Gillespie Community Unit School District No. 7 v. Union Pacific R.R. Co.

2015 IL App (4th) 140877
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 30, 2015
Docket4-14-0877
StatusUnpublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2015 IL App (4th) 140877 (Gillespie Community Unit School District No. 7 v. Union Pacific R.R. Co.) 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
Gillespie Community Unit School District No. 7 v. Union Pacific R.R. Co., 2015 IL App (4th) 140877 (Ill. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

2015 IL App (4th) 140877 Opinion filed November 6, 2015

NO. 4-14-0877 Modified upon denial of rehearing December 30, 2015 IN THE APPELLATE COURT

OF ILLINOIS

FOURTH DISTRICT

GILLESPIE COMMUNITY UNIT SCHOOL ) Appeal from DISTRICT NO. 7, MACOUPIN COUNTY, ) Circuit Court of ILLINOIS; and THE BOARD OF EDUCATION OF ) Macoupin County THE GILLESPIE COMMUNITY UNIT SCHOOL ) No. 09L22 DISTRICT NO. 7, MACOUPIN COUNTY, ) ILLINOIS, ) Plaintiffs-Appellees and Cross- ) Appellants, ) v. ) UNION PACIFIC RAILROAD COMPANY, ) Defendant-Appellant and Cross- ) ) Appellee ) (Illinois Mine Subsidence Insurance Fund, ) Intervenor-Appellee and Cross- ) Appellant). ) Honorable ) Patrick J. Londrigan, ) Judge Presiding.

JUSTICE APPLETON delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion. Presiding Justice Knecht and Justice Steigmann concurred in the judgment and opinion.

OPINION ¶1 There are three plaintiffs in this case. The first two plaintiffs are Gillespie

Community Unit School District No. 7 and its board of education, and we will refer to those two

plaintiffs, collectively, as "the School District." The third plaintiff is the Illinois Mine

Subsidence Insurance Fund (Fund). The defendant is Union Pacific Railroad Company (Union

Pacific). ¶2 Plaintiffs brought this action to recover damages from Union Pacific for a coal

mine subsidence, which happened in Benld in March 2009 and which destroyed an elementary

school and damaged a house. The school belonged to the School District. The house belonged

to William and Jennifer Carter. The Carters are not parties to this case, but the Fund is a

reinsurer of their house, and it also is a reinsurer of the school.

¶3 The Fund seeks from Union Pacific the amounts it paid as a reinsurer, and the

School District seeks to be compensated for the destruction of its school and the damage to its

land.

¶4 Union Pacific protests, however, that it did not dig the coal mine. Rather,

Superior Coal Company (Superior Coal) did so long ago. Even so, plaintiffs seek to hold Union

Pacific liable on the theory that in 1956 Chicago and North Western Railway Company (Chicago

and North Western) assumed Superior Coal's liability for subsidences or, alternatively, on the

theory that Superior Coal was, all along, Chicago and North Western's mere instrumentality or

alter ego. The School District also alleges that Chicago and North Western directly participated

in Superior Coal's mining activities. It appears to be undisputed that if any of those theories

holds true, the liability ultimately got passed along, by merger, to Union Pacific.

¶5 In the trial court's view, the alleged facts failed to support any of those theories,

and the court granted Union Pacific's motion to dismiss the complaints, with prejudice, for

failure to state a cause of action (735 ILCS 5/2-615 (West 2010)). Plaintiffs appealed. We

upheld the dismissal of some counts and reversed the dismissal of other counts. Gillespie

Community Unit School District No. 7 v. Union Pacific R.R. Co., 2012 IL App (4th) 110142-U,

¶ 147. We could not say it was clear, on the face of the complaints, that no set of facts could be

proved that would entitle plaintiffs to recover on the counts alleging assumption of liability,

-2- direct participation, and alter ego. Id. Looking at those counts in the light most favorable to

plaintiffs, we decided to remand the case for further proceedings. Id.

¶6 On remand, the parties filed cross-motions for summary judgment. In the hearing

on these motions, the trial court understood our discussion of plaintiffs' theory of assumption of

liability as leaving the court no choice but to enter a summary judgment in plaintiffs' favor on

that theory and to award them $9.85 million in damages, although the court made a summary

determination in Union Pacific's favor on the remaining theories of direct participation and alter

ego (which could not logically coexist with a theory of assumption of liability).

¶7 Actually, our preceding decision left some room for proof on the question of

assumption of liabilities: we observed that the term "liabilities" in Chicago and North Western's

resolution of 1956 could mean perfected liabilities, contingent liabilities, or both. Id. ¶ 82. On

remand, Union Pacific presented extrinsic evidence that by assuming Superior Coal's

"liabilities," Chicago and North Western intended to assume only perfected liabilities, liabilities

that accrued before Superior Coal's dissolution—not unaccrued, unknowable, contingent

liabilities, such as liabilities for subsidences occurring after dissolution. Because the record

appears to contain no evidence contradicting Union Pacific's evidence in that respect, we

conclude, de novo, that Union Pacific eliminated any genuine issue as to the meaning of

"liabilities" in Chicago and North Western's resolution of 1956, and consequently we reverse the

summary judgment in plaintiffs' favor. Chicago and North Western never assumed liability for

future subsidences, that is, subsidences occurring after the dissolution of its subsidiary, Superior

Coal.

¶8 That does not mean the case is over. Both plaintiffs and Union Pacific are only

partly right in their cross-motions for summary judgment, and we only partly agree with their

-3- cross-appeals. Plaintiffs are entitled to a summary determination in their favor on Union

Pacific's third, sixth, and ninth affirmative defenses, as the trial court correctly concluded. Union

Pacific is entitled to a summary determination in its favor on the theory of assumption of

liability, and thus there is no occasion to reform Chicago and North Western's resolution, as

Union Pacific proposes to do. Union Pacific also is entitled to a summary determination on the

theory of direct participation. But there still is a genuine issue of material fact as to plaintiffs'

alter ego theory. With that theory still at issue, it would be premature to address the School

District's remaining contention that it was entitled to prove the cost of grouting (filling the mine

rooms with concrete). See Pielet v. Pielet, 2012 IL 112064, ¶ 57; Business & Professional

People for the Public Interest v. Illinois Commerce Comm'n, 136 Ill. 2d 192, 228 (1989); In re

Marriage of Osborn, 206 Ill. App. 3d 588, 600 (1990).

¶9 Because there still is a genuine issue as to whether Superior Coal was the alter

ego or instrumentality of Chicago and North Western, we reverse the summary judgment in

plaintiffs' favor, and we remand this case for further proceedings.

¶ 10 We now will explain, in greater detail, how we arrived at this decision, beginning

with the evidence in the summary judgment proceedings.

¶ 11 I. BACKGROUND

¶ 12 A. The Origin of Superior Coal

¶ 13 From about 1935 to 1947, Superior Coal was in litigation with the Illinois

Department of Finance (Department). The Department claimed that Superior Coal owed a

retailers' occupation tax in the total amount of $97,838 for coal Superior Coal had sold to its

parent corporation, Chicago and North Western, from July 1933 to May 1935. Superior Coal

contested this claim for back taxes because Superior Coal regarded itself as a department of

-4- Chicago and North Western, rather than a bona fide separate corporation, and the purported sales

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