McGary v. Illinois Farmers Insurance

2016 IL App (1st) 143190, 58 N.E.3d 804
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJune 30, 2016
Docket1-14-3190
StatusUnpublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 2016 IL App (1st) 143190 (McGary v. Illinois Farmers Insurance) 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
McGary v. Illinois Farmers Insurance, 2016 IL App (1st) 143190, 58 N.E.3d 804 (Ill. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

2016 IL App (1st) 143190 No. 1-14-3190 Opinion filed June 30, 2016 Second Division

IN THE

APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS

FIRST DISTRICT

) ) CARLOS MCGARY, ) Appeal from the Circuit Court ) Plaintiff-Appellant, of Cook County. ) ) v. ) No. 2011 L 5484 ) ILLINOIS FARMERS INSURANCE, ) ) Defendant-Appellee The Honorable ) Eileen O’Neill Burke, ) (Caren Schulman and Solomon Morgan, Judge, presiding. ) Contemnors-Appellants). ) ) )

JUSTICE HYMAN delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion. Presiding Justice Pierce and Justice Simon concurred in the judgment and opinion.

OPINION

¶1 Carlos McGary sued Illinois Farmers Insurance (Farmers) for not paying an insurance

claim after a car accident. During discovery, a witness, Solomon Morgan, refused to answer

Farmers’ deposition questions on the advice of his attorney. The trial court held Morgan and his

attorney in contempt and ordered they pay sanctions to Farmers. 1-14-3190

¶2 Morgan and his attorney, Caren Schulman (“the contemnors”), argue that they should not

have been held in contempt because Farmers’ deposition questions were irrelevant to the issue of

whether McGary violated the policy’s cooperation clause, and the “mend the hold” doctrine

prevents Farmers from changing that already-stated position. We need not decide whether the

contemnors may invoke the “mend the hold” doctrine, as we vacate the contempt and sanction

orders and remand because the contempt order lacks a purge provision and both orders lack

written reasons as required under Illinois Supreme Court Rule 219(c) (eff. Sept. 1, 1974).

¶3 BACKGROUND

¶4 The Accident and Investigation

¶5 On June 29, 2010, Carlos McGary went to a police station and made a report that while

leaving a gas station in Lynwood, IL, he accidentally rear-ended a car, which then drove off. The

report listed McGary as the driver living on South Forrestville Avenue in Chicago, and Farmers

as the insurance company. Another man, Solomon Morgan of South Michigan Avenue in

Chicago, was identified as the owner of the Bentley, which McGary was driving. McGary had

added the Bentley to his existing Farmers policy on June 25, 2010. The certificate of insurance

reflected his mother, Vernelle McGary, as the Bentley’s owner.

¶6 A “used vehicle order” from A&S Auto Sales in Columbus, Ohio, dated June 21, 2010,

indicated McGary purchased the Bentley for $55,000 by trading in a 2007 S550 Mercedes and

paying $15,000 cash on delivery. Farmers’ investigator David Sowinski interviewed McGary on

August 10, 2010. McGary told Sowinski that he lived in Minnesota, and claimed to have

purchased the Bentley on June 21, 2010, for $55,000, trading in a Mercedes S550 to reduce the

price. The Mercedes had been titled to Solomon Morgan, who transferred the title to McGary so

McGary could use it in trade. Morgan did this in exchange for $7500 and as a favor to McGary.

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McGary said he was a registered sex offender in Illinois but it was permissible for him to live in

Minnesota. At some point McGary refused to further answer Sowinski’s questions on the

grounds that McGary did not think the questions to be relevant to his insurance claim.

¶7 Farmers’ claim file reflects that about a month later, on September 13, a Farmers

representative contacted Solomon Morgan. According to Morgan, he did not know McGary or a

firm by the name of A&S Auto Sales and had never owned or purchased a Bentley. Morgan

denied giving McGary the Mercedes because he owed McGary a favor. Morgan said that in

2009, an acquaintance named “Mendell” asked him to put a Mercedes in his name. Morgan

received the Mercedes and the title and garaged the car for a year before Mendell retrieved it.

Morgan indicated he was “very concerned and angered that it appears he was taken advantage

of.”

¶8 On November 10, 2010, McGary participated in an “examination under oath” conducted

by a Farmers attorney. McGary said he lived in Minnesota with his mother and had previously

lived on Forrestville Avenue in Chicago. He admitted to two felony convictions in Cook County,

one for kidnapping and the other for armed violence (which he sometimes referred to as a drug

conviction). Although he had moved to Minnesota, McGary still carried an Illinois driver’s

license.

¶9 McGary said he purchased the Bentley at an Ohio car dealership, A&S Auto Sales, on

June 21, 2010. That same day, he called Farmers to add the Bentley to his already existing

insurance policy. The price of the Bentley was $55,000, and McGary traded in a S550 Mercedes

as part of the purchase. The owner of the Mercedes was his friend Solomon Morgan, who had

signed the title and put the car in McGary’s name. Morgan did this because he owed McGary a

favor. McGary obtained the Mercedes in 2007 and drove it until 2010, though the Mercedes

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remained in Morgan’s name, the registration stickers had expired, and there was no insurance on

the Mercedes.

¶ 10 In addition to the trade-in, the receipt showed McGary paid $15,000 cash on delivery.

McGary, though, said he paid A&S Auto Sales $5000 at the sale, then wired an additional $8000

to A&S Auto Sales later. He still owed money and had receipts for the payments at home.

McGary had no other bills of sale. He initially tried to register the Bentley in Minnesota but, due

to the high vehicle tax, he then tried and failed to register the car in Illinois, before finally

applying to title it in Minnesota on August 5, 2010 (after the accident).

¶ 11 On the evening of the accident, McGary was turning left out of a gas station parking lot

when he rear-ended another car, which immediately sped off, though it was badly damaged.

Police did not come to the scene. The Bentley was damaged and leaking antifreeze, so McGary

drove to his friend Keesha’s house, and Keesha drove him to the police station to report the

accident. He told the police that Morgan was the Bentley’s owner, but he did not call Morgan to

tell him about the accident. Instead, Morgan later called McGary because he had not known that

McGary had traded in the Mercedes, and Morgan was not involved in purchasing the Bentley.

McGary reported the accident to Farmers the day of the accident, and, a few days later, Farmers

towed the Bentley.

¶ 12 At this point in the examination, Farmers’ attorney asked McGary if he needed to take a

break. McGary said he wanted to get food and take medication. The examination was recessed,

and when it resumed, the attorney asked more questions about the Bentley and McGary’s

criminal history. McGary stated that he was a registered sex offender in Illinois and had told

Illinois authorities that he was living in Chicago. McGary became agitated and protested these

questions, stating that this “got nothing to with my insurance” and “I gave you enough

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information anyway.” Farmers’ attorney then asked questions about paperwork, receipts, and

license plates, but McGary cut off further questioning and left the room.

¶ 13 On December 22, 2010, Farmers informed McGary that it would not cover his accident

due to his failure to “cooperate [ ] and assist [Farmers] in any matter concerning a claim or suit”

and “submit to examination under oath upon request.”

¶ 14 This Lawsuit

¶ 15 In 2011, McGary filed a complaint against Farmers alleging breach of contract for failing

to pay his claim.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2016 IL App (1st) 143190, 58 N.E.3d 804, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcgary-v-illinois-farmers-insurance-illappct-2016.