Zurich American Insurance Co. v. Infrastructure Engineering, Inc.

2023 IL App (1st) 230147-U
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedSeptember 19, 2023
Docket1-23-0147
StatusUnpublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 2023 IL App (1st) 230147-U (Zurich American Insurance Co. v. Infrastructure Engineering, Inc.) 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
Zurich American Insurance Co. v. Infrastructure Engineering, Inc., 2023 IL App (1st) 230147-U (Ill. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

2023 IL App (1st) 230147-U

SECOND DIVISION September 19, 2023

No. 1-23-0147

NOTICE: This order was filed under Supreme Court Rule 23 and is not precedent except in the limited circumstances allowed under Rule 23(e)(1).

IN THE APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT

ZURICH AMERICAN INSURANCE COMPANY, ) Appeal from the Circuit Court of as subrogee of Community College District No. 508 ) Cook County. d/b/a City Colleges of Chicago and CMO, a joint ) venture, ) ) Plaintiff-Appellant, ) No. 16 L 12712 ) v. ) ) INFRASTRUCTURE ENGINEERING, INC., ) ) Honorable Patrick J. Sherlock, Defendant-Appellee. ) Judge Presiding

PRESIDING JUSTICE HOWSE delivered the judgment of the court. Justices McBride and Ellis concurred in the judgment.

ORDER

¶1 Held: We reverse the summary judgment entered in favor of defendant, and we remand for further proceedings. The trial court erred when it entered summary judgment for defendant on the grounds the elements of equitable subrogation were not met because contractual subrogation standards applied.

¶2 Plaintiff, Zurich American Insurance Company, issued a builder’s risk insurance policy

to insure a building during its construction. Defendant Infrastructure Engineering, Inc., was a

subcontractor on the construction project who was hired to install a system for collecting 1-23-0147

rainwater. A rainstorm occurred while the building was still under construction and the basement

of the building flooded, causing significant damage. Plaintiff paid out a claim to CMO, the

general contractor, in accordance with the policy it issued. Plaintiff, as subrogee of CMO and the

owner, a community college, then sued defendant, alleging defendant caused the water damage.

Defendant moved for summary judgment, arguing that plaintiff was not entitled to subrogate for

the building owner. The trial court agreed, and it granted judgment in defendant’s favor. Plaintiff

now appeals arguing that the insurance policy entitles it to a right of subrogation. For the

following reasons, we reverse and remand for further proceedings.

¶3 BACKGROUND

¶4 City Colleges of Chicago owns and operates Malcom X College. When City Colleges

decided to construct a new academic building at Malcom X College, it contracted with a general

contractor, CMO. CMO agreed to serve as the general contractor for the construction of the new

academic building, providing all necessary labor, material, and equipment to complete the

project. The contract between CMO and City Colleges required CMO to purchase and maintain a

builder’s risk property insurance policy during the period of construction.

¶5 CMO purchased the builder’s risk policy from plaintiff Zurich American Insurance

Company. The “named insured” in the policy is CMO and City Colleges is named as an

“additional named insured.” Under the policy, CMO was deemed to be the agent for all the other

entities insured thereunder.

“[CMO] shall be deemed the sole and irrevocable agent of each and every Insured

hereunder for the purpose of giving and receiving notices to/from the Company,

giving instruction to or agreeing with the Company as respects Policy alteration,

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for making or receiving payments of premium or adjustments to premium, and as

respects the payment for claims.”

The insurance policy also gives Zurich, as the insurer, a right of subrogation for any

claims it might pay under the policy.

“If [Zurich] pays a claim under this Policy, they will be subrogated, to the extent

of such payment, to all the Insured’s rights of recovery from other persons,

organizations and entities.

****

It is a condition of this Policy that [Zurich] shall be subrogated to all the Insured’s

unwaived rights of recovery, if any, against any third party Architect or Engineer,

whether named as an Insured or not, for any loss or damage arising out of the

performance of professional services in their capacity as such and caused by any

error, omission, deficiency or act of the third party Architect or Engineer, by any

person employed by them or by any others for whose acts they are legally liable.”

¶6 On August 17, 2015, while the construction project was ongoing, there was a rainstorm.

The stormwater detention system designed by Infrastructure Engineering was not fully installed

at the time of the storm. The basement of the academic building flooded. There was damage to

the building itself and to its electrical and mechanical equipment. CMO submitted a claim to

Zurich for the damage that resulted from the flooding. Zurich made claim payments to CMO

totaling $2,998,929.35.

¶7 Zurich filed this case against Infrastructure Engineering, as subrogee of City Colleges

and CMO. Zurich alleges that Infrastructure Engineering designed a defective stormwater

management system which caused the loss at the construction site. Zurich contends that it is

3 1-23-0147

entitled to stand in the shoes of City Colleges as a result of making the claim payments under the

builder’s risk policy.

¶8 Infrastructure Engineering filed an initial motion for summary judgment which was

denied and is not at issue in this appeal. Infrastructure Engineering subsequently filed a second

motion for summary judgment which is the matter at issue in this appeal. In its second motion for

summary judgment, Infrastructure Engineering argued that it was entitled to a judgment of no

liability because neither of Zurich’s alleged subrogors, CMO or City Colleges, were third-party

beneficiaries of the subcontract between Infrastructure Engineering and Moody Nolan.

Infrastructure Engineering argued that while the contract between Moody Nolan and City

Colleges provides that City Colleges is a third-party beneficiary of any subcontract between

Moody Nolan and its subcontractors, the subcontract between Moody Nolan and Infrastructure

Engineering provides that “Nothing contained in this Agreement shall create a contractual

relationship with, or a cause of action in favor of, a third party against either the [Moody Nolan]

or [IEI].”

¶9 Infrastructure Engineering further argued in support of its second motion for summary

judgment that Zurich could not establish the necessary elements to entitle it to a right of

subrogation because there was no contractual relationship between CMO and Infrastructure

Engineering and because City Colleges suffered no loss and received no loss payment under the

insurance policy. Infrastructure Engineering cited State Farm General Insurance Co. v. Stewart,

288 Ill. App. 3d 678, 686 (1997) to point out that “the prerequisites to a subrogation claim are:

(1) a third party must be primarily liable to the insured for the loss; (2) the insurer must be

secondarily liable to the insured for loss under an insurance policy; and (3) the insurer must have

paid the insured under that policy, thereby extinguishing the debt of the third party.”

4 1-23-0147

Infrastructure Engineering argued that Zurich “cannot establish the third element of a

subrogation claim: namely, that it paid City Colleges under the Builders Risk Policy.”

¶ 10 Zurich responded to the motion for summary judgment and acknowledged it was required

to show that City Colleges was a third-party beneficiary of the contract between Moody Nolan

and Infrastructure Engineering. Zurich also acknowledged that it was required to show that “it is

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2023 IL App (1st) 230147-U, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/zurich-american-insurance-co-v-infrastructure-engineering-inc-illappct-2023.