Ahlgren v. Stonegate Insurance Co., Inc.

2025 IL App (1st) 240905
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedApril 8, 2025
Docket1-24-0905
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2025 IL App (1st) 240905 (Ahlgren v. Stonegate Insurance Co., Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ahlgren v. Stonegate Insurance Co., Inc., 2025 IL App (1st) 240905 (Ill. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

2025 IL App (1st) 240905 No. 1-24-0905 Opinion filed April 8, 2025 Second Division ______________________________________________________________________________

IN THE APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS FIRST DISTRICT ______________________________________________________________________________ MICHAEL AHLGREN, ) Appeal from the ) Circuit Court of Plaintiff-Appellee, ) Cook County. ) v. ) No. 22 CH 4700 ) STONEGATE INSURANCE COMPANY, INC., ) Honorable ) Clare J. Quish, Defendant-Appellant. ) Judge, presiding.

PRESIDING JUSTICE VAN TINE delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion. Justices Howse and Ellis concurred in the judgment and opinion.

OPINION

¶1 Defendant Stonegate Insurance Company, Inc. (Stonegate), appeals from the circuit court’s

grant of summary judgment in favor of plaintiff Michael Ahlgren. The circuit court found that

Stonegate had an obligation to provide insurance coverage for an incident in which a vehicle driven

by an uninsured motorist, Saul Garcia, struck Ahlgren in a parking lot when he was outside his

own vehicle. On appeal, Stonegate argues that Ahlgren was not “using” his insured vehicle at the

time of the incident; therefore, no insurance coverage exists. For the following reasons, we reverse

and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion. ¶2 I. BACKGROUND

¶3 A. Complaint and Insurance Policy

¶4 Ahlgren is the owner of a towing company. Stonegate provided automobile insurance for

his company. Ahlgren filed a declaratory action against Stonegate seeking coverage for an incident

that occurred on May 6, 2021. Ahlgren’s complaint alleged that, at approximately 5:15 p.m. that

day, he was driving a Chevrolet Silverado pickup truck on State Route 71 in Oswego, Illinois,

when Garcia, who was driving a Hyundai Elantra, instigated an altercation on the road. Ahlgren

followed Garcia’s vehicle into a parking lot and exited his Silverado. He walked approximately 25

steps away from it toward Garcia’s vehicle, which was 50 to 60 feet away from the Silverado. As

Ahlgren approached Garcia’s vehicle, Garcia drove forward and struck Ahlgren, injuring him.

Garcia was uninsured. Ahlgren sought a declaration that Stonegate was obligated to provide

coverage for this incident pursuant to his policy’s uninsured motorist endorsement.

¶5 Relevant here, the policy provides that an “[i]nsured” is anyone “using with your

permission a covered ‘auto’ you own.” (Emphasis added.). The parties agree that the Silverado

Ahlgren was driving on the day of the incident was a covered automobile under the policy and that

Ahlgren gave himself “permission” to drive his own company truck. They disagree as to whether

Ahlgren was “using” the Silverado within the meaning of the policy. The controlling authority on

this issue is Schultz v. Illinois Farmers Insurance Co., 237 Ill. 2d 391, 401-02 (2010), which states

that “[o]ne uses an automobile whenever such use is rationally connected to the vehicle for the

purpose of providing transportation or satisfying some other related need of the user.” (Internal

quotation marks omitted.).

¶6 B. Summary Judgment

-2- ¶7 Both parties moved for summary judgment. Relevant here, Ahlgren argued that he was

“using” the Silverado at the time of the incident because his actions were directly connected to that

vehicle and his “purpose for exiting his vehicle was to obtain the license plate number and

potentially exchange information so that he could make a formal complaint for the injuries

sustained to his head.” Stonegate contended that Ahlgren was not “using” the Silverado because

“[o]btaining information necessary to file a criminal complaint against Garcia for throwing an

object that hit Ahlgren ha[d] no ‘rational connection’ to the Silverado,” and Ahlgren did not need

to approach Garcia’s vehicle on foot to obtain its license plate number anyway. Attached to the

summary judgment briefing are transcripts of Ahlgren and Garcia’s depositions, as well as

surveillance camera video recordings of the part of the incident that occurred in the parking lot.

¶8 1. Ahlgren’s Deposition Testimony

¶9 Ahlgren testified that on May 6, 2021, he first saw Garcia while both men were driving.

Garcia was “hanging out of the driver’s window while in motion, his entire body hanging out of

the window with two middle fingers in the air screaming and yelling.” When they stopped at a red

light, Garcia began “throwing stuff from one and a half car lengths behind [Ahlgren] ***, throwing

lighters and other items out of his vehicle at [Ahlgren’s] vehicle.” Ahlgren did not know why

Garcia was throwing things at his vehicle. When the light turned green, Garcia pulled up parallel

with Ahlgren’s vehicle and threw an object through its open driver’s side window. The object

struck Ahlgren above the left eyebrow and “split open [his] head.” Ahlgren did not know what hit

him in the face and never recovered that object. 1

1 Stonegate’s counsel repeatedly referred to a bottle striking Ahlgren in the head, but Ahlgren never testified that the object that hit him was a bottle.

-3- ¶ 10 Garcia turned into the parking lot of Eastview Academy, and Ahlgren followed him.

Ahlgren “was trying to get the license plate first because [he could] tell [Garcia] was trying to

run.” Ahlgren exited his vehicle without turning off the engine. He then walked around the rear of

his vehicle and “tried to look at the rear plate of [Garcia’s] vehicle when he put it into reverse.

Then [Garcia] backed up far enough into the parking lot where [Ahlgren] couldn’t visually see the

front license plate, so [Ahlgren] attempted to get close enough to get a good view of the plate.” As

he approached Garcia’s vehicle on foot, Ahlgren yelled, “[Y]ou’re going to jail” one time. Ahlgren

wanted to obtain Garcia’s license plate number “[t]o file a complaint for assault.” He saw part of

Garcia’s license plate number for approximately one second before Garcia’s vehicle struck him.

¶ 11 2. Garcia’s Deposition Testimony

¶ 12 Garcia testified that he encountered Ahlgren while driving on May 6, 2021. On the road,

Ahlgren’s pickup truck cut off Garcia’s vehicle, and Garcia threw his hands up and saying, “[W]hat

the heck *** you almost hit me, dude.” Alhgren responded with “vulgar like hand signals, like

flicking [Garcia] off, telling [Garcia] like F you and suck my you know what.” At the next red

light, Ahlgren exited his vehicle, banged on Garica’s driver’s side window, and told Garica to fight

him. Garcia drove away when the light turned green. At red light after that, Garcia threw a perfume

bottle cap through his open driver’s side window into Ahlgren’s vehicle, hitting him. When the

light turned green, Ahlgren blocked Garcia’s vehicle by stopping in the middle of the intersection.

¶ 13 Garcia then pulled into the parking lot of Eastview Academy in an attempt to find a “safe

haven.” Ahlgren followed him into the parking lot and “tri[ed] to ram [Garcia] with [his

Silverado].” Ahlgren exited his vehicle and yelled that he was going to kill Garcia. Ahlgren did

not ask for Garcia’s license plate number. When Ahlgren approached Garcia’s vehicle on foot,

-4- Garcia reversed his vehicle because he thought Ahlgren had a weapon and was going to kill him.

Garcia told Ahlgren that if he ran toward Garcia’s vehicle, Garcia would hit him. Ahlgren ran

toward Garcia’s vehicle, and Garcia “panicked, stepped on the gas,” and struck Ahlgren with his

vehicle.

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2025 IL App (1st) 240905, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ahlgren-v-stonegate-insurance-co-inc-illappct-2025.