American Standard Insurance Co. v. Basbagill

CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedAugust 21, 2002
Docket2-00-1476 Rel
StatusPublished

This text of American Standard Insurance Co. v. Basbagill (American Standard Insurance Co. v. Basbagill) 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
American Standard Insurance Co. v. Basbagill, (Ill. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

No. 2--00--1476

_________________________________________________________________

IN THE

APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS

SECOND DISTRICT

_________________________________________________________________

AMERICAN STANDARD INSURANCE     ) Appeal from the Circuit Court

COMPANY, a member of American   ) of Lake County.

Family Insurance Group,         )

 )

Plaintiff-Appellant,       )

v.  )  No. 99--MR--381                                                 )

PAUL BASBAGILL and PETER BENCAK, )

as Independent Co-Adm'rs of the )

Estate of Peter G. Sawczuk, De- )

ceased; PAUL BASBAGILL and      )

PETER BENCAK, as Independent Co-)

Adm'rs of the Estate of Sharon  )

A. Sawczuk, Deceased; PAUL BAS- )

BAGILL and PETER BENCAK, as     )

special Co-Adm'rs of the Estate )

of Elizabeth M. Sawczuk, De-    )

ceased; PAUL BASBAGILL and PETER)

BENCAK, as Special Co-Adm'rs of )

of the Estate of Katharine A.   )

Sawczuk, Deceased; RANDY E.     )

BRESNAHAN; and ANTHONY P. PEASE,)

Indiv. and as Agent of RANDY E. )

BRESNAHAN,                      )  Honorable

                          )  Stephen E. Walter,

Defendants-Appellees.      )  Judge, Presiding.

_________________________________________________________________

JUSTICE KAPALA delivered the opinion of the court:

Plaintiff, American Standard Insurance Company, appeals from  an order entered pursuant to a complaint for a declaratory judgment. The order determined that plaintiff had a duty to defend a tort suit (the Sawczuk suit) brought by Paul Basbagill and Peter Bencak, as administrators of the estates of Peter Sawczuk and his family, against plaintiff's insureds, Randy E. Bresnahan and Anthony P. Pease.  Bresnahan and Pease were named  also  as defendants in plaintiff's complaint for declaratory judgment.  Plaintiff asserts that, by offering to settle for the policy limit and by tendering that amount to the court via interpleader (see 735 ILCS 5/2--409 (West 2000)), it has discharged its contractual duty to defend even though the Sawczuk suit was still pending.  We disagree and affirm.

Plaintiff issued an automobile liability insurance policy to Bresnahan, covering his 1990 Ford Bronco for up to $40,000 per incident.  On April 19, 1997, with the policy in force, the Bronco collided with Peter Sawczuk's car, killing Sawczuk, his wife, and their two daughters.  On January 27, 1999,  Basbagill and  Bencak, the administrators of the Sawczuk estates, sued Bresnahan and Pease in the circuit court of Lake County, alleging that, although the identity or the driver was in question, either Bresnahan or Pease was driving the Bronco and was at fault when the Bronco collided with the Sawczuk car.

On March 30, 1999, American Standard filed the two-count complaint in the case now before this court.  Count I, for interpleader, states that, although plaintiff does not admit any liability in the Sawczuk suit, the total claims there could equal or exceed the Bresnahan policy's $40,000 limit. In count I plaintiff asks for leave to deposit $40,000 with the clerk of the circuit court so that, when the Sawczuk suit is resolved, the money can be distributed according to an appropriate court order.  Count II seeks a declaration that granting plaintiff judgment on count I relieves it of any further duty to defend Bresnahan or Pease in the Sawczuk suit.  Plaintiff relies on the following language in part I of the policy:

" We will pay compensatory damages an insured person is legally  liable for because of bodily injury and property damage ***.

We will defend any suit or settle any claim for damages payable under this policy as we think proper.

If a suit involves both compensatory and punitive or exemplary damages, we will defend the compensatory damages.   We will not defend the punitive or exemplary damage portion of the suit.

HOWEVER, WE WILL NOT DEFEND ANY SUIT AFTER OUR LIMIT OF LIABILITY HAS BEEN OFFERED OR PAID."  (Emphasis in original.)

The policy does not define "offered" or "paid."

Pease filed an answer to the complaint.  Bresnahan did not file an answer.  Plaintiff moved for summary judgment on both counts of the complaint.  In seeking summary judgment on count II, plaintiff argued that, under Zurich Insurance Co. v. Raymark Industries, Inc. , 118 Ill. 2d 23 (1987), and Novak v. American Family Insurance Co. , 183 Wis. 2d 133, 515 N.W.2d 504 (1994), part I of the policy implies that its duty to defend the Sawczuk suit would end when it tendered the $40,000 policy limit to the court via interpleader.  P ease did not oppose summary judgment for plaintiff on count I, but he argued that plaintiff could not discharge its contractual duty merely by tendering its policy limit to the court before the Sawczuk suit had been resolved.

The trial court initially granted plaintiff summary judgment on both counts of its complaint.  Pease moved to reconsider the judgment on count II, arguing that, under Douglas v. Allied American Insurance , 312 Ill. App. 3d 535 (2000), plaintiff had not discharged its contractual duty to defend and that to allow plaintiff to withdraw from the defense of its insured while the tort suit awaited resolution would violate public policy.

Plaintiff responded that Douglas was both distinguishable and wrongly decided .  Plaintiff also filed the affidavit of Charles Swearingen, its casualty claims specialist.  Swearingen stated that in 1998 he wrote to Pease and the representatives of the Sawczuk estates.  Pease, who may have been the passenger in Bresnahan's Bronco, and the Sawczuk estates had potential claims under Bresnahan's policy.  Swearingen proposed to discharge plaintiff's liability as insurer by paying each party $8,000, thus exhausting the $40,000 liability limit.  The offer was rejected.

The trial court vacated the summary judgment on count II and held a bench trial on that count.  The sole witness, Charles Swearingen, testified consistently with his affidavit.  The trial court ruled in favor of Pease on count II.  (Plaintiff received a  default judgment against Bresnahan on this count.)  

The court gave two reasons for its holding.  First, plaintiff had not satisfied its contractual duty to defend.  Finding the term "offered or paid" ambiguous and construing it against plaintiff, the court reasoned that the $40,000 policy limit would not be "paid" until a claimant received it via a settlement or judgment establishing plaintiff's legal liability.

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American Standard Insurance Co. v. Basbagill, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-standard-insurance-co-v-basbagill-illappct-2002.