MFA Mutual Insurance Co. v. Cheek

340 N.E.2d 331, 34 Ill. App. 3d 209, 1975 Ill. App. LEXIS 3338
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 19, 1975
Docket74-93
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 340 N.E.2d 331 (MFA Mutual Insurance Co. v. Cheek) 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
MFA Mutual Insurance Co. v. Cheek, 340 N.E.2d 331, 34 Ill. App. 3d 209, 1975 Ill. App. LEXIS 3338 (Ill. Ct. App. 1975).

Opinion

Mr. JUSTICE GEORGE J. MORAN

delivered the opinion of tixe court:

M.F.A. Mutual Insurance Company appeals from a judgment of the circuit court of Monroe County dismissing its complaint for a declaratory judgment against Harold Miller and Marie Miller that an automobile insurance policy sold to George Cheek was void because of a breach of the cooperation clause in the policy by Cheek, who told M.F.A. that he was driving his car when it struck Harold Miller, a pedestrian, and then later told M.F.A. that William Valleroy was driving. _ ->¡&

The stipulated facts disclosed that M.F.A. Mutual Insurance- OoSÍpa&y (herein called M.F.A.) sold an automobile insurance-ptilioy 40>'Ge®a>g@ Cheek which protected Cheek against liability incurred iiAáñ aütbfflbMíi accident up to the amount of $10,000 p ér- áécidetiL victim s-Arf-óEtnibÜS clause in the policy protected any?¡MrSdnÁ4id used - Ghéék'S'Wtofiibbile with his permission. A coopeiWtióíiiMáuSeAwSS ln&lhdédílíi'itheiTíolihy which said: '(•tojsrdbob n tol nonos ®i& ni Ichi a is-iiA

“Assistance and Ccfc^6^.668i MsM cooperate with -the^dih|)É^p-:dis¿lbSMg all^Wríiiiieníi fSó€S3Si^#a or available t6nhfiñ',^bhdf%^<3¿ fhB Ch'mpaby^^Sqtiest/ÁsSiSt^ in making sñttfetíefítsj ififEb^Bbk^uét ^feMtshá^d'tgfbhforéíig*!^^ right'-ííf^cíñ^ibiitibn-'bffiéddiHñá^'aígains't áhy<pefs®H é®9slgfflS^¿i'-iSoS-tHáfInSá^ b@4íáblel$¿ íthel'BSWéd’ -aheeTs':áfforded''riridfer'th6::p0licyf r’ * !•.?:• Io.”.:/ í marro adí tedi

ThÁ^blibyj wás W be m^ffbct Épéñf- Sbplémb8f- $l,24971y. tb^MSrgtí'íí, í®72.-,'Oii,^íbiP!éíab'ér5i CÍieek-WaS £iditígEib- Ktá'5CarJiWíthlíW’ilI^th ^á'Hbti5yíatidiMfbiotiiér1p'etsóñSf'vyh'eiííit'' striekP&fid íñjütísd MÍíftiMiMÉfer •iSEübíhe^^aáíWo'SsiñgsaVseáeli tjn v-'-sx bino» bcn-ram" en') i-safon yoifoq ^S©lifeek'Sní(8aiaed ÍES j^blíeé ■' oiBcé'r' -WSí ín^esiígátfed^áfés 'ábcáBéhtstSat te^M-idíSeS^ilíi^ifig' ^tieh^WñíeS'was-'injul'ed- añd^Ctli&ile^elSirig*sX8heek ^Héd'i'kií?MÍÍ^A,.;:ife^fes^itátive'ori-the,*ttelbphbii'e Jáfifd^áidsthSPílféííhad. (M^ngiáPthé tñhe^'ú'f- tb^§CscM©a&' ©n Se'íSlIbMa^ 'dMyi ©to@fe •tféáitqtó !thb répm§etitatiS%’8' bfficé'áhB'b'Otop'Mbd'la-lb&’sín-^liígÉ^lfe is6tdd'"<thgl8 he' fed Web -the5 dñvfer* bfe ílie ^StitbitibbiS. ©ti NóviftibePíé1, 1971, - atií -MíFíÁÍ brñ^ltiyée2 visited'-' Chbek7: Vállésáyj -hhldThe'' 'tW53bfh§”t •petSeiSf^ydi&'h'áB beábdív-íhe eaUíAh''offEém"sáíd!-íthat%heeki had-beái Btívmg:.'"'"' "r- T'-'flc-q -.i.xr-rjsxj >jHíü,,-ji! a lo yA&íAy náS lo noli

.OT^Qlenfile! a^Gom^lkift' against -Gheekl in 4he Wéttit bóu*t2’of3Mbfit@é 56&ífatfy "bn June‘7£B9-72i- "í-he .bóiñpiaitit?; alleged- íBafc JGhéelé’sbh¿|;fi|;enyé hádMMuSédvSMíéW ihjunfespánB-^rayeB-fo'r $5O(O90ídáS^ges! fBí§?Í3hE§$:. .M'áfférlMíS^d afe wifá 'Sf!H®bIBqMfllgrl^Wxá§KéSMb$25í600^h®Sg^ from Cheek for the loss of her husband’s services. Because Harold Miller and Marie Miller occupy the same position with respect to M.F.A., only Harold Miller will be referred to below for the sake of convenience.

Cheek was served with a summons and a copy of Miller’s complaint on June 13, 1972. On the next day Cheek went to an M.F.A. office and told a supervisory employee that he had not been driving the automobile at the time of the accident, and that William Valleroy actually had been driving.

M.F.A. promptly sent Cheek a letter disclaiming its liability on the policy on the ground that Cheek had breached the cooperation clause of the policy by withholding from M.F.A. pertinent information about the accident. M.F.A. filed a complaint in the circuit court of Monroe County requesting a declaratory judgment against Cheek and Miller that the policy was void because of a breach of tire cooperation clause. Cheek did not make an appearance in this action, and a default judgment was entered against him. M.F.A. then added Valleroy as a defendant. Valleroy did not appear, and a default judgment was also entered against him.

After a trial in the action for a declaratory judgment, the circuit court held that “all issues presented herein are found in favor of the defendants and against the plaintiff,” and dismissed M.F.A.’s complaint.

M.F.A. contends (1) that the default judgments against Cheek and Valleroy extinguished M.F.A.’s liability on the policy and precluded Miller from recovering damages from M.F.A., (2) that a breach of the policy’s cooperation clause occurred which voided the policy, and (3) that the circuit court should have entered an order that declared the rights of the parties instead of an order that dismissed the complaint.

, The statement has often appeared in Illinois decisions that an accident victim cannot recover from an insurer on a liability insurance policy unléss the insured could recover if he were to sue the insurer. (See, e.g., Zitnik v. Burik, 395 Ill. 182, 69 N.E.2d 888 (1946); Firebaugh v. Jumes, 341 Ill.App. 1, 92 N.E.2d 790 (1950).) This simply means that an insurer may assert against an accident victim all the substantive defenses based upon the terms of the policy that the insurer could assert against the insured. The statement does not mean, however, that a procedural misstep by the insured which terminates his rights against the insurer nullifies the rights of an accident victim against the insurer.

An accident victim must be given a chance to litigate the question of the validity of a liability insurance policy before his interest in the insurance can be terminated. (Fourniotis v. Woodward, 63 Ill.App.2d 79, 211 N.E.2d 571 (1965); Sobina v. Busby, 62 Ill.App.2d 1, 210 N.E.2d 769 (1965).) If an accident victim declines an opportunity to litigate this matter in a declaratory judgment proceeding brought by an insurer, he may be deprived of his interest in the insurance without being given another opportunity to be heard. (Williams v. Madison County Mutual Automobile Insurance Co., 40 Ill.2d 404, 240 N.E.2d 602 (1968).) The accident victim must nevertheless be given at least one opportunity to be heard on the question of the policy’s validity. Because Miller was entitled to an opportunity to be heard, the default judgments entered against Cheek and Valleroy did not preclude Miller from recovering from M.F.A.

Because an insured’s breach of the cooperation clause is a substantive defense based upon the terms of a liability insurance policy, an insurer may urge this defense against an accident victim. (Schneider v. Autoist Mutual Insurance Co., 346 Ill. 137, 178 N.E. 466 (1931).) Moreover, if William Valleroy were the driver of the automobile, he was a permissive user who was insured by the omnibus clause in Cheek’s policy, and his cooperation with M.F.A. was a condition upon M.F.A.’s duty to pay on the policy. (Zitnik v. Burik.) M.F.A. could, thei-efore, properly argue that a significant breach of the cooperation clause by Cheek or Valleroy would preclude Miller from recovering from M.F.A.

The question of when an insured’s breach of the cooperation clause in a liability policy will be regarded as sufficiently serious to void tire policy has caused widespread dispute among the jurisdictions in the United States. There is agreement that trivial instances of uncooperative conduct are not enough to release an insurer of its obligation on the policy. (See Allstate Insurance Co. v.

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Bluebook (online)
340 N.E.2d 331, 34 Ill. App. 3d 209, 1975 Ill. App. LEXIS 3338, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mfa-mutual-insurance-co-v-cheek-illappct-1975.