the absence of the policy.
    Without Lockheed’s anti-harassment policy, Bachak would have been subject to
    harassment without any internal corporate means to address it. And without Lockheed’s
    Workplace Security policy and Post Orders (both of which directed personnel on how to
    identify and react to potentially violent situations), there would have been no coordinated
    effort to prevent or respond to workplace violence. Moreover, it is plaintiffs’ position that
    U.S. Security’s no-fraternization policy was effectively ignored with respect to Bachak
    and Zadolnny. Thus, the existence of the no-fraternization rule did not place Bachak in
    greater danger than if it had not been implemented at all.
    12
    Plaintiffs are no more successful under § 323(b) because Bachak did not rely on
    any of these policies to her detriment. As mentioned, Bachak and Zadolnny disregarded
    U.S. Security’s no-fraternization rule. Similarly, Bachak never reported any threats or
    harassment to security, management, or the human resources department as required by
    Lockheed’s policies addressing violence in the workplace. Indeed, when Lockheed
    employee Richard Lombardo became concerned that Zadolnny was bothering Bachak on
    the morning of the shooting, Bachak downplayed the situation and asked Lombardo twice
    to “leave it alone,” and not report Zadolnny to the human resources department. J.A. vol.
    IX, 1112.
    Bachak’s failure to invoke the protective policies of Lockheed and U.S. Security
    precludes a finding of reliance. Cf. Jain v. State, 
    617 N.W.2d 293
    , 299-300 (Iowa 2000)
    (finding school had no duty under § 323 where it offered suicide prevention services but
    student refused to take advantage of them). In addition, at least one court has found that
    an employee could not have relied on an employer for protection where the employee did
    not evince any awareness of the threat to herself. See Midgette v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.,
    
    317 F. Supp. 2d 550
    , 561 (E.D. Pa. 2004) (“[E]ven if we were to assume that Wal–Mart
    did assume a duty to protect Plaintiff . . . , there is no evidence on the record that would
    even suggest . . . that Plaintiff was shot on Sunday because she relied on a belief that her
    employer would protect her from any violence from Bryan. In fact, Plaintiff did not even
    expect that Bryan would harm her physically at the Wal–Mart, much less shoot her.”).
    Given that there is no genuine issue of material fact that Bachak either (a) was
    made worse off by defendants’ policies, or (b) relied on these policies to her detriment,
    13
    we agree with the District Court that defendants did not owe Bachak a duty under
    Restatement § 323.8
    C.
    Plaintiffs contend that even if we decline to find a duty under §§ 317 or 323 of the
    Restatement, we should nonetheless recognize that defendants had a duty to provide a
    safe workplace under Pennsylvania non-Restatement common law. But the duty to
    provide a safe workplace is essentially the duty to prevent foreseeable acts of harm. See
    Mike v. Borough of Aliquippa, 
    421 A.2d 251
    , 257 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1980) (finding that
    Borough, as employer of police officers, failed to provide employee with a safe working
    place where “there was a wealth of evidence from which the jury could conclude that the
    Borough should have foreseen criminal, possibly violent, acts by the constables”). As we
    previously stated, Zadolnny’s violent act was not reasonably foreseeable to Lockheed and
    U.S. Security. Thus, any non-Restatement common law claim, if one exists, must fail.9
    III.
    8
    Plaintiffs also contend Lockheed’s security protocols made Bachak worse off
    under § 323 because she was prohibited from carrying a weapon to protect herself. But if
    Bachak had perceived a threat, she still could have protected herself by making a report
    to management or the human resources department. There was also no credible evidence
    that the murder occurred because Bachak relied on the no-weapons policy.
    Lastly, plaintiffs allege that defendants were negligent in the supervision,
    management, and training of the employees who provided protective services to Bachak.
    We think this argument is a recharacterization of plaintiffs’ argument under § 317 and
    dispose of it as such.
    9
    Because we find that neither Lockheed nor U.S. Security may be held liable to plaintiffs
    under a negligence theory, we needn’t consider whether Lockheed is vicariously liable
    for U.S. Security’s actions.
    14
    Lockheed appeals the District Court’s denial of its motion for summary judgment
    and dismissal of its cross-claim against U.S. Security for indemnity. Lockheed asserts
    that it is contractually entitled to reimbursement from U.S. Security for litigation costs
    and attorneys’ fees, regardless of whether U.S. Security is adjudicated non-negligent.
    A section of the parties’ contract entitled “Insurance/Entry on Lockheed Martin
    Property” requires that if U.S. Security or its employees enter the Lockheed facility, U.S.
    Security must obtain general liability, bodily injury, and property damage insurance in
    reasonable amounts. This section then states:
    [U.S. Security] shall defend, indemnify and hold harmless [Lockheed], its
    officers, employees, and agents from any losses, costs, claims, causes of
    action, damages, liabilities, and expenses, including attorneys fees, all
    expenses of litigation and/or settlement, and court costs, by reason of
    property damage or loss or personal injury to any person caused in whole or
    in part by the actions or omissions of [U.S. Security], its officers,
    employees, agents, suppliers, or subcontractors.
    J.A. vol. X, 1388.
    In Pennsylvania, “[w]hen the words of a contract are clear and unambiguous, the
    meaning of the contract is ascertained from the contents alone.” Mace v. Atl. Ref. Mktg.
    Corp., 
    785 A.2d 491
    , 496 (Pa. 2001). The contract here unambiguously entitles Lockheed
    to reimbursement for all litigation expenses that it incurs because of any act or omission
    of a U.S. Security employee that caused property damage, loss, or personal injury to
    another. We decline U.S. Security’s invitation to read the contract as only providing
    indemnification for an act or omission by U.S. Security that the court determines was
    negligent. If the parties intended that Lockheed only be reimbursed for “any negligent
    act” committed by U.S. Security, they could have said as much.
    15
    In addition, we do not find compelling U.S. Security’s assertion that the parties
    would never have agreed to such sweeping indemnity rights. U.S. Security’s liability to
    Lockheed is not endless under our reading of the contract; it is limited to expenses that
    Lockheed incurs because of acts and omissions of U.S. Security and its employees. It is
    not unreasonable that the parties would agree to such an arrangement.10
    Since Lockheed incurred costs and attorneys’ fees in defending a suit precipitated
    by an act of a U.S. Security employee, U.S. Security is contractually obligated to
    reimburse Lockheed for these expenses.
    IV.
    We will affirm the District Court’s grant of summary judgment to defendants
    Lockheed and U.S. Security on the Sabrics’ negligence claims. With respect to
    Lockheed’s indemnity cross-claim, we will reverse and remand to the District Court with
    instructions that summary judgment be entered for Lockheed.
    10
    A separate section of the contract entitled “Independent Contractor Relationship”
    states:
    [U.S. Security] shall be responsible for and hold harmless
    [Lockheed] and its customers from and against all losses, costs, claims,
    causes of action, damages, liabilities, and expenses, including attorneys
    fees, all expenses of litigation and/or settlement, and court costs, arising
    from any act or omission of [U.S. Security], its officers, employees, agents,
    suppliers, or subcontractors at any tier, in the performance of any of its
    obligations under this Contract.
    J.A. vol. X, 1388. U.S. Security asserts that it is not contractually required to indemnify
    Lockheed because Zadolnny’s actions were not “in the performance of” U.S. Security’s
    obligations under the contract. But the indemnity provision in the “Insurance/Entry on
    Lockheed Martin Property” section contains no “in the performance of” limitation. We
    will not read in this qualification to a provision that contains no reference to it.
    16