Carolina Casualty Insurance Company v. The Estate of Sperl

2015 IL App (3d) 130294
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJanuary 27, 2015
Docket3-13-0294, 3-13-0910 cons.
StatusUnpublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2015 IL App (3d) 130294 (Carolina Casualty Insurance Company v. The Estate of Sperl) 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
Carolina Casualty Insurance Company v. The Estate of Sperl, 2015 IL App (3d) 130294 (Ill. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

2015 IL App (3d) 130294

Opinion filed January 27, 2015 _____________________________________________________________________________

IN THE

APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS

THIRD DISTRICT

A.D., 2015

CAROLINA CASUALTY INSURANCE ) Appeal from the Circuit Court COMPANY, DEAN HENRY, TOAD-L ) of the 12th Judicial Circuit, DRAGON FLY EXPRESS, INC., LUANN ) Will County, Illinois, BLACK, and MICHAEL SMITH, ) ) Plaintiffs-Appellees, ) ) v. ) ) THE ESTATE OF JOSEPH SPERL, ) SUSAN SPERL, THE ESTATE OF ) THOMAS SANDERS, and ANNETTE ) SANDERS, ) ) Defendants-Appellants ) ) (C.H. Robinson Company; CH. H. Robinson ) Company, Inc.; CH. Robinson Worldwide, ) Inc.; C.H. Robinson International, Inc.; and ) Appeal Nos. 3-13-0294 C.H. Worldwide-LTL, Inc., ) 3-13-0310 ) Defendants-Appellees; ) Circuit No. 04-CH-1195 ) William Taluc, Edward Dusik, Michael ) Bundy, Donald Kaminky, Shirley Kaminky, ) Charles Ingram, Marie Hernandez, Trisha ) Vagas, Proven St. Joseph Medical Center, ) Insure One, Holmes, Murphy and Associates, ) Auto Owners-Caywood Insurance, Clarendon ) National Enterprise Leasing, Garland Gherke ) Trucking, Inc., Advocate Good Samaritan ) Hospital, The Plainfield Fire Department, ) Lifeflight, Paula Saintvillers, Augustine ) Hernandez, United Healthcare, Inc., Midwest ) Trauma, LLC, Blue Cross and Blue Shield of ) Illinois, Farmers Insurance Group, American ) Modern Home Insurance Company, and ) Unknown Claimants, ) The Honorable ) Barbara N. Petrungaro, Defendants). ) Judge, Presiding.

___________________________________________________________________________

JUSTICE CARTER delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion. Presiding Justice McDade and Justice Wright concurred in the judgment and opinion. _____________________________________________________________________________

OPINION

¶1 Plaintiff, Carolina Casualty Insurance Company (CCIC), on behalf of all of the listed

plaintiffs, filed an interpleader action against several defendants to resolve multiple potential

claims that existed as to the proceeds of a CCIC insurance policy arising out of a multiple-

vehicle traffic accident. Prior to trial, CCIC moved to voluntarily dismiss (735 ILCS 5/2-1009(a)

(West 2012)) defendants, the estates of Joseph Sperl and Thomas Sanders, from the action,

alleging that the claims of the estates had been satisfied in full and that the estates no longer had

an interest in the disputed funds. After written and oral arguments on the matter, the trial court

granted CCIC's motion to dismiss the estates from the interpleader action and also denied

motions that had been made by the estates for leave to file counterclaims for breach of settlement

contract and garnishment. The estates appeal. We affirm the trial court's judgment.

¶2 FACTS

¶3 The facts of the underlying traffic accident have been set forth in a previous appeal (Sperl

v. C.H. Robinson Worldwide, Inc., 408 Ill. App. 3d 1051, 1052-56 (2011)) and will only be

repeated here as necessary to place this appeal in context. On April 1, 2004, DeAn Henry was

2 driving her tractor-trailer (the truck) northbound on Interstate 55 near Plainfield, Illinois, when

she noticed that the vehicles in front of her were not moving. Henry was unable to stop her truck

in time and ran over several of the vehicles, causing a multiple-vehicle collision. As a result of

the collision, Joseph Sperl and Thomas Sanders were killed, William Taluc was severely injured,

and several other people suffered personal injuries and/or property damage.

¶4 Henry owned the truck she was driving and operated it under the federal motor carrier

authority of Dragon Fly Express, Inc. (Dragon Fly), which was owned by LuAnn Black and

Michael Smith. C.H. Robinson Worldwide, Inc. (CHR), brokered the load that Henry was

hauling that day. At the time of the accident, Dragon Fly was covered by a commercial

transportation policy, which had been issued to it by CCIC. The insurance policy contained a

combined single liability limit of $1 million for bodily injury and property damage and obligated

CCIC to pay all interest that accrued on any judgment that was entered.

¶5 In July 2004, CCIC filed the instant interpleader action in Will County on behalf of all of

the listed plaintiffs to resolve the multiple potential claims against the policy resulting from the

accident. Named as defendants in the action were the 2 estates, CHR, and over 20 others. CCIC

alleged in its complaint, which was amended several times, that because of the severity of the

damage caused, the liability limits of the policy were insufficient to satisfy all of the claims of

the potential claimants.

¶6 After the interpleader action was filed, the estates and Taluc filed separate lawsuits,

which were later consolidated for trial, against Henry, Dragon Fly, and CHR for wrongful death,

survival, and personal injuries that were due to Henry's negligent operation of the truck. CHR

filed a claim for contribution against Henry and Dragon Fly, but that claim was severed from the

wrongful death, survival, and personal injury action.

3 ¶7 In March 2009, the wrongful death, survival, and personal injury action proceeded to a

jury trial. At the trial, Henry and Dragon Fly admitted liability. The only issues before the jury

were: (1) whether Henry was CHR's agent so as to make CHR vicariously liable for the injuries;

and (2) the nature and amount of damages to be awarded. At the conclusion of the trial, the jury

found that Henry was the agent of CHR and that CHR was vicariously liable for the injuries.

The jury awarded damages of $7.25 million to Sperl's estate, $8.75 million to Sanders’s estate,

and $7.775 million to Taluc, for a total damages award of $23.775 million. A portion of the

damages award to each estate ($250,000 each for a total of $500,000) was for conscious pain and

suffering of the decedents prior to their deaths (the survival awards).

¶8 CHR filed a posttrial motion. Dragon Fly and Henry did not. In its motion, CHR

asserted, among other things, that the survival awards in favor of the estates were not supported

by the evidence and had to be vacated because there was insufficient evidence presented of

conscious pain and suffering of the decedents. The trial court agreed, and in September 2009, it

entered an order granting CHR's request to vacate that portion of the judgment.

¶9 CHR appealed from the underlying judgment, contesting the jury's finding of agency and

the trial court's refusal to give the jury an instruction on apportionment of damages between

CHR and Dragon Fly. Henry and Dragon Fly did not appeal. The estates cross-appealed the

vacation of the survival awards but later withdrew their appeal. In March 2011, this court

affirmed the trial court's judgment, finding, among other things, that CHR's liability was not

capable of being apportioned because it was entirely derivative and was based upon respondeat

superior, rather than upon CHR's own negligence or fault in causing the accident. See Sperl, 408

Ill. App. 3d at 1060-61. CHR filed a petition for leave to appeal to the supreme court, but that

petition was denied.

4 ¶ 10 Before, during, and after the trial in the underlying tort case, CCIC offered its entire

policy limit of $1,000,000 to the estates. Shortly after the trial court ruled upon CHR's posttrial

motion, CCIC again tendered its policy limit to the estates.

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Carolina Casualty Insurance Co. v. Estate of Sperl
2015 IL App (3d) 130294 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 2015)

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