Frederick W. Preisler v. Kuettel's Septic Service, LLC ( 2014 )


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    2014 WI 135
    SUPREME COURT             OF   WISCONSIN
    CASE NO.:               2012AP2521
    COMPLETE TITLE:         Tina L. Preisler and Frederick W. Preisler,
    Plaintiffs-Co-Appellants-Petitioners,
    v.
    General Casualty Insurance Company, Regent
    Insurance
    Company, Hastings Mutual Insurance Company and
    Secura
    Insurance, a mutual company,
    Defendants-Respondents,
    Kuettel's Septic Service, LLC, 4-DK Farm, Duke
    Kuettel,
    Doug Kuettel, Dale Kuettel and Cheryl Kuettel,
    Defendants-Appellants-Petitioners.
    ------------------------------------------------
    Tina L. Preisler and Frederick W. Preisler,
    Plaintiffs-Appellants-Petitioners,
    v.
    Chartis Specialty Insurance Company f/k/a
    American
    International Specialty Lines Insurance Company,
    Defendant,
    Rural Mutual Insurance Company,
    Defendant-Respondent,
    Phil's Pumping and Fab, Inc.,
    Defendant-Co-Appellant-Petitioner.
    REVIEW OF A COURT OF APPEALS DECISION
    (Reported at 
    352 Wis. 2d 754
    , 843, N.W.2d 710)
    (Ct. App. 2014 – Unpublished)
    OPINION FILED:          December 30, 2014
    SUBMITTED ON BRIEFS:
    ORAL ARGUMENT:          September 12, 2014
    SOURCE OF APPEAL:
    COURT:               Circuit
    COUNTY:              Outagamie
    JUDGE:               Michael W. Gage
    JUSTICES:
    CONCURRED:           BRADLEY, J., concurs. (Opinion filed.)
    DISSENTED:           ABRAHAMSON, C.J., dissents. (Opinion filed.)
    NOT PARTICIPATING:
    ATTORNEYS:
    For   the     defendants-appellants-petitioners,        there     were
    briefs by Michael C. Menghini and Herrling Clark Law Firm Ltd.,
    Appleton, and oral argument by Michael C. Menghini.
    For   the     defendant-co-appellant-petitioner,        there     were
    briefs by Winston A. Ostrow, Jonathan T. Smies, and Godfrey &
    Kahn, S.C., Green Bay, and oral argument by Jonathan T. Smies.
    For   the    plaintiffs-co-appellants-petitioners,       there    were
    briefs by James A. Olson, P. Scott Hassett, Kathryn A. Harrell,
    Daniel S. Lenz, and Lawton & Cates, S.C., Madison, and oral
    argument by James A. Olson.
    For defendant-respondent Rural Insurance Company, there was
    a brief by Christine M. Rice, Matthew J. Van Keulen, and Simpson
    & Deardorff, S.C., Chicago. Oral argument by Christine M. Rice.
    For defendant-respondent Hastings Mutual Insurance Company,
    there was a brief by William R. Wick, Ryan R. Graff, Katelyn P.
    Sandfort,     and    Nash,   Spindler,    Grimstad   &   McCracken       LLP,
    Manitowoc, and oral argument by Ryan R. Graff.
    For   defendants-respondents      General   Casualty    Company       of
    Wisconsin and Regent Insurance Company, there was a brief and
    oral argument by Jeffrey A. Evans and von Briesen & Roper, S.C.,
    Milwaukee.
    For   defendant-respondent    Secura   Insurance,      there    was   a
    brief and oral argument by Todd Joseph Koback, John P. Runde,
    and Davczyk & Varline, LLC, Wausau.
    2
    3
    
    2014 WI 135
                                                              NOTICE
    This opinion is subject to further
    editing and modification.   The final
    version will appear in the bound
    volume of the official reports.
    No.   2012AP2521
    (L.C. No.   2010CV2601 & 2011CV706)
    STATE OF WISCONSIN                      :            IN SUPREME COURT
    Tina L. Preisler and Frederick W. Preisler,
    Plaintiffs-Co-Appellants-Petitioners,
    v.
    General Casualty Insurance Company, Regent
    Insurance Company, Hastings Mutual Insurance
    Company and Secura Insurance, a mutual company,
    Defendants-Respondents,
    Kuettel's Septic Service, LLC, 4-DK Farm, Duke
    Kuettel, Doug Kuettel, Dale Kuettel and Cheryl
    Kuettel,
    FILED
    Defendants-Appellants-Petitioners.
    DEC 30, 2014
    ----------------------------------------------
    Diane M. Fremgen
    Tina L. Preisler and Frederick W. Preisler,               Clerk of Supreme Court
    Plaintiffs-Appellants-Petitioners,
    v.
    Chartis Specialty Insurance Company f/k/a
    American International Specialty Lines
    Insurance Company,
    Defendant,
    Rural Mutual Insurance Company,
    Defendant-Respondent,
    Phil's Pumping and Fab, Inc.,
    Defendant-Co-Appellant-Petitioner.
    REVIEW of a decision of the Court of Appeals.                    Affirmed.
    ¶1        PATIENCE DRAKE ROGGENSACK, J.                We review a decision
    of the court of appeals1 affirming an order of the circuit court2
    that granted summary judgment to Rural Mutual Insurance Company,
    Regent      Insurance        Company    and       General    Casualty     Company   of
    Wisconsin.           Our     review    focuses       on     the   interpretation     of
    pollution exclusion clauses in commercial and contractor general
    liability insurance policies.
    ¶2        We conclude that a reasonable insured would understand
    that decomposing septage is a "contaminant" and therefore, a
    "pollutant" as defined in the policies when it has decomposed
    and    seeps      into   a   water    supply.       Accordingly,     we   affirm    the
    decision of the court of appeals, which granted summary judgment
    upon       its    conclusion     that     the      pollution      exclusion    clause
    precluded coverage for harm resulting from the Preislers' water
    supply's contamination.
    1
    Preisler v. Kuettel's Septic Serv., LLC, No. 2012AP2521,
    unpublished slip op. (Ct. App. Jan. 14, 2014).
    2
    The        Honorable     Michael       W.    Gage     of   Outagamie    County
    presided.
    2
    No.     2012AP2521
    ¶3         We       also    conclude    that          the     petitioners       failed    to
    petition this court for review of the court of appeals dismissal
    of their claims against Hastings Mutual Insurance Company and
    Secura Insurance Company on alternative grounds.                                 We decline to
    consider issues not raised in petitions for review.                                      State v.
    Bodoh, 
    226 Wis. 2d 718
    , 737, 
    595 N.W.2d 330
    (1999); Wis. Stat.
    § 809.62         (2011-12).3            Accordingly,           those    dismissals       are    not
    before us.
    I.    BACKGROUND
    ¶4         This      review    involves          an   insurance        coverage    dispute
    concerning             a    pollution     exclusion           clause     commonly       found    in
    commercial general liability (CGL) policies.                              The historic facts
    are not in dispute.
    ¶5         Fred and Tina Preisler operate a dairy farm and raise
    cattle.            A       well    drilled     in       1972       supplied    water     for    the
    Preislers' household and farm uses until 2008.
    ¶6         Duke, Doug, Dale, and Cheryl Kuettel live on a farm
    across the road from the Preislers' farm.                               From that property,
    the Kuettels run a farming operation, 4-DK Farm, and a septic
    pumping          service,         Kuettel's    Septic          Service,       LLC.      Kuettel's
    Septic hauls, stores, and disposes of the waste it pumps from
    customers' septic tanks.                     Kuettel's Septic also collects waste
    from grease traps, floor pits, and car washes, which it combines
    with       the    human       waste     from   septic          tanks.         Kuettel's    Septic
    3
    All subsequent references to the Wisconsin Statutes are to
    the 2011-12 version unless otherwise indicated.
    3
    No.    2012AP2521
    periodically hired Phil's Pumping and Fab, Inc. to dispose of
    septage.4
    ¶7     Septage is primarily composed of human urine and fecal
    material,   as   well   as   other   materials   disposed     of    in   septic
    tanks, grease interceptors and portable restrooms.                   See Wis.
    Admin.    Code   § NR   113.03(55)   (Feb.    2014)    (defining    septage).
    Septage contains nitrogen, and when septage is introduced into
    soil, it decomposes.         During that biological process nitrates
    are formed.       Mike O'Leary et al.,        Understanding Nitrogen in
    Soils,             Univ.             of               Minn.              (2002)
    http://www.extension.umn.edu/agriculture/nutrient-
    management/nitrogen/understanding-nitrogen-in-soils/.
    ¶8     When nitrates are created in excess of what plants are
    able to use, nitrates can leach into water supplies.                 
    Id. The presence
    of nitrates in water supplies is a concern for human
    health as it may cause health problems in infants and may be
    implicated as a risk factor associated with chronic health and
    reproductive     problems.     Nonpoint      Source    Pollution    Abatement
    Program Redesign, Nitrate in Groundwater - A Continuing Issue
    for Wisconsin Citizens 3 (1999).             Additionally, high nitrate
    4
    We will subsequently refer to Fred and Tina Preisler as
    "the Preislers." We will refer to Kuettel's Septic, 4-DK Farm,
    the individual Kuettels, and Phil's Pumping collectively as "the
    Kuettels."   We will refer to the insurance companies either
    collectively as "the insurers" or individually as "Regent" or
    "Rural."
    4
    No.        2012AP2521
    levels may cause poor appetite or acute nitrogen poisoning in
    livestock.      
    Id. ¶9 Fred
        Preisler    and     Duke      Kuettel       discussed       applying
    septage on the Preislers' farm as fertilizer.                        Kuettel's Septic
    received      permission    from     the      Wisconsin      Department       of    Natural
    Resources (DNR) to apply it.                  Kuettel's Septic applied septage
    to the Preislers' farm fields for several years.
    ¶10    In 2008, the Preislers experienced problems with their
    well water.      The Preislers' cattle that drank the water began to
    die at an uncharacteristic rate.                   The Preislers further noted a
    decrease in milk production.                  August 2008 testing showed the
    Preislers'     well     water     contained        elevated    levels    of    nitrates,
    which are produced as septage decomposes.                          The cattle deaths
    subsided later in 2008 after the Preislers drilled a new well.
    ¶11    The Preislers sued Kuettel's Septic in 2010 and Phil's
    Pumping in 2011.         The cases were consolidated and 4-DK Farm and
    the    individual       Kuettels    were      added.         The    Preislers       alleged
    negligence      in     storing    and    in       applying    septage    resulting        in
    nuisance and trespass.              They also alleged the Kuettels were
    strictly liable for engaging in an abnormally dangerous activity
    and that Duke Kuettel violated Wis. Stat. § 100.18 by promising
    compliance with DNR regulations, failing to follow through, and
    falsifying DNR reports.
    ¶12    The Preislers added the parties' insurers to the suit.
    Hastings insured Kuettel's Septic under a CGL policy between
    1999    and    2005,    after     which    Regent      insured       Kuettel's       Septic
    (General Casualty Insurance Company did not insure any party,
    5
    No.     2012AP2521
    but is affiliated with Regent).              Hastings also insured 4-DK Farm
    under a CGL policy until 2007, after which Secura insured 4-DK
    Farms.      Secura also provided homeowners insurance to individual
    Kuettels.5       Rural    insured    Phil's    Pumping    under    a     CGL   policy
    between 2002 and 2013.
    ¶13    The Rural and Regent policies include similarly worded
    pollution exclusion clauses.           They exclude harm "arising out of
    the   actual,     alleged,     or     threatened        discharge,       dispersal,
    seepage, migration, release or escape of 'pollutants'. . . ."
    The Rural and Regent policies also define "pollutants" similarly
    as:       "any   solid,    liquid,     gaseous     or    thermal       irritant   or
    contaminant,      including     smoke,        vapor,    soot,     fumes,       acids,
    alkalis, chemicals and waste.                Waste includes materials to be
    recycled, reconditioned or reclaimed."
    5
    The homeowners policies are not at issue in this appeal.
    They do not include pollution exclusion clauses, and the circuit
    court determined another exclusion applied. The parties do not
    challenge this determination, and we do not address it.      See
    Waushara Cnty. v. Graf, 
    166 Wis. 2d 442
    , 451, 
    480 N.W.2d 16
    (1992)   (appellate  courts   need  not   consider  issues   not
    specifically raised on appeal).
    6
    No.   2012AP2521
    ¶14     The    insurers   moved        for   summary       and     declaratory
    judgment.6    The circuit court agreed that the pollution exclusion
    clause applies to preclude coverage for alleged losses arising
    out of storage of septage and application of septage to farm
    fields that is alleged to have caused contamination of the water
    supply resulting in harm to the Preislers.                     The Preislers and
    Kuettels     appealed,   arguing      septage     is    not    a    pollutant     and
    therefore, the exclusion does not preclude coverage.                        The court
    of appeals affirmed.
    ¶15     On    April 17,   2014    we     granted    the       Preislers'     and
    Kuettels' petitions for review.             On May 21, 2014, Secura filed a
    motion for summary disposition in this court on the alternative
    basis of a limited liability endorsement.                     Initially, we held
    the motion in abeyance.        We need not address Secura's motion as
    Secura's liability is not before us as we explain below.
    II.    DISCUSSION
    A.   Standard of Review
    ¶16     The Preislers and Kuettels ask the court to review the
    applicability of the pollution exclusion clause, upon which the
    6
    Rural and Regent moved for summary judgment. Hastings and
    Secura moved for summary and declaratory judgment. All insurers
    argued they had no duty to defend or indemnify the various
    insureds.    The policies we address are Regent's Contractors
    General Liability Coverage policy for Kuettel's Septic, LLC and
    Rural's Commercial General Liability Coverage policy for Phil's
    Pumping and Fab, Inc. We do not discuss the pollution exclusion
    clauses in Hastings' and Secura's policies because the parties
    did not petition for review of the court of appeals' dismissal
    of claims against Hastings and Secura, on alternative grounds.
    7
    No.    2012AP2521
    circuit court and the court of appeals relied to grant summary
    judgment dismissing Rural and Regent from this lawsuit.                           When we
    review      summary     judgment,     we         independently      apply       the   same
    methodology as the circuit court and the court of appeals.                             The
    standards     set     forth   in    Wis.   Stat.         § 802.08   are    our    guides.
    Hirschhorn v. Auto-Owners Ins. Co., 
    2012 WI 20
    , ¶20, 
    338 Wis. 2d 761
    , 
    809 N.W.2d 529
    (reviewing summary judgment denying coverage
    for property harm from accumulation of bat guano); Siebert v.
    Wis. Am. Mut. Ins. Co., 
    2011 WI 35
    , ¶27, 
    333 Wis. 2d 546
    , 
    797 N.W.2d 484
       (reviewing       summary       judgment       denying    coverage     in
    negligent entrustment claim); Peace v. Nw. Nat'l Ins. Co., 
    228 Wis. 2d 106
    , 119-20, 
    596 N.W.2d 429
    (1999) (reviewing summary
    judgment denying coverage for claims arising from ingestion of
    lead); Donaldson v. Urban Land Interests, Inc., 
    211 Wis. 2d 224
    ,
    229-30,     
    564 N.W.2d 728
       (1997)        (reviewing       summary      judgment
    denying coverage for injuries resulting from buildup of carbon
    dioxide).        Summary judgment "shall be rendered if the pleadings,
    depositions, answers to interrogatories, and admissions on file,
    together with the affidavits, if any, show that there is no
    genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party
    is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law."                      § 802.08(2).
    ¶17    The parties do not dispute the material facts giving
    rise to the Preislers' loss.7              Rather, the sole issue is whether
    the   pollution        exclusion     clause         in    the    insurance       policies
    7
    See Preisler, No. 2012AP2521, unpublished slip op., ¶12.
    8
    No.    2012AP2521
    excludes coverage for harm the Preislers allege they sustained
    due    to    contamination          of    their    water        supply    by     decomposing
    septage.        The     interpretation            of    an     insurance       policy      is    a
    question of law that we review independently.                                  Siebert, 
    333 Wis. 2d 546
    , ¶28.
    B.    Policy Interpretation
    ¶18     This    case      requires     us       to     interpret       the   pollution
    exclusion      clause       as     it    applies       to    decomposing       septage      that
    entered a water supply.                   We must determine whether it is a
    pollutant within the meaning of the pollution exclusion clause
    of    the    insurance       policies.         The          primary    task    in    contract
    interpretation         is    to     determine      and        carry    out    the    parties'
    intentions.         Hirschhorn, 
    338 Wis. 2d 761
    , ¶22; Am. Family Mut.
    Ins. Co. v. Am. Girl, Inc., 
    2004 WI 2
    , ¶23, 
    268 Wis. 2d 16
    , 
    673 N.W.2d 65
    .          We interpret insurance policy language according to
    its plain and ordinary meaning as understood by a reasonable
    insured.       Hirschhorn, 
    338 Wis. 2d 761
    , ¶22; 
    Peace, 228 Wis. 2d at 120-21
    .
    ¶19     Terms, words, or phrases in an insurance policy are
    ambiguous rather than plain if they are "fairly susceptible to
    more    than    one     reasonable         interpretation."               Hirschhorn,           
    338 Wis. 2d 761
    , ¶23; accord 
    Peace, 228 Wis. 2d at 121
    .                                     Policy
    language       is     not     ambiguous      merely          because      more      than    one
    dictionary definition exists or the parties disagree about its
    meaning.       Hirschhorn, 
    338 Wis. 2d 761
    , ¶23; 
    Peace, 228 Wis. 2d at 136
    .      Policy language also is not ambiguous because different
    9
    No.    2012AP2521
    courts    have     come      to    differing         interpretations.                
    Peace, 228 Wis. 2d at 136
    .
    ¶20   Policy language is ambiguous when a reasonable insured
    would read the policy to provide coverage and the language is
    susceptible to more than one reasonable interpretation.                                        See
    
    Donaldson, 211 Wis. 2d at 235
    .                       If coverage is ambiguous, the
    court's      construction            is     constrained           and     ambiguities          are
    construed       against        the    insurer         and    in    favor        of    coverage.
    Hirschhorn, 
    338 Wis. 2d 761
    , ¶23; 
    Peace, 228 Wis. 2d at 121
    ;
    
    Donaldson, 211 Wis. 2d at 230
    .
    1.      Initial grant of coverage
    ¶21   The      insurers,       in    disputing        the       policies'       grant   of
    coverage to the Kuettels, are disputing their duties to defend
    and indemnify.          We determine an insurer's duty to defend "by
    comparing the allegations of the complaint to the terms of the
    insurance policy."             Estate of Sustache v. Am. Family Mut. Ins.
    Co.,     
    2008 WI 87
    ,     ¶20,       
    311 Wis. 2d 548
    ,      
    751 N.W.2d 845
    .
    "[A]llegations         contained           within      the     four      corners        of     the
    complaint" trigger the duty to defend.                            
    Id. We focus
    on the
    nature, rather than the merits, of the claim.                             
    Id. The duty
    to
    defend is broader than the duty to indemnify, "insofar as the
    former    implicates         arguable,       as      opposed      to    actual,       coverage."
    
    Id. We construe
    allegations in the complaint liberally and
    assume all reasonable inferences.                       
    Id., ¶21. The
    Preislers'
    complaint includes allegations of negligent septage application
    and storage by the Kuettels.
    10
    No.     2012AP2521
    ¶22      Our procedure for determining whether coverage exists
    under     an   insurance     policy      follows       three    steps.         First,     we
    examine the facts of the insured's claim to decide whether the
    policy makes an initial grant of coverage for the claim set out
    in the complaint.          Am. Girl, 
    268 Wis. 2d 16
    , ¶24.                 The analysis
    ends there if the policy clearly does not cover the claim.                               
    Id. However, if
      the   claim    set   out    in     the   complaint         triggers    a
    potential grant of coverage, we secondly examine whether any of
    the policy's exclusions preclude coverage for that claim.                                
    Id. Third, if
    an exclusion precludes coverage, we analyze exceptions
    to the exclusion to determine whether any exception reinstates
    coverage.       
    Id. ¶23 The
    parties did not argue the Preislers' claims fall
    outside the policies' grant of coverage.                       The court of appeals
    assumed        without     deciding        that        the     policies        at   issue
    affirmatively grant coverage.8             However, we nevertheless consider
    whether there is a potential grant of coverage because it aids
    in our evaluation of the historic facts in the context of the
    pollution exclusion.
    ¶24      Coverage is triggered by an occurrence.                    Regent's and
    Rural's policies provide that they "appl[y] to 'bodily injury'
    and   'property       damage'     only   if:      (1)    The    'bodily        injury'    or
    'property       damage'    is     caused   by     an    occurrence."            (Emphasis
    added.)             The   policies       define        "occurrence"       identically:
    8
    Preisler, No. 2012AP2521, unpublished slip op., ¶15.
    11
    No.    2012AP2521
    "'[o]ccurrence'       means     an     accident,    including         continuous        or
    repeated      exposure    to    substantially      the    same    general      harmful
    conditions."         We   interpret      policy    language      according        to   its
    plain   and     ordinary       meaning    as    understood       by    a    reasonable
    insured.      Hirschhorn, 
    338 Wis. 2d 761
    , ¶22; 
    Peace, 228 Wis. 2d at 120-21
    .
    ¶25     We turn to Couch on Insurance for its description of
    "occurrence" in pollution exclusion cases:
    Due to the fact that most policies define an
    "occurrence" to mean an "accident," the pollution
    coverage issue often turns upon the intent of the
    insured.   In making this determination, jurisdictions
    have focused on different aspects of the polluting
    process to assess the mindset of the insured.     Most
    courts have focused on the damage caused by the
    pollution and have concluded that there is an
    occurrence when the insured did not expect or intend
    the resultant damage.
    9 Steven Plitt et al., Couch on Insurance § 127.4 (2008).
    ¶26     We have interpreted whether certain circumstances fall
    within policy definitions of "occurrence."                  In American Girl, we
    determined that soil settlement that occurred because of faulty
    site-preparation advice of a soil engineer was an "occurrence."
    Am.   Girl,    
    268 Wis. 2d 16
    ,     ¶38.     The    policy's     definition        of
    "occurrence" was the same as here, and we focused on defining
    "accident."      
    Id., ¶37. We
    looked to a dictionary definition:
    "'The   word    "accident,"      in    accident    policies,      means      an    event
    which takes place without one's foresight or expectation.                               A
    result, though unexpected, is not an accident; the means or
    cause must be accidental.'"              
    Id. (quoting Black's
    Law Dictionary
    12
    No.       2012AP2521
    15    (7th    ed.     1999)).         We   considered         two    causes       of    property
    damage,       both    the    inadequate         site-preparation           advice       and    the
    actual settling of the soil, and found neither was intended,
    anticipated, or expected.                   
    Id., ¶38. We
    therefore held the
    accidental      circumstances          underlying          the     claim    constituted         an
    "occurrence" within the policy's definition.                         
    Id. ¶27 Interpreting
    American Girl, the court of appeals has
    held accidental soil contamination was an "occurrence," where
    the policy provided no definition.                        United Coop. v. Frontier FS
    Coop., 
    2007 WI App 197
    , ¶¶12, 15, 
    304 Wis. 2d 750
    , 
    738 N.W.2d 578
    .     The court acknowledged that American Girl required focus
    on the "event or series of events that allegedly caused the
    alleged bodily injury or property damage."                            
    Id., ¶16. United
    Coop. lacked any specific facts on how the soil contamination
    occurred, but nevertheless concluded that the contamination was
    an     "occurrence"           because        it      caused        property       damage        to
    groundwater.         
    Id., ¶¶20, 35.
    ¶28     As with American Girl and United Coop., the facts of
    this    case,    if     proved,       present        an   "occurrence"       triggering         an
    initial grant of coverage.                 Here, the "accident" was the seepage
    of     decomposing          septage     into      the      Preislers'       water        supply.
    Seepage into the water supply was not "intended, anticipated, or
    expected."            Am.    Girl,     
    268 Wis. 2d 16
    ,    ¶38.         Seepage       of
    decomposing septage into the water supply is an occurrence, as
    was     the     settling        soil       in     American         Girl     and        the    soil
    contamination in United Coop.                     Id.; United Coop., 
    304 Wis. 2d 750
    ,    ¶20.         Here,    the    resulting        harm    is    water    with       elevated
    13
    No.     2012AP2521
    nitrate levels.       See United Coop., 
    304 Wis. 2d 750
    , ¶35 (stating
    an occurrence caused property damage to groundwater).
    2.   Pollution exclusion
    ¶29   Next,    we   examine     whether    either      of    the   policies'
    exclusions preclude coverage at the time of the occurrence.                       See
    Am. Girl, 
    268 Wis. 2d 16
    , ¶24.             Typically, to resolve whether a
    pollution     exclusion     applies,     we    first    determine     whether     the
    substance in question falls unambiguously within the policy's
    definition    of     pollutants.       Hirschhorn,      
    338 Wis. 2d 761
    ,   ¶25
    (determining whether bat guano is unambiguously a pollutant);
    
    Peace, 228 Wis. 2d at 119
    (determining whether lead present in
    paint is unambiguously a pollutant); 
    Donaldson, 211 Wis. 2d at 229
    (determining whether exhaled carbon dioxide is unambiguously
    a pollutant).        Then, if the substance fits within the policy's
    definition of pollutants, we determine whether the alleged loss
    resulted     from    the   "discharge,     dispersal,        seepage,     migration,
    release or escape" of the substance under the plain terms of the
    policy's pollution exclusion clause.                   Hirschhorn, 
    338 Wis. 2d 761
    , ¶25; 
    Peace, 228 Wis. 2d at 119
    ; 
    Donaldson, 211 Wis. 2d at 229
    .
    ¶30   However, the parties do not appeal the circuit court's
    ruling   that   the    Preislers'      alleged    damage      resulted     from   the
    "discharge, dispersal, seepage, migration, release or escape of"
    decomposing     septage     within   the      meaning   of    the   terms    in   the
    14
    No.   2012AP2521
    pollution exclusion clause.9         Therefore, we are presented with
    the sole inquiry of whether, at the time of the occurrence that
    triggered   coverage,      the   decomposing    septage    is    a    pollutant
    within the policies' definition.
    a.   limited inquiry
    ¶31     We need to determine only whether decomposing septage
    is a pollutant as it seeped into the Preislers' water supply.
    There is no occurrence until that seepage into the water supply
    takes place.     Our approach of construing whether a substance is
    a pollutant at the point it harms the interests of another is
    consistent with our previous pollution exclusion decisions.                  As
    we explain below, those decisions focused on the event giving
    rise to the alleged harm at issue, rather than on an initial
    event that may have involved a beneficial use of the substance.
    
    Peace, 228 Wis. 2d at 126
    ; U.S. Fire Ins. Co. v. Ace Baking Co.,
    
    164 Wis. 2d 499
    , 501, 
    476 N.W.2d 280
    (Ct. App. 1991).
    ¶32     Peace and Ace Baking are particularly instructive.               In
    Peace,   harm   resulted    from   the    release   of   lead   paint   chips,
    flakes, and dust into a home painted with lead paint.                    
    Peace, 228 Wis. 2d at 111
    .        We focused not on lead intentionally used
    in paint for a beneficial purpose, but rather on release of lead
    from the paint on the walls into the air or onto the floor as
    the substance that gave rise to an occurrence under the language
    9
    See Preisler, No. 2012AP2521, unpublished slip op., ¶39
    (failing to challenge the circuit court's conclusion at the
    court of appeals).
    15
    No.    2012AP2521
    of the policy.        See 
    id. at 126
    ("Conceptually, we view the lead
    not   as    contaminating       the    paint      but   as    giving    the     paint    the
    potential to contaminate air, water, and the human body when it
    disperses.").       Therefore, although lead had a beneficial use in
    the paint when it was applied to the walls, our evaluation of
    whether lead was a pollutant was made when harm occurred.
    ¶33    In Ace Baking, fabric softener and ice cream cones
    were stored in the same warehouse, and a fragrance additive to
    the fabric softener spread to the ice cream cones, making them
    taste like soap.         Ace 
    Baking, 164 Wis. 2d at 500
    .                    The court of
    appeals determined that the fragrance in the fabric softener
    became a pollutant when it spread to the ice cream cones stored
    in the same warehouse, even though the court would not have
    considered     it   a    pollutant         if    it   had    stayed    in     the     fabric
    softener.     
    Id. at 505.
              The court said, "it is a rare substance
    indeed that is always a pollutant; the most noxious of materials
    have their appropriate and non-polluting uses."                        
    Id. Peace and
    Ace Baking support our conclusion that we apply the definition
    of    pollutant     at    the       time    of    the       occurrence,       i.e.,     when
    decomposing     septage        entered     Preislers'        well,    rather     than    the
    allegedly negligent application of septage to fields.
    b.    reasonable insured
    ¶34    The    pollution         exclusion         clause    provides,         "[t]his
    insurance does not apply to:                . . . 'Bodily injury' or 'property
    damage'     arising      out    of    the       actual,      alleged    or      threatened
    discharge, dispersal, seepage, migration, release or escape of
    'pollutants'."        Each policy defines "pollutants" as "any solid,
    16
    No.     2012AP2521
    liquid, gaseous or thermal irritant or contaminant, including
    smoke, vapor, soot, fumes, acids, alkalis, chemicals and waste.
    Waste    includes          materials         to     be       recycled,    reconditioned          or
    reclaimed."         The policy does not further define contaminant.
    ¶35       We construe these terms according to their plain and
    ordinary meanings as understood by a reasonable person in the
    position of the insured.                      Hirschhorn, 
    338 Wis. 2d 761
    ,                     ¶22;
    
    Peace, 228 Wis. 2d at 120-21
    .                      Our decisions in Donaldson, Peace
    and Hirschhorn are instructive in determining the meaning of
    contaminant and therefore, pollutant.                          Furthermore, the limiting
    principles         applied          in     Donaldson          and     Langone     aid     us     in
    determining a reasonable insured's understanding of the meaning
    of pollutant and contaminant.                       
    Donaldson, 211 Wis. 2d at 232
    ;
    Langone v. Am. Family Mut. Ins. Co., 
    2007 WI App 121
    , ¶22, 
    300 Wis. 2d 742
    , 
    731 N.W.2d 334
    .
    ¶36       First,           in    Donaldson,         we    held     that     the     pollution
    exclusion clause did not preclude coverage for personal injury
    claims stemming from inadequate ventilation of exhaled carbon
    dioxide in an office building.                          
    Donaldson, 211 Wis. 2d at 235
    .
    We concluded a reasonable insured would not understand exhaled
    carbon     dioxide         to       fall    within       the    policy's        definition      of
    pollutants.              
    Id. at 231-32.
            We    recognized       the   pollutant
    definition         was    broad:            "'irritant'         and    'contaminant,'          when
    viewed   in    isolation,             are    virtually         boundless,       for     there   is
    virtually no substance or chemical in existence that would not
    irritate      or    damage          some    person       or    property."         
    Id. at 232
    (quoting Pipefitters Welfare Educ. Fund v. Westchester Fire Ins.
    17
    No.    2012AP2521
    Co., 
    976 F.2d 1037
    (7th Cir. 1992)).                        Therefore, we warned that
    "[t]he       reach     of   the      pollution         exclusion       clause       must    be
    circumscribed by reasonableness, lest the contractual promise of
    coverage      be     reduced    to    a   dead     letter."          
    Id. at 233.
         We
    concluded      that      the     plaintiffs'           injuries      resulted       from    an
    everyday activity "gone slightly, but not surprisingly, awry."
    
    Id. (quoting Pipefitters,
    976 F.2d at 1043-44).                            We explained it
    was    significant       that     exhaled    carbon          dioxide    is    "universally
    present      and     generally    harmless        in    all    but     the   most     unusual
    instances" and that exhaled carbon dioxide is a necessary and
    natural part of life.                
    Id. at 234.
               Accordingly, we held that
    "the     pollution      exclusion         clause       is    ambiguous       because       [the
    insured] could reasonably expect coverage on the facts of this
    case."    
    Id. at 233.
    ¶37    Two years later, in Peace, we held that a pollution
    exclusion clause excluded coverage for personal injury claims
    arising out of a minor's ingestion of lead-based paint chips,
    flakes, and dust present in the insured's apartment.                               
    Peace, 228 Wis. 2d at 110-11
    .             We concluded once the previously contained
    pollutant, lead, "begins to disperse, discharge, or escape from
    the containment of the painted surface, it falls within the
    plain language of the pollution exclusion clause."                           
    Id. at 130.
    ¶38    Before coming to our conclusion, we consulted a non-
    legal dictionary to define contaminant and irritant.                                  
    Id. at 122.
         We applied these common definitions to the plaintiff's
    claims and concluded there was "little doubt that lead derived
    from lead paint chips, flakes, or dust is an irritant or serious
    18
    No.     2012AP2521
    contaminant."        
    Id. at 125.
               We noted the physical consequences
    of lead paint used in a home were well-documented.                               
    Id. at 123-
    24.     "Lead poisoning from paint at residential properties is
    generally     caused      by   the     inhalation         of    lead-contaminated             dust
    particles     or    toxic       lead     fumes    through            respiration        or    the
    ingestion of lead-based paint chips by mouth.                             The consequences
    can    be    disastrous        for     children."              
    Id. We distinguished
    Donaldson because lead paint chips, flakes and dust "are widely,
    if not universally, understood to be dangerous," while carbon
    dioxide is not.          
    Id. at 137.
           Therefore, "[r]easonable owners of
    rental property[, the insureds,] understand their obligation to
    deal with the problem of lead paint."                     
    Id. at 138.
    ¶39   Most    recently,         in    Hirschhorn,             we   held       bat     guano
    unambiguously falls within the term, "pollutants," as defined by
    the insurance policy because it constituted an irritant and a
    contaminant.        Hirschhorn, 
    338 Wis. 2d 761
    , ¶¶33-34.                         We referred
    both    to    dictionary        definitions          of        the    terms      and       health
    consequences of human proximity to bat guano.                                  
    Id., ¶33. We
    concluded a reasonable insured would consider bat guano to be
    waste, referencing the dictionary definition of the term.                                    
    Id., ¶34. ¶40
      In the instant case, the issue is whether a reasonable
    insured would consider decomposing septage to be a pollutant
    when it seeps into a water supply.                    Again, we interpret policy
    language      according        to    its     plain    and        ordinary        meaning       as
    understood     by    a    reasonable        insured.            Id.,      ¶22;    
    Peace, 228 Wis. 2d at 120-21
    .             When determining the ordinary meaning of
    19
    No.    2012AP2521
    words not defined in an insurance policy, it is appropriate to
    look to the definitions in a non-legal dictionary.                           Weimer v.
    Country Mut. Ins. Co., 
    216 Wis. 2d 705
    , 723, 
    575 N.W.2d 466
    (1998); Just v. Land Reclamation, Ltd., 
    155 Wis. 2d 737
    , 745,
    
    456 N.W.2d 570
    (1990).
    ¶41    As explained above, we accepted a non-legal dictionary
    definition of contaminant in 
    Peace, 228 Wis. 2d at 122
    .                                 We
    determined      the    ordinary       meaning     of    contaminant     is    one     that
    contaminates,         and   contaminate         means    "'[t]o   make       impure     or
    unclean by contact or mixture.'"                  
    Id. at 122
    (quoting American
    Heritage Dictionary of the English Language 406 (3d ed. 1992)
    [hereinafter American Heritage Dictionary]).
    ¶42    In determining whether a substance is a contaminant
    and therefore a pollutant, the focus is on the event causing
    harm because that is the occurrence triggering coverage.                         
    Id. at 126.
         Here,     the     event     causing    harm    is    decomposing      septage
    seeping      into   the     water   supply.        A    reasonable     insured      would
    understand decomposing septage to be a contaminant when it seeps
    into a water supply.
    ¶43    Handling, storing, and applying septage are activities
    regulated by both the DNR and the United States Environmental
    Protection      Agency.         See     generally       40    C.F.R.   § 503     (2013)
    (federal regulation of domestic septage); Wis. Admin. Code §§ NR
    113-114 (Feb. 2014) (state regulation of septage).                       Publications
    produced to guide septage haulers and storers recognize septage
    may be harmful and have the potential to affect health of humans
    and livestock.         EPA, A Plain English Guide to the EPA Part 503
    20
    No.     2012AP2521
    Biosolids             Rule         2            (1994),            available                 at
    http://water.epa.gov/scitech/wastetech/biosolids/503pe_index.cfm
    ; Wis. DNR, Septage Operator Servicing Handbook and Study Guide
    8-9                     (2013),                        available                             at
    http://dnr.wi.gov/regulations/opcert/documents/septagestudyguide
    .pdf [hereinafter "WDNR Septage Handbook"].                            The government's
    regulation      of     septage     contributes         to     reasonable           insureds'
    awareness of the health risks of septage hauling, storing, and
    application.          See    
    Peace, 228 Wis. 2d at 150
          (Bradley,       J.,
    concurring)     (noting        regulatory       restriction        of       lead    use     and
    pollutant status despite intentional application).
    ¶44     Limiting principles that consider the nature of the
    substance ensure that our construction of a pollution exclusion
    clause   is    consistent       with   the      understanding          of    a    reasonable
    insured.      
    Donaldson, 211 Wis. 2d at 232
    (citing 
    Pipefitters, 976 F.2d at 1043
    ); Langone, 
    300 Wis. 2d 742
    , ¶22.                          These principles
    apply to aid in the overarching reasonable insured analysis.
    See   Hirschhorn,        
    338 Wis. 2d 761
    ,      ¶30    (tying        the     limiting
    principle back to a reasonable insured's understanding); 
    Peace, 228 Wis. 2d at 136
    -38 (addressing limiting principle within the
    understanding of a reasonable insured); 
    Donaldson, 211 Wis. 2d at 233-34
       (placing        limiting     principles           in    context        of    a
    reasonable      insured);         Langone,       
    300 Wis. 2d 742
    ,     ¶¶17-18
    (discussing         limiting    principle       in     context     of       a      reasonable
    insured).
    ¶45     One     such     limiting    principle         applies        whenever        the
    substance is "universally present and generally harmless in all
    21
    No.       2012AP2521
    but the most unusual instances."                  
    Donaldson, 211 Wis. 2d at 234
    .
    In those instances, we are hesitant to conclude that such a
    substance    is     a    pollutant.       
    Id. Both Donaldson
            and    Langone
    considered the gasses at issue to be "universally present and
    generally harmless in all but the most unusual instances."                                Id.;
    see also Langone, 
    300 Wis. 2d 742
    , ¶19 ("Like carbon dioxide,
    carbon monoxide is colorless, odorless, and present in the air
    around us.").
    ¶46     Individual          components         of     septage        are        common.10
    Septage   is    a      waste    product   with      use    as   a      farm    fertilizer.
    Application       of     septage     comes    with      risks     to    water       supplies
    because decomposing septage can release high levels of nitrates,
    which can be dangerous to humans and cattle if they reach water
    supplies.         WDNR     Septage    Handbook       at    8-9.         Septage      is    not
    generally harmless nor is it the type of pervasive substance
    considered in Donaldson and Langone.                    See 
    Donaldson, 211 Wis. 2d at 234
    ; Langone, 
    300 Wis. 2d 742
    , ¶19.
    ¶47     A     second       limiting   principle        is     that    if     the      harm
    results     from        "everyday    activities         gone      slightly,         but   not
    surprisingly, awry," a reasonable insured would not necessarily
    understand the substance to be a pollutant.                            Pipefitters, 976
    10
    In Guenther v. City of Onalaska, 
    223 Wis. 2d 206
    , 
    588 N.W.2d 375
    (Ct. App. 1998), the court of appeals held the
    pollution exclusion clause did not apply to the occurrence of a
    domestic   sewer   backup.     
    Id. at 208.
        Guenther   is
    distinguishable, as there the court concluded the policy covered
    damage resulting from the liquid, non-toxic nature of the sewage
    backup. 
    Id. 22 No.
       2012AP2521
    F.2d at 1043-44; accord 
    Peace, 228 Wis. 2d at 158
    ; 
    Donaldson, 211 Wis. 2d at 233
    .               Exposure of decomposing septage to the
    Preislers'        water     supply      is    not    "an   everyday          activity       'gone
    slightly,       but   not    surprisingly,           awry.'"         See     
    Donaldson, 211 Wis. 2d at 233
        (quoting     
    Pipefitters, 976 F.2d at 1043-44
    );
    Langone, 
    300 Wis. 2d 742
    , ¶19.
    ¶48     To explain further, in Langone, a gas-burning boiler
    caused    an      excess    of   carbon       monoxide     and    caused       the    harm    at
    issue.       Langone, 
    300 Wis. 2d 742
    , ¶¶2-3.                    The court of appeals
    noted the common exposure of individuals to some carbon monoxide
    in homes, especially in the presence of stoves with gas burners.
    
    Id., ¶19. However,
           the     exposure     of        water     supplies       to
    decomposing septage is not an everyday activity, as evidenced by
    the protective regulatory mechanisms surrounding the hauling,
    storing, and application of septage that are designed to prevent
    invasion of water supplies.                  40 C.F.R. § 503 (2013); Wis. Admin.
    Code §§ NR 113-114 (Feb. 2014).
    ¶49     Additionally, we have already rejected an attempt to
    equate       application         of     a     contaminant        to     the     surrounding
    environment with exhalation of an omnipresent gas.                                  
    Peace, 228 Wis. 2d at 137-38
    (differentiating release of lead paint from
    exhaling       carbon      dioxide).          A     reasonable        insured       would    not
    understand exposure of water supplies to decomposing septage as
    "an    everyday       activity        'gone    slightly,       but     not    surprisingly,
    awry.'"      See 
    Donaldson, 211 Wis. 2d at 233
    (quoting 
    Pipefitters, 976 F.2d at 1043-44
    ); Langone, 
    300 Wis. 2d 742
    , ¶19.
    23
    No.    2012AP2521
    ¶50     Furthermore, that septage fits the ordinary meaning of
    waste,     which    the   policies       expressly       list    as    a     pollutant,
    supports our conclusion that septage is a pollutant when it
    seeps into a water supply.               Septage is primarily composed of
    human urine and feces.        The ordinary meanings of feces and urine
    are, respectively, "'[w]aste matter eliminated from the bowels;
    excrement,'"       and    "'[t]he     waste       product       secreted       by    the
    kidneys.'"         Hirschhorn,     
    338 Wis. 2d 761
    ,        ¶34   (quoting      The
    American Heritage Dictionary 1965).                  The ordinary meaning of
    waste includes, among other things, "'[t]he undigested residue
    of food eliminated from the body; excrement.'"                         
    Id. (quoting American
        Heritage     Dictionary      2016).          In    Hirschhorn,         these
    definitions of waste, urine, and feces supported our conclusion
    that bat guano——which consists of bat urine and feces——was a
    pollutant when it infiltrated a home.                
    Id., ¶¶34-36. Likewise,
    in the present case, these definitions support our conclusion
    that decomposing septage is a pollutant when it seeps into a
    water supply.
    ¶51     The     policies'      use     of    "contaminant"         in      defining
    "pollutant" should have been clear notice to the Kuettels that
    their    policies    would   not     cover      claims    involving        decomposing
    septage's seepage into water supplies.11                       Stated otherwise, a
    11
    One could wonder what conversation transpired between the
    insurance agent and the Kuettels yielding insurance policies
    that do not cover harm caused in the course of their chosen
    business. However, the actions of the insurers and their agents
    are not before us.
    24
    No.    2012AP2521
    reasonable insured would conclude that the policies would not
    provide coverage on these facts.                  The key terms of the policies
    are unambiguous.           See 
    Peace, 228 Wis. 2d at 136
    .
    ¶52       Typically,      we    would     proceed    to      determine     whether
    spraying       or    injecting       septage      on   farmland     constitutes      the
    "discharge, dispersal, seepage, migration, release or escape of
    'pollutants'."            See 
    Donaldson, 211 Wis. 2d at 228
    .            However, the
    parties    do       not    appeal    the   circuit     court's     ruling     that   the
    Preislers' alleged loss resulted from the "discharge, dispersal,
    seepage, migration, release or escape of" septage within the
    meaning of the terms in the pollution exclusion clause of the
    insurance policy.12           Accordingly, we conclude that the insureds'
    claims    fall       within    the    unambiguous       terms     of   the    pollution
    exclusion clauses.13
    C.    Summary Judgment Granted to Hastings and Secura
    ¶53       A final issue is whether the Preislers and Kuettels
    have waived consideration of                 the court of appeals' grant of
    summary judgment to Hastings and Secura.                        Secura and Hastings
    12
    See Preisler, No. 2012AP2521, unpublished slip op., ¶39
    (failing to challenge the circuit court's conclusion at the
    court of appeals).
    13
    Typically, our third step is to analyze exceptions to the
    exclusion to determine whether any reinstates coverage.      Am.
    Family Mut. Ins. Co. v. Am. Girl, Inc., 
    2004 WI 2
    , ¶24, 
    268 Wis. 2d 16
    , 
    673 N.W.2d 65
    .      The parties did not argue an
    exception to the pollution exclusion applies; therefore, we need
    not reach this step.
    25
    No.     2012AP2521
    argued alternative grounds for summary judgment to the circuit
    court and the court of appeals.14
    ¶54       The   circuit      court   did    not   address      Hastings'      and
    Secura's alternative grounds for summary judgment.                           The only
    responses to Hastings' and Secura's arguments to the court of
    appeals     were     the   Preislers'     assertions     in    two    reply     brief
    footnotes that Hastings and Secura were required to file cross-
    appeals to raise alternative grounds for summary judgment.                         The
    court     of    appeals    held    Preislers'      response    insufficient        and
    separately dismissed claims against Hastings and Secura on their
    alternative grounds.           See Preisler v. Kuettel's Septic Serv.,
    LLC, No. 2012AP2521, unpublished slip op., ¶¶40-42 (Ct. App.
    Jan. 14, 2014).
    ¶55       By supreme court rule, "[i]f a petition [for review]
    is granted, the parties cannot raise or argue issues not set
    forth in the petition unless ordered otherwise by the supreme
    court."        Wis. Stat. § 809.62(6).          In their petitions for review,
    the Preislers, the Kuettels, and Phil's Pumping framed the issue
    as whether septage falls within the pollutant definition for
    purposes of the pollution exclusion clause.
    ¶56       None of the petitioners petitioned the supreme court
    to review summary judgments granted to Hastings and Secura on
    alternative       grounds.        Hastings'     dismissal     was    based    on   the
    14
    Brief for Secura at 24-30, Preisler, No. 2012AP2421,
    unpublished slip op. (Ct. App. Jan. 14, 2014); Brief for
    Hastings at 33-36, Preisler, No. 2012AP2421, unpublished slip
    op. (Ct. App. Jan. 14, 2014).
    26
    No.     2012AP2521
    conclusion that the harm did not occur during the policy period.
    Secura's dismissal was based on the conclusion that the harm did
    not occur to the covered premises.                     In granting the petition, we
    did not instruct the parties to brief or argue any additional
    issues       pursuant        to   Wis.     Stat.      § 809.62(6).            Because      the
    alternative grounds for summary judgment in favor of Hastings
    and Secura were not raised as an issue on petition to us, the
    Preislers,        the    Kuettels,       and    Phil's      Pumping   have        waived   our
    consideration of those grounds for summary judgment.                               See Doyle
    v.     Engelke,     
    219 Wis. 2d 277
    ,      294,    
    580 N.W.2d 245
       (1998)
    (concluding that issues omitted from petitions for review may be
    waived       if    we     do      not    direct       that     they    be      addressed).
    Accordingly, these dismissals by the court of appeals become the
    law of the case for further proceedings on Preislers' claims.
    State v. Moeck, 
    2005 WI 57
    , ¶18, 
    280 Wis. 2d 277
    , 
    695 N.W.2d 783
    .
    ¶57     While we retain the inherent power to consider issues
    beyond those raised in the petitions, we decline to do so in
    this matter.        See Univest Corp. v. Gen. Split Corp., 
    148 Wis. 2d 29
    , 37, 
    435 N.W.2d 234
    (1989).
    III.       CONCLUSION
    ¶58     We conclude that a reasonable insured would understand
    that decomposing septage is a "contaminant" and therefore, a
    "pollutant" as defined in the policies when it has decomposed
    and    seeps      into   a     water    supply.        Accordingly,      we       affirm   the
    decision of the court of appeals, which granted summary judgment
    upon     its      conclusion        that       the    pollution       exclusion       clause
    27
    No.     2012AP2521
    precluded coverage for harm resulting from the Preislers' water
    supply's contamination.
    ¶59     We   also   conclude    that     the    petitioners       failed    to
    petition this court for review of summary judgments of dismissal
    of their claims against Hastings and Secura.                   We decline to
    consider issues not raised in petitions for review.                   
    Bodoh, 226 Wis. 2d at 737
    ;   Wis.   Stat.    § 809.62.        Accordingly,      those
    dismissals are not before us.
    By    the    Court.—The    decision     of   the   court   of     appeals   is
    affirmed.
    28
    No.   2012AP2521.awb
    ¶60     ANN    WALSH       BRADLEY,      J.    (concurring).          Although    I
    agree with the majority's conclusion that septage is a pollutant
    here,   I   part   ways        with   the    majority      when   it   undertakes    an
    analysis of "occurrence."             Not only is the analysis unclear, it
    is unnecessary to the decision, and inconsistent with Wilson
    Mutual Ins. Co. v. Falk, 
    2014 WI 136
    , __ Wis. 2d __, __ N.W.2d
    __, a case decided on the same day, on the same issue.
    ¶61     It is unclear whether the majority is embarking on a
    cause   approach          or    damage       approach      in     determining      what
    constitutes an occurrence.                  It quotes a leading authority on
    insurance law, Couch on Insurance, for the premise that "[m]ost
    courts have focused on the damage caused by the pollution and
    have concluded that there is an occurrence when the insured did
    not expect or intend the resultant damage."                       Majority op., ¶25
    (quoting    9    Steven    Plitt      et    al.,   Couch    on    Insurance   §   127.4
    (2008)).        It then discusses Am. Family Mut. Ins. Co. v. Am.
    Girl, Inc., 
    2004 WI 2
    , ¶38, 
    268 Wis. 2d 16
    , 
    673 N.W.2d 65
    , which
    looked at both cause and damage in its discussion of occurrence.
    
    Id., ¶26. ¶62
        Yet, after discussing these authorities, the majority
    cites United Coop. v. Frontier FS Coop., 
    2007 WI App 197
    , ¶¶12,
    15, 
    304 Wis. 2d 750
    , 
    738 N.W.2d 578
    , for the premise that the
    focus in an occurrence determination is on "the event or series
    of events that allegedly caused the alleged bodily injury or
    property damage."          
    Id., ¶27. The
    majority then concludes that
    the occurrence in this case was the "[s]eepage of decomposing
    septage into the water supply" and "the resulting harm is water
    1
    No.       2012AP2521.awb
    with elevated nitrate levels."                          
    Id., ¶28. By
    including its
    statement that the resulting harm was something other than the
    occurrence,        the      majority       suggests         it    is        taking       the      cause
    approach.           Without          a    definite          statement,             however,         the
    juxtaposition          of         this     conclusion            with        the        conflicting
    authorities renders the majority's analysis unclear.
    ¶63   Not       only        is     the      majority's           analysis           of      what
    constitutes an occurrence unclear, but it is also unnecessary.
    What    constitutes          an     occurrence           was     not     addressed           in     the
    arguments presented by the parties.                              This issue was neither
    briefed nor argued, and none of the leading cases on pollution
    exclusions discuss it.                  See Hirschhorn v. Auto-Owners Ins. Co.,
    
    2012 WI 20
    ,       
    338 Wis. 2d
        761,      
    809 N.W.2d 529
    ;        Peace     v.
    Northwestern Nat'l Ins. Co., 
    228 Wis. 2d 106
    , 
    596 N.W.2d 429
    (1999); Donaldson v. Urban Land Interests, 
    211 Wis. 2d 224
    , 
    564 N.W.2d 728
    (1997); Langone v. Am. Family Mut. Ins. Co., 2007 WI
    App 121, 
    300 Wis. 2d 742
    ; 
    731 N.W.2d 334
    ; United States Fire
    Ins. Co. v. Ace Baking Co., 
    164 Wis. 2d 499
    , 
    476 N.W.2d 280
    (Ct.
    App. 1991).
    ¶64   Lastly,         if    the    majority         is    going       to     address        what
    constitutes       an     occurrence,          it       should    do    so    in     a    consistent
    manner.      As noted above, the majority appears to take a cause
    approach     to    occurrence.                This      conflicts       with        the     apparent
    approach embraced in Wilson Mutual, __ Wis. 2d __, ¶32, which we
    also release today.                Wilson Mutual acknowledges that "Wisconsin
    is in the jurisdictional majority in defining an occurrence as
    2
    No.   2012AP2521.awb
    unexpected   or    unintended      resultant         damage."     Which    precedent
    should future attorneys follow?
    ¶65   Overall,      the     majority's           occurrence       discussion   is
    problematic.      By creating unclear, unnecessary, and inconsistent
    precedent,   the    court   does    not       live    up   to   its   obligation   to
    provide a clear and concise articulation of a legal standard.
    Accordingly, I respectfully concur.
    3
    No.    2012AP2521.ssa
    ¶66    SHIRLEY S. ABRAHAMSON, C.J.                 (dissenting).            I would
    reverse the decision of the court of appeals.
    ¶67    This     case     requires       us   to    interpret         the    standard
    pollution exclusion clauses in a commercial general liability
    policy and a contractors' general liability policy.
    ¶68    The majority opinion frames the question presented in
    this case as "whether decomposing septage is a pollutant as it
    seeped into the Preislers' water supply."1                     The majority opinion
    then holds that "a reasonable insured would conclude that the
    policies would not provide coverage on these facts."2
    ¶69    The    majority         opinion's     approach     to    the        pollution
    exclusion clauses in the instant case unnecessarily departs from
    precedent,      undercuts        the   limiting     principles    our        prior      cases
    have       applied   to    pollution          exclusion    clauses,         and     further
    confuses this murky area of the law.
    ¶70    The      majority         opinion      needlessly        decides          what
    "occurrence" triggered coverage in the instant case and further
    complicates      the      law    in    this    area.       The   question          of   what
    constitutes an occurrence need not be decided to resolve the
    question presented.             The occurrence issue was neither raised nor
    briefed by the parties and was not ruled on by the circuit court
    or the court of appeals.                 The issue is complex.3                   The court
    1
    Majority op., ¶31.
    2
    
    Id., ¶51. 3
           Steven Plitt et al., 9 Couch on Insurance § 126:27 (1997)
    ("Whether there has been an accident or occurrence to trigger
    insurance coverage has been a much litigated issue.").
    1
    No.   2012AP2521.ssa
    should   not    delve    into    it   without       the   benefit     of    briefs    or
    argument.
    ¶71    Furthermore,        the   majority       opinion's      discussions       of
    what constitutes an occurrence and of whether a substance is a
    pollutant are inconsistent with the court's approach to those
    issues     in   Wilson   Mutual       v.    Falk,    
    2014 WI 136
    ,     ¶38,     ___
    Wis. 2d ___, ___ N.W.2d ___.               I write on substantially similar
    issues in my dissent in Wilson Mutual.                    My dissents in Wilson
    Mutual and in the instant case should be read together.
    ¶72    I conclude that a reasonable person in the position of
    the insureds, two companies in the business of hauling, storing,
    and disposing of septage, would not consider septage a pollutant
    under    the    pollution       exclusion      clause     of    general      liability
    policies they purchased to cover liability for damage caused by
    their septic business operations.
    ¶73    If the majority is unwilling to honor the reasonable
    expectations of these insured septic companies, then I conclude
    the case should be remanded to the circuit court to allow the
    parties to present evidence regarding the insureds' expectations
    of   coverage      and    the      objective        reasonableness          of      those
    expectations.4
    ¶74    Accordingly, I dissent.
    I
    4
    See majority op., ¶51 n.11 ("One could wonder what
    conversation transpired between the insurance agent and the
    Kuettels yielding insurance policies that do not cover harm
    caused in the course of their chosen business.      However, the
    actions of the insurers and their agents are not before us.").
    2
    No.   2012AP2521.ssa
    ¶75        The present case involves two insured companies and
    two insurance policies.5
    ¶76        Kuettel's Septic Service, LLC (Kuettel's) is a company
    that       hauls,     stores,       and    disposes     of   septage.            Kuettel's
    sometimes disposes of septage by spreading it as fertilizer on
    farmland.          Kuettel's has periodically hired Phil's Pumping and
    Fab,       Inc.    (Phil's      Pumping)    to    dispose    of    septage.         Phil's
    Pumping sometimes disposes of the septage by spreading it as
    fertilizer on farmland.
    ¶77        These    septic    companies       purchased     general       liability
    policies      to     insure      their    business    operations,        that    is,   they
    purchased insurance policies to cover damage they might cause in
    the ordinary course of their hauling, storing, and disposing of
    septage.
    ¶78        Kuettel's purchased a contractors' general liability
    policy       from     Regent      Insurance       Company.        The     Regent    policy
    contains the following provisions:
    B. EXCLUSIONS
    1. Applicable to Contractors Liability Coverage
    This insurance does not apply to:
    . . . .
    f. Pollution
    (1)   "Bodily injury" or "property damage"
    arising out of the actual, alleged or
    5
    As the majority opinion points out, there were other
    insurers and other insurance contracts involved at earlier
    stages of the litigation.
    3
    No.   2012AP2521.ssa
    threatened     discharge,   dispersal,
    seepage, migration, release or escape
    of "pollutants" . . . .
    F. LIABILITY AND MEDICAL EXPENSES DEFINITIONS
    . . . .
    14. "Occurrence"  means   an    accident,  including
    continuous    or     repeated     exposure    to
    substantially    the   same    general   harmful
    conditions.
    . . . .
    16. "Pollutants" means any solid, liquid, gaseous
    or thermal irritant or contaminant, including
    smoke, vapor, soot, fumes, acids, alkalis,
    chemicals and waste. Waste includes materials
    to be recycled, reconditioned or reclaimed.
    ¶79    Phil's      Pumping   purchased   a   commercial     general
    liability policy from Rural Mutual Insurance Company.         The Rural
    Mutual policy contains the following provisions:
    2. Exclusions
    This insurance does not apply to:
    . . . .
    f. Pollution
    (1)     "Bodily   injury"   or "property  damage,"
    arising out of the actual, alleged, or
    threatened discharge, dispersal, seepage,
    migration,     release  or    escape    of
    "pollutants" . . . .
    SECTION V - DEFINITIONS
    . . . .
    13. "Occurrence"  means    an   accident,  including
    continuous    or     repeated     exposure    to
    substantially    the   same    general   harmful
    conditions.
    . . . .
    4
    No.   2012AP2521.ssa
    15. "Pollutants" mean any solid, liquid, gaseous or
    thermal irritant or contaminant, including
    smoke, vapor, soot, fumes, acids, alkalis,
    chemicals and waste. Waste includes materials
    to be recycled, reconditioned or reclaimed.
    ¶80       For several years, Kuettel's and Phil's Pumping spread
    septage on Fred and Tina Preisler's farmland.                        In 2008, when the
    Regent and Rural Mutual insurance policies described above were
    in effect, the Preislers discovered that septage had seeped into
    their well and contaminated their water supply, causing cattle
    loss and other problems on their farm.
    ¶81       The    Preislers     sued     Kuettel's          and    Phil's      Pumping,
    alleging      that    the   companies       negligently            stored   and     spread
    septage,    resulting       in   nuisance      and   trespass.           Kuettel's    and
    Phil's Pumping contend that septage is not a pollutant under the
    pollution exclusion clauses at issue and thus that Regent and
    Rural Mutual should defend and indemnify under the policies.
    II
    ¶82       Applying the court's general principles of insurance
    contract interpretation6 to the facts of the present case, I
    conclude      that   a   reasonable   person         in   the      position    of   these
    insured septic companies would not consider septage a pollutant
    under   the    pollution     exclusion      clause        of   a     general   liability
    policy purchased to cover liability for damage caused by their
    septic business operations.
    6
    See Frost ex rel. Anderson v. Whitbeck, 
    2002 WI 129
    , ¶¶15-
    22, 
    257 Wis. 2d 80
    , 
    654 N.W.2d 225
    .         I set forth these
    principles at length in Wilson Mutual Insurance Co. v. Falk,
    
    2014 WI 136
    , ¶___, ___ Wis. 2d ___, ___ N.W.2d ___ (Abrahamson,
    C.J., dissenting).
    5
    No.    2012AP2521.ssa
    ¶83       Excrement may be waste, an irritant, or a contaminant,
    but septage is a valuable product.                    It is a fertilizer used to
    enrich the soil.           When it is used to enrich the soil, it is no
    longer waste, an irritant, or a contaminant.
    ¶84       Because we construe insurance contract provisions as
    would     a     reasonable      insured,       we     have    held     that    pollution
    exclusion        clauses   do   not    apply    when       "injuries     result[]     from
    everyday activities gone slightly, but not surprisingly, awry"
    or        when        a      reasonable             policyholder         "would        not
    characterize . . . [the] incident[] as pollution."7
    ¶85       To septic companies like Kuettel's and Phil's Pumping,
    storing       and     spreading       septage        are     indisputably       everyday
    activities.          Septic companies store septage and often spread
    septage on farmland.            Seepage is the whole point of spreading
    septage       on    farmland.     If     the    seepage       of   septage     into    the
    Preislers' well resulted from the storage of septage or the
    spreading of septage on farmland, then it clearly resulted from
    an   everyday        activity    "gone     slightly,         but   not     surprisingly,
    awry."8
    ¶86       A court keeps the underlying purpose of the insurance
    in mind when construing policy provisions.9                    Kuettel's and Phil's
    7
    Donaldson v. Urban Land Interests, Inc., 
    211 Wis. 2d 224
    ,
    233, 
    564 N.W.2d 728
    (1997).
    8
    
    Id. 9 Frost,
    257 Wis. 2d 80
    , ¶22 ("[I]n construing an insurance
    policy as it is understood by a reasonable person in the
    position of the insured, a court may consider the purpose or
    subject matter of the insurance, the situation of the parties,
    and the circumstances surrounding the making of the contract.").
    6
    No.    2012AP2521.ssa
    Pumping    purchased          these       general    liability     policies       to    insure
    their septic business operations.                     The insurance companies knew
    the nature of the business these companies are engaged in from
    their company names and probably from information submitted in
    their insurance policy applications.                       "Certainly an insured who
    purchases [commercial general liability] insurance expects to be
    covered for ordinary negligence in the course of its insured
    operations."10
    ¶87       The     fact        that     "[h]auling,      storing,      and     applying
    septage are activities regulated by both the DNR and the United
    States    Environmental             Protection       Agency"     further     supports       my
    conclusion that Kuettel's and Phil's Pumping were aware of the
    risks     of    working        with       septage    and    thus    purchased          general
    liability insurance policies to cover their liability for damage
    caused    by    their        septic       business   operations     when     an    everyday
    activity went slightly but not surprisingly awry.11
    ¶88       Thus, a reasonable person in the position of these
    insured septic companies would expect coverage for damage caused
    by   septage         under     a    general     liability      policy       it    purchased
    precisely in order to cover damage caused by its septic business
    operations.          An insured's reasonable expectations of coverage
    must be honored.         I would not bar coverage.
    10
    Keggi v. Northbrook Prop. & Cas. Ins. Co., 
    13 P.3d 785
    ,
    ¶29 (Ariz. 2000).
    11
    Majority op., ¶43.
    7
    No.   2012AP2521.ssa
    ¶89     The    majority       opinion        is     problematic           for    several
    reasons.
    ¶90     First, as I stated previously, the majority opinion
    has an unnecessary discussion of occurrence, an issue that is
    not relevant and was not briefed or argued by the parties.
    ¶91     Second,     the   majority's             discussion    of     occurrence        is
    inconsistent with the discussion of occurrence in Wilson Mutual.
    It remains unclear whether this court considers the cause of the
    damage or the damage itself to be the occurrence.
    ¶92     The majority opinion suggests that it is taking the
    cause approach.12          The Preislers' complaint alleges negligence in
    the    storing       and   spreading     of    septage.            Couldn't       the    causal
    event,       and    thus   the      accident       for     which     the     insureds        seek
    coverage,      be    the     negligent    storing          or    spreading       of    septage,
    rather than seepage?
    ¶93     In her concurring opinion in the instant case, Justice
    Bradley       persuasively       explains          that     the      majority          opinion's
    discussion           of      occurrence            is      unnecessary,            internally
    contradictory,13 and inconsistent with                          Wilson Mutual v. Falk,
    
    2014 WI 136
    ,    ¶32,    ___    Wis. 2d ___,          ___    N.W.2d ___.            I   join
    Justice Bradley's criticism of the majority opinion's discussion
    of "occurrence."
    12
    Majority op., ¶28.
    13
    "It is unclear whether the majority is embarking on a
    cause   approach  or   damage  approach   in  determining   what
    constitutes an occurrence." Justice Bradley's concurrence, ¶61.
    8
    No.    2012AP2521.ssa
    ¶94      Third, the essence of the majority's analysis is that
    septage becomes a pollutant under the policy when it pollutes.
    Under      this      reasoning,      every       substance     that       pollutes          is    a
    pollutant.          This reasoning simply begs the question.
    ¶95      By    contending      that    a    substance    becomes           a     pollutant
    under the policy at the moment the substance contaminates, the
    majority opinion allows the pollution exclusion clause to extend
    far beyond the limited scope we have permitted in our prior
    cases, leading to absurd results.
    ¶96      The majority's approach ignores the fact that "there
    is virtually no substance or chemical in existence that would
    not irritate or damage some person or property."14                              As this court
    has     said      again    and     again,    "[t]he      reach       of     the        pollution
    exclusion clause must be circumscribed by reasonableness, lest
    the   contractual          promise    of     coverage     be     reduced          to    a    dead
    letter."15
    ¶97      Fourth,     Wilson     Mutual       and   the   instant           opinion         are
    inconsistent          in   their     test    for     whether     a    substance             is    a
    pollutant under a standard pollution exclusion clause, although
    both look to whether a reasonable person in the position of the
    insured would consider the substance a pollutant.
    14
    
    Donaldson, 211 Wis. 2d at 232
    (quoting Pipefitters
    Welfare Educ. Fund v. Westchester Fire Ins. Co., 
    976 F.2d 1037
    ,
    1043 (7th Cir. 1992)).
    15
    
    Donaldson, 211 Wis. 2d at 233
    .
    9
    No.       2012AP2521.ssa
    ¶98    The     instant     case    simply     asks   "whether          a    reasonable
    insured would consider decomposing septage to be a pollutant
    when it seeps into a water supply."16
    ¶99    Wilson Mutual sets forth the following two-part test
    for whether a reasonable insured would consider a substance a
    pollutant:
    [A] reasonable insured would consider a substance to
    be a pollutant if (1) the substance is largely
    undesirable and not universally present in the context
    of the occurrence that the insured seeks coverage for;
    and (2) a reasonable insured would consider the
    substance causing the harm involved in the occurrence
    to be a pollutant.17
    ¶100 Does        the     Wilson    Mutual      two-part        test    survive       the
    opinion in the present case?
    ¶101 Fifth, as I have noted, the parties in the instant
    case are here on summary judgment.                 If the majority is unwilling
    to   adhere      to     our    longstanding        practice         of     honoring       the
    expectations of the reasonable insured, then I would remand the
    case to the circuit court so the parties can produce evidence
    regarding     the       insureds'      expectations       of    coverage            and   the
    objective     reasonableness           of     those    expectations.                 Summary
    judgment should not be granted before the parties have that
    opportunity.
    ¶102 In sum, I conclude that a reasonable person in the
    position    of    the    insureds,      two      companies     in    the    business       of
    16
    Majority op., ¶40.
    17
    Wilson Mutual v. Falk, 
    2014 WI 136
    , ¶38, ___ Wis. 2d ___,
    ___ N.W.2d ___.
    10
    No.   2012AP2521.ssa
    hauling, storing, and disposing of septage, would not consider
    septage   a   pollutant   under   the    pollution   exclusion   clause   of
    general liability policies they purchased to cover liability for
    damage caused by their septic business operations.
    ¶103 For the reasons set forth, I dissent.
    11
    No.   2012AP2521.ssa
    1