Central Illinois Public Service Company v. Agricultural Insurance Company

CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJanuary 14, 2008
Docket5-06-0181 Rel
StatusPublished

This text of Central Illinois Public Service Company v. Agricultural Insurance Company (Central Illinois Public Service Company v. Agricultural Insurance Company) 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
Central Illinois Public Service Company v. Agricultural Insurance Company, (Ill. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

NO. 5-06-0181 NOTICE

Decision filed 01/14/08. The text of IN THE this decision may be changed or

corrected prior to the filing of a APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS Peti tion for Rehearing or th e

disposition of the same. FIFTH DISTRICT ________________________________________________________________________

CENTRAL ILLINOIS PUBLIC SERVICE COMPANY, ) Appeal from the ) Circuit Court of Plaintiff, ) Madison County. ) v. ) No. 00-MR-494 ) AGRICULTURAL INSURANCE COMPANY, ) ) Defendant and Counterdefendant-Appellee, ) ) and ) ) AMERICAN INTERNATIONAL SPECIALTY LINES) INSURANCE COMPANY, ) ) Defendant and Counterplaintiff-Appellant, ) ) and ) ) SEABOARD SURETY COMPANY, ) Honorable ) Barbara J. Crowder, Defendant. ) Judge, presiding. ________________________________________________________________________

JUSTICE GOLDENHERSH delivered the opinion of the court:

Central Illinois Public Service Company (CIPS) filed an action for a declaratory

judgment in the circuit court of Madison County seeking a resolution of matters regarding

coverage by several insurers for an accident involving numerous plaintiffs. American

International Specialty Lines Insurance Company (AISLIC), a higher-tiered excess insurer,

filed a counterclaim against Great American Assurance Company, formerly known as

Agricultural Insurance Company (Great American), a lower-tiered excess insurer, for

negligence and bad faith in the settlement process. The circuit court dismissed the

counterclaim. On review, AISLIC raises issues regarding (1) whether a lower-tiered excess

1 insurer owes any duty to a higher-tiered excess insurer to engage in meaningful settlement

negotiations and (2) whether an underlying insurer still owes that duty if it could not settle

the matter within its own policy limits. We reverse and remand.

FACTS

In November 1996 an elevator at the CIPS power plant in Newton, Illinois, dropped

15 floors, injuring 23 boilermakers inside, the Philbrick plaintiffs. CIPS and Dover Elevator

Company (Dover) were defendants in suits brought by the boilermakers.

The parties in this appeal are excess insurers of CIPS. CIPS had several layers of

insurance. Seaboard Surety Company (Seaboard) had primary insurance coverage in the

amount of $5 million. Steadfast Insurance Company (Steadfast), the first-level excess

carrier, provided the next $10 million. The second-level excess carrier, Great American,

provided the next $15 million. The third-level excess carrier, AISLIC, provided the final $25

million of coverage.

On September 25, 2000, CIPS and Dover made a settlement offer to the first 10

Philbrick plaintiffs in the amount of approximately $20 million. Dover's insurer paid $5

million on Dover's behalf, and Seaboard and Steadfast, CIPS's primary and first-level excess

insurance carriers, provided the limits of their coverage totaling $15 million.

On October 4, 2000, CIPS sent correspondence to Great American and AISLIC asking

each to consent to an additional $29 million payment to settle with the remaining 13

Philbrick plaintiffs. On October 13, 2000, Great American and AISLIC agreed to fund the

$29 million settlement. The parties agreed that liability for the $29 million settlement would

be decided in an allocation trial between Dover and CIPS.

The allocation trial began on October 16, 2000. A jury found CIPS 95% liable for the

Philbrick damages. Thus, CIPS was responsible for $27.5 million of the $29 million

settlement. After posttrial motions, the trial court reduced CIPS's share, with Great American

2 still responsible for its policy limits of $15 million and AISLIC responsible for $10.325

million.

On October 12, 2000, CIPS filed a complaint for a declaratory judgment, naming each

of its insurers as defendants. AISLIC filed a counterclaim against Great American for a

failure to settle. AISLIC alleged Great American was negligent and acted in bad faith.

AISLIC claimed that Great American ignored its demands to enter into good-faith settlement

efforts or tender its policy limits so that AISLIC could resolve the matter. AISLIC brought

claims under theories of a direct duty and equitable subrogation.

Great American filed a motion for a summary judgment on the counterclaim. Great

American submitted affidavits from attorneys for the Philbrick plaintiffs stating the plaintiffs

had not been willing to accept any settlement offer for less than the ultimate settlement

amount. Great American also submitted the affidavit of a representative from Dover's insurer

stating that he had rejected proposals that Dover's insurer fund any settlement with the

Philbrick plaintiffs on a 50/50 basis. Attached to a supplemental motion was an affidavit

from an attorney stating that she had represented CIPS regarding insurance coverage matters

and that she was not aware of any offer by Dover's insurer to contribute 50% of the Philbrick

settlement.

AISLIC filed a motion for leave to file a second amended counterclaim. The trial

court granted leave but barred any claim that the underlying Philbrick suit could have been

settled for less than $49 million. AISLIC's amended counterclaim contains four counts.

AISLIC alleged bad faith and negligence under theories of direct duty and equitable

subrogation. AISLIC also alleged that the allocation trial could have been resolved with

Dover on a 50/50 basis or, alternatively, that the allocation trial could have been settled

above Great American's policy limits on a percentage basis more favorable than a 95%/5%

split.

3 Great American filed a motion to strike or dismiss the amended counterclaim. See

735 ILCS 5/2-615 (West 2000). The trial court found that AISLIC failed to state a claim

under Illinois law, and the court dismissed the counterclaim. The trial court denied AISLIC's

motion to reconsider, stating:

"Taking the claim as pled from AISLIC, AISLIC complains not that Great

American could have settled the allocation portion of the trial within the policy limits.

AISLIC seeks not only to extend Illinois law to excess insurers, but also to extend it

to a duty to settle above policy limits. AISLIC's attempt to recast this claim into an

argument that Great American breached a duty to tender its policy limits to AISLIC

so that AISLIC could try to settle for less than AISLIC ultimately had to pay after the

allocation trial is beyond a logical extension of existing law. While counsel makes

an interesting argument, this court cannot create such an extension of Illinois law.

The motion to reconsider is denied."

AISLIC appeals.

ANALYSIS

I

The resolution of this appeal requires us to address two issues. First, we must

consider whether an underlying excess insurer can be liable to a supplemental excess carrier.

We must also look at whether the trial court was correct in finding that any such duty only

arises if the underlying excess insurer could have settled the claim within the limits of its

own policy. These issues, including the definitions of the key terms involved, compound

with each other and invite a lengthy discourse. To further complicate matters, Illinois courts

have not directly addressed what duties an excess carrier may owe to another excess carrier.

Illinois courts have produced a significant amount of case law on the nature of excess

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