Progressive Universal Insurance Co. v. Taylor

CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedAugust 15, 2007
Docket4-06-1003 & 4-06-1004 cons. Rel
StatusPublished

This text of Progressive Universal Insurance Co. v. Taylor (Progressive Universal Insurance Co. v. Taylor) 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
Progressive Universal Insurance Co. v. Taylor, (Ill. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

NOS. 4-06-1003, 4-06-1004 cons. Filed 8/15/07

IN THE APPELLATE COURT

OF ILLINOIS FOURTH DISTRICT

PROGRESSIVE UNIVERSAL INSURANCE ) Appeal from COMPANY OF ILLINOIS, ) Circuit Court of Plaintiff, ) Champaign County v. ) No. 05MR111 DEBBIE S. TAYLOR; CEDRIC A. YOUNG; ) HEATHER L. TAYLOR; KAHENDE M. JAKE; ) DANIEL G. JOYCE; ESTATE OF JERRY L. ) JEFFERS, Deceased; THE CARLE FOUNDATION; ) and CARLE CLINIC ASSOCIATION, ) Defendants, ) and ) CARLE FOUNDATION HOSPITAL, a Not-For-Profit ) Corporation; and CARLE CLINIC ASSOCIATION, a ) Professional Corporation, ) Counterplaintiffs-Appellees, ) v. (No. 4-06-1003) ) KAHENDE M. JAKE, ) Counterdefendant-Appellant. ) ------------------------------------------------------------- ) PROGRESSIVE UNIVERSAL INSURANCE ) COMPANY OF ILLINOIS, ) Plaintiff, ) v. ) DEBBIE S. TAYLOR; CEDRIC A. YOUNG; ) HEATHER L. TAYLOR; KAHENDE M. JAKE; ) DANIEL G. JOYCE; ESTATE OF JERRY L. ) JEFFERS, Deceased; THE CARLE FOUNDATION; ) and CARLE CLINIC ASSOCIATION, ) Defendants, ) and ) CARLE FOUNDATION HOSPITAL, a Not-For-Profit ) Corporation; and CARLE CLINIC ASSOCIATION, a ) Professional Corporation, ) Counterplaintiffs-Appellees, ) v. (No. 4-06-1004) ) Honorable DANIEL G. JOYCE, ) Michael Q. Jones, Counterdefendant-Appellant. ) Judge Presiding. JUSTICE APPLETON delivered the opinion of the court:

Counterdefendants Kahende M. Jake and Daniel G. Joyce sustained

injuries when the car in which they were riding as passengers ran off the road and

crashed. The car was insured by Progressive Universal Insurance Company of Illinois

(Progressive). Progressive paid them $5,000 apiece pursuant to the medical-payments

coverage of its policy. The medical providers, Carle Foundation Hospital and Carle

Clinic Association (collectively, Carle), won a summary judgment requiring Jake and

Joyce to endorse the checks over to Carle. We have consolidated their appeals.

We modify the summary judgment so as to require Jake and Joyce to turn

over to Carle only 40% of the proceeds of the two $5,000 checks. Although their

indebtedness to Carle may well be more, section 10(a) of the Health Care Services Lien

Act (770 ILCS 23/10(a) (West 2004)) limits Carle's lien to 40%. We affirm the judg-

ment as modified.

I. BACKGROUND

On August 24, 2004, in Urbana, Cedric A. Young was driving Debbie S.

Taylor's car with the permission of Debbie's daughter, Heather A. Taylor. He got into a

single-vehicle accident when he ran off the road under a railway overpass. Two of his

passengers, Jake and Joyce, sustained injuries. A third passenger, Jerry L. Jeffers, died.

Debbie had an automobile insurance policy with Progressive. On February

10, 2005, Progressive filed a complaint for interpleader and declaratory judgment, in

which it tendered the entire $50,000 liability coverage to the trial court for distribution

to the injured passengers. The combined losses of the passengers far exceeded $50,000.

In October 2005, the parties agreed that the $50,000 should be divided

-2- among the passengers in the same proportion that each passenger's medical expenses

bore to the total medical expenses of the passengers. Joyce, the estate of Jeffers, and

Heather Taylor received $16,000 apiece, and the remaining $2,000 went to Jake, who

was less seriously injured. Also by agreement, Joyce paid Carle 40% of his allotment of

$16,000 (or $6,400) pursuant to section 10(a) of the Health Care Services Lien Act (770

ILCS 23/10(a) (West 2004)). According to a docket entry of December 19, 2005, the

parties informed the trial court that "the only remaining [dispute was] as to the medical

payments involving [d]efendants Jake and Joyce."

On January 6, 2006, Carle filed a supplemental counterclaim, alleging it

had provided medical treatment to Jake and Joyce for injuries they had sustained in the

automobile accident and, as a consequence, they owed Carle more than $5,000 apiece.

(Joyce still owed Carle more than $5,000 after her payment of 40% of the $16,000 to

Carle.) Debbie's insurance policy provided medical-payments coverage of $5,000 per

person--over and above the $50,000 in liability coverage that Progressive had tendered

to the trial court. Carle alleged:

"10. *** [M]edical[-]payments coverage is intended to

pay medical bills of the injured parties[] and should be

turned over to Carle *** for application [toward] the [medi-

cal debts that Jake and Joyce owe Carle].

11. [Jake and Joyce,] through their respective attor-

neys, have failed and refused to turn over the

medical[-]payments coverage proceeds.

12. *** [T]he respective attorneys for [Jake and Joyce]

-3- improperly claim that they are entitled to a one-third portion

of the medical[-]payments funds as an attorney fee."

Carle requested a judgment against Jake and Joyce "for turnover of the

medical[-]payments coverage proceeds" to Carle so that Carle could apply the proceeds

against their medical bills.

In their reply to the supplemental counterclaim, Jake and Joyce alleged

that they had offered to pay Carle 40% of the $5,000 checks in accordance with section

10(a) of the Health Care Services Lien Act (770 ILCS 23/10(a) (West 2004)) but that

Carle had refused to accept only 40% and demanded 100% of the checks. They con-

tended that Carle had a lien no greater than 40%. See 770 ILCS 23/10(a) (West 2004).

On June 19, 2006, Carle filed a motion for summary judgment on its

supplemental counterclaim. Exhibit B was a copy of Debbie's insurance policy. Part II

of the policy, entitled "Medical Payments Coverage," provided as follows:

"INSURING AGREEMENT

Subject to the Limits of Liability, if you pay the pre-

mium for Medical[-]Payments Coverage, we will pay the

usual and customary charge for reasonable and necessary

expenses, incurred within three (3) years from the date of an

accident, for medical and funeral services because of bodily

injury:

1. sustained by an insured person;

2. caused by an accident; and

3. arising out of the ownership, mainte-

-4- nance[,] or use of a motor vehicle or trailer.

Any dispute as to the usual and customary charge will be

resolved between the service provider and us." (Emphases in

original.)

According to the declarations page of the policy, the medical-payments coverage was

$5,000 per person.

Jake's attorney filed an affidavit, which included, as exhibits, his retainer

agreement with Jake and the notice of lien he had received from Carle. Again, Jake's

attorney alleged that he had offered Carle 40% of the medical-payments coverage but

that Carle had refused anything less than 100%. Joyce's attorney filed an affidavit

saying essentially the same thing.

On September 20, 2006, the trial court granted Carle's motion for

summary judgment on it supplemental counterclaim. The court held as follows:

"1. *** [T]he medical[-]payments proceeds disburse-

ments were automatic payments contractually required to be

paid to [Jake and Joyce] pursuant to the Progressive ***

policy.

2. *** [T]he [c]ommon[-][f]und [d]octrine does not

apply in this matter.

3.

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