Thomson Inc. n/k/a Technicolor USA, Inc. v. Insurance Company of North America n/k/a Century Indemnity Company, and XL Insurance America ( 2014 )


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  • FOR PUBLICATION
    ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT/                    ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE/
    CROSS-APPELLEE:                             CROSS-APPELLANT CENTURY
    INDEMNITY COMPANY f/k/a
    GEORGE M. PLEWS                             INSURANCE COMPANY OF
    FREDERICK D. EMHARDT                        NORTH AMERICA:
    KATHERINE E. WINDERS
    JOSH S. TATUM                               DALE W. EIKENBERRY
    SEAN M. HIRSCHTEN                           Wooden & McLaughlin LLP       Jun 19 2014, 10:02 am
    Plews Shadley Racher & Braun LLP            Indianapolis, Indiana
    Indianapolis, Indiana
    WILLIAM M. COHN
    J. CHRISTOPHER MADDEN
    Cohn Baughman & Martin
    Chicago, Illinois
    ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE/
    CROSS-APPELLANT XL INSURANCE
    AMERICA, INC. f/k/a WINTERTHUR
    INTERNATIONAL AMERICA INSURANCE
    COMPANY:
    STEPHEN J. PETERS
    DAVID I. RUBIN
    Harrison & Moberly, LLP
    Indianapolis, Indiana
    MATTHEW S. PONZI
    JAMES B. GLENNON
    Foran Glennon Palandech Ponzi & Rudloff PC
    Chicago, Illinois
    IN THE
    COURT OF APPEALS OF INDIANA
    THOMSON INC. n/k/a                          )
    TECHNICOLOR USA, INC.,                      )
    )
    Appellant-Plaintiff/Cross-Appellee,   )
    )
    vs.                            )    No. 49A05-1109-PL-470
    )
    INSURANCE COMPANY OF NORTH                        )
    AMERICA n/k/a CENTURY INDEMNITY                   )
    COMPANY, et al.,                                  )
    )
    Appellees-Defendants/Cross-Appellants,     )
    )
    and                                 )
    )
    XL INSURANCE AMERICA, INC. f/k/a                  )
    WINTERTHUR INTERNATIONAL AMERICA                  )
    INSURANCE COMPANY,                                )
    )
    Appellee-Defendant/Cross-Appellant,        )
    )
    and                                 )
    )
    TRAVELERS PROPERTY CASUALTY                       )
    CO., et al.,                                      )
    )
    Appellee-Defendant/Cross-Appellant.        )
    APPEAL FROM THE MARION SUPERIOR COURT
    The Honorable Michael D. Keele, Judge
    Cause No. 49D07-0807-PL-30747
    June 19, 2014
    OPINION – FOR PUBLICATION
    CRONE, Judge
    Case Summary
    In 2004, a group of former factory workers and their heirs filed a class-action lawsuit
    in Taiwan (“the Taiwan Class Action”) against Thomson Consumer Electronics Television
    Taiwan Ltd. (“TCETVT”), a Taiwanese company which owned and operated an electronics
    manufacturing plant in Taiwan from the late 1980s to 1992. The workers sought damages for
    bodily injury allegedly resulting from exposure to organic solvents while working in the plant
    2
    and living in dormitories near the plant. Over 99% of TCETVT’s stock is owned by
    Thomson Consumer Electronics (Bermuda) Ltd. (“TCEB”), and less than .01% is owned by
    Thomson Inc. n/k/a Technicolor USA, Inc. (“Thomson”), a Delaware corporation with its
    headquarters in Indiana. Both TCEB and Thomson are wholly owned subsidiaries of French
    electronics company Thomson SA.
    The Taiwan Class Action was dismissed in 2005 and reinstated in 2006. In 2007, the
    plaintiffs attempted to name Thomson SA, TCEB, and Thomson as additional defendants
    based on corporate-veil-piercing and joint-liability theories. Those entities have not yet been
    served or entered an appearance in the Taiwan Class Action. In 2008, Thomson filed a
    declaratory judgment action against its primary and umbrella liability insurers, seeking
    defense and indemnification costs for the Taiwan Class Action. The primary insurers
    included XL Insurance America, Inc. f/k/a Winterthur International America Insurance
    Company (“XL”) and Century Indemnity Company (“Century”). 1 The umbrella insurers
    included XL and Travelers Casualty and Surety Company f/k/a The Aetna Casualty and
    Surety Company and Travelers Property Casualty Company of America f/k/a The Travelers
    Indemnity Company of Illinois (collectively, “Travelers”).
    In November 2009, Thomson filed a motion for summary judgment as to the primary
    insurers’ duty to defend, which the trial court granted by interlocutory order in July 2010
    1
    Century refers to the following insurance companies: Century Indemnity Company, as successor to
    CCI Insurance Company, as successor to Insurance Company of North America and as successor to Indemnity
    Insurance Company of North America; ACE Property & Casualty Company, f/k/a CIGNA Property and
    Casualty Company; and ACE American Insurance Company f/k/a CIGNA Insurance Company. The trial court
    and the other parties refer to Century as “ACE” or “the ACE Defendants.”
    3
    (“the Duty to Defend Order”). In the Duty to Defend Order, the trial court ruled that XL and
    Century have a duty to defend Thomson in the Taiwan Class Action and reimburse Thomson
    for reasonable and necessary defense costs, which would be determined later. The insurers
    asked the trial court to certify the Duty to Defend Order for discretionary interlocutory
    appeal, and Thomson asked the trial court to certify it as a final judgment. The trial court
    denied both requests.
    In October 2010, Thomson filed a motion for summary judgment as to trigger,
    allocation, occurrence, and the absence of aggregates in the primary policies at issue. In
    August 2011, the trial court entered a partial final judgment in favor of Thomson on certain
    issues (“the Allocation Order”). Thomson, XL, and Century appealed from the Allocation
    Order.
    In October 2011, Thomson filed a motion for summary judgment for defense costs
    against XL and for defense costs coverage against Travelers. In June 2012, the trial court
    granted Thomson’s motion to amend its complaint to add TCETVT as a plaintiff. The trial
    court also entered a partial final judgment against XL (“XL Defense Costs Order”) and a
    partial final judgment against Travelers (“Travelers Defense Costs Order”) (collectively, “the
    Defense Costs Orders”). XL and Travelers appealed from the Defense Costs Orders. The
    appeals from the Allocation Order and the Defense Costs Orders were consolidated. In May
    2014, Thomson notified this Court that it had reached a full settlement on all issues with
    Travelers and had reached a partial settlement with Century regarding Century’s liability for
    4
    defending Thomson in the Taiwan Class Action. Travelers’ appeal was dismissed, 2 and
    Century’s appeal remained pending as to all indemnity issues.
    The parties have raised numerous issues for review, which we have reordered and
    consolidated as the following eleven issues:
    (1) XL contends that we should dismiss this appeal because the Duty to
    Defend Order is not a final judgment. We agree with Thomson that the
    Duty to Defend Order was essentially made final when the trial court
    issued the Defense Cost Orders. Therefore, we deny XL’s request to
    dismiss.
    (2) XL contends that the trial court erred in issuing the Duty to Defend Order
    because genuine issues of material fact remain as to the applicability of
    certain policy exclusions and defenses, such as the employer’s liability
    exclusion and the known-loss doctrine. We affirm the trial court on this
    issue.
    (3) Thomson contends that the trial court erred in ruling that there are only
    two “occurrences” under the XL and Century policies. We affirm the
    trial court on this issue.
    (4) Thomson contends that the trial court erred in ruling that it must satisfy
    the deductible for each occurrence for XL’s 2000, 2001, and 2002
    primary policies. We affirm the trial court on this issue.
    (5) XL contends that the trial court erred in failing to apply the self-insured
    retentions (“SIRs”) in its 2003, 2004, and 2005 primary policies. We
    reverse and remand with instructions to do so.
    (6) Thomson contends that the trial court erred in concluding that the
    “personal injury” provisions in XL’s 2000 primary policy are
    inapplicable. We reverse the trial court on this issue.
    (7) XL contends that the trial court erred in applying a “continuous trigger”
    to its policies and in using diagnosis of disease as the manifestation point
    for that trigger. We conclude that XL has waived any argument regarding
    2
    Pursuant to Indiana Appellate Rule 17(A), a party of record in the trial court shall be a party on
    appeal, and therefore we have included Travelers in the case caption.
    5
    the applicability of a “continuous trigger” and therefore affirm on this
    issue. We conclude that the proper manifestation point is when the
    disease becomes reasonably capable of medical diagnosis and therefore
    reverse and remand on this issue.
    (8) XL and Century contend that the trial court erred in using an “all sums”
    allocation method for their policies. We reverse and remand with
    instructions to use an appropriate pro rata allocation method.
    (9) XL contends that the trial court erred in concluding that TCETVT and
    Thomson SA are insureds under its primary and umbrella policies. We
    affirm the trial court on this issue.
    (10) XL contends that genuine issues of material fact exist regarding the
    reasonableness and necessity of Thomson’s defense costs. We affirm the
    trial court on this issue.
    (11) XL contends that the trial court erred in awarding prejudgment interest on
    the defense costs. We affirm the trial court on this issue.
    In sum, we affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand for further proceedings consistent with
    this opinion.
    Facts and Procedural History
    The Taiwan Class Action plaintiffs have alleged that Radio Corporation of America
    (“RCA”) was approved to operate in Taiwan (“RCAT”) in 1967 and established an
    electronics manufacturing plant in Taoyuan by 1970. Thousands of employees lived in
    dormitories near the plant. In 1986, RCA and the Taoyuan plant were merged into General
    Electric International, Inc. (“GEI”). In 1987, RCA and RCAT were acquired by Thomson
    SA through its wholly owned subsidiaries, including TCEB and Thomson. RCAT’s name
    was changed to TCETVT. TCEB has always owned approximately 99.98% of TCETVT, and
    Thomson has owned between four and sixteen shares, or approximately .003% to .005%, of
    6
    TCETVT. TCETVT, a Taiwanese company, owned and operated the plant until it was sold
    to a local developer in 1992. The plant was demolished in 2004 or 2005.
    In April 2004, former plant employees and their heirs, who are members of a plaintiff
    association, filed a class-action lawsuit against TCETVT and GEI in Taiwan. The plaintiffs
    in the Taiwan Class Action sought damages for claimed exposure to the organic solvents
    trichloroethylene (“TCE”) and perchloroethylene (“PCE”) from 1970 to 1992. The original
    complaint alleged that TCETVT and GEI failed to properly train their employees regarding
    TCE and PCE and allowed them to improperly dispose of the solvents, which contaminated
    the soil and groundwater. The complaint also alleged that bodily injury occurred to
    employees who had either died from cancer, been diagnosed with cancer, or are at increased
    risk of cancer because of their exposure to the solvents. The plaintiffs later alleged that
    TCETVT employees were exposed to organic solvents in the plant through inhalation and
    dermal contact while soldering and dyeing and cleaning work tools and table tops, as well as
    through drinking contaminated groundwater. The employees also used the contaminated
    groundwater for bathing, clothes washing, and drinking in the dormitories.
    Since 1992, TCETVT has had no employees. Thomson’s general counsel, Meggan
    Ehret, has overseen TCETVT’s defense in the Taiwan Class Action, and Thomson employee
    Richard Dyer has overseen environmental remediation at the Taoyuan plant that was ordered
    by Taiwanese authorities. According to Ehret, TCETVT’s only two activities are defending
    the lawsuit and overseeing the remediation. TCETVT retained the law firm Kirkland & Ellis
    LLP to represent it in the Taiwan Class Action. TCETVT later retained other firms,
    7
    including Alliance International Law Offices, Summit Law Group, PLLC, and the Taiwanese
    firm of Lee & Li. Ehret is responsible for reviewing and approving payment of invoices
    from the law firms and experts used in defending the Taiwan Class Action. TCETVT has
    paid its own defense costs.
    According to attorney J. Chad Mitchell, who has represented the Thomson entities
    with Kirkland & Ellis and Summit Law Group, Thomson was aware of soil and groundwater
    contamination at the Taoyuan plant by February 1989. By 1994, Thomson was aware of
    allegations that the contamination had contributed to cancer in some plant employees.
    Approximately 3000 RCAT workers underwent physical examinations, and their claims for
    damages based on the examination results were rejected by Taiwan’s Council for Labor
    Affairs in 1998. The Council also published studies concluding that there was no reliable
    scientific proof that working at the plant would lead to illnesses. Based upon his “interviews
    of current and former Thomson employees and experts and review of available documents,”
    Mitchell believes that TCETVT did not use TCE or PCE at the Taoyuan plant “from at least
    1987 until the plant closed in 1992.” Thomson’s AO Br. at 913. 3
    The Taiwan Class Action was dismissed on technical grounds in 2005 and reinstated
    in 2006. Taiwan uses an opt-in system for class actions. The number of plaintiffs in the
    Taiwan Class Action has fluctuated from over a thousand to just over a hundred and totaled
    529 in late 2007. In August 2007, the plaintiffs attempted to name Thomson SA, TCEB, and
    3
    The parties’ briefs and appendices relating to the Allocation Order are designated “AO.” The briefs
    and appendices relating to XL’s Defense Costs Order are designated “XO.”
    8
    Thomson as additional defendants based on corporate-veil-piercing and joint-liability
    theories. 4 The service of the amended complaint began in October 2007 but is not complete,
    and neither Thomson SA, TCEB, nor Thomson has appeared in the Taiwan Class Action.
    The success of various defenses asserted by the Thomson entities (such as failure of service,
    lack of personal jurisdiction, and untimeliness) likely will not be known until the end of the
    case.
    On July 8, 2008, Thomson notified its primary insurers about the Taiwan Class
    Action. Three days later, Thomson filed its original declaratory judgment complaint against
    its primary and umbrella insurers. The primary insurers included XL, which provided
    insurance to Thomson from January 2000 to January 2006; Century, which provided
    insurance to Thomson from January 1991 to January 1995; and Zurich American Insurance
    Company and American Guarantee and Liability Insurance Company (collectively,
    “Zurich”). The umbrella insurers included XL and Travelers.
    4
    See Thomson’s AO App. at 930-31 (translation of Taiwan Class Action plaintiffs’ additional claim:
    “Under the doctrine of piercing the corporate veil in Anglo-American law, it is considered unfair or unjust to
    grant immunity to the shareholders of a corporation, who are basically not held liable for the debts or liabilities
    of the corporation, because the shareholder may attempt to make use of the company to evade their liabilities,
    and thus the shareholders and the company are held jointly liable.… The Anglo-American doctrine may serve
    as the jurisprudence in judging cases, to which Taiwan law does not contain applicable provisions.…
    Thomson SA, Thomson Inc., and [TCEB] are the controlling companies of a subsidiary, i.e., TCETVT. They
    directly or indirectly caused the subsidiary to conduct business in a manner that defies normal business practice
    or that is not gainful. Pursuant to Article 1 of the Civil Code, the doctrine of piercing the corporate veil, and
    Paragraph 2, Article 369-4 of the Company Act …, the three companies should compensate the plaintiff for its
    injuries resulting from the acts of TCETVT. Moreover, pursuant to Paragraph 2, Article 369-4 of the
    Company Act …, the three companies should be jointly liable for compensation for the damage sustained by
    the plaintiff.”).
    9
    In January 2009, Thomson filed an amended complaint. Zurich denied coverage in
    March 2009; Century denied coverage in April 2009; and XL reserved its rights in May 2009
    but has provided no coverage. In August 2009, Thomson filed a second amended complaint.
    In November 2009, Thomson filed a motion for summary judgment as to the primary
    insurers’ duty to defend, which the trial court granted in its interlocutory Duty to Defend
    order in July 2010. Among other things, the trial court ruled that Indiana law applies to this
    case and that XL, Century, and Zurich have a duty to defend Thomson in the Taiwan Class
    Action and reimburse Thomson for reasonable and necessary defense costs, which would be
    determined later. In August 2010, Zurich filed a motion to certify the Duty to Defend Order
    for discretionary interlocutory appeal pursuant to Indiana Appellate Rule 14(B). XL and
    Century joined the motion, and Thomson opposed the motion, which the trial court denied in
    October 2010. In September 2011, Thomson filed a motion to certify the Duty to Defend
    Order as a final judgment pursuant to Trial Rule 54(B) and Trial Rule 56(C), which the trial
    court denied.
    In October 2010, Thomson filed a motion for summary judgment as to trigger,
    allocation, occurrence and the absence of aggregates in the primary insurance policies at
    issue. Century filed a cross-motion for summary judgment on the number of occurrences and
    allocation, and Zurich and XL filed a motion for partial summary judgment concerning
    Thomson’s obligation to pay self-insured retentions. Zurich settled with Thomson and was
    dismissed from the case in July 2011. In August 2011, the trial court issued the Allocation
    Order, which granted partial summary judgment in favor of Thomson on certain issues, and
    10
    certified the order as a partial final judgment pursuant to Indiana Trial Rule 56(C).
    Thomson, XL, and Century each filed a notice of appeal from the Allocation Order. 5
    In December 2011, XL and Century filed a motion to dismiss the appeal from the
    Allocation Order, which essentially challenged the propriety of the trial court’s certification
    of the order as a partial final judgment based on the interlocutory status of the Duty to
    Defend Order. Thomson and Century each filed a motion for oral argument. XL objected to
    Thomson’s motion except as to the motion to dismiss. Oral argument was scheduled solely
    on that issue and held on November 1, 2012. One week later, we issued an order summarily
    denying the motion to dismiss.
    In October 2011, Thomson filed a motion for summary judgment for defense costs
    against XL. Thomson also sought declaratory relief as to defense costs coverage under
    Travelers’ umbrella policies. In March 2012, Thomson filed a motion to amend its complaint
    to add TCETVT as a plaintiff, which XL and Travelers opposed. In June 2012, the trial court
    granted Thomson’s motion to amend. Also in June 2012, the trial court issued the Defense
    Cost Orders, from which XL and Travelers appealed.
    In October 2012, Thomson filed a motion to consolidate the appeals from the
    Allocation Order and the Defense Costs Orders, which we granted in December 2012. In its
    briefs regarding its Defense Costs Order, XL requested to stay the proceedings until the trial
    court ruled on several pending summary judgment motions; we granted that request in May
    5
    In the Allocation Order, the trial court ruled that the Century policies do not have aggregate limits.
    Thomson spends several pages of its reply brief rebutting a nonexistent challenge to that ruling. Thomson’s
    AO Reply Br. at 5-8.
    11
    2013. That same month, Travelers filed a motion for oral argument. In September 2013, the
    parties reported that the trial court had ruled on the aforementioned summary judgment
    motions and submitted a copy of that ruling. In October 2013, we issued an order granting
    Travelers’ motion for oral argument on the issues already briefed by the parties. We held
    oral argument in February 2014. In May 2014, Thomson notified us that it had reached a full
    settlement on all issues with Travelers and had reached a partial settlement with Century
    regarding Century’s liability for defending Thomson in the Taiwan Class Action. Travelers’
    appeal was dismissed, and Century’s appeal remained pending as to all indemnity issues.
    Discussion
    Section 1 – XL’s Request to Dismiss This Appeal
    We first address XL’s request to dismiss this appeal. XL argues,
    [I]f the trial court makes any ruling on the eight (8) pending summary
    judgment motions regarding coverage, subsequently revises the Duty to
    Defend Order or this Court reverses the Duty to Defend Order on appeal
    following final judgment or proper certification, then any decision based on
    that Duty to Defend Order (including the Allocation Order and the Defense
    Costs Order) will, in Thomson’s own words, “be built on sand,[”] and “all of
    the briefing by the parties, and the Court’s time in deciding the issue will have
    been wasted to a significant degree.” Due to the existing uncertainties of the
    matters pending before the trial court, which could affect the propriety of any
    appellate decision, the matter is not reviewable at this time and should be
    dismissed without prejudice or stayed.
    Furthermore, the Trial Court erroneously concluded in its … Duty to
    Defend Order that XL owed Thomson a duty to defend the Taiwan Class
    Action, even though Thomson never appeared or otherwise asserted a defense
    in that action. The Trial Court’s Order was directed to Thomson – TCETVT
    was not a party at the time – and is a non-final interlocutory order which can
    be revised. There are multiple motions for summary judgment pending, which
    could require the Court to vacate or modify the Duty to Defend Order. The
    determination of these motions by the trial court also could affect the present
    12
    appeal. Therefore, no appellate ruling should be made until the pending
    motions are decided.
    XL’s XO Br. at 5-6 (citations to appendices omitted).
    As it turned out, the trial court did not vacate or modify the Duty to Defend Order in
    ruling on the pending summary judgment motions, and XL cites no authority for the
    proposition that an insurer’s duty to defend is contingent upon the insured’s entering an
    appearance in an action. We agree with Thomson that “[b]y making the determination of the
    amount of defense costs final, the trial court logically and necessarily made the final
    determination that XL owed a duty to defend.” Thomson’s XO Br. at 24. Therefore, we
    deny XL’s request to dismiss this appeal. 6
    Section 2 – Applicability of XL Policy Exclusions and Defenses
    From this point forward, we will be dealing primarily with the parties’ appeals from
    the trial court’s rulings on motions and cross-motions for summary judgment. “The purpose
    of summary judgment is to terminate litigation about which there can be no material factual
    dispute and which can be resolved as a matter of law.” Nationwide Ins. Co. v. Heck, 
    873 N.E.2d 190
    , 196 (Ind. Ct. App. 2007). When reviewing a summary judgment ruling, our
    6
    XL also argues that we should reverse the Duty to Defend Order because
    Thomson bore the burden of demonstrating coverage under the XL Policies. This included
    the burden of proving an ‘occurrence’ resulting in ‘bodily injury’ during the policy period that
    was neither expected nor intended. [TCETVT], to the extent it seeks insured status, also bore
    this burden. The burden was not satisfied ….
    XL’s XO Br. at 6 (citations omitted). This argument is waived. See Gasser Chair Co. v. Nordengreen, 
    991 N.E.2d 122
    , 126 (Ind. Ct. App. 2013) (“Bald assertions made in an appellate brief are not to be considered in
    determining whether there is a genuine issue of fact, and on review, we will not search the record to find a
    basis for a party’s argument.”) (citation omitted).
    13
    standard of review is the same as that of the trial court. Dreaded, Inc. v. St. Paul Guardian
    Ins. Co., 
    904 N.E.2d 1267
    , 1269 (Ind. 2009).
    Considering only those facts that the parties designated to the trial court, we
    must determine whether there is a “genuine issue as to any material fact” and
    whether “the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law.” Ind.
    Trial Rule 56(C). In answering these questions, the reviewing court construes
    all factual inferences in the non-moving party’s favor and resolves all doubts
    as to the existence of a material issue against the moving party. The moving
    party bears the burden of making a prima facie showing that there are no
    genuine issues of material fact and that the movant is entitled to judgment as a
    matter of law; and once the movant satisfies the burden, the burden then shifts
    to the non-moving party to designate and produce evidence of facts showing
    the existence of a genuine issue of material fact.
    
    Id. at 1269-70
    (some citations omitted). “[T]he fact that cross-motions for summary
    judgment were made does not alter our standard of review. Instead, the reviewing court must
    consider each motion separately to determine whether the moving party is entitled to
    judgment as a matter of law.” Hammerstone v. Indiana Ins. Co., 
    986 N.E.2d 841
    , 845 (Ind.
    Ct. App. 2013) (citation and quotation marks omitted).
    “Interpretation of an insurance policy presents a question of law that is particularly
    suitable for summary judgment.” State Auto Mut. Ins. Co. v. Flexdar, Inc., 
    964 N.E.2d 845
    ,
    848 (Ind. 2012). “Clear and unambiguous language in insurance policy contracts, like other
    contracts, should be given its plain and ordinary meaning.” Cinergy Corp. v. Associated
    Elec. & Gas Ins. Servs., Ltd., 
    865 N.E.2d 571
    , 574 (Ind. 2007). “Policy terms are interpreted
    from the perspective of an ordinary policyholder of average intelligence. If reasonably
    intelligent persons may honestly differ as to the meaning of the policy language, the policy is
    ambiguous.” Gasser v. Downing, 
    967 N.E.2d 1085
    , 1087 (Ind. Ct. App. 2012) (citation
    14
    omitted). “However, an ambiguity does not exist merely because the parties proffer differing
    interpretations of the policy language.” Buckeye State Mut. Ins. Co. v. Carfield, 
    914 N.E.2d 315
    , 318 (Ind. Ct. App. 2009), trans. denied (2010). Also, “a term is not ambiguous simply
    because it is not defined.” Bastin v. First Ind. Bank, 
    694 N.E.2d 740
    , 746 (Ind. Ct. App.
    1998), trans. denied.
    A split of judicial authority on the meaning of similar contract terms does not
    necessarily mean that those terms are ambiguous. Allgood v. Meridian Sec. Ins. Co., 
    836 N.E.2d 243
    , 248 (Ind. 2005).
    A disagreement among courts as to the meaning of a particular contractual
    provision is evidence that an ambiguity may exist. But a division of authority
    is only evidence of ambiguity. It does not establish conclusively that a
    particular clause is ambiguous, and we are not obliged to agree that those
    courts that have reached different results have read the policy correctly.
    
    Id. (citation omitted).
    Where an ambiguity does exist, insurance policies are to be construed strictly against
    the insurer. 
    Flexdar, 964 N.E.2d at 848
    .
    This is especially true where the language in question purports to exclude
    coverage. Insurers are free to limit the coverage of their policies, but such
    limitations must be clearly expressed to be enforceable. Where provisions
    limiting coverage are not clearly and plainly expressed, the policy will be
    construed most favorably to the insured, to further the policy’s basic purpose
    of indemnity. Where ambiguity exists not because of extrinsic facts but by
    reason of the language used, the ambiguous terms will be construed in favor of
    the insured for purposes of summary judgment.
    
    Id. (citations and
    quotation marks omitted); see also Am. Econ. Ins. Co. v. Liggett, 
    426 N.E.2d 136
    , 144 (Ind. Ct. App. 1981) (“Under Indiana law, insurance policies must be
    construed so as to effectuate indemnification to the insured or the beneficiary. Where any
    15
    reasonable construction can be placed on a policy that will prevent the defeat of the insured’s
    indemnification for a loss covered by general language, that construction will be given.”).
    “We construe the policy as a whole and consider all of the provisions of the contract
    and not just the individual words, phrases or paragraphs.” Nat’l Mut. Ins. Co. v. Curtis, 
    867 N.E.2d 631
    , 634 (Ind. Ct. App. 2007). “We must accept an interpretation of the contract
    language that harmonizes the provisions, rather than one that supports conflicting versions of
    the provisions.” 
    Id. We “should
    construe the language of a contract so as not to render any
    words, phrases, or terms ineffective or meaningless.” 
    Hammerstone, 986 N.E.2d at 846
    .
    “[T]he power to interpret contracts does not extend to changing their terms and we will not
    give insurance policies an unreasonable construction to provide additional coverage.” 
    Curtis, 867 N.E.2d at 634
    .
    A trial court’s summary judgment ruling is clothed with a presumption of validity, and
    the losing party has the burden of establishing that the trial court erred. 
    Hammerstone, 986 N.E.2d at 845
    . “Where a trial court enters specific findings and conclusions, they offer
    insight into the rationale for the trial court’s judgment and facilitate appellate review, but are
    not binding upon this court. We will affirm upon any theory or basis supported by the
    designated materials.” 
    Id. (citation omitted).
    *    *    *
    XL contends that the trial court
    erred in issuing the Duty to Defend Order for several reasons, including: (1)
    the employer’s liability exclusion in the XL Policies defeated coverage; (2) the
    late notice of the claims defeated coverage; (3) the “Deemer Clause” in the
    2002-2005 XL Policies precluded coverage; (4) [t]he “Known Loss Doctrine”
    16
    precluded coverage; and (5) the coverage territory of the 2005 XL Policy
    precluded coverage.
    XL’s XO Br. at 6-7. 7 An insurer bears the burden of proof as to any basis for avoiding
    coverage. PSI Energy, Inc. v. Home Ins. Co., 
    801 N.E.2d 705
    , 725 (Ind. Ct. App. 2004),
    trans. denied; Gen. Housewares Corp. v. Nat’l Surety Corp., 
    741 N.E.2d 408
    , 414 (Ind. Ct.
    App. 2000). With this in mind, we address each exclusion in turn.
    Section 2.1 – Employer’s Liability Exclusion
    XL’s primary policies contain an exclusion that reads in pertinent part as follows:
    2.       Exclusions
    This insurance does not apply to:
    ….
    e.       Employer’s Liability
    “Bodily injury” to:
    (1)      An “employee” of the insured arising out of and in the course
    of:
    (a)      Employment by the insured; or
    7
    Thomson contends that XL should be estopped from raising policy defenses because it breached its
    duty to defend. Thomson cites Employers Insurance of Wausau v. Recticel Foam Corp., 
    716 N.E.2d 1015
    (Ind. Ct. App. 1999), trans. denied (2000), for the proposition that “this Court approved the principle that an
    insurer is estopped from raising policy defenses to coverage when it fails to either defend under a reservation of
    rights or to seek a declaratory judgment that there is no coverage ….” Thomson’s XO Br. at 42. In fact, the
    cited portion of Recticel Foam states, “If an insurer fails to defend under a reservation of rights or to seek a
    declaratory judgment that there is no coverage and is later found to have wrongfully denied coverage, the
    insurer may be estopped from raising policy defenses to 
    coverage.” 716 N.E.2d at 1029
    n.16 (emphasis
    added). No such finding has been made in this case. Moreover, as XL points out, our supreme court stated in
    a subsequent case that “an insurer may choose at its own peril not to defend or seek a declaratory judgment,
    and failure to do either is not a waiver of defenses.” Tri-Etch, Inc. v. Cincinnati Ins. Co., 
    909 N.E.2d 997
    ,
    1001 n.2 (Ind. 2009) (citing Microvote Corp. v. GRE Ins. Group, 
    779 N.E.2d 94
    , 96 (Ind. Ct. App. 2002),
    trans. denied (2003)). In sum, XL is not estopped from raising policy defenses here.
    17
    (b)     Performing duties related to the conduct of the insured’s
    business; or
    (2)      The spouse, child, parent, brother or sister of that “employee” as
    a consequence of Paragraph (1) above.
    This exclusion applies:
    (1)      Whether the insured may be liable as an employer or in any
    other capacity; and
    (2)      To any obligation to share damages with or repay someone else
    who must pay damages because of the injury.
    This exclusion does not apply to liability assumed by the insured under
    an “insured contract”.
    See, e.g., Thomson’s AO App. at 345-46.
    Assuming, without deciding, that this provision excludes coverage to TCETVT for
    bodily injury to its employees resulting from their exposure to organic solvents in the
    Taoyuan plant, because the provision applies only to bodily injury arising both out of and in
    the course of employment or performing business-related duties, we cannot conclude that it
    applies to bodily injury resulting from exposure to organic solvents in the dormitories, where
    the employees bathed, drank, washed their clothes, and performed other non-work-related
    activities. We find XL’s countervailing arguments unpersuasive. 8
    8
    Thomson asserts that XL has waived its arguments regarding this exclusion because XL did not raise
    them in opposition to Thomson’s defense costs motion. We disagree. XL joined Zurich’s arguments regarding
    this exclusion in opposition to Thomson’s duty to defend motion. In its interlocutory Duty to Defend Order,
    the trial court addressed Zurich’s arguments but said nothing about XL. XL raised the issue again in the
    summary judgment motions on which the trial court ruled in September 2013, and the trial court did not find it
    waived. We see no reason to do so here.
    18
    We are also unpersuaded by XL’s argument that the exclusion applies to other
    Thomson entities because it “applies to an entity whether it is liable as an employer or in
    another capacity, such as alter-ego or parent of a sham corporation.” XL’s XO Br. at 9. The
    exclusion applies only to bodily injury to an employee “of the insured,” and only TCETVT
    employed the workers in the Taoyuan plant. The phrase “liable as an employer or in any
    other capacity” clearly refers to multiple theories of liability as to the employer, and not to
    multiple entities to which the exclusion may apply. In sum, the employer’s liability exclusion
    does not negate XL’s duty to defend.
    Section 2.2 – Late Notice of Claims
    In Miller v. Dilts, 
    463 N.E.2d 257
    (Ind. 1984), our supreme court stated that an
    insurance policy’s notice requirement is “‘material, and of the essence of the contract.’” 
    Id. at 265
    (quoting London Guar. & Accident Co. v. Siwy, 
    35 Ind. App. 340
    , 345, 
    66 N.E. 481
    ,
    482 (1903), trans. denied); see also Ind. Farmers Mut. Ins. Co. v. N. Vernon Drop Forge,
    Inc., 
    917 N.E.2d 1258
    , 1273 (Ind. Ct. App. 2009) (“The duty to notify an insurance company
    of potential liability is a condition precedent to the company’s liability to its insured.”), trans.
    denied (2010).
    The requirement of prompt notice gives the insurer an opportunity to make a
    timely and adequate investigation of all the circumstances surrounding the
    accident or loss. This adequate investigation is often frustrated by a delayed
    notice. Prejudice to the insurance company’s ability to prepare an adequate
    defense can therefore be presumed by an unreasonable delay in notifying the
    company about the accident or about the filing of the lawsuit. This is not in
    conflict with the public policy theory that the court should seek to protect the
    innocent third parties from attempts by insurance companies to deny liability
    for some insignificant failure to notify. The injured party can establish some
    evidence that prejudice did not occur in the particular situation. Once such
    19
    evidence is introduced, the question becomes one for the trier of fact to
    determine whether any prejudice actually existed. The insurance carrier in turn
    can present evidence in support of its claim of prejudice. Thus, both parties
    are able to put forth their respective positions in the legal arena.
    
    Miller, 463 N.E.2d at 265-66
    .
    XL’s primary policies contain the following notice requirement:
    2.     Duties in The Event Of Occurrence, Offense, Claim or Suit
    a.     You must see to it that we are notified as soon as practicable of
    an “occurrence” or an offense which may result in a claim. To
    the extent possible, notice should include:
    (1)    How, when and where the “occurrence” or offense took
    place;
    (2)    The names and addresses of any injured persons and
    witnesses; and
    (3)    The nature and location of any injury or damage arising
    out of the “occurrence” or offense.
    b.     If a claim is made or “suit” is brought against any insured, you
    must:
    (1)    Immediately record the specifics of the claim or “suit”
    and the date received; and
    (2)    Notify us as soon as practicable.
    You must see to it that we receive written notice of the claim or
    “suit” as soon as practicable.
    See, e.g., Thomson’s AO App. at 353.
    XL notes that the Taoyuan plant was closed in 1992 and that “Thomson/TCETVT had
    been aware of environmental contamination at the plant since at least 1989, and of
    allegations of bodily injury [by] former workers since 1994.” XL’s XO Br. at 14. XL further
    20
    observes that the Taoyuan plant was demolished in 2004 or 2005 and that approximately two
    dozen workers died between 1992 and 2008. XL contends,
    While there is no shortage of dates that XL can, and has, pointed to when
    Thomson/TCETVT had knowledge that bodily injury claims were being made
    by former workers or when suit was brought alleging similar claims, the
    absolute latest of those dates was April 22, 2004 when the former workers’
    association filed the current incarnation of the Class Action against TCETVT.
    Because the notice obligation under Paragraph 2.b. is triggered by suit against
    any insured, the filing of the Class Action complaint on that date activated the
    notice obligation for each of the Thomson Entities, not just TCETVT.
    
    Id. at 11-12.
    9 Thus, XL argues,
    Thomson’s notice to XL on July 8, 2008 was unreasonable as a matter of law;
    TCETVT’s notice on October 5, 2011 was even more so. The delayed notice
    creates a presumption of prejudice to XL which Thomson/TCETVT failed to
    rebut with undisputed evidence. Even if Thomson/TCETVT were able to shift
    the burden to XL to show prejudice, the designated evidence shows at least
    that genuine issues of material fact exist precluding summary judgment.
    
    Id. at 10.
    We disagree. Claims for damages by 3000 Taoyuan plant workers were rejected by
    Taiwan’s Council for Labor Affairs in 1998, two years before XL sold its first policy to
    Thomson. The Taiwan Class Action was dismissed in 2005 and not reinstated until 2006,
    after XL sold its last policy to Thomson. The plaintiffs did not seek to add Thomson,
    Thomson SA, and TCEB as defendants until 2007. XL does not dispute Thomson’s assertion
    that the Thomson entities have mounted a “vigorous” defense in the Taiwan Class Action,
    9
    XL emphasizes that it “does not concede that TCETVT is an insured. However, to the extent that
    Thomson seeks that benefit, they also must accept the obligation of providing notice under the XL Policies.”
    XL’s XO Br. at 12 n.5.
    21
    including hiring experts and conducting an investigation;10 that the first evidentiary hearing in
    the Taiwan Class Action was held in November 2009, more than fifteen months after notice
    was given in July 2008; and that the Taiwan court “still has made no substantive rulings,”
    adverse or otherwise. Thomson’s XO Br. at 44. Based on the foregoing, we conclude as a
    matter of law that XL has failed to establish that notice was unreasonably delayed or that it
    was actually prejudiced thereby.
    Section 2.3 – “Deemer Clause”
    The XL primary policies from 2002 through 2005 provide in pertinent part that the
    insurance applies to “bodily injury” only if the “bodily injury” occurs during the policy
    period and,
    [p]rior to the policy period, no insured listed in Paragraph 1. of Section II –
    Who Is An Insured and no “employee” authorized by you to give or receive
    notice of an “occurrence” or claim, knew that the “bodily injury” … had
    occurred, in whole or in part. If such a listed insured or authorized “employee”
    knew, prior to the policy period, that the “bodily injury” … occurred, then any
    continuation, change or resumption of such “bodily injury” … during or after
    the policy period will be deemed to have been known prior to the policy
    period.
    10
    XL asserts,
    Timely notice affords an insurer the opportunity to protect its own rights and interests as well
    as those of its insured. While those interests often align – e.g., minimizing liability and
    damages to a third-party with claims against the insured – they often do not. An insurer’s
    investigation enables it to protect itself against fraud, to estimate its potential risks and
    liabilities, to manage costs in the defense of its insured, and to evaluate its indemnity
    obligations to the insured for claims alleged against it. Thus, the investigation and efforts of
    Thomson/TCETVT’s defense counsel in the Class Action is not a substitute for XL’s right to
    conduct its own investigation.
    XL’s XO Br. at 14. Notably, XL has failed to establish that its interests do not align with those of the
    Thomson entities, which have had to pay for and manage their own defense with no promise of reimbursement.
    Consequently, as we discuss in more detail below, the Thomson entities have had every incentive to minimize
    their liability, damages, and defense costs.
    22
    See, e.g., Thomson’s AO App. at 466. The policies further provide as follows:
    d.     “Bodily injury” … will be deemed to have been known to have
    occurred at the earliest time when any insured listed under Paragraph 1.
    of Section II – Who Is An Insured or any “employee” authorized by you
    to give or receive notice of an “occurrence” or claim:
    (1)    Reports all, or any part, of the “bodily injury” … to us or any
    other insurer;
    (2)    Receives a written or verbal demand or claim for damages
    because of the “bodily injury” …; or
    (3)    Becomes aware by any other means that “bodily injury” … has
    occurred or has begun to occur.
    
    Id. XL argues,
    “While similar to the common law known loss doctrine, this policy
    language referred to as the ‘Deemer Clause’ is independent of it and is a valid and
    enforceable limitation on coverage according to the terms stated in the policy.” XL’s XO Br.
    at 15. XL further argues,
    Thomson and TCETVT were deemed to have known of the “bodily injury”
    well before any policy was issued by XL to Thomson. Accordingly, the
    unambiguous language of the XL Policies beginning in 2002 applies, and
    coverage is barred under the 2002-2005 XL Policies. The Trial Court’s Duty
    to Defend Order and the subsequent Defense Costs Order cannot be upheld.
    
    Id. at 16.
    Assuming, without deciding, that the deemer clause would bar coverage under the
    post-2001 XL policies, the clause does not appear in the earlier policies and thus would not
    negate XL’s duty to defend.
    23
    Section 2.4 – “Known Loss” Doctrine
    Next, XL contends that coverage is precluded under all of its policies pursuant to the
    common law “known loss” doctrine. “The ‘known loss’ doctrine is a common law concept
    deriving from the fundamental requirement in insurance law that the loss be fortuitous.
    Simply put, the known loss doctrine states that one may not obtain insurance for a loss that
    has already taken place.” Gen. Housewares 
    Corp., 741 N.E.2d at 413
    . “[T]he known loss
    doctrine is not so much an exception, limitation, or exclusion as it is a principle intrinsic to
    the very concept of insurance.” 
    Id. at 415.
    “[I]f an insured has actual knowledge that a loss
    has occurred, is occurring, or is substantially certain to occur on or before the effective date
    of the policy, the known loss doctrine will bar coverage.” 
    Id. at 414.
    Whether an insured
    had actual knowledge is ordinarily a question of fact. 
    Id. at 413-14.
    “[W]hen determining a
    party’s actual knowledge, courts should keep in mind that a party may not intentionally turn a
    blind eye in order to avoid application of the known loss doctrine.” 
    Id. at 413
    n.3.
    “[B]ecause the effect of the known loss doctrine is to avoid coverage, the burden of proving
    that the loss was known is on the party seeking to avoid coverage.” 
    Id. at 414.
    “[T]here is a distinct difference between knowledge of the existence of liability and
    knowledge of the full extent of liability.” 
    Id. at 416.
    The existence of liability can be known without the full extent of
    liability being fixed. For example, if one negligently injures a pedestrian with
    one’s automobile, one’s liability is substantially certain. However, it may be
    months before the dollar amount of liability is certain, and the known loss
    doctrine bars purchasing insurance after the accident. An insured’s liability
    need not be fixed to a monetary certainty; if the known liability has occurred or
    is substantially certain to occur, the known loss doctrine bars coverage.
    24
    
    Id. at 417.
    XL argues,
    Here, the bodily injury claims alleged in the [Taiwan] Class Action
    were a “known loss” prior to inception of the first XL Policies on January 1,
    2000. Beginning with discovery of the contamination in 1989 up until the
    inception of the first XL Policies on January 1, 2000, the very same bodily
    injury claims were a gathering storm that neither Thomson nor TCETVT can
    deny having actual knowledge of as of January 1, 2000. Indeed, as the Trial
    Court previously found, Thomson has known of the environmental
    contamination and allegations of bodily injury claims related to the site since
    1989. Thus, as of 1989, eleven years prior to the effective date of the first XL
    Policies, Thomson/TCETVT knew of soil and groundwater contamination at
    the Taoyuan facility, accepted responsibility for the assessment and
    remediation of that contamination, and appreciated the health risks to former
    workers and local residents as a result of their exposure to those contaminants.
    ….
    Assuming, arguendo, that Thomson’s and/or TCETVT’s liability for the
    bodily injuries alleged in the [Taiwan] Class Action was uncertain when
    Thomson applied for insurance from XL, the impending legal action by the
    former workers’ association, and the need for a defense, was no longer a “risk”
    – it was a certainty. By that date, the contamination alleged to have occurred
    at the site had taken place, the claimants, whether they had manifested or been
    diagnosed with illness or not, had long ago been exposed to the conditions
    which they allege as the cause, while other claimants had already manifested
    injury and sought to hold Thomson and TCETVT responsible. Thus, with
    respect to the bodily injury claims asserted by the claimants in the [Taiwan]
    Class Action, the insurance transaction through which Thomson purchased
    coverage from XL beginning on January 1, 2000 lacked the key and necessary
    feature of insurance – a transfer of risk. The act, event, or occurrence –
    whether it be the discharge of contaminants into the groundwater or soil at the
    facility, the underlying claimant[s’] exposure to industrial solvents and/or the
    contaminated groundwater, or even the assertion of claims by former workers
    seeking compensation for bodily injury – indisputably took place with
    Thomson’s and TCETVT’s actual knowledge prior to the inception of the XL
    Policies. As such, no coverage is available under any of the XL Policies.
    XL’s XO Br. at 19-20 (citations omitted).
    25
    We disagree. The “loss” at issue here is liability for bodily injury to the plant
    employees, not bodily injury per se or environmental contamination. See Gen. Housewares
    
    Corp., 741 N.E.2d at 716
    (“Because Housewares insured against liability to a third party and
    not property damage, we look to see if the insured knew of a liability, rather than whether
    property damage was known.”). The Taoyuan plant was in operation for approximately
    twenty-two years and was owned by TCETVT for only five. The claims brought by the plant
    employees in the 1990s were rejected in 1998 by the Council for Labor Affairs, which
    published studies concluding that there was no reliable scientific proof that working at the
    plant would lead to illnesses. The Taiwan Class Action plaintiffs did not file suit against
    TCETVT until 2004. The suit was dismissed in 2005 and reinstated in 2006, and the
    plaintiffs did not attempt to sue the other Thomson entities until 2007. Based on his research
    on behalf of the Thomson entities, attorney J. Chad Mitchell believes that TCETVT did not
    use TCE or PCE at the Taoyuan plant “from at least 1987 until the plant closed in 1992.”
    Thomson’s AO App. at 913. Based on the foregoing, we conclude as a matter of law that the
    Thomson entities did not have actual knowledge that a loss occurred, was occurring, or was
    substantially certain to occur before the effective date of XL’s policies. Even assuming for
    argument’s sake that the Thomson entities acquired such knowledge when TCETVT was
    sued in 2004, this would not negate XL’s duty to defend.
    Section 2.5 – Coverage Territory Exclusion
    XL states that its 2005 policy
    only provides coverage for bodily injury caused by an occurrence that takes
    place in the “coverage territory.” The bodily injuries alleged by the claimants
    26
    in the [Taiwan] Class Action occurred solely in Taiwan, which is not within
    the coverage territory of the 2005 XL Primary Policy. As a result, no coverage
    is available under the 2005 XL Primary Policy for the bodily injury claims
    asserted in the [Taiwan] Class Action.
    XL’s XO Br. at 21. See Thomson’s AO App. at 678 (providing that insurance applies to
    “bodily injury” only if it “is caused by an ‘occurrence’ that takes place in the ‘coverage
    territory’”); 
    id. at 690
    (defining “coverage territory” in pertinent part to restrict coverage to
    injury or damage arising out of goods or products made or sold by the insured in the United
    States, Puerto Rico, and Canada).
    Thomson points out that XL failed to raise this argument below, and therefore it has
    waived this claim. See Troxel v. Troxel, 
    737 N.E.2d 745
    , 752 (Ind. 2000) (stating that a party
    may not raise an issue for the first time on appeal). Moreover, because the exclusion applies
    only to XL’s 2005 policy, it does not negate XL’s duty to defend.
    Section 3 – Number of Occurrences in XL and Century Policies
    In the Allocation Order, the trial court ruled on the occurrences issue as follows:
    Thomson asserts that each individual claim, brought by individual
    claimants, constitutes a separate occurrence because each claimant’s exposure
    to TCE/PCE was distinct. Thomson asserts that exposure took place over
    different lengths of time and at different locations (in the workplace and in the
    workers’ living quarters). Thomson also asserts that each claimant may have
    been exposed to TCE/PCE in different ways whether by dermal contact (in the
    workplace or showering with TCE/PCE-contaminated water), inhalation of
    vapors/fumes, or ingestion (drinking TCE/PCE-contaminated water).
    Defendant insurers argue the workers’ exposure to TCE/PCE was repeated and
    continuous exposure to substantially the same general harmful conditions and,
    therefore, constitutes a single occurrence under the Policies’ terms.
    Ample case law advances both parties’ arguments. After review of the
    factual record, this Court finds that each individual claim does not constitute a
    single occurrence nor do all claims constitute a single occurrence. For reasons
    27
    outlined below, the claimants’ “bodily injury” resulted from two “occurrences”
    under the terms of the Policies. The first occurrence is exposure and resulting
    injury due to deficient workplace conditions (insufficient gas ventilation
    equipment and monitoring, failure to warn of potential harm and proper
    emergency measures, failure to appoint doctors, failure to give proper
    protective equipment). The second occurrence is exposure and resulting injury
    due to illegal dumping of chemicals (TCE/PCE and VOCs [volatile organic
    compounds]) that tainted the local water supply workers used for drinking and
    bathing in the workers’ dormitories (their residence).
    The pertinent provisions of the 1994 - 2006 Defendant insurers’ policies
    are as follows:
    This insurance applies to “bodily injury” and “property
    damage” only if:
    (1) The “bodily injury” … is caused by an “occurrence”
    that takes place in the “coverage territory”.
    (2)    The “bodily injury” … occurs during the policy
    period.
    “Bodily injury” is defined by the policies as:
    … bodily injury, sickness, or disease sustained by a
    person, including death resulting from any of these at any time.
    “Occurrence” is defined by the policies as:
    … an accident, including continuous or repeated
    exposure to substantially the same general harmful conditions.
    The terms of the Policies as well as the factual circumstances show that
    a single occurrence construction, rather than multiple occurrences, is proper.
    First, the “continuous or repeated exposure to substantially the same general
    harmful conditions” policy language in this case is not present in many of the
    cases cited by Thomson where multiple occurrences were found. In many of
    those cases the policy language was broader than here. While some cases
    contain the same (or similar) restrictive policy language found here, other
    factual circumstances (various geographical locations, time periods, multiple
    proximate causes of injury, etc.) predominate the courts’ analyses rather than
    merely the policy language; generally the policies were viewed as ambiguous
    in these cases.
    28
    Second, many of the multiple occurrence cases involved the
    manufacture and sale of defective goods which injured third parties as opposed
    to workers. The controversies in multiple occurrence cases primarily centered
    on the shipment of defective goods to buyers, not poor workplace conditions or
    illegal dumping of chemicals as here. With the latter, courts determine the
    “occurrence” by evaluating the cause or causes of the resulting injury and,
    using the “cause” theory, the courts ask if “there was but one proximate,
    uninterrupted, and continuing cause which resulted in all of the injuries and
    damage.” Although no Indiana Appellate Court has examined this issue, two
    Indiana federal courts, Irving Materials, Inc. v. Zurich American Ins. Co., 
    2007 WL 1035098
    (S.D. Ind., March 30, 2007) and Indiana Gas Co., Inc. v. Aetna
    Cas. & Sur. Co., 
    951 F. Supp. 773
    (1996), vacated Indiana Gas Co., Inc. v.
    Home Ins. Co., 
    141 F.3d 314
    (7th Cir. 1998), have specifically examined the
    issue of number of occurrences in the context of continuing injury or damage.
    The Court finds these cases persuasive and notes that where “there is scant
    Indiana law on [an] issue … [Indiana courts] turn for guidance to the federal
    courts …” Tony v. Elkhart County, 
    918 N.E.2d 363
    , 369 (Ind. Ct. App. 2009).
    Both courts have applied the “cause” test and have refused to tie the number of
    occurrences to the number of claimants. Here, the alleged hazardous
    workplace conditions and the alleged illegal chemical dumping (into the local
    water stream) are each shown by the evidence presented as capable of being
    “one proximate, uninterrupted, and continuing cause which resulted in all of
    the injuries and damage,” each its own occurrence.
    Third, the third parties in multiple occurrence cases suffered injuries at
    various geographical locations, and this is not the case here. The Taiwanese
    workers were injured solely on the Taoyuan plant property in the
    manufacturing buildings or the dormitories. Here, there are two separate
    conditions and each of them on their own could be considered “continuous or
    repeated exposure to substantially the same conditions” even though they
    occurred within the same geographical location. The first is exposure and
    resulting injury due to deficient workplace conditions and the second is
    exposure and resulting injury due to illegal dumping of chemicals tainting the
    local water supply.
    This Court finds that this case involves two (2) separate occurrences
    under the “cause” theory: 1) deficient workplace conditions and procedures
    and 2) illegal dumping of hazardous chemicals which tainted the local water
    supply. Each of these occurrences is factually distinct. Even though
    hazardous chemical (TCE/PCE and VOCs) exposure is the underlying cause of
    injury the promulgation of conditions and practices which allowed for
    29
    hazardous workplace conditions are different than those which led to exposure
    in the workers’ residence.
    Thomson’s AO App. at 44-48.
    Thomson disagrees with the trial court’s finding of only two occurrences, arguing that
    [e]ach worker worked at the Taoyuan plant at different times, was allegedly
    exposed in unique ways, and has a unique set of injuries allegedly caused by
    the exposures. All the applicable policies provide coverage for an
    “occurrence” which is defined as “an accident, including continuous or
    repeated exposure to substantially the same general harmful conditions.” The
    applicable primary policies define “bodily injury” to mean “bodily injury,
    sickness, or disease sustained by a person, including death resulting from [any
    of] these at any time.” (emphasis supplied). Thus, all applicable primary
    policies provide coverage in their insuring clauses to cover “bodily injury,”
    which is defined to be sustained by a single person. And all the applicable
    policies define “occurrence” to be a single “accident.”… [E]ach plaintiff
    member alleges repeated exposure at the Taoyuan plant, which over time
    resulted in each plaintiff’s injuries with each injury causing event a single
    distinct accident. Thus, each plaintiff Association member alleges a separate
    occurrence.
    Absent from the [Century] and XL primary policies are any “deemer”
    clauses that make “all damages that arise from exposure to the same general
    conditions are considered to arise out of one ‘occurrence.’” This missing
    language is present in the policies in virtually every case the insurers cited to
    the trial court. If the insurers had wanted to limit its [sic] coverage in this way,
    they should have done so by using this language. The absence of this language
    in the primary policies indicates that “all damages” are not to be grouped
    together to constitute a single occurrence.
    Thomson’s AO Br. at 24-25. Thomson also contends that the trial court “incorrectly looked
    to federal cases to adopt a common ‘cause’ test for determination of the number of
    occurrences,” given that Indiana state appellate courts have not done so. 
    Id. at 34.
    30
    In response, Century and XL first emphasize the following language from their
    policies, much of which was not quoted in the Allocation Order: 11
    COVERAGE A. BODILY INJURY AND PROPERTY DAMAGE
    LIABILITY INSURING AGREEMENT
    We will pay those sums that the insured becomes legally obligated to pay as
    damages because of “bodily injury” … to which this insurance applies.… This
    insurance applies only to “bodily injury” … which occurs during the Policy
    Period. The “bodily injury” … must be caused by an “occurrence.”…
    1.       The amount we will pay for damages is limited as described in
    SECTION III – LIMITS OF INSURANCE;
    ….
    SECTION III – LIMITS OF INSURANCE
    The Limits of Insurance for COMMERCIAL GENERAL LIABILITY
    COVERAGE shown in the Declarations and the rules below fix the most we
    will pay regardless of the number of:
    1.       Insureds;
    2.       Claims made or “suits” brought; or
    3.       Persons or organizations making claims or bringing “suits.”
    The Each Occurrence Limit is the most we will pay for the sum of
    1.       Medical expenses under Coverage C; and
    2.       Damages under Coverage A because of all “bodily injury” and
    “property damage” arising out of any one “occurrence”;
    ….
    11
    XL adopts Century’s argument by reference pursuant to Indiana Appellate Rule 46(G). The
    relevant language of XL’s policies does not differ substantially from that of Century’s policies for purposes of
    this issue.
    31
    SECTION V – DEFINITIONS
    ….
    Bodily injury
    means bodily injury, sickness or disease sustained by a person, including death
    resulting from any of these at any time.
    ….
    Occurrence
    means an accident, including continuous or repeated exposure to substantially
    the same general harmful conditions.
    ….
    LIABILITY COVERAGES DECLARATIONS
    ….
    COMMERCIAL GENERAL LIABILITY COVERAGE
    $1,000,000   each “occurrence”
    $1,000,000   products completed/operations aggregate
    $1,000,000   personal & advertising injury aggregate
    $1,000,000   premises damage limit (each “occurrence”)
    $10,000   medical expense limit (any one person)
    Thomson’s AO App. at 71, 79, 83, 87, 58.
    Century and XL contend,
    The mere fact that workers may have suffered exposure in different ways or
    different times … does not mean there are multiple occurrences. To the
    contrary, the “occurrence” definition expressly contemplates such a scenario
    by providing that “continuous or repeated exposure to substantially the same
    general harmful conditions” -- not identical exposure to identical conditions --
    constitutes a single occurrence.
    Century’s AO Br. at 9. They further assert,
    32
    The Declarations reflect that the policies expressly contemplate a
    distinction between “per occurrence” limits and “per person” limits. While
    Thomson ignores this distinction by suggesting that the “occurrence” limit
    applies on a “per person” basis, if Thomson had wanted to base bodily injury
    coverage on the number of claimants, it could have negotiated coverage on an
    “any one person” basis, just as Thomson did for medical expense coverage.
    Thomson chose not to do so.
    
    Id. at 10.
    Turning to the Allocation Order itself, Century and XL contend that “[t]he trial court
    correctly applied a ‘cause’ test to determine the number of occurrences presented by the class
    action, because that test properly interprets the plain language of Century’s [and XL’s]
    policies.” 
    Id. at 11.
    They argue,
    Not surprisingly, since Century’s policies … afford coverage on an
    “occurrence” as opposed to a “claim” basis, Thomson has … advanced an
    overly simplistic argument to support its “one occurrence per plaintiff”
    approach: because the “bodily injury” definition includes injury “sustained by
    a person” and the insuring agreement covers bodily injury, this must mean that
    if a single person suffers injury it is a separate occurrence. In so doing,
    Thomson has deliberately confused the issue of what constitutes an
    “occurrence” with the separate issue that is before this Court -- how many
    “occurrences” are there. As courts have recognized, however, if the test for
    determining the number of occurrences could be answered simply by looking
    at the ultimate resulting injuries, as Thomson suggests, no court would ever
    find a single occurrence to apply in a multiple plaintiff case.
    Century’s AO Br. at 12 n.7. As for Thomson’s arguments regarding deemer clauses, 12
    Century and XL assert that their policies “contain language that is functionally equivalent”
    thereto, that is, they “fix the most [Century] will pay,” “regardless of the number of persons
    12
    Century and XL contend that Thomson’s deemer clause argument was raised for the first time on
    appeal. Century’s AO Br. at 26. Thomson asserts that this argument “was a central point at the hearing on the
    motion for summary judgment held on June 1, 2011” and that Thomson “submitted a proposed order to the
    Trial Court, which distinguished [Century’s] cases in this manner.” Thomson’s AO Reply Br. at 19-20. The
    record supports Thomson’s assertion.
    33
    making claims,” and “through the ‘occurrence’ definition contemplate the aggregation of
    multiple claims into a single occurrence where there is ‘continuous or repeated exposure to
    substantially the same general harmful conditions.” 
    Id. at 26
    (quoting Thomson’s AO App.
    at 71).
    We agree with the trial court’s finding of two occurrences based on its application of
    the policy language to the facts alleged by the Taiwan Class Action plaintiffs. We also find
    nothing wrong with the trial court’s application of the cause theory, which has been adopted
    by a majority of jurisdictions to determine the number of occurrences in cases involving
    multiple injuries. 13 The Illinois Supreme Court has written a useful description of the cause
    theory and a competing approach, the effect theory:
    The definitions of occurrence used in the insurance policies [at issue]
    are typical of commercial liability policies. As in our case, such policies often
    describe an occurrence using terms such as “accident,” “happening” or
    “event.” While the form of such terms is singular, what seems like a single
    accident, happening, or event to the person who triggered the incident giving
    rise to the loss for which coverage is sought may be perceived as multiple
    accidents, happenings or events from the perspective of those who sustained
    injury or damage as a result of the insured’s conduct. Accordingly, the terms
    of the insurance policy are not always sufficient, standing alone, to permit a
    definitive determination as to whether a particular case involves one
    occurrence or many.
    In order to overcome this problem, American courts have developed
    two basic approaches for assessing the number of occurrences that took place
    within the meaning of policies such as those at issue in this case, the cause
    theory and the effect theory. The effect theory, as its name implies, determines
    the number of accidents or occurrences by looking at the effect an event had,
    i.e., how many individual claims or injuries resulted from it. Under the cause
    13
    Although not controlling, the Indiana federal court decisions cited by the trial court have persuasive
    value. We note that Indiana Gas was vacated based on lack of diversity jurisdiction and not on substantive
    grounds.
    34
    theory, on the other hand, the number of occurrences is determined by
    referring to the cause or causes of the damages.
    The difference between these two approaches is illustrated by the
    following hypothetical. Assume that a motorist is traveling down a street lined
    with parked cars. Looking away from the roadway to change the station on his
    car’s radio, the motorist allows his vehicle to wander. As a result, his car
    strikes the sides of three of the parked cars in succession, damaging each of
    them. The owners of the three damaged vehicles sue, and the vehicle owner
    seeks indemnification from his automobile insurance carrier. Under the effect
    theory, the fact that three cars were damaged and three claims were filed would
    mean that there were three “occurrences” for purposes of determining liability
    coverage, absent specific policy language to the contrary.[ 14] Under the cause
    theory, on the other hand, the fact that the damage to all three vehicles resulted
    from the same conditions and was inflicted as part of an unbroken and
    uninterrupted continuum would yield the conclusion that there was only one
    occurrence. Neither the cause theory nor the effect theory inevitably favors
    one party to an insurance contract over another. Whether a particular approach
    would be more beneficial to the insurance carrier or its insured depends on the
    limits of coverage, the number of claims, the magnitude of the claimant’s
    losses, and the size of applicable deductibles in a given case. For example,
    attributing damages sustained by multiple claimants to multiple occurrences
    would be beneficial to the insured where the claims are large relative to the
    per-occurrence policy limits, for it would maximize the coverage the insured
    will receive. It would benefit the insurance carrier where, as in this case, the
    individual claims are each smaller than the applicable deductible, for it would
    allow the insurer to avoid paying anything. The full loss would be borne by
    the insured.
    14
    Century observes that “[w]hile a small minority of courts have employed an ‘effect’ test, which
    bases the number of occurrences not on the underlying cause but on the resulting injuries, not even Thomson
    advocates the ‘effect[]’ test here.” Century’s AO Br. at 11 n.6.
    35
    Nicor, Inc. v. Associated Elec. & Gas Ins. Servs. Ltd., 
    860 N.E.2d 280
    , 286-87 (Ill. 2006)
    (citations omitted). 15
    In this case, the Taiwan Class Action plaintiffs’ alleged injuries have two causes: (1)
    exposure to organic solvents while working in the factory (through inhalation, dermal
    contact, and ingestion of contaminated water); and (2) exposure to organic solvents while
    using contaminated groundwater in the dormitories (through drinking, bathing, and clothes
    washing). 16 The specific means and timing of exposure and the resulting injuries may differ
    15
    Nicor involved the contamination of gas company customers’ homes during the removal of gas
    meter regulators containing mercury. Of the 1070 homes throughout northern Illinois where contamination
    was discovered, 195 were subject to the policies at issue. The appellate court ruled that each mercury spill was
    a separate occurrence, and the supreme court affirmed, stating,
    Liability was incurred only when mercury happened to spill as an old-style regulator
    was being replaced with one of the new mercury-free units.… The spills had no common
    cause. Mercury escaped from the regulators under a variety of circumstances, including
    unique physical circumstances in particular homes which required technicians to tilt gas
    meters in order to remove them. One spill was reported to have resulted when the Nicor
    technician accidently stumbled or tripped. Sometimes technicians were careless and
    neglected to follow Nicor’s safe mercury-handling procedures. In addition, the spills occurred
    at different times over a 17-year period in the case of the spills subject to the London Insurers’
    policies. No temporal or geographical pattern to these spills was established, and no claim
    was made that any particular technician or group of technicians was responsible for the spills.
    The technicians did not even share a common employer. Some were apparently Nicor
    employees while others worked for the company’s subcontractors. To say that each of the
    195 spills emanated from a single cause would, under these circumstances, be completely
    
    untenable. 860 N.E.2d at 295
    . Thomson cites Nicor in support of its argument for multiple occurrences, but because of
    the numerous factual distinctions we do not find it persuasive. We are also unpersuaded by Thomson’s
    reliance on Plastics Engineering Co. v. Liberty Mutual Insurance Co., 
    759 N.W.2d 613
    (Wis. 2009), where
    multiple occurrences were found based in part on the individual plaintiffs’ exposure over several decades to
    the defendant’s asbestos-containing products, which had been sold at numerous places across the country.
    Here, TCETVT owned the Taoyuan plant for only five years, and the workers were exposed to organic solvents
    only in the factory and the dormitories.
    16
    Thomson disputes the trial court’s statement that the groundwater was contaminated by illegal
    dumping, Thomson’s AO Reply Br. at 18 n.9, but the cause of contamination is irrelevant for purposes of our
    analysis.
    36
    with respect to each plaintiff, but it is undeniable that the alleged injuries were caused by
    “continuous or repeated exposure to substantially the same general harmful conditions” in
    the factory and in the dormitories. It is also undeniable that the policies differentiate between
    per-occurrence and per-person limits and that the per-occurrence limit fixes the amount that
    the insurer will pay for the sum of damages because of all bodily injury arising out of any one
    occurrence and regardless of the number of claims made or suits brought or the number of
    persons making claims or bringing suits. All of this cuts decisively against Thomson’s
    argument that each bodily injury must be a separate occurrence and that a deemer clause is
    required to group multiple injuries into a single occurrence. Thus, based on the cause theory
    and the unambiguous language of the relevant policies, we affirm the trial court’s finding of
    two occurrences in this case. 17
    Section 4 – Applicability of Deductibles in XL’s 2000-2002 Primary Policies
    In the Allocation Order, the trial court ruled that “Thomson must pay and satisfy the
    applicable SIR [sic 18] for each occurrence for [XL’s] 2000, 2001, and 2002 primary policies,
    17
    Because we find the policy language unambiguous, we reject Thomson’s invitation to construe the
    policies against the insurers and to find multiple occurrences to “further the purpose of fully insuring Thomson
    for potential liability in the Taiwan Class Action.” Thomson’s AO Br. at 36. Likewise, we need not consider
    Century’s argument that finding one occurrence per plaintiff would result in a “windfall” to Thomson.
    Century’s AO Br. at 13.
    18
    In Monroe Guaranty Insurance Co. v. Langreck, 
    816 N.E.2d 485
    (Ind. Ct. App. 2004), we
    explained,
    37
    before XL must pay any indemnity costs[.]” Thomson’s AO App. at 49. Thomson contends
    that this ruling is erroneous.
    XL’s 2000 primary policy contains the following “Deductible Liability Endorsement”:
    This endorsement modifies insurance provided under the following:
    COMMERCIAL GENERAL LIABILITY COVERAGE PART
    PRODUCTS/COMPLETED OPERATIONS LIABILITY COVERAGE
    PART
    SCHEDULE
    Coverage                                 Amount and Basis of Deductible
    PER CLAIM or PER OCCURRENCE
    Bodily Injury Liability                $            $
    OR
    Property Damage Liability      $                              $
    OR
    Bodily Injury Liability and/or
    Property Damage Liability
    Combined                       $                              $500,000 Products/Completed
    Operations
    $250,000 All Other Coverages
    ….
    There are key differences between a deductible, which generally exist in primary policies, and
    retained amounts, which generally are found in umbrella policies or policies designed to be
    excess of a self-insured amount. One difference is that while a deductible is subtracted from a
    policy’s limits, thereby reducing an insurer’s total obligation to the insured, the full limits of a
    policy including a retained amount are available to the insured once that amount has been
    satisfied. Another key difference is that in a policy with a deductible, the insurer retains
    complete control of claims handling; in a policy with a retained amount, the insurer has no
    claims handling responsibility, particularly with respect to claims not exceeding the retained
    amount.
    
    Id. at 495
    (citation omitted). The relevant endorsements of XL’s 2000, 2001, and 2002 primary policies
    involve deductibles, and the relevant endorsements of XL’s 2003, 2004, and 2005 primary policies involve
    self-insured retentions/SIRs.
    38
    The deductible applies to the sum of all loss arising out of “bodily injury”,
    “property damage”, and/or “Supplementary Payments - Coverage A”, however
    caused.
    A.    Our obligation under the Bodily Injury Liability and Property Damage
    Liability Coverages to pay damages on your behalf applies only to the
    amount of damages in excess of any deductible amounts stated in the
    Schedule above as applicable to such coverages.
    B.    You may select a deductible amount on either a per claim or a per
    “occurrence” basis. Your selected deductible applies to the coverage
    option and to the basis of the deductible indicated by the placement of
    the deductible amount in the Schedule above. The deductible amount
    stated in the Schedule above applies as follows:
    1.     PER CLAIM BASIS. If the deductible amount indicated in the
    Schedule above is on a per claim basis, that deductible applies
    as follows:
    a.     Under Bodily Injury Liability Coverage, to all damages
    sustained by any one person because of “bodily injury”;
    b.     Under Property Damage Liability Coverage, to all
    damages sustained by any one person because of
    “property damage”; or
    c.     Under Bodily Injury Liability and/or Property Damage
    Liability Coverage Combined, to all damages sustained
    by any one person because of:
    (1)    “Bodily injury”;
    (2)    “Property damage”; or
    (3)    “Bodily injury” and “property damage” combined
    as the result of any one “occurrence”.
    If damages are claimed for care, loss of services or death
    resulting at any time from “bodily injury”, a separate deductible
    amount will be applied to each person making a claim for such
    damages.
    ….
    39
    2.   PER OCCURRENCE BASIS. If the deductible amount
    indicated in the Schedule above is on a “per occurrence” basis,
    that deductible amount applies as follows:
    a.    Under Bodily Injury Liability Coverage, to all damages
    because of “bodily injury”;
    b.    Under Property Damage Liability Coverage, to all
    damages because of “property damage”; or
    c.    Under Bodily Injury Liability and/or Property Damage
    Liability Coverage Combined, to all damages because of:
    (1)    “Bodily injury’;
    (2)    “Property damage”; or
    (3)    “Bodily injury” and “property damage” combined
    as the result of any one “occurrence”, regardless of the
    number of persons or organizations who sustain damages
    because of that “occurrence.”
    
    Id. at 359-60.
    The endorsements in XL’s 2001 and 2002 primary policies are substantially similar,
    but the deductible liability endorsement schedule reads as follows:
    Coverage                               Amount and Basis of Deductible
    PER CLAIM or PER OCCURRENCE
    Bodily Injury Liability             $                   $
    And/or
    Property Damage Liability-          $                   $250,000
    All Other Coverages
    OR
    Bodily Injury Liability and/or
    Property Damage Liability Combined-
    Products/Completed Operations only $                    $500,000
    
    Id. at 410,
    483.
    40
    Thomson makes the following argument:
    While the trial court correctly held that Thomson chose a “Per Occurrence”
    instead of “Per Claim” in the deductible endorsement, it is important to
    examine the difference between the types of deductibles offered under the
    policy endorsement in effect for the [foregoing] policies. Under Indiana law,
    any contract provision must be read with the assumption that every word was
    included for a purpose. The [foregoing] policies provided the policyholder
    with a choice of two different deductibles. That choice must make a
    difference; otherwise the giving of the “choice” would have no purpose.
    The “Per Claim” deductible term in XL’s preprinted endorsement, not
    selected by Thomson, provides that as to “Bodily Injury Liability Coverage,”
    the deductible applies “to all damages sustained by any one person because of
    [‘]bodily injury.[’]” (emphasis added). In contrast, the deductible in the
    applicable “Per Occurrence” term … applies “to all damages because of
    ‘bodily injury.’” The “Per Claim” section also provides that “if damages are
    claimed for care, loss of services or death resulting at any time from [‘]bodily
    injury,[’] a separate deductible amount will be supplied to each person making
    a claim for such damages.” That sentence is not present in the “Per
    Occurrence” deductible which is applicable to the Thomson policies. The
    contrast between these alternative provisions shows separate deductibles do
    not apply when the “Per Occurrence” selection is made as it was in Thomson’s
    policies. Instead, “all damages because of bodily injury” are considered
    together to satisfy a single $250,000 deductible.
    Thomson’s AO Br. at 40-41 (citations omitted).
    Thomson’s argument ignores the last sentence of the “per occurrence” claim section,
    which provides that the per-occurrence deductible applies to all damages because of bodily
    injury “as the result of any one ‘occurrence’, regardless of the number of persons or
    organizations who sustain damages because of that ‘occurrence.’” The trial court properly
    found two occurrences and also properly found that Thomson must satisfy the deductible for
    each occurrence for XL’s 2000, 2001, and 2002 primary policies. Therefore, we affirm on
    41
    this issue, subject to our holding in Section 6 of this opinion regarding the personal injury
    coverage in XL’s 2000 primary policy.
    Section 5 – Applicability of SIRs in XL’s 2003-2005 Primary Policies
    XL’s 2003, 2004, and 2005 primary policies contain the following “Retention
    Endorsement”:
    This endorsement modifies insurance provided under the following:
    Commercial General Liability Coverage Part
    It is agreed that such insurance as is afforded by this policy applies subject to
    the following additional provisions, which in the event of conflict with any
    provisions elsewhere in the policy shall control the application of the insurance
    to which this endorsement applies:
    1.     The Limits of Insurance as stated on the declarations page shall apply
    excess of a retained limit of $250,000 per occurrence for Premises
    Operations and $500,000 per occurrence for Products/Completed
    Operations and you agree to assume this retained limit (herein called
    the “self-insured retention”). We will pay only the amount excess of
    the self-insured retention.
    You shall have the obligation to provide, at your own expense,
    adequate defense and investigation of any claim and to accept any
    reasonable offer of settlement within the self-insured retention and in
    event of your failure to comply with this clause, no loss, cost or
    expense shall be payable by us.
    ….
    2.     This retention endorsement applies to those claims or suits that would
    be covered by the above referenced coverage part(s) in the absence of
    this endorsement.
    3.     You are obligated to pay the following up to the limit of the self-
    insured retention:
    42
    a.     All compensatory amounts which an insured shall become
    legally obligated to pay as damages because of bodily injury,
    property damage, personal injury, or advertising injury sustained
    by one or more persons or organizations.
    b.     All supplementary payments as defined in the policy and all loss
    adjustment expense including but not limited to the following:
    All administrative agency and court costs, fees and expenses;
    fees for service of process; fees to attorneys; the cost, material
    and labor for photography; fees or costs for experts; cost of
    copies of transcripts of testimony at coroner inquests or criminal
    or civil proceedings; cost of copies of public records; cost of
    depositions and court reporters or recorded statements; and any
    similar costs or expenses properly chargeable to the
    investigation or defense of a particular claim or to protect the
    right of subrogation of the company.
    ….
    7.     In the event of a claim or claims arising which appear likely to exceed
    the self-insured retention, no costs, other than loss adjusting expenses,
    shall be incurred by you without the prior written consent of us.
    8.     We shall have the right in all cases to assume charge of the defense
    and/or settlement of any claim and, upon written request from us, the
    insured shall tender such portion of the self-insured retention as we may
    deem necessary to complete the settlement of such claim.
    See, e.g., Thomson’s AO App. at 588-89.
    XL contends that the trial court simply failed to address these SIRs in the Allocation
    Order. XL says,
    This Court recognized the obligation of an insured to satisfy SIR’s in
    Allianz Ins. Co. v. Guidant Corp., 
    884 N.E.2d 405
    (Ind. Ct. App. 2008), trans.
    denied, 
    915 N.E.2d 977
    (Ind. 2009). There, the insured argued that the mere
    potential exhaustion of an SIR was sufficient to trigger an insurer’s duty to
    defend. 
    Id. at 420.
    The Court rejected the insured’s argument, holding that:
    43
    Our Supreme Court recently explained that it is only after the
    SIR is exhausted that an insurer’s duty to defend, among
    other things, is triggered. Cinergy Corp. v. Assoc. Elec. & Gas
    Ins. Servs., Ltd., 
    865 N.E.2d 571
    , 576-77 (Ind. 2007); see also
    Monroe Guar. Ins. Co. v. Langreck, 
    816 N.E.2d 485
    , 495-96
    (Ind. Ct. App. 2004) (holding that coverage is available to the
    insured once the SIR has been satisfied and that the insurer has
    no claims handling responsibility with respect to claims not
    exceeding the SIR). It is apparent, therefore, that it is the
    responsibility of the policyholder to prove this condition
    precedent to coverage—SIR exhaustion—and unless and until it
    is able to do so, the duty to defend is not triggered.
    
    Id. (emphasis added).
    As Allianz holds, Thomson must prove that the $250,000 SIR for each
    “occurrence” has been satisfied under the 2003 XL Policy, 2004 XL Policy,
    and 2005 XL Policy before any obligations under those Policies commence.
    Accordingly, the Court should reverse the trial court’s failure to find that the
    Retention Endorsement in [those policies] applies, and remand with
    instructions that Thomson must prove the SIR for each “occurrence” has been
    satisfied before any of XL’s obligations under [those policies] are triggered.
    XL’s AO Br. at 37-38.
    44
    We agree with XL and therefore reverse and remand with instructions to order
    Thomson to prove that the SIR for each “occurrence” has been satisfied before any of XL’s
    obligations under its 2003, 2004, and 2005 primary policies are triggered. 19
    Section 6 – Applicability of Personal Injury Provisions in XL’s 2000 Primary Policy
    XL’s 2000 primary policy reads in pertinent part as follows:
    COVERAGE A BODILY INJURY AND PROPERTY DAMAGE
    LIABILITY
    1.   Insuring Agreement
    a.      We will pay those sums that the insured becomes legally
    obligated to pay as damages because of “bodily injury” or
    “property damage” to which this insurance applies. We will
    have the right and duty to defend the insured against any “suit”
    seeking those damages.…
    b.      This insurance applies to “bodily injury” and “property damage”
    only if:
    19
    Thomson argues,
    The Trial Court did not commit any error by not addressing the SIR issue in the later
    XL policies …. All of XL’s arguments as to the use of SIRs to limit its primary coverage
    were made part of a joinder into a motion filed by another insurer, Zurich, as to Zurich’s
    SIRs. Zurich then settled with Thomson. Zurich’s cross motion was withdrawn and Zurich
    did not participate in oral argument. XL did not renew the motion as its own. It was therefore
    within the Trial Court’s discretion to not further consider the cross motion on SIRs in the
    [aforementioned] policies. If XL wanted declaratory relief on its later primary policies, it
    should have moved with a separate motion.
    Thomson’s AO Reply Br. at 31-32. XL notes that, pursuant to Indiana Trial Rule 56(B), “[w]hen any party has
    moved for summary judgment, the court may grant summary judgment for any other party upon the issues
    raised by the motion although no motion for summary judgment is filed by such party.” XL asserts that it
    designated the relevant provisions of the XL Policies, and adopted and incorporated by
    reference the arguments made by [Zurich] on this issue. XL also requested that the trial court
    grant XL partial summary judgment and declare that “Thomson must prove that it has
    exceeded its per occurrence deductible and/or self-insured retention of $250,000 for each
    claimant that triggers coverage under any XL policy before XL has any duty to defend or
    indemnify Thomson[.]” Thus, XL raised and is entitled to summary judgment on this issue.
    XL’s AO Reply Br. at 19-20 (citations to appendix omitted). We agree with XL.
    45
    (1)    The “bodily injury” or “property damage” is caused by an
    “occurrence” that takes place in the “coverage territory”
    and
    (2)    The “bodily injury” or “property damage” occurs during
    the policy period.
    ….
    2.   Exclusions
    This insurance does not apply to:
    ….
    o.    Personal And Advertising Injury
    “Bodily injury” arising out of “personal and advertising injury.”
    ….
    COVERAGE B PERSONAL AND ADVERTISING INJURY LIABILITY
    1.   Insuring Agreement
    a.    We will pay those sums that the insured becomes legally
    obligated to pay as damages because of “personal and
    advertising injury” to which this insurance applies. We will
    have the right and duty to defend the insured against any “suit”
    seeking those damages.…
    b.    This insurance applies to “personal and advertising injury”
    caused by an offense arising out of your business but only if the
    offense was committed in the “coverage territory” during the
    policy period.
    ….
    SECTION V – DEFINITIONS
    ….
    46
    14.     “Personal and advertising injury” means injury, including consequential
    “bodily injury”, arising out of one or more of the following offenses:
    …
    c.     The wrongful eviction from, wrongful entry into, or invasion of
    the right of occupancy of a room, dwelling or premises that a
    person occupies, committed by or on behalf of its owner,
    landlord or lessor;
    Thomson’s AO App. at 345, 348, 349, 355, 356. On appeal, XL does not dispute Thomson’s
    contention that its 2000 primary policy does not have a deductible for personal injury
    coverage.
    In the Duty to Defend Order, the trial court ruled that XL’s policies provide coverage
    for personal injury. The trial court stated that in Travelers Indemnity Co. v. Summit Corp. of
    America, 
    715 N.E.2d 926
    (Ind. Ct. App. 1999), “the Indiana Court of Appeals held that
    ‘personal injury’ encompassed environmental liability claims.” Thomson’s AO App. at 1223.
    The trial court further stated that XL’s definition of personal injury expressly includes
    “consequential bodily injury” and concluded,
    Here, the “wrongful entry” and “invasion of the right of private
    occupancy” terms include alleged entry of organic solvents into the soil and
    groundwater around the site and into the water supplies of the workers in the
    dormitories. The offense continues until the injury is manifest. There could
    not be more clear allegations of “wrongful entry” and an “invasion of the right
    of private occupancy.”
    
    Id. at 1224.
    In the Allocation Order, however, the trial court ruled that
    47
    coverage for the Taiwan Class Action does not concern “personal injury”
    coverage. Defense/indemnity costs associated with the Taiwan Class Action
    claimants could only fall within the 2000 policy’s “Bodily Injury” coverage.
    The Taiwan Class Action claimants seek redress for bodily injury,
    sickness and/or disease related to environmental contamination, which
    implicates the Coverage A for “Bodily Injury”. Conversely, the Taiwanese
    claimants do not seek redress for false imprisonment, defamation,
    infringement, and the other sorts of injuries provided for by Coverage B, for
    “personal and advertising injury.”
    Therefore, the 2000 policy’s personal injury coverage has no bearing on
    Thomson’s obligation to satisfy policy deductibles related to the Taiwan Class
    Action claims which implicate the “Bodily Injury” coverage.
    
    Id. at 48-49.
    In appealing the Allocation Order, Thomson laments the trial court’s “change of
    opinion” on this issue. Thomson’s AO Br. at 38 n.8. Thomson argues that “[t]he allegations
    of the Taiwan Class Action include claims that the workplace chemicals wrongfully entered
    the premises occupied by the workers – both at the plant [and] in the dormitories. This Court
    previously determined in [Summit] that similarly worded policy language provided coverage
    for environmental property damage claims.” 
    Id. at 38-39.
    In that case, Summit sought coverage for claims resulting from environmental
    contamination at sites in several states, including Indiana. The trial court determined, among
    other things, that the “personal injury” provisions in the relevant policies provided coverage
    for the environmental cleanup claims against Summit. On appeal, we reviewed the
    applicable “personal injury” provisions. Those provisions defined “personal injury” as
    “injury, other than bodily injury,” unlike XL’s provision here (which specifically defines
    “personal injury” as “injury, including consequential ‘bodily injury’”), but they are otherwise
    48
    substantially similar in that they allow coverage for personal injury arising out of “[t]he
    wrongful eviction from, wrongful entry into or invasion of the right of private occupancy of a
    room, dwelling, or premises that a person occupies by or on behalf of its owner, landlord or
    lessor.” Summit 
    Corp., 715 N.E.2d at 936-37
    (emphasis removed). The Summit court found
    that the terms “wrongful,” “entry,” and “invasion” “can have a variety of meanings” and
    therefore were ambiguous and must be construed “against the insurer and in favor of
    coverage” for the “pollution of real property of others by Summit in sending wastes to real
    property of others and allowing contaminated groundwater to migrate from its sites to
    neighboring land.” 
    Id. at 937.
    Thomson contends that Summit should control in favor of personal injury coverage in
    this situation, which involves the “entry of solvents into a water supply” and consequential
    bodily injury. Thomson’s AO Br. at 39. XL argues that
    the “plain terms” of the XL Policies establish that coverage for “bodily injury”
    may not simultaneously exist under Coverage A and Coverage B.… What
    Thomson ignores … is that the XL Policies contain an exclusion under
    Coverage A for “‘bodily injury’ arising out of ‘personal and advertising
    injury’.” By the “plain terms” of the XL Policies, if there is “bodily injury”
    under Coverage B, then such “bodily injury” is excluded under Coverage A.
    XL’s AO Br. at 20 (citations to appendix omitted). Thomson replies that “[t]here is nothing
    in the policy to prevent [it] from selecting [personal injury] coverage instead of the bodily
    injury coverage that is subject to a $250,000 deductible.” Thomson’s AO Reply Br. at 30.
    We agree with Thomson in all respects and therefore reverse the trial court on this issue.
    Section 7 – Applicability of “Continuous Trigger” to XL Policies
    In the Duty to Defend Order, the trial court ruled on the issue of trigger as follows:
    49
    The trigger of coverage for a bodily injury claim is controlled by Eli
    Lilly & Co. v. Home Ins. Co., 
    482 N.E.2d 467
    (Ind. 1985). In Eli Lilly, the
    plaintiffs in the underlying actions alleged that they had been exposed to the
    anti-miscarriage drug diethylstilbestrol and that the mothers and their female
    offspring allegedly were injured by the development of cancer years later.
    
    Lilly, 482 N.E.2d at 468
    . Lilly strongly contested the allegations. The Indiana
    Supreme Court held that:
    In order to achieve the objectives in Indiana law, of giving effect
    to the policies’ dominant purpose of indemnity, we hold that
    coverage is triggered at any point between ingestion of DES and
    the manifestation of a DES-related disease. This holding
    comports with the rule of interpretation that the courts should
    strive to give effect to the reasonable expectations of the
    insured. We therefore adopt the multiple trigger interpretation
    of the “injury”/ “occurrence” language in Lilly’s policies.
    
    Id. [at 471]
    (emphasis supplied). Under Lilly’s triple trigger, any policy with a
    policy period during initial exposure, during the period of latency, or at alleged
    manifestation of the disease is triggered. There is just such evidence here. XL
    insured Thomson from 2000, before the complaint was filed, to 2006. The
    2004 complaint, filed years after XL’s coverage incepted, alleges injury “until
    now.” The plaintiffs included many persons who were presently not ill but
    feared cancer which may manifest in the future. The Plaintiff Association has
    continually added new members with new claims. Newly manifested claims
    are being presented each time new members are added. Of the two plaintiffs
    who have provided medical evidence to date, one identified cancer she claimed
    manifested in 2008 and 2010. There is ample evidence, in all these facts, to
    support the possibility of coverage in XL’s 2000 through 2005 policies under
    the Lilly trigger.
    Thomson’s AO App. at 1214-15 (citations to affidavit omitted).
    In its brief in support of its motion for summary judgment on trigger, allocation,
    occurrence, and the absence of aggregates, Thomson argued that
    the bodily injury claims filed against the Thomson entities in the underlying
    action … trigger each of the liability insurance policies that are at issue in this
    action … from the date each worker alleges to have been exposed to the
    chemicals through the date of alleged manifestation of injury, including a
    diagnosis of cancer allegedly connected to the exposure.
    50
    
    Id. at 1146.
    In its response to Thomson’s motion, XL stated,
    [W]hile XL acknowledges that Eli Lilly’s triple trigger is applicable in
    this case, Thomson has misread and mischaracterized the precise time at which
    disease manifestation occurs. In its motion, Thomson assumes without reason
    or citation to supportive case law, that manifestation of disease occurs when
    disease is diagnosed. Eli Lilly is silent on the issue; it held only that trigger
    occurs continuously from exposure to manifestation of disease. Eli 
    Lilly, 482 N.E.2d at 471
    . Neither Eli Lilly nor any other Indiana decision defines the
    point at which manifestation occurs. Disease manifestation was defined,
    however, in Eagle-Picher Industries, Inc. v. Liberty Mutual Insurance Co., 
    682 F.2d 12
    (1st Cir. 1982).
    Eagle-Picher involved a dispute over insurance coverage relative to the
    plaintiff’s manufacture of asbestos-containing insulation and the personal
    injury litigation that flowed therefrom. The Eagle-Picher court rejected the
    contention that disease manifested itself when a medical diagnosis was made.
    
    Eagle-Picher, 682 F.2d at 24
    . “The existence of [a] clinically evident,
    diagnosable disease is in no way dependent upon actual diagnosis.” 
    Id. Instead, disease
    manifests itself “when it becomes clinically evident, that is,
    when it becomes reasonabl[y] capable of medical diagnosis.” 
    Id. at 25.
           Because Eagle-Picher’s definition of manifestation best comports with the
    reasonable interpretation of the language of XL’s policies, this Court should
    adopt Eagle-Picher’s definition of manifestation.
    
    Id. at 1197-98
    (emphasis added).
    In the Allocation Order, the trial court ruled that
    Lilly’s continuous trigger holding controls here, as the Court indicated
    in the July 23, 2010 Duty to Defend Order …. The members of the plaintiff
    Association allege delayed manifestation of cancer and other diseases from
    exposure beginning with their time at the Taoyuan plant or in the dormitories
    and after. For each claim, each policy in force during the period from first
    exposure to the chemicals alleged to have cause[d] harm to manifestation of a
    disease alleged to be related to the exposure is triggered.
    51
    
    Id. at 42
    (footnote omitted). And at the conclusion of the order, the trial court held that “each
    of the policies in effect from alleged first exposure to alleged diagnosis of disease is
    triggered[.]” 
    Id. at 49.
    In appealing the Allocation Order, XL argues that Lilly’s “continuous trigger” holding
    is inapplicable to its post-2001 primary policies because they contain language that
    purportedly “exclude[s] from coverage injury or damage that occurs ‘in part’ before the
    policy begins.” XL’s AO Br. at 21. Thomson observes that XL had expressly conceded
    otherwise and argues that
    it is too late for XL to argue this for the first time on appeal. “An issue not
    raised at trial cannot be advanced for the first time on appeal.” Lea v. Lea, 
    691 N.E.2d 1214
    , 1218 (Ind. 1998); accord Johnson v. Parkview Health Sys., 
    801 N.E.2d 1281
    , 1288 (Ind. Ct. App. 2004) (“substantive questions independent in
    character and not within the issues or not presented to the trial court shall not
    be first made upon appeal”) (quoting Bielat v. Folta, 
    229 N.E.2d 474
    , 475 (Ind.
    Ct. App. 1967)).
    Thomson’s AO Reply Br. at 10-11.
    We agree with Thomson on this point. In its response to Thomson’s summary
    judgment motion on trigger, not only did XL expressly concede the applicability of Lilly’s
    “continuous trigger” holding, but it also failed to quote the relevant provisions in its post-
    2001 primary policies that it now says render that holding inapplicable. This issue is
    52
    waived. 20 See GKC Ind. Theatres, Inc. v. Elk Retail Investors, LLC, 
    764 N.E.2d 647
    , 651
    (Ind. Ct. App. 2002) (“As a general rule, a party may not present an argument or issue to an
    appellate court unless the party raised that argument or issue to the trial court.… The rule of
    waiver in part protects the integrity of the trial court; it cannot be found to have erred as to an
    issue or argument that it never had an opportunity to consider. Conversely, an intermediate
    court of appeals, for the most part, is not the forum for the initial decisions in a case.”); see
    also Harris v. Traini, 
    759 N.E.2d 215
    , 222 (Ind. Ct. App. 2001) (finding counsel’s
    concession at summary judgment hearing binding on clients), trans. denied (2002).
    XL also argues that the trial court erred in using diagnosis as the manifestation point
    for purposes of the “continuous trigger.” In Lilly, the court examined three approaches to the
    trigger of coverage, including the manifestation theory espoused in Eagle-Picher, 
    682 F.2d 12
    . In that case, which involved claims resulting from asbestos inhalation, the First Circuit
    Court of Appeals determined that manifestation occurs when a latent disease “becomes
    clinically evident, that is, when it becomes reasonably capable of medical diagnosis.” 
    Id. at 20
                XL “acknowledges that it did not raise this issue as part of the summary judgment briefing on the
    Allocation Order,” but notes that “there is an upcoming dispositive motions deadline in the trial court [now
    long since past], and XL will be filing a dispositive motion on this issue.” XL’s AO Reply Br. at 7 n.8. In the
    September 2013 order on motions for partial summary judgment, the trial court correctly ruled that it could not
    “revisit the issue of trigger, having already decided – in a final judgment now on appeal [i.e., the Allocation
    Order] – that all of XL’s policies are triggered. XL failed to raise the clause when the issue of trigger was
    before the Court.” September 2013 Order at 10. XL also asserts that it “joined and adopted [Zurich’s]
    arguments on this specific issue in prior summary judgment briefing. Thus, the issue is not waived and, if the
    merits are reached, this Court should reverse on this issue.” XL’s AO Reply Br. at 7 n.8 (citing XL’s AO
    Supp. App. at 45, 22-26). We disagree. Zurich’s argument addressed only the “known loss” doctrine and did
    not mention Lilly’s “continuous trigger” holding. Moreover, Zurich’s argument was raised in response to
    Thomson’s motion for summary judgment on defense costs, and XL’s joinder in that argument was filed
    almost a year before its response to Thomson’s motion for summary judgment on trigger and other issues. XL
    had ample opportunity to apply Zurich’s arguments to the trigger issue at the trial court level, but it failed to do
    so. It may not raise the issue for the first time on appeal.
    53
    25. In so deciding, the First Circuit rejected the district court’s definition of manifestation as
    “‘the date of actual diagnosis’ or the date of death,” noting that “[t]he existence of clinically
    evident, diagnosable disease is in no way dependent upon actual diagnosis.” 
    Id. at 24.
    XL contends that
    [t]he distinction between the date of diagnosis and the date a disease
    becomes capable of diagnosis is especially relevant here. To the extent that
    the plaintiffs in the Taiwan Class Action had symptoms or illnesses that made
    their alleged disease capable of diagnosis before the policy periods of the XL
    Policies, those Policies would not be triggered under Lilly, which held that
    coverage is triggered between exposure and 
    manifestation. 482 N.E.2d at 471
    .
    Even if a plaintiff’s disease was diagnosed during or after the XL Policies’
    policy periods, the “manifestation,” i.e. the end point for the multiple trigger,
    would have occurred prior to the inception of the XL Policies. Accordingly, to
    the extent that the “continuous trigger” applies, the trial court’s ruling on this
    issue should be reversed to reflect that the XL Policies are [no longer]
    triggered [once] a disease becomes capable of diagnosis.
    XL’s AO Br. at 30.
    We agree with XL on this point. XL’s policies require that bodily injury “occur”
    during the policy period, not that it be medically diagnosed during the policy period. Cf.
    
    Eagle-Picher, 682 F.2d at 24
    (“The policy language clearly requires that exposure result in
    bodily injury during the policy period, not that the injury be medically diagnosed during the
    policy period. The existence of clinically evident, diagnosable disease is in no way
    dependent upon actual diagnosis.”). Because our supreme court in Lilly specifically cited
    Eagle-Picher’s manifestation theory in its trigger analysis and held that manifestation is the
    end point of the continuous trigger, we are unwilling to depart from Eagle-Picher’s definition
    of manifestation. Therefore, we affirm the trial court’s application of Lilly’s “continuous
    54
    trigger” holding but reverse and remand with instructions to follow Eagle-Picher in
    determining manifestation, should that be necessary down the road.
    Section 8 – Applicability of “All Sums” Allocation Method to XL/Century Policies
    In the Allocation Order, the trial court ruled on the allocation issue as follows:
    Under Indiana law, any triggered policy in a delayed manifestation
    liability [sic] provides indemnity to the policyholder for the entire amount
    which the policyholder must pay as a result of an occurrence, subject only to
    policy limits. Insurers are not free to limit their responsibility only to the
    portion of injury which allegedly takes place in the policy period. See Allstate
    Ins. Co. v. Dana, 
    759 N.E.2d 1049
    , 1058 (Ind. 2001) (“Dana II”). This Court
    previously rejected XL’s claim that it is entitled to a pro rata allocation on the
    duty to defend. The same insurer arguments, which rest upon the same policy
    language, are no more persuasive as to indemnity.
    Dana II involved insurance coverage for environmental cleanups in
    nineteen states where the contamination occurred over the span of several
    years. The Indiana Supreme Court considered whether the policies’ promise to
    indemnify the insured was limited by any language in the policies to cover only
    that part of injury taking place in the policy period. The Court found no such
    limitation, rejecting the insurer’s argument that it should be responsible only
    for the portion of damages that occurred during a particular policy period. 
    Id. Thus, under
    Dana II, once a policy is triggered, that policy is liable for
    the entire amount of damages for which the policyholder is liable, up to the
    policy’s limits. 
    Id. Nothing in
    the language of the policies limits the insurer’s
    obligation to “some sums,” “part of the sums,” or that proportion of the
    damage that took place during the policy period. As the Dana II Court
    explained, although further damage may take place over time, once an
    occurrence triggers coverage, coverage is for all sums related to that
    occurrence:
    [T]here is no language in the coverage grant, including the
    definition of “property damage,” “personal property,” or
    “occurrence,” that limits [the insurer’s] responsibility to
    indemnification for liability derived solely for that portion of
    damages taking place during the policy period. By the policy’s
    terms, once an accident or event resulting in [the insured’s]
    liability—an occurrence—takes place within the policy period,
    55
    [the insurer] must indemnify [the insured] for “all sums” [the
    insured] must pay as a result of that occurrence, subject to the
    policy limits…[W]hether or not the damaging effects of an
    occurrence continue beyond the end of the policy period, if
    coverage is triggered by an occurrence, it is triggered for ‘all
    sums’ related to that occurrence.
    Dana 
    II, 759 N.E.2d at 1057-58
    (emphasis added).
    In this case, the policies designated use the words “those sums” and not
    “all sums.” This does not change the result. The use of “those” instead of
    “all” does not constitute the clear proration language Dana II noted insurers
    would need to support proration, and this Court finds that the insurers’ use of
    “those sums” rather than “all sums” constitutes a difference without a
    distinction.
    Dana II requires that any proration terms must be precise and clear to
    govern. No such terms are found in ACE’s or XL’s policies. The coverage
    obligation for the Taiwan Class Action, whether defense or immunity, is joint
    and several. The Court enters summary judgment for Thomson on this point of
    coverage for the Taiwan Class Action.
    Thomson’s AO App. at 43-44 (citation omitted).
    XL and Century contend that the trial court’s reliance on Dana II is misplaced and that
    the proration terms in its policies are unambiguous and should dictate a different result. 21 At
    issue in Dana II was Allstate’s liability to Dana under excess liability policies dating from
    1977 through 1982. “Much of the disputed cost [was] for remediation of contaminated
    ground water.” Dana 
    II, 759 N.E.2d at 1053
    .
    The 1977, 1978 and 1979 policies provide[d] the following coverage grant:
    I. Coverage
    21
    Century adopts XL’s arguments on this issue pursuant to Indiana Appellate Rule 46(B)(1).
    Century’s AO Br. at 5 n.5.
    56
    The Company hereby agrees, subject to the limitations, terms and
    conditions hereinafter mentioned, to indemnify the insured for all sums
    which the insured shall be obligated to pay by reason of the liability
    A. imposed upon the Insured by law, or
    B. assumed under contract or agreement by the Named Insured,
    for damages on account of
    A. Personal Injuries
    B. Property Damage
    C. Advertising Liability, caused by or arising out of each
    Occurrence happening anywhere in the world.
    The 1980 and 1981 policies provide[d]:
    A. Coverage:
    To indemnify the INSURED for the ULTIMATE NET LOSS, in excess
    of the greater of the RETAINED LIMIT, or UNDERLYING LIMIT,
    for all sums which the INSURED shall be obligated to pay by reason of
    the liability imposed upon the INSURED by law or liability assumed by
    the INSURED under contract or agreement for damages and expenses,
    because of:
    (1) PERSONAL INJURY,
    (2) PROPERTY DAMAGE, or
    (3) ADVERTISING LIABILITY to which this policy applies, caused
    by an OCCURRENCE, happening anywhere in the world.
    
    Id. at n.3.
    Allstate contended that it was “responsible only for the portion of damages incurred in
    a particular policy period” and argued “for a proportional allocation of damages among each
    triggered policy period.” 
    Id. at 1057.
    The Dana II court concluded,
    there is no language in the coverage grant, including the definitions of
    “property damage,” “personal injury,” or “occurrence,” that limits Allstate’s
    responsibility to indemnification for liability derived solely for that portion of
    damages taking place within the policy period. By the policy’s terms, once an
    accident or event resulting in Dana’s liability—an occurrence—takes place
    within the policy period, Allstate must indemnify Dana for “all sums” Dana
    must pay as a result of that occurrence, subject to the policy limits. We agree
    with the Court of Appeals that whether or not the damaging effects of an
    occurrence continue beyond the end of the policy period, if coverage is
    57
    triggered by an occurrence, it is triggered for “all sums” related to that
    occurrence.
    
    Id. at 1058.
    The XL policies at issue read in pertinent part as follows:
    SECTION I – COVERAGES
    COVERAGE A BODILY INJURY AND PROPERTY DAMAGE
    LIABILITY
    1.      Insuring Agreement
    a.    We will pay those sums that the insured becomes legally
    obligated to pay as damages because of “bodily injury” or
    “property damage” to which this insurance applies.…
    ….
    b.    This insurance applies to “bodily injury” and “property
    damage” only if:
    (1)    The “bodily injury” or “property damage” is caused by an
    “occurrence” that takes place in the “coverage territory”;
    and
    (2)    The “bodily injury” or “property damage” occurs
    during the policy period ….
    See, e.g., Thomson’s AO App. at 345 (emphases added). We presume that the applicable
    Century policies contain substantially similar language, and Thomson does not contend
    otherwise.
    We have found no Indiana state appellate decisions that examine the italicized
    language in the allocation context. Where no Indiana case law is on point, we may look to
    federal cases as persuasive authority. The Blakely Corp. v. EFCO Corp., 
    853 N.E.2d 998
    ,
    58
    1004 (Ind. Ct. App. 2006). In Trinity Homes LLC v. Ohio Casualty Insurance Co., 864 F.
    Supp. 2d 744 (S.D. Ind. 2012), Judge Barker was confronted with nearly identical language.
    At issue in that case were policies issued to two affiliated homebuilding entities, Trinity and
    Beazer, from 1994 through 1999. Beginning in 2002, purchasers of the homes filed claims
    against Trinity and Beazer, “alleging that the faulty work of [its] subcontractors resulted in
    water intrusion, which in turn damaged various components of the purchasers’ homes.” 
    Id. at 747.
    Trinity initiated a remediation protocol, and Trinity and Beazer reached a class
    settlement resulting in the payment of over $58,000,000 in investigative and repair costs.
    Trinity and Beazer filed a declaratory judgment action against their insurer, Ohio Casualty,
    and both sides moved for summary judgment.
    Judge Barker addressed the allocation issue as follows:
    The final issue raised by the cross motions for summary judgment is
    whether coverage exists for “all” damages for which Trinity becomes liable
    arising out of each occurrence or whether it is liable only for “those” damages
    which arose during the relevant policy period.
    In [Dana II], the Indiana Supreme Court interpreted Allstate insurance
    policy provisions stating that it would pay “all sums” which Allstate “shall be
    obligated to pay” based on property damage “caused by an occurrence,” to
    provide indemnification for “all sums,” not just those sums accruing as a result
    of damages which arose during the policy period. We have previously
    interpreted policy language similar to the indemnity language before us as
    being distinguishable from that at issue in Dana II.
    Irving Materials, Inc. v. Ohio Cas. Ins. Co., 
    2008 WL 687126
    (S.D.
    Ind. March 10, 2008), was a case involving multiple insurers and multiple
    policies, and damages arising over multiple coverage periods, not unlike the
    circumstances here emanating from the class settlement …. In Irving
    Materials, we examined the following provision of another Ohio Casualty
    policy:
    59
    We will pay on behalf of the “Insured” those sums in excess of
    the “Retained Limit” that the “Insured” becomes legally
    obligated to pay by reason of liability imposed by law or
    assumed by the “Insured” under an “insured contract” because
    of … “property damage,”…. that takes place during the Policy
    Period and is caused by an “occurrence” happening anywhere.
    
    Id. at *5.
    We addressed the differences between this language and the “all
    sums” provision discussed in Dana II, and questioned the reasoning of a ruling
    by the Lake Superior Court in State Farm Fire & Casualty v. Anthony J.
    Cefali, Cause No. 45D04-0507-PL-00030, 
    2007 WL 1152987
    (Jan. 25, 2007),
    proffered by Trinity as support for a conclusion that the policy provision of
    “those sums,” is not actually distinguishable from “all sums” and, therefore,
    Ohio Casualty, like the insurer in Dana II, is on the hook for all the damages
    arising from each occurrence.
    In undertaking our analysis in Irving Materials, in contrast to the
    situation in Cefali, we were not focused exclusively on the distinction between
    “those sums” and “all sums.”[ 22] Rather, we found persuasive the fact of
    additional specific policy language providing that the insurer would indemnify
    property damage “that takes place during the Policy Period.” Here, as in Irving
    Materials, the policy not only uses the term “those sums” in lieu of “all sums,”
    it further qualifies its indemnity obligation, as evidenced by the highlighted
    language below:
    § I(1)(a)—We will pay those sums that the Insured becomes
    legally obligated to pay as damages because of “bodily injury”
    or “property damage” to which this insurance applies….
    (b)—This insurance applies to “bodily injury” and “property
    damage” only if:
    (1) the “bodily injury” or “property damage” is caused by
    an “occurrence” that takes place in the “coverage
    territory”; and
    (2) the “bodily injury” or “property damage” occurs
    during the policy period.
    22
    We note that XL and Century relied on Irving Materials and that Thomson relied on Cefali at the
    trial court level and on appeal. Trinity Homes was decided in March 2012, when briefing of the appeal from
    the Allocation Order was underway.
    60
    Accordingly, we reach here the same conclusion we did in Irving Materials,
    namely, that Ohio Casualty is obligated to indemnify Trinity only for damages
    arising during its policy periods for pro rata liability as opposed to several and
    indivisible, by reason of its having limited its indemnity obligation to “those
    sums” that Trinity becomes liable to pay for property damage which “occurs
    during the policy period.”
    
    Id. at 758-59
    (footnote omitted); accord Crossmann Communities of N.C., Inc., v.
    Harleysville Mut. Ins. Co., 
    717 S.E.2d 589
    , 600 (S.C. 2011) (adopting pro rata approach in
    case involving “standard CGL” policies with same “key language,” including “those sums”;
    “The insurance applies ‘only if … [t]he “bodily injury” or “property damage” occur[red]
    during the policy period.’ In other words, the insurance does not apply to property damage
    that did not occur during the policy period.”).
    We find the reasoning in Trinity Homes persuasive and agree with Judge Barker that
    Dana II is not controlling in cases involving the decisively different policy language at issue
    here. Judge Barker’s interpretation gives effect to the plain meaning of the limiting phrases
    “those sums” and “during the policy period” and does not render any of the remaining
    language meaningless. The cases cited and arguments made by Thomson focus almost
    exclusively on the distinction between “all sums” and “those sums” and ignore the critical
    phrase “during the policy period,” and therefore we do not find them persuasive or as
    evidence of an ambiguity, as Thomson insists. Thomson contends that if either XL or
    Century “actually wanted to require proration of payment to only that portion of bodily injury
    which takes place in a policy period, it could and should have said so directly.” Thomson’s
    AO Reply Br. at 17. We think that they said so directly enough.
    61
    Thomson further argues,
    With long tail claims like those in this case, how would a court determine
    exactly when and in what quantum the “bodily injury” occurred? We do not
    understand many of the mechanisms by which chemical exposure may cause
    cancer. How would the Court decide if 10% or 15% or 50% should be
    attributed to any one year?
    
    Id. The problems
    posed by Thomson are difficult, but by no means insurmountable. The
    Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts has observed that “[c]ourts in other jurisdictions
    have struggled to define the scope of coverage where successive CGL policies are triggered
    by long-tail claims for injuries which take place over many years and are caused by
    environmental damage or toxic exposure.” Boston Gas Co. v. Century Indem. Co., 
    910 N.E.2d 290
    , 301 (Mass. 2009).
    Determining the proper method for prorating losses raises a myriad of issues,
    which have caused courts to adopt several different pro rata allocation methods
    in cases involving long-tail claims. See S.M. Seaman & J.R. Schulze,
    Allocation of Losses in Complex Insurance Coverage Claims § 4.3[b], at 4-17–
    4-21 (2d ed. 2008). The ideal method is a “fact-based” allocation, under which
    courts would “determine precisely what injury or damage took place during
    each contract period or uninsured period and allocate the loss accordingly.” 
    Id. at §
    4.3[b][1], at 18. “Although such an allocation is the most consistent with
    the contract language, the inability to make such determinations or the
    litigation costs associated with such an exact allocation has caused courts to
    use various proxies for deriving fair apportionment.” 
    Id. Id. at
    312.
    In Boston Gas Co., the court discussed “the ‘two primary means of apportioning
    liability on a pro rata basis’ where a fact-based allocation is not feasible”: the “time on the
    risk” approach and the “years and limits” approach. 
    Id. (quoting EnergyNorth
    Natural Gas,
    62
    Inc. v. Certain Underwriters at Lloyd’s, 
    934 A.2d 517
    , 523 (N.H. 2007)). 23 Each approach
    has its perceived advantages and disadvantages, as will any other approach that attempts to
    23
    Under the “time on the risk” approach,
    “each triggered policy bears a share of the total damages [up to its policy limit] proportionate
    to the number of years it was on the risk [the numerator], relative to the total number of years
    of triggered coverage [the denominator].” 23 E.M. Holmes, Appleman on Insurance §
    145.4[A] [2][b], at 24 (2d ed. 2003). “Apportioning costs among all triggered years is
    compatible with having determined that some injury or damage resulted in all of those years.
    Consistent with the contract language, an insurer pays its percentage of loss attributed to its
    policy period.” 
    Id. at 29.
    Boston Gas 
    Co., 910 N.E.2d at 313
    . Under the “years and limits” approach,
    “… loss is allocated among policies ‘based on both the number of years a policy is on the risk
    as well as that policy’s limits of liability. The basis of an individual insurer’s liability is the
    aggregate coverage it underwrote during the period in which the loss occurred.’ … Under this
    approach, ‘an insurer’s proportionate share is established by dividing its aggregate policy
    limits for all the years it was on the risk for the single, continuing occurrence by the aggregate
    policy limits of all the available policies and then multiplying that percentage by the amount
    of indemnity costs.’”
    
    Id. (quoting EnergyNorth
    , 934 A.2d at 523 (quoting 23 E.M. HOLMES at § 145.4[A][2][c] and Colon, Pay it
    Forward: Allocating Defense and Indemnity Costs in Environmental Liability Cases in California, 24 INS.
    LITIG. REP. 43, 60 (2002)).
    63
    fairly apportion liability among multiple insurers and policies and periods. 24 A close
    approximation of a fact-based allocation may be achievable in some cases and not in others,
    but the overriding goal of apportionment should be to give effect to the unambiguous
    language of the policy and to avoid a significant windfall or shortfall to the insured. We
    24
    According to the Boston Gas court,
    “[T]he time-on-the-risk method offers several policy advantages, including spreading the risk
    to the maximum number of carriers, easily identifying each insurer’s liability through a
    relatively simple calculation, and reducing the necessity for subsequent indemnification
    actions between and among the insurers.” Towns v. Northern Sec. Ins. Co., 
    964 A.2d 1150
    ,
    1166 (Vt. 2008). However, “[c]ritics of pro-ration by years note that it fails to consider the
    limits of each policy because a policy with very low limits of liability may be liable for the
    same amount as a policy with much greater limits, despite the likely disparity in the premium
    paid by the insured to the carrier(s).” 23 E.M. 
    Holmes, supra
    at § 145.4[A][2][b], at 25
    n.109.
    ….
    …. The rationale for allocating [by years and limits] is “that insurers who provided
    more coverage, that is, higher limits or lower deductibles, assumed more of the risk of liability
    than insurers who provided less coverage.” Comment, Allocating Progressive Injury Liability
    Among Successive Insurance Policies, 64 U. Chi. L. Rev. 257, 274-275 (1997). “A major
    criticism of pro-ration by years and limits is that insurers with higher limits may be liable for a
    disproportionate share of damages based solely on their limits.” 23 E.M. 
    Holmes, supra
    at §
    145.4[A][2][c], at 30 
    n.133. 910 N.E.2d at 313
    . Ultimately, the court determined that
    the time-on-the-risk method of allocating losses is appropriate where the evidence will not
    permit a more accurate allocation of losses during each policy period. “[I]ts inherent
    simplicity promotes predictability, reduces incentives to litigate, and ultimately reduces
    premium rates.” Comment, supra at 281. The … method of prorating by years and limits
    “disproportionately assign[s] liability to generous policies, disproportionately increasing their
    price, thus making them more difficult to purchase.” Comment, supra at 276. Moreover,
    “[p]rogressive injuries by definition do not … magically gravitate toward periods with more
    coverage.” 
    Id. at 283.
    Although either method would require us to indulge in a “probable
    fiction,” Boston Gas Co. v. Century Indem. Co., 
    529 F.3d 8
    , 14 (1st Cir. 2008), we conclude
    that the more reasonable fiction to adopt is that the progressive injuries took place evenly
    across all policy periods. Proration by time on the risk reflects this “probable fiction.” 
    Id. See 1
    A.D. Windt, Insurance Claims and Disputes § 6:47, 6–418—6–419 (5th ed. 2007) (“the
    most equitable [method of proration] is allocating based upon the relative periods of time each
    insurer was on the risk, and the courts have, in general, so recognized”).
    
    Id. at 314-15.
    64
    decline to adopt a particular approach in this case, in which the liability of the Thomson
    entities has yet to be determined in an unfamiliar legal system. Instead, we believe that the
    trial court will be best situated to select (and customize, if necessary) the fairest method of
    apportioning liability among the insurers in light of the factual complexities of the case at the
    appropriate time. And for that reason, we believe that the trial court should be afforded
    broad discretion in selecting and applying an apportionment method. Therefore, we reverse
    and remand for further proceedings on this issue.
    Section 9 – Whether TCETVT and Thomson SA are Insureds Under XL’s Policies
    The next three issues arise from the XL Defense Costs Order, which reads in pertinent
    part as follows:
    I. SUMMARY
    On October 5, 2011, [Thomson] filed its “Motion for Summary
    Judgment for Defense Costs in the Amount of $7,321,261.06 for Defense of
    the Taiwan Class Action.”… For the reasons given here, the Court now
    GRANTS this motion in part, and awards Thomson judgment for its defense
    costs incurred after July 8, 2008, through April 30, 2011 in the sum of
    $2,950,196.34 against defendant [XL]. Thomson also is entitled to
    prejudgment interest on these costs, in the sum of $413,473.05 through August
    1, 2011 and $646.25 for each day thereafter. Thomson has continued to accrue
    defense costs after April 30, 2012. XL further is ordered (1) to reimburse all
    costs pertaining to defense incurred since April 30, 2011 and pay all such costs
    to which it has no specific objection within 30 days of this order; and (2) to
    establish a means by which further costs may be paid within 30 days after they
    are paid by Thomson.
    II. BACKGROUND
    On July 23, 2010 this Court ordered Thomson’s three primary insurers
    to defend Thomson. After the [Duty to Defend Order] was entered one
    65
    primary insurer, Zurich, settled all disputes with Thomson, as did one umbrella
    insurer, Lumbermens. In addition, a second insurer, ACE, has settled its
    obligation to Thomson on defense costs through December 31, 2011. The
    third primary insurer, XL, has not contributed anything to any defense costs,
    either before or after the [Duty to Defend Order]. Thomson therefore brought
    the instant motion.…
    To decide this motion the Court must decide four issues:
    1.   By what standard is a trial court to address a request for
    reimbursement of defense costs against an insurer which has breached the duty
    to defend?
    2.    Were the costs incurred reasonable and necessary to the defense
    of the Taiwan Class Action?
    3.    Were the defense costs reasonable and necessary to the defense
    of Thomson in that Class Action?
    4.    Is TCETVT also an insured entitled to a defense in the Taiwan
    Class Action under the XL policies?
    III. ANALYSIS
    A.     The standard for review of defense cost reimbursement by an
    insurer
    XL does not dispute that the defense costs at issue were incurred or
    paid. There is also no dispute XL has not paid any defense costs, even after
    the [Duty to Defend Order], and therefore has breached that duty to defend.
    This Court is asked to determine if the defense costs incurred and paid are
    reasonable and necessary.
    How is this Court to address this task? Thomson cites numerous cases,
    many from the Seventh Circuit but also from other courts coast to coast, that
    hold that when an insurer has breached the duty to defend, and the
    policyholder has secured, supervised, and paid for a defense without any
    expectation of payment, those costs are “market tested” and are presumed to be
    “reasonable and necessary.” Taco Bell v. Continental Casualty Co., 
    388 F.3d 1069
    , 1075-77 (7th Cir. 2008); Metavante Corp. v. Emigrant Savings Bank,
    619[]F.3d 748, 772-776 (7th Cir. 2010) ($10 million in fees); Charter Oak Fire
    Ins. Co. v. Hedeen & Cos., 
    280 F.3d 730
    , 738-39 (7th Cir. 2002); Sentex
    66
    Systems, Inc. v. Hartford Accident and Indemnity Co., 
    882 F. Supp. 930
    , 946-
    47 (C.D. Cal. 1995) affirmed 
    93 F.3d 576
    (9th Cir. 1996); American Service
    Ins. Co. v. China Ocean Shipping Co., 
    932 N.E.2d 8
    , 23-24 (Ill. Ct. App.
    [2]010; 3-17 Appleman on Insurance § 17.07 (Ins. Library Ed. 2011). XL did
    not cite a single contrary case.
    This presumption rests on two principles. First, the policyholder, which
    is defending itself without an assurance it will be reimbursed, provides a
    market-based check on the amounts spent, a better check than any court can
    provide after-the-fact. Second, it is unfair to let a breaching insurer nit-pick
    costs later when it could have—had it honored its duty to defend—initially
    directed the defense in any reasonable way it wished. Taco 
    Bell, 388 F.3d at 1077
    .
    This Court agrees. Thomson’s fees are presumed to be reasonable and
    necessary. XL’s expert evidence criticizing general billing practices is
    unavailing here, just as similar insurer analyses were rejected in Taco Bell and
    its progeny. The market has checked the fees, and the insurer cannot second
    guess the work done or amounts paid where it has failed to accept its defense
    duty. In any event, as shown below, XL has presented no competent evidence
    that any particular defense action or cost was not reasonable or necessary.
    B.      Thomson’s defense costs were “reasonable and necessary”
    Each side presented a very different approach to the Court for deciding
    what is “reasonable and necessary.” Thomson relies on the expert support of
    G. Ferguson McNeil. Mr. McNeil is a partner at Vinson & Elkins who has
    defended toxic tort, class action cases in foreign countries which like Taiwan
    do not have developed Western-style legal systems. He examined the actions
    taken and the firms used to discharge the defense here, and reached what
    Thomson calls a “total value” conclusion. He based his opinion on the various
    factors set forth in Rule 1.5 of the Code of Professional Conduct—not just the
    time involved in tasks but the novelty and difficulty of the matter, and the skill,
    67
    experience, reputation and ability of the lawyers involved.[25] He concluded the
    costs were reasonable and necessary.
    XL took a very different approach. It relies nearly completely on the
    opinion of Jack Pierce. Mr. Pierce has never litigated or managed a toxic-tort,
    class action anywhere, and not in a developing, non-Western legal system. He
    did not apply Rule 1.5 as the standard; his written report expressly rejects it.
    His claimed expertise is in reviewing legal bills and identifying practices he
    claims lead to overbilling. Importantly, he did not identify a single defense
    action which was not necessary to the defense of Thomson in Taiwan, or a
    single specific action which was overbilled.
    This Court is persuaded that Mr. McNiel’s approach is more sound and
    more consistent with Indiana law. Our courts have expressly adopted Rule 1.5
    as the standard for what is reasonable. Terry Gerstbauer v. Styers, 
    898 N.E.2d 369
    , 381 (Ind. Ct. App. 2008). The analysis is case-specific. What matters is
    what is reasonable and necessary to defend the particular case at issue. The
    Taiwan action is novel and complex. Mr. McNiel’s expertise in similar cases
    is the probative expertise.
    Rule 1.5 mandates a multi-factor total value approach. In addition to
    time spent, the Court is to consider novelty, difficulty, skill, experience,
    reputation, and ability. Mr. Pierce focuses only on time and billing practices
    affecting the amount of time recorded. He makes no adjustment for any of the
    1.5 factors, such as upward adjustments for skill or efficiency. His method is
    thus biased downward, and does not comport with Rule 1.5.
    25
    Indiana Professional Conduct Rule 1.5(a) provides,
    A lawyer shall not make an agreement for, charge, or collect an unreasonable fee or
    an unreasonable amount for expenses. The factors to be considered in determining the
    reasonableness of a fee include the following:
    (1) the time and labor required, the novelty and difficulty of the questions involved,
    and the skill requisite to perform the legal service properly;
    (2) the likelihood, if apparent to the client, that the acceptance of the particular
    employment will preclude other employment by the lawyer;
    (3) the fee customarily charged in the locality for similar legal services;
    (4) the amount involved and the results obtained;
    (5) the time limitations imposed by the client or by the circumstances;
    (6) the nature and length of the professional relationship with the client;
    (7) the experience, reputation, and ability of the lawyer or lawyers performing the
    services; and
    (8) whether the fee is fixed or contingent.
    68
    Mr. Pierce’s criticisms center on lawyer billing practices, in particular
    “block billing,” which he alleges tends to inflate time entries. This Court is
    not persuaded, for several reasons. First, logically, there is no basis to
    conclude that block billing results in inflated time; it could as easily lead to lost
    time. Second, Indiana cases expressly acknowledge and permit the practice.
    Greenfield Mills, Inc. v. Carter, 
    569 F. Supp. 2d 737
    , 748 (S.D. Ind. 2008);
    Fulmore v. Home Depot, USA, Inc., 
    2007 WL 2746882
    and 4; Clark v. Oakhill
    Condominium Association, Inc., 
    2001 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 35228
    at 20-27 (N.D.
    Ind. 2011). Third, Mr. Pierce’s analysis neglects that the work has been
    reviewed by Meggan Ehret, Thomson’s in-house counsel, who has every
    incentive to minimize legal costs. The cases upon which Mr. Pierce relies are
    first-level reviews in statutory fee-shifting cases, where no one has supervised
    or reviewed the bills prior to the court’s assessment. E.g., Moore v. University
    of Notre Dame, 
    22 F. Supp. 2d 896
    , 913 (N.D. Ind. 1998) (an age discrimination
    case, the only Indiana case he cites in his report on this issue.) There is no
    prior market check in such cases. But even such cases, including Greenfield
    Mills, Fulmore and Clark as well as Moore, do not proscribe block billing.
    Mr. Pierce’s other critiques are no more persuasive. He claims time
    spent pursuing indemnity claims against third parties should be excluded.
    Such work, however, actually assists the insurers by minimizing what they
    must pay. That is why courts have routinely allowed such costs. Great
    Western Cas. Co. v. Marathon Oil Co., [3]15 F.Supp.2d 879, 881-85 (N.D. Ill.
    2003); Oscar W. Larson v. United Capital Ins. Co., 
    845 F. Supp. 458
    , 461
    (W.D. Mich. 1993); 3-17 Appleman on Insurance § 17.07 (Ins. Library Ed.
    2011). XL cites no contrary case.[ 26]
    Next, Mr. Pierce critiques charges for which [sic] he claims are
    “administrative” tasks, or for response to the insurers’ inquiries. This includes
    maintaining the Sharepoint website, which has furnished information the
    insurers needed; on it they access billings and monitor the underlying defense.
    These costs help the insurers, and Thomson is entitled to be reimbursed for
    them.
    26
    XL contends that Recticel Foam, 
    716 N.E.2d 1015
    , holds that Thomson cannot seek recovery of
    “fees and expenses related to this insurance coverage action” or “fees and expenses related to its offensive
    indemnification claims[.]” XL’s XO Br. at 37. Because Recticel Foam does not specifically hold that
    indemnification costs can never be recoverable as defense costs and does not address the issue of coverage
    actions, we do not find it persuasive. Cf. Great W. Cas. 
    Co., 315 F. Supp. 2d at 882-83
    (“‘Defense’ is about
    avoiding liability. Claims and actions seeking third-party contribution and indemnification are a means of
    avoiding liability just as clearly as is contesting the claims alleged to give rise to liability. A duty to defend
    would be nothing but a form of words if it did not encompass all litigation by the insured which could defeat its
    liability, including claims and actions for contribution and indemnification.”). We note that the coverage
    action would not have been necessary if XL had not refused to defend Thomson.
    69
    Finally, Mr. Pierce complains certain entries are too vague. This
    ignores two critical facts. First, Thomson has scrutinized these costs each
    month with knowledge of the case and incentives to not over-spend. Second,
    if the insurers wanted more detail, they could have gotten it had they timely
    honored their duty to defend. The Court notes that Mr. Pierce made no further
    inquiry as to any of those entities, and does not claim that any of the work
    described was unnecessary or unreasonable.
    In sum, the Court holds that (1) the defense costs are presumed to be
    reasonable and necessary, but (2) even if this presumption was not dispositive,
    the competent, relevant evidence supports the conclusion that the costs
    incurred were reasonable and necessary. The Court holds that XL’s evidence
    on these costs is not competent, and in any event does not create a genuine
    issue of material fact because it rests upon the wrong standard and does not
    show that any specific defense action or cost was unreasonable or unnecessary.
    C.     Were the defense costs incurred reasonable and necessary to the
    defense of Thomson?
    XL claims it is not obligated to pay any of these costs because Thomson
    Inc. has not appeared in the underlying action and TCETVT has paid those
    defense costs to date. The motion to dismiss Thomson Inc. on a variety of
    grounds continues to pend in the underlying case, but it likely will not be
    decided until the underlying case is at an end.
    This Court resolved this issue in large part in its [Duty to Defend
    Order], when it held that payment by TCETVT was no defense to XL:
    Thomson is entitled to a full defense against the allegations. A
    full defense includes, but it not limited to, asserting any
    Thomson jurisdictional defense. It does not mean the other
    actions needed to defend the rest of the case do not benefit XL
    or are not necessary to discharge its defense obligations. The
    success of Thomson’s jurisdictional defense will not be known
    until the end of the Taiwan action. A complete defense is
    needed to protect Thomson from whatever may happen.
    [Duty to Defend] Order, at p. 12.
    The “full defense” to which Thomson is entitled includes defense
    against the merits of the underlying claims. Mr. McNiel specifically opined
    70
    that the defense actions here were all reasonable and necessary to protect all
    the Thomson entities. XL did not present any contrary evidence. The Court
    concludes that Thomson has demonstrated that the defense actions were
    reasonable and necessary to Thomson Inc.’s “full defense.”
    D.     Is TCETVT also an insured entitled to a defense?
    The Court’s holding that defense costs incurred after July 8, 2008 are
    reasonable and necessary to the defense of Thomson Inc. is fully sufficient to
    support Thomson’s motion. But Thomson argues that there is [a] second,
    independent basis for that decision, that T[C]ETVT also is an insured entitled
    to a defense.
    This decision turns on analysis of two endorsements to XL’s policies.
    Using XL’s 2002 policy as an example, the first endorsement makes Thomson
    SA, Thomson Inc.’s direct parent, an insured, by amending the “Who is an
    Insured” (Section II)[] of the policy to:
    Include as an insured the … organization(s) shown in the
    Schedule, but only with respect to their liability arising out of:
    a.     Their financial control of you …
    Thomson SA is in the Schedule. This “financial control” is precisely
    applicable to the situation here, where there are veil-piercing allegations in the
    underlying case against Thomson.
    A second endorsement completes inclusion of TCETVT. This is the
    “International Extended General Liability Endorsement” (“IEGLE”). It
    includes a “Broad Form Named Insured Endorsement,” which again amends
    Section II, this time to include as an insured:
    (1) Any subsidiary and subsidiary thereof of yours which is a
    legally incorporated entity of which you own a financial interest
    of more than fifty percent (50%) of the voting stock on the
    effective date of the coverage part …
    As the ownership chart attached shows, Thomson SA indirectly owns almost
    all the shares of TCETVT through two subsidiaries (Thomson Inc. owns the
    rest). Thus TCETVT is an insured through Thomson SA’s ownership.
    71
    XL’s defense is that “you” and “your” are described elsewhere in the
    policy to “refer to the Named Insured shown in the Declaration,” which it
    claims is only Thomson Inc. The problem with this reading is that “you” and
    “your” also expressly includes “any other person qualifying as a Named
    Insured under this policy.” “Named Insured” is not defined. How does one
    “qualify” to be a “Named Insured?” The only logical answer is via the
    endorsements described. The IEGLE supplies such a qualifying provision,
    under the heading “Broad Form Named Insured,” that includes TCETVT.
    What else is the point of a “Broad Form Named Insured” endorsement but to
    “broaden” the “Named Insured?” This also comports with the general purpose
    of the endorsement, to furnish “broad” foreign liability protection for Thomson
    companies operating in foreign countries.
    Even if XL’s narrow construction were reasonable, that would still
    leave, at the very least, an ambiguity. Thomson’s construction is at the least a
    reasonable one. As Indiana courts have held many times, where more than one
    reasonable construction of a policy term is possible, there is ambiguity. Eli
    Lilly & Co. v. Home Ins. Co., 
    482 N.E.2d 467
    , 470-71 (Ind. 1985).
    Ambiguous policy terms are interpreted in favor of a liability policy’s basic
    purpose of indemnity. 
    Lilly, 482 N.E.2d at 470
    ; American States Ins. Co. v.
    Kiger, 
    662 N.E.2d 945
    , 947 (Ind. 1996). The policyholder’s construction need
    not be the best or only possible construction to prevail; if any reasonable
    construction of a term supports coverage, that construction governs as a matter
    of law. Lilly, 482 N.E.2d [at 144].
    A fair reading of XL’s terms includes Thomson SA and TCETVT as
    insureds (and “Named Insureds”) entitled to a defense against just this sort of
    veil-piercing international toxic tort claim. The lack of clarity or restriction on
    what constitutes a “Named Insured,” or how one “qualifies” (other than by
    inclusion in endorsements) as a “Named Insured,” coupled with the lack of
    restraint of defense to any particular form of “insured,” doom XL’s after-the-
    claim restrictive construction. TCETVT is entitled to a defense in its own
    right.
    Finally, even if TCETVT did not qualify as a Named Insured under
    XL’s primary policies, it does under XL’s umbrella policies. XL’s umbrella
    insures Thomson and “any company for which you exercise control or actively
    manage.” That describes TCETVT—a company with no employees or
    facilities which Thomson “actively manages.” If the primary doesn’t cover or
    defend, the umbrella drops down to do so. The result is the same. TCETVT is
    entitled to a defense.
    72
    XL’s XO App. at 60-69 (some citations and footnotes omitted).
    Section 9.1 – XL’s Primary Policies
    As indicated above, the trial court determined that both TCETVT and Thomson SA
    are insureds under XL’s primary policies based primarily on two endorsements: the
    Additional Insured – Controlling Interest Endorsement (“AICIE”) and the International
    Extended General Liability Endorsement (“IEGLE”). The AICIE names Thomson SA in the
    schedule and provides in pertinent part,
    1.      WHO IS AN INSURED (Section II) is amended to include as an
    insured the person(s) or organization(s) shown in the Schedule, but only
    with respect to their liability arising out of:
    a.       Their financial control of you[ 27]; or
    b.       Premises they own, maintain or control while you lease or
    occupy these premises.
    See, e.g., Thomson’s XO App. at 138 (emphasis added).
    XL notes that in the insurance context, the phrase “arising out of” has been held to
    require a causal connection. See Grinnell Mut. Ins. Co. v. Ault, 
    918 N.E.2d 619
    , 626 (Ind. Ct.
    App. 2009) (“[T]he [plaintiffs] do not dispute that the phrase ‘arising out of’ connotes a
    causal connection between an insured’s business activities and a victim’s injuries.”). XL
    argues,
    Here, no such causal connection exists. Thomson (SA) is not being
    sued for liability caused by its control of Thomson or premises leased or
    27
    Section I of the policies provide, “Throughout this policy the words ‘you’ and ‘your’ refer to the
    Named Insured shown in the Declarations, and any other person or organization qualifying as a Named Insured
    under this policy.” See, e.g., Thomson’s XO App. at 122. Thomson is shown as the only named insured on
    the policies’ common declarations pages. 
    Id. at 119.
    73
    occupied by Thomson. The liability which the Taiwan plaintiffs seek to
    impose on Thomson (SA) arises out of Thomson (SA)’s indirect financial
    control of TCETVT and its premises. The allegations against Thomson (SA)
    have nothing to do with its financial control of Thomson Inc., or premises
    owned by Thomson (SA) but leased or occupied by Thomson Inc.
    XL’s XO Br. at 24.
    Thomson argues that “Thomson SA’s potential liability does ‘arise out of’ financial
    control of Thomson Inc. and all the Thomson entities. ‘Financial control’ is an undefined
    term. It describes the veil piercing theory and joint liability claim made against the three
    Thomson entities to the Taiwan Class Action.” Thomson’s XO Br. at 35. We agree with
    Thomson.
    We now turn to the IEGLE, which reads in pertinent part,
    1.     Broad Form Named Insured
    Paragraph 1. of Section II – Who is an insured is amended to include the
    following:
    d.     (1)    Any subsidiary and subsidiary thereof of yours which is a legally
    incorporated entity of which you own a financial interest of
    more than fifty percent (50%) of the voting stock on the
    effective date of the coverage part, then you are an insured ….
    Thomson’s XO App. at 164.
    XL asserts,
    The only entity that is shown in the Declarations is Thomson Inc. (or one of its
    predecessors). Clearly, ownership of less than one percent (1%) of TCETVT
    by Thomson does not trigger coverage for TCETVT under this Endorsement.
    As a matter of law, TCETVT is not an insured under this policy language
    because a less than one percent (1%) interest is not an “interest of more than
    fifty percent (50%).”
    74
    XL’s XO Br. at 26. XL’s argument disregards the fact that Thomson SA also qualifies as an
    insured under the AICIE and owns TCEB, which owns 99% of TCETVT. 28 Therefore, we
    affirm the trial court’s ruling that Thomson SA and TCETVT are insureds under XL’s
    primary policies.
    Section 9.2 – XL’s Umbrella Policies
    XL does not dispute the trial court’s observation that its umbrella policies insure
    “Thomson and ‘any company [over] which you [i.e., Thomson] exercise control [and]
    actively manage.’” XL’s XO App. at 68. 29 And XL does not challenge the trial court’s
    conclusion that this language “describes TCETVT—a company with no employees or
    facilities which Thomson ‘actively manages.’” 
    Id. at 68-69.
    Thus, XL has effectively
    conceded that TCETVT is a named insured under its umbrella policies.
    XL focuses on the following policy language:
    Insuring Agreements
    I.      Coverage
    A.      Coverage A
    We will pay those sums that the “insured” becomes
    legally obligated to pay as damages arising out of an
    “occurrence” which are in excess of the underlying
    insurance stated in Schedule A of this policy. The
    coverage provisions of the scheduled underlying policies
    are incorporated as a part of the policy except for (a)
    Medical Payment, (b) Uninsured or Underinsured
    28
    We are unpersuaded by XL’s attempt to distinguish between a “named insured” and an “additional
    insured” for purposes of the AICIE and the IEGLE.
    29
    Thomson’s proposed order, which the trial court adopted nearly verbatim, misquotes the relevant
    policy language. We address this at greater length below.
    75
    Motorist Coverage, (c) any duty to investigate or defend
    any claim, or to pay for any investigation or defense, (d)
    the limits of insurance or (e) any other provision that is
    not consistent with a provision in this policy.
    This insurance applies only to “bodily injury”, “personal
    injury”, “property damage” or “advertising liability [sic]”
    which occurs during the policy period.
    B.    Coverage B
    With respect to any loss covered by the terms and
    conditions of this policy, but not covered as warranted by
    the underlying policies listed on Schedule A, or any
    other underlying insurance, we will pay on your behalf
    for loss caused by an “occurrence” which is in excess of
    the “retained limit” for liability imposed on you by law or
    assumed by you under contract for “bodily injury”,
    “personal injury”, “property damage” or “advertising
    injury.”
    This insurance applies only to “bodily injury”, “personal
    injury”, “property damage or “advertising injury” which
    occurs during the policy period.
    II.   Defense Settlement
    For damages covered by this policy, but not covered by
    any other insurance or underlying insurance, we have
    these obligations:
    A.     We will defend any “suit” seeking damages
    covered by this policy; but we may investigate,
    negotiate, and settle any clam or “suit” at our
    discretion.
    B.     We will pay the premium for any bond to release
    attachments for amounts not exceeding the policy
    Limits of Insurance, but we are not obligated to
    apply or furnish those bonds.
    XL’s XO App. at 120.
    76
    XL argues, “As a threshold matter, Coverage A only applies to “those sums that the
    ‘Insured’ becomes legally obligated to pay.” Thus, Coverage A can only apply to sums that
    Thomson Inc. becomes legally obligated to pay in excess of the scheduled underlying
    primary coverage.” XL’s XO Br. at 29. Given that XL has conceded that TCETVT is also
    an insured, we disagree. And because TCETVT is insured under Coverage A, we need not
    address XL’s arguments regarding Coverage B or the defense settlement provision.
    Therefore, we affirm the trial court’s ruling that TCETVT is an insured under XL’s umbrella
    policies.
    Section 10 – Reasonableness and Necessity of Thomson’s Defense Costs
    XL contends that the trial court erred in awarding defense costs on summary
    judgment, claiming that genuine issues of material fact remain regarding the reasonableness
    and necessity of those costs. XL complains that
    [t]he trial court overlooked the insufficiency of the materials presented
    by Thomson and adopted a “market tested” analysis for determining the
    amount, necessity and reasonableness of the requested fees. However, as
    acknowledged by the Trial Court, no Indiana court has ever permitted this
    method for analyzing fee requests. Also, use of this analysis [c]onflicts with
    the existing Indiana authorities cited … by XL and the other Defendants. In a
    summary judgment proceeding, it is not appropriate to establish a new legal
    analysis and to impose newly minted legal liability on a party to a pending
    lawsuit.
    XL’s XO Br. at 36 (citations to appendix omitted).
    We note, however, that XL had an opportunity to respond to Thomson’s arguments on
    summary judgment in favor of adopting the “market tested” analysis. The trial court was
    77
    unpersuaded by XL’s arguments, as are we. What the Seventh Circuit said about Taco Bell
    and its insurer could be said with equal force about Thomson and XL in this case:
    When [Thomson] hired its lawyers, and indeed at all times since, [XL] was
    vigorously denying that it had any duty to defend – any duty, therefore, to
    reimburse [Thomson].          Because of the resulting uncertainty about
    reimbursement, [Thomson] had an incentive to minimize its legal expenses
    (for it might not be able to shift them); and where there are market incentives
    to economize, there is no occasion for a painstaking judicial review.…
    ….
    Furthermore, although [XL’s] policy entitled it to assume [Thomson’s]
    defense, in which event [XL] would have selected, supervised, and paid the
    lawyers for [Thomson] in the [Taiwan Class Action], it declined to do so –
    gambling that it would be exonerated from a duty to defend – with the result
    that [Thomson] selected the lawyers. Had [XL] mistrusted [Thomson’s]
    incentive or ability to economize on its legal costs, it could, while reserving its
    defense that it had no duty to defend, have assumed the defense and selected
    and supervised and paid for the lawyers defending [Thomson] in the [Taiwan
    Class Action], and could later have sought reimbursement if it proved that it
    had indeed had no duty to defend [Thomson]. So presumably it had some
    confidence in [Thomson’s] incentive and ability to minimize legal expenses.
    We add that the duty to defend would be significantly undermined if an
    insurance company could, by the facile expedient of hiring an audit firm to
    pick apart a law firm’s billing, obtain an evidentiary hearing on how much of
    the insured’s defense costs it had to reimburse.
    78
    Taco Bell 
    Corp., 388 F.3d at 1075-77
    (citations omitted). 30 The rationale for the “market
    tested” analysis is compelling, and we cannot say that the trial court erred in applying it in
    this case.
    Nor can we say that XL rebutted the presumption that Thomson’s defense costs are
    reasonable and necessary. Cf. Aerojet-Gen. Corp. v. Transport Indem. Co., 
    948 P.2d 909
    ,
    924 (Cal. 1997) (“[I]n the exceptional case, wherein the insurer has breached its duty to
    defend, it is the insured that must carry the burden of proof on the existence and amount of
    the site investigation expenses, which are then presumed to be reasonable and necessary as
    defense costs, and it is the insurer that must carry the burden of proof that they are in fact
    unreasonable or unnecessary.”), modified on denial of reh’g (1998). Simply stated, XL has
    presented no relevant facts or citations to authority to persuade us that the trial court erred as
    a matter of law in finding Pierce’s criticisms and opinions unpersuasive. The same is true for
    the trial court’s acceptance of McNiel’s affidavit. As such, we find no genuine issues of
    30
    In its reply brief, XL notes that the Seventh Circuit decisions cited by Thomson “clearly indicated
    the ‘market tested’ analysis was adopted as a federal procedural rule of analysis” and that other courts have
    rejected this analysis. XL’s XO Reply Br. at 19 n.11. Be that as it may, we agree with the trial court’s
    adoption of the “market tested” analysis in this case. As the Seventh Circuit observed in Metavante, when fees
    are “paid by a party who had no reassurance of indemnity, … market considerations normally would render
    unnecessary resort to the time-consuming examination of individual expenses. For the federal courts, such
    exercises drain the institution of its most valuable 
    resource—time.” 619 F.3d at 774
    . Time is an equally
    valuable resource in state courts, and the same market considerations apply.
    79
    material fact regarding the reasonableness and necessity of Thomson’s defense costs and
    therefore affirm the trial court on this issue. 31
    Section 11 – Prejudgment Interest on XL’s Defense Costs
    The trial court ruled on the issue of prejudgment interest as follows:
    E.       Thomson is entitled to an award of prejudgment interest
    The total costs here are fixed, paid, and undisputed. Thomson is
    entitled to prejudgment interest at the statutory rate of 8% from the date of
    payment.[ 32] In a contract action, such an award merely puts the party suffering
    a breach in as good a position as it would have been in had no breach occurred.
    Such an award is not “a matter of discretion.” E.g., Sand Creek Country Club
    v. CSO Architecture, 
    582 N.E.2d 872
    , 875-76 (Ind. Ct. App. 1991).
    XL’s XO App. at 69.
    Indiana Code Section 34-51-4-7 states, “The court may award prejudgment interest as
    part of a judgment.” In Bopp v. Brames, 
    713 N.E.2d 866
    (Ind. Ct. App. 1999), trans. denied
    (2000), this Court said,
    When reviewing a decision regarding an award of prejudgment interest,
    our standard of review is for an abuse of discretion, focusing on the trial
    court’s threshold determination as to whether the facts satisfy the test for
    making such an award. The decision to award prejudgment interest rests on a
    factual determination and this court may only consider the evidence most
    favorable to the judgment.
    31
    XL asserts that “Thomson has presented no reason why it should be entitled to recover costs
    incurred on behalf of TCETVT.” XL’s XO Br. at 31. This assertion ignores McNiel’s unchallenged opinion
    that “the defense actions here were all reasonable and necessary to protect all the Thomson entities.” XL’s XO
    App. at 66. In light of McNiel’s opinion, we also reject XL’s assertions regarding the alleged violation of
    Indiana’s anti-assignment rules as to insurance policies and coverage.
    32
    Indiana Code Section 24-4.6-1-102 states, “When the parties do not agree on the rate, interest on
    loans or forbearances of money, goods or things in action shall be at the rate of eight percent (8%) per annum
    until payment of judgment.”
    80
    We note that the crucial factor in determining whether damages in the
    form of prejudgment interest are allowable is whether the damages were
    ascertainable in accordance with fixed rules of evidence and accepted
    standards of valuation. An award of prejudgment interest is proper only where
    a simple mathematical computation is required. Damages that are the subject
    of a good faith dispute cannot allow for an award of prejudgment interest.
    
    Id. at 872
    (citations omitted); see also Indiana Indus., Inc. v. Wedge Prods., Inc., 
    430 N.E.2d 419
    , 427 (Ind. Ct. App. 1982) (“[P]re-judgment interest is proper where the trier of fact need
    not exercise its judgment to assess the amount of damages.”), trans. denied.
    XL argues,
    Based on these standards, it is obvious that an award of prejudgment
    interest was not proper. Thomson’s purported damages were not presently
    ascertainable. John Pierce’s affidavit creates multiple issues of fact which
    required the trier of fact to exercise its judgment to assess the proper amount of
    attorneys fees to which Thomson was entitled, if any.
    XL’s XO Br. at 40. As we determined above, the trial court properly concluded that
    Thomson’s defense costs were presumed to be reasonable and necessary and that Pierce’s
    affidavit did not rebut that presumption; in other words, the affidavit did not create a genuine
    issue of material fact. Therefore, we affirm the trial court’s award of prejudgment interest. 33
    33
    XL observes that on the same day the trial court issued the XL Defense Costs Order, it also issued
    an order denying Thomson’s motion to hold XL in contempt for failing to defend. In that order, the trial court
    stated that “Thomson still has to meet its burden of proving that the defense costs incurred were reasonable and
    necessary before any such costs may be recovered ….” XL’s XO App. at 87. XL argues, “If the amount,
    reasonableness and necessity of fees was in dispute and precluded a finding of contempt, it likewise precluded
    an award of pre-judgment interest.” XL’s XO Br. at 40. XL ignores that in the contempt order, the trial court
    specifically found that Thomson had “met its burden of proof on the reasonableness and necessity of defense
    costs” and denied Thomson’s contempt motion because XL “had the right to offer legal argument and expert
    witness testimony disputing that incurred expenses were reasonable and necessary to Thomson’s defense” and
    therefore did not willfully violate the Duty to Defend Order. XL’s XO App. at 87-88.
    81
    Conclusion
    To reiterate, we rule on the foregoing issues as follows:
    (1)    We deny XL’s request to dismiss this appeal.
    (2)    We affirm the Duty to Defend Order as finalized by the Allocation
    Order and the Defense Cost Orders.
    (3)    We affirm the trial court’s finding of two “occurrences” under the XL
    and Century policies.
    (4)    We affirm the trial court’s ruling that Thomson must satisfy the
    deductible for each occurrence for XL’s 2000, 2001, and 2002 primary
    policies.
    (5)    We reverse and remand with instructions to apply the self-insured
    retentions in XL’s 2003, 2004, and 2005 primary policies.
    (6)    We reverse the trial court’s ruling that the “personal injury” provisions
    in XL’s 2000 primary policy are inapplicable.
    (7)    We affirm the trial court’s application of a “continuous trigger” to XL’s
    policies but reverse and remand with instructions to use when the
    disease became reasonably capable of medical diagnosis as the trigger’s
    manifestation point.
    (8)    We reverse the trial court’s use of an “all sums” allocation method for
    XL’s and Century’s policies and remand with instructions to use an
    appropriate pro rata allocation method.
    (9)    We affirm the trial court’s ruling that TCETVT and Thomson SA are
    insureds under XL’s primary and umbrella policies.
    (10)   We affirm the trial court’s ruling regarding the reasonableness and
    necessity of Thomson’s defense costs as to XL.
    (11)   And finally, we affirm the trial court’s award of prejudgment interest
    on the defense costs as to XL.
    82
    Affirmed in part, reversed in part, and remanded.
    BRADFORD, J., concurs.
    VAIDIK, C.J., concurs in part and dissents in part with opinion.
    83
    IN THE
    COURT OF APPEALS OF INDIANA
    THOMSON INC. n/k/a
    TECHNICOLOR USA, INC.,                               )
    )
    Appellant-Plaintiff/Cross-Appellee             )
    )
    vs.                                     )       No. 49A05-1109-PL-470
    )
    INSURANCE COMPANY OF NORTH                           )
    AMERICA n/k/a CENTURY INDEMNITY                      )
    COMPANY, et al.,                                     )
    )
    Appellees-Defendants/Cross-Appellants,         )
    )
    And                                     )
    )
    XL INSURANCE AMERICA, INC. f/k/a                     )
    WINTERTHUR INTERNATIONAL                             )
    AMERICA INSURANCE COMPANY,                           )
    )
    Appellee-Defendant/Cross-Appellant,     )
    )
    And                                     )
    )
    TRAVELERS PROPERTY CASUALTY                          )
    CO., et al.,                                         )
    )
    Appellee-Defendant/Cross-Appellant.     )
    VAIDIK, Chief Judge, concurring in part and dissenting in part.
    I applaud the well-written and well-reasoned opinion of my colleagues, and I
    wholeheartedly concur in all but one respect. I respectfully disagree with my colleagues’
    84
    conclusion that XL/Century is only liable for the portion of damages that occurred in its
    policy periods. Rather, I agree with the trial court that the XL/ Century policies’ use of the
    phrase “those sums” instead of “all sums” does not constitute the clear proration language
    that our Supreme Court in Dana II Court noted that insurers needed to use to limit their
    liability to only those damages that occur in their policy period. I would affirm the trial
    court’s entry of summary judgment in favor of Thomson on this issue.
    Dana II involved insurance coverage for environmental-cleanup costs in nineteen
    states where contamination occurred over the course of several years. In Dana II, the
    policies provided that Allstate would pay “all sums which [Dana] shall be obligated to pay by
    reason of the liability . . . imposed upon [Dana] by law . . . for damages because of [personal
    injury or property damage] . . . caused by an OCCURRENCE. . . .” 
    759 N.E.2d 1049
    , 1057
    (Ind. 2001) (emphasis added). In determining coverage for liability from personal injury or
    property damage, “occurrence” was defined as “an accident, event or happening including
    continuous or repeated exposure to conditions which result[ed], during the policy period, in
    Personal Injury [or] Property Damage . . . neither expected nor intended from the standpoint
    of the Insured.” 
    Id. (emphasis added).
    Our Supreme Court noted that the “policies require[d]
    Allstate to indemnify Dana for all sums paid as a result of liability arising from any covered
    accident or event resulting in property damage or personal injury that occurr[ed] during the
    policy period.” 
    Id. Allstate, however,
    contended that it was responsible for only the portion
    of damages incurred in a particular policy period. 
    Id. It argued
    for a proportional allocation
    of damages among each triggered policy period. 
    Id. 85 The
    Supreme Court found, however, that there was no language in the coverage grant,
    including the definitions of “property damage,” “personal injury,” or “occurrence,” that
    limited Allstate’s responsibility to indemnification for liability derived solely for that portion
    of damages that took place within the policy period. 
    Id. at 1058.
    By the policy’s terms, once
    an accident or event resulting in Dana’s liability—an occurrence—took place within the
    policy period, Allstate must indemnify Dana for “all sums” Dana must pay as a result of that
    occurrence, subject to the policy limits. 
    Id. Accordingly, the
    Supreme Court held that
    regardless of whether the damaging effects of an occurrence continued beyond the end of the
    policy period, if coverage was triggered by an occurrence, it was triggered for “all sums”
    related to that occurrence. 
    Id. The policy
    at issue here provides:
    SECTION I – COVERAGES
    COVERAGE A BODILY INJURY AND PROPERTY DAMAGE
    LIABILITY
    1.     Insuring Agreement
    a. We will pay those sums that the insured becomes legally
    obligated to pay as damages because of “bodily injury” or
    “property damage” to which this insurance applies. . . .
    *****
    b. This insurance applies to “bodily injury” and “property
    damage” only if:
    (1) The “bodily injury” or “property damage” is caused
    by an “occurrence” that takes place in the “coverage
    territory”; and
    86
    (2) The “bodily injury” or “property damage” occurs
    during the policy period . . . .
    Thomson’s AO App. p. 345 (emphases added). The difference between this policy and the
    policy in Dana II is that this policy uses the phrase “those sums” instead of “all sums.”
    Contrary to the majority’s implication, both policies use the phrase “during the policy
    period.” See Dana 
    II, 759 N.E.2d at 1057
    (defining “occurrence” as “an accident, event or
    happening including continuous or repeated exposure to conditions which results, during the
    policy period, in Personal Injury [or] Property Damage . . . neither expected nor intended
    from the standpoint of the Insured.” (emphasis added)).
    I agree with the trial court that the use of the terms “those sums” instead of “all sums”
    does not change the result and that using “those” instead of “all” does not constitute the clear
    proration language that our Supreme Court in Dana II noted that insurers needed to use to
    support proration. Accordingly, if XL/Century wanted to require proration of payment to
    only that portion of bodily injury that took place in a policy period, it should have done so
    more directly by using careful language. Contrary to the majority, I do not think that simply
    trading “some” for “all” is “direct[] enough.” Slip op. at 60.
    Businesses make calculated decisions to purchase insurance to protect against future
    unknown risks. Insurers and insureds determine the amount of premiums they are willing to
    offer and pay based upon their assessment of risk. In other words, each calculate the risk and
    determine the cost based on the potential risks. Long-tail claims, where damages evolve over
    a long period of time, are one of those risks. There is no dispute that the policies in question
    here involve long-tail claims. The only question is whether XL/Century may prorate their
    87
    coverage to apply only to damages occurring in their policy periods.
    XL/Century, as the drafters of these policies, were decidedly in the driver’s seat when
    defining the risk that they were insuring with regard to these covered long-tail claims. If
    XL/Century meant to say that they were liable for those evolving damages incurred only
    during the period of their policies, they should have said so.
    As Thomson points out in its brief, it will be difficult for a court to determine exactly
    when and in what amount damages occurred. The majority answers this by giving the trial-
    court judge two main tests to decide upon and “broad discretion in selecting and applying an
    apportionment method.” 
    Id. at 64.
    This is unfair to the insurance companies, Thomson, and
    its employees. The risk that each of the parties calculated in offering and buying insurance is
    as uncertain post injury as ever. The majority opinion also has broad-range consequences for
    future long-tail coverage cases as the risk that each future insurer and insured calculate up
    front are now subject to change based upon the vicissitudes of 400 trial-court judges who
    have received little or no direction from us.
    For these reasons I agree with Dana II and determine that the language of these
    policies is not specific enough to demand proration of damages. If insurance companies
    want to limit only those evolving damages that occurred during the life of their policies, then
    they must be specific so as to give notice to the insureds of what may come.
    88