Nautilus Insurance Company v. 1452-4 N. Milwaukee

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedApril 7, 2009
Docket07-3147
StatusPublished

This text of Nautilus Insurance Company v. 1452-4 N. Milwaukee (Nautilus Insurance Company v. 1452-4 N. Milwaukee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nautilus Insurance Company v. 1452-4 N. Milwaukee, (7th Cir. 2009).

Opinion

In the

United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit

No. 07-3147

N AUTILUS INSURANCE C OMPANY, an Arizona corporation, Plaintiff-Appellant, v.

1452-4 N. M ILWAUKEE A VENUE, LLC, G REAT C ENTRAL INSURANCE C OMPANY, a subrogee of Thomas Tunney Enterprises, Ltd. doing business as Ann Sather Restaurant, and B ADGER M UTUAL INSURANCE C OMPANY, as subrogee of Anthony Mignano, Defendants-Appellees.

A ppeal from the U nited States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division. N o. 06 C 6440— M atthew F. Kennelly, Judge.

A RGUED F EBRUARY 14, 2008—D ECIDED A PRIL 7, 2009

Before R IPPLE, S YKES, and T INDER, Circuit Judges. S YKES, Circuit Judge. Nautilus Insurance Company filed this declaratory-judgment action to determine whether 2 No. 07-3147

it has a duty to defend or indemnify its insured, 1452-4 North Milwaukee Avenue LLC (“1452 LLC”), against lawsuits alleging that an excavation on 1452 LLC’s prop- erty damaged a neighboring building. In Nautilus’s view, none of the claimed damage is covered because two clauses in the insurance policy—the “contractors and subcontractors” exclusion and the “classification limita- tion” exclusion—eliminate coverage for the property damage alleged in the underlying complaints. The district court disagreed, entered judgment on the pleadings declaring a duty to defend, and dismissed the duty to indemnify claim as unripe. Nautilus appeals. We reverse. The underlying complaints assert multiple claims against 1452 LLC, its contractors, and a subcon- tractor, but the property damage at issue in all the claims—damage to the neighboring building—is alleged to have arisen from excavation work performed on 1452 LLC’s property by contractors and a subcontractor. Al- though the complaints assert claims for relief against 1452 LLC directly (for negligence, res ipsa loquitur, and violation of a statutory duty to give adjacent property owners advance notice of the excavation), these claims do not allege any property damage or injury independent of the damage caused by the contractors’ and subcon- tractor’s negligent excavation. That is, the claims against 1452 LLC simply state alternative theories of recovery for the property damage caused by the faulty excava- tion work conducted by the contractors and the subcon- tractor. Because coverage for this property damage is excluded by the contractor-subcontractor exclusion, No. 07-3147 3

Nautilus has no duty to defend and therefore no duty to indemnify either.

I. Background In the fall of 2005, the building that housed the Ann Sather Restaurant, located at 1448 North Milwaukee Avenue in Chicago, was damaged so seriously that it had to be demolished. The restaurant, the owner of the property, and two insurance companies that had to pay for the loss filed lawsuits in Cook County Circuit Court alleging that the damage was caused by a negligent excavation conducted at 1452-54 North Milwaukee Ave- nue, the property next door to the restaurant.1 The suits were brought against 1452 LLC, the owner of 1452-54 North Milwaukee Avenue, and the general contractor, project manager, and subcontractor hired by 1452 LLC to perform the excavation. The complaints alleged that 1452 LLC hired the con- tractor, project manager, and subcontractor to perform an excavation on its property and that they botched the job. More specifically, the complaints alleged that the contractor, project manager, and subcontractor failed to properly reinforce the neighboring property; ran a backhoe into the side of the restaurant causing structural damage; and committed various other errors and omis- sions during the course of their work. The complaints

1 The allegations in each of the complaints are identical for purposes of this coverage dispute. 4 No. 07-3147

further alleged that the damage to the restaurant building was so severe that the building had to be demolished. The complaints asserted various claims for relief against the contractor, project manager, and subcontractor, and also asserted claims against 1452 LLC for negligence, negligent hiring and supervision of the contractors and subcontractor, res ipsa loquitur, and violating section 140/1 of chapter 765 of the Illinois Compiled Statutes. Section 140/1 requires that a property owner “intending to make or to permit an excavation to be made on his land shall give due and reasonable notice in writing to the owner or owners of adjoining lands.” 765 ILL. C OMP. S TAT. 140/1(1). If notice is not given, the statute imposes liability on the property owner for any damage to the adjacent property “arising from such excavation.” Id. 140/1(2). The complaints alleged that the required statutory notice was not given. Nautilus Insurance Company had issued a comprehen- sive general liability policy (“CGL”) to 1452 LLC covering the time period in question, so 1452 LLC tendered the defense of the lawsuits to Nautilus. Nautilus denied coverage and brought this suit against 1452 LLC and the plaintiffs in the underlying suits in federal district court, invoking the court’s diversity jurisdiction and seeking a declaratory judgment that it had no duty to defend or indemnify its insured in the underlying lawsuits. Nautilus claimed that the property damage alleged in the underlying complaints was excluded from coverage under the CGL policy’s “contractors and subcontractors” exclusion or its “classification limitation” exclusion. Some No. 07-3147 5

of the defendants moved to dismiss under Rule 12(b)(6) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure; others sought judg- ment on the pleadings under Rule 12(c). All of the motions were premised upon the argument that neither of the exclusions invoked by Nautilus applied, so the district court treated all of the motions as seeking judg- ment on the pleadings. The district court rejected Nautilus’s arguments about the applicability of the two exclusions and found coverage under the policy. The court first held that although the property damage alleged in the underlying complaints “was occasioned by 1452 LLC’s contractors’ operations,” the statutory claim against 1452 LLC fell outside the contractor-subcontractor exclusion and therefore was covered by the policy. The court said that if 1452 LLC were found to have violated the statute, then “it breached a duty that it owed neighboring property owners directly, making it liable based on its own conduct, not that of contractors or subcontractors.” The court also concluded that the classification-limitation exclusion did not apply. That clause of the policy excludes coverage for “operations that are not classified or shown on the Declarations, its endorsements, or supplements.” The declarations, endorsements, and supplements in the policy listed 1452 LLC’s property as “vacant land” and a “vacant building,” and under “description of operations” specified that 1452 LLC “intends to demolish” the building. Nautilus argued that it was possible that 1452 LLC was using the building in some capacity or storing some personal property there and thus the property might not 6 No. 07-3147

actually have been “vacant” as classified in the declara- tions, endorsements, and supplements. The district court rejected this argument, noting that nothing in the under- lying complaints supported this speculation; to the con- trary, the complaints described vacant property that was demolished and excavated. Accordingly, the court entered a declaration that Nautilus had a duty to defend 1452 LLC, dismissed the duty-to-indemnify claim as unripe, and entered final judgment terminating the case. Nautilus appealed.

II. Analysis The question in a duty-to-defend case is whether the damages alleged in the underlying complaint fall within or potentially within the insurance policy’s coverages.

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Nautilus Insurance Company v. 1452-4 N. Milwaukee, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nautilus-insurance-company-v-1452-4-n-milwaukee-ca7-2009.