Pekin Insurance v. U.S. Credit Funding, Ltd.

571 N.E.2d 769, 212 Ill. App. 3d 673, 156 Ill. Dec. 789
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMarch 28, 1991
Docket1-90-0635
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 571 N.E.2d 769 (Pekin Insurance v. U.S. Credit Funding, Ltd.) 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
Pekin Insurance v. U.S. Credit Funding, Ltd., 571 N.E.2d 769, 212 Ill. App. 3d 673, 156 Ill. Dec. 789 (Ill. Ct. App. 1991).

Opinion

PRESIDING JUSTICE RAKOWSKI

delivered the opinion of the court:

Plaintiff-appellant Pekin Insurance Company (Pekin) brought a declaratory action against its insured, U.S. Credit Funding, Ltd. (U.S. Credit), seeking to obtain a declaration that Pekin’s insurance policy did not obligate Pekin to defend or indemnify U.S. Credit in a lawsuit brought on behalf of Beth Trilling, a minor. The Trilling lawsuit arose from an accident occurring on January 22, 1987, in which Beth TriHing was struck by an automobile driven by defendant Heather Gould. A bench trial ensued, and the trial court entered judgment against Pekin. Pekin appeals the entry of judgment against it and in favor of defendants. 1 A number of issues are raised on appeal, including: (1) whether the trial court’s finding that U.S. Credit owned the automobile involved in the accident was against the manifest weight of the evidence; and (2) whether section 154 of the Insurance Code (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1987, ch. 73, par. 766) precludes Pekin from raising the defense of fraud with respect to the issue of U.S. Credit’s ownership of the vehicle. We reverse.

On January 22, 1987, Heather Gould, a minor and the daughter of Jack Gould, a principal of U.S. Credit, was driving a 1976 Ford Granada car. The car struck and injured Trilling. Later that same day, Jack Gould applied for and was issued by Pekin a business automobile policy to insure three automobiles, including the 1976 Ford Granada. The trial court found that Gould made a material misrepresentation to Pekin regarding his knowledge of the accident. Defendant Trilling does not dispute the existence of this material misrepresentation on the part of Gould. The result of this misrepresentation was that the policy was backdated to become effective January 21, 1987, so as to provide coverage for the Trilling lawsuit.

At trial, Jack Gould testified that the Granada was owned by U.S. Credit, although at his deposition he conceded that his wife Roberta Gould’s name was on the title to the vehicle. Gould contended that the vehicle had been transferred to U.S. Credit several months before it was placed on the Pekin policy. He said that there was a handwritten receipt for the transfer, but he could produce no written documentation supporting the transfer. Gould further testified at trial that after the accident, he told a representative of the towing company that U.S. Credit was the owner of the car at the time. At his deposition, however, he stated that he thought his wife was listed as the owner when the car was given over to the tow truck driver.

Roberta Gould testified at trial that in October of 1986, she sold the subject automobile to U.S. Credit for $100.00. She was not sure whether the sale was for cash or check, and though she thought the car may have been paid for by check, she did not have a cancelled check concerning the payment. She testified that she did have a copy of the handwritten bill of sale, but this was not admitted into evidence.

Prior to trial, on March 21, 1988, Pekin filed a request to admit facts, which U.S. Credit and Heather Gould never answered. Requests numbers three and four stated:

“3. That on January 22, 1987, U.S. CREDIT FUNDING, LTD. was not the title holder of the 1976 Ford automobile.
4. That U.S. CREDIT FUNDING, LTD. did not purchase the aforesaid 1976 Ford automobile on or prior to January 21,1987.”

During cross-examination of Jack Gould, Pekin offered a certified copy of the Hlinois Secretary of State’s records pertaining to the title of the 1976 Ford Granada. This record, which was introduced into evidence, contained a duplicate certificate of title in the name of Roberta Gould. This certificate, Pekin asserts and Trilling does not dispute, is dated November 14,1986.

Pekin did not attach a copy of the application for insurance to the policy. At trial, testimony from a Pekin representative established that the policy application and Secretary of State records were considered in determining whether to underwrite a particular policy. On the application for the policy in question, only Jack Gould and his partner at U.S. Credit, John Spiess, were listed as the drivers, and U.S. Credit was listed as the owner. Pekin would not have underwritten the policy at the risk indicated on the application had Pekin known either that the automobile was involved in an accident on January 22, 1987, or that there was going to be an underaged driver of the vehicle. Had the application indicated that the Granada was owned by someone other than the named insured (U.S. Credit), the vehicle would have had to be insured on another policy.

Before resolving the issues we are confronted with, we clarify that we are not confronted with the issue of whether the policy itself could provide coverage on a vehicle which the insured did not “own.” The sole basis of Pekin’s complaint was that the misrepresentation that U.S. Credit owned the vehicle absolved Pekin from responsibility under the policy. The parties in their briefs have both taken the position that if U.S. Credit did not own the vehicle, a representation that it did own the vehicle could absolve Pekin of responsibility.

Pekin argues that the trial court’s finding that U.S. Credit owned the Granada was contrary to the manifest weight of the evidence. Pekin’s argument here is that the Secretary of State’s certificate of title, which indicated that Roberta Gould’s name appeared on a duplicate title application for the vehicle, was not sufficiently rebutted by competent evidence of contrary ownership."

Trilling argues the certificate of title listing Roberta Gould as the duplicate title holder is not presumptive evidence that Roberta Gould was, in fact, the owner of the vehicle. The certificate of title, however, “is evidence of title, though it is not conclusive and one can own an automobile though the certificate of title is in the name of another.” (Emphasis in original.) (State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Co. v. Lucas (1977), 50 Ill. App. 3d 894, 898, 365 N.E.2d 1329.) A prima facie presumption of ownership arises from a certificate of title; this presumption may be rebutted by competent evidence of actual ownership. (Klein v. Pritikin (1972), 6 Ill. App. 3d 323, 328, 285 N.E.2d 457.) Thus, the duplicate title application did present presumptive evidence of ownership, and the issue is whether this presumption of ownership was sufficiently rebutted by competent evidence at trial.

Trilling argues that there was a sale by Roberta Gould of the Granada to her husband’s business in the fall of 1986, and that subsequent to this sale, her husband’s business became incorporated in December of 1986. Then, according to Trilling’s theory, the unincorporated business “transferred” the Granada to U.S. Credit, the newly formed corporation. Either separate to this argument, or in conjunction with it, Trilling argues that the testimony of the Goulds as to the purchase of the automobile and U.S. Credit’s dominion over the automobile was uncontradicted at trial and, hence, the trial court’s finding that U.S. Credit owned the automobile must stand.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
571 N.E.2d 769, 212 Ill. App. 3d 673, 156 Ill. Dec. 789, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pekin-insurance-v-us-credit-funding-ltd-illappct-1991.