Central Illinois Light Co. v. Home Insurance Co.

CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 2, 2004
Docket96978 Rel
StatusPublished

This text of Central Illinois Light Co. v. Home Insurance Co. (Central Illinois Light Co. v. Home Insurance Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Central Illinois Light Co. v. Home Insurance Co., (Ill. 2004).

Opinion

Docket No. 96978–Agenda 15–May 2004.

CENTRAL ILLINOIS LIGHT COMPANY, Appellee, v. THE HOME INSURANCE COMPANY et al. , Appellants.

Opinion filed December 2, 2004.

JUSTICE GARMAN delivered the opinion of the court:

Plaintiff Central Illinois Light Company (CILCO) filed suit against its excess liability insurers for indemnification of funds expended to investigate and remediate environmental contamination at several sites that formerly housed manufactured gas plants (MGPs). Defendant insurers filed nine motions seeking summary judgment or partial summary judgment. The circuit court granted five of these motions and denied four.

Interlocutory cross-appeals were taken to the appellate court pursuant to Rule 308 (155 Ill. 2d R. 308). CILCO appealed the circuit court’s orders granting three of the summary judgment motions, one of which was the dismissal of claims based on coverage contained in policies written in 1948-57 and 1974-85. CILCO was unable to locate the actual policies, but offered secondary evidence of these writings, which the circuit court found inadmissible. In addition, the circuit court denied CILCO’s motion for additional discovery of standard or sample policy language in use by the defendants at these times. CILCO also raised this issue on appeal. Defendants cross-appealed the circuit court’s denial of three of their summary judgment motions.

The appellate court reversed the circuit court’s order granting summary judgment in favor of the defendants on the issue of indemnity. In addition, the appellate court reversed the circuit court’s judgment on the missing policy issues. The appellate court affirmed a ruling dealing with CILCO’s claim for legal expenses in litigation that is not at issue in the present appeal. Finally, the appellate court declined to review defendants’ appeals from the denial of three summary judgment motions. 342 Ill. App. 3d 940, 965.

We granted defendants’ petitions for leave to appeal pursuant to Rule 315(a) (177 Ill. 2d R. 315(a)). Pursuant to Supreme Court Rule 345 (155 Ill. 2d R. 345), we have permitted the Complex Insurance Claims Litigation Association to file a brief amicus curiae on behalf of the defendants. We have also permitted the Illinois Energy Association, the Illinois Environmental Regulatory Group, Northern Illinois Gas Company, Kraft Foods North America, Inc., the Builders Association of Greater Chicago, the Northern Illinois Building Contractors Association, Illinois Tool Works, Inc., the Illinois State Fabricare Association, the Land of Lincoln Drycleaners Association, Inc., and the Chicagoland Cleaners Association to file briefs amici curiae on behalf of the plaintiffs.

BACKGROUND

Plaintiff CILCO is the owner of several properties in the State of Illinois that formerly housed MGPs, including sites located at MacArthur Boulevard (MacArthur) and First and Washington Streets (First and Washington) in Springfield and Persimmon Street (Persimmon) in Peoria. Gas was manufactured at these facilities from the 1850s through the 1930s, using processes that created coal tar as a by-product. The coal tar was recovered, stored in underground containment structures, and sold. By the middle of the twentieth century, MGPs were being rendered obsolescent by the advent of natural gas pipelines. CILCO dismantled the First and Washington site in the late 1920s and the MacArthur and Persimmon sites in the early 1950s. At each site, the cover of the containment structure was removed and most of the remaining coal tar was extracted for sale. However, significant amounts of tar remained in the structures, which were filled in with construction debris and other materials. Over time, the structures leaked and the surrounding soil and groundwater were contaminated.

In 1985, CILCO received a report prepared by the Radian Corporation in conjunction with the United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), which described the potential for environmental contamination at former MGP sites. CILCO began to investigate its properties and identified three former MGP sites that it then owned, the MacArthur, First and Washington, and Persimmon locations. Visual inspection of these sites revealed no evidence of contamination. However, in 1986, discolored and odorous soil was discovered at the MacArthur site by workers excavating to install an underground storage tank. CILCO investigated and eventually determined that tar constituents were present in the soil.

Shortly thereafter, the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency (IEPA) held a meeting for the heads of the environmental departments at various Illinois utilities to discuss potential environmental contamination at more than 100 MGP sites throughout the state. The record contains the affidavit of a former CILCO environmental engineer in which he states that at the meeting the utilities were informed that they were strictly liable, under state and federal law, for environmental contamination at MGP sites. Further, the companies were informed that although the IEPA could bring suit to compel investigation and remediation of the sites, the companies could act voluntarily under the supervision of the agency. The IEPA officials presenting this information also informed the utilities that they could deal with this liability “the easy way or the hard way.”

CILCO’s subsequent expenditures to investigate and remediate the contamination of its MGP sites were not the result of a judgment following adjudication of liability or of a settlement reached after the initiation of an enforcement action. Rather, CILCO entered into a voluntary agreement with the IEPA in 1987, pursuant to the Pre-Notice Site Cleanup Program (Pre-Notice Program). The Pre-Notice Program was established pursuant to a provision of the Environmental Protection Act (Act) that permitted the IEPA, upon the request of the owner or operator, to provide review and evaluation services at a site where hazardous substances might be present, and to supervise the voluntary cleanup of the site. 415 ILCS 5/22.2(m)(1) (West 1994). Under the agreement between CILCO and the IEPA, agency guidelines and instructions governed the cleanup work. All work plans required agency approval. In addition, the IEPA regularly billed CILCO for its costs in overseeing the investigation and remediation. In 1995, the Pre-Notice Program was replaced with the Site Remediation Program (415 ILCS 5/58 et seq. (West 1996)), which also provides for voluntary cleanup of certain types of sites under IEPA oversight. Eventually, the IEPA sent “No Further Action” letters to CILCO, informing it that it was released from “further responsibilities under the Act for performance of the approved remedial action” with regard to certain sites.

This litigation followed when CILCO sought indemnification from its excess insurers for its expenditures related to investigation and remediation of the sites. Defendants included the Home Insurance Company (Home) and certain other London market insurers (referred as the CLMI) from whom CILCO purchased excess liability policies between 1948 and 1985. It is the construction of the language of the CLMI policies that is at issue in the present case.

From 1957 through 1971, the CLMI policies provided that the insurers would “indemnify [the insured] for any and all sums which the Insured shall by law become liable to pay and shall pay

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