Sanders v. Illinois Union Insurance Co. ( 2019 )


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  •                                          
    2019 IL App (1st) 180158
                                                  No. 1-18-0158
    SECOND DIVISION
    January 15, 2019
    ______________________________________________________________________________
    IN THE
    APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS
    FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT
    ______________________________________________________________________________
    RODELL SANDERS and THE CITY OF             )    Appeal from the Circuit Court
    CHICAGO HEIGHTS,                           )    of Cook County.
    )
    Plaintiffs-Appellants,               )
    )    No. 16 CH 02605
    v.                                         )
    )
    ILLINOIS UNION INSURANCE COMPANY           )    The Honorable
    and STARR INDEMNITY & LIABILITY            )    Celia Gamrath,
    COMPANY,                                   )    Judge Presiding.
    )
    Defendants-Appellees.                )
    ______________________________________________________________________________
    JUSTICE PUCINSKI delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion.
    Justice Hyman concurred in the judgment and opinion.
    Presiding Justice Mason dissented, with opinion.
    OPINION
    ¶1          Plaintiffs, Rodell Sanders and City of Chicago Heights (City), appeal from the trial
    court’s dismissal with prejudice of their second amended complaint pursuant to section 2­
    619(a)(9) of the Code of Civil Procedure (Code) (735 ILCS 5/2-619(a)(9) (West 2016)). On
    appeal, plaintiffs argue that the trial court erred in concluding that the insurance policies issued
    by defendants, Illinois Union Insurance Company (Illinois Union) and Starr Indemnity &
    Liability Company (Starr), did not provide coverage for Sanders’s underlying claim of malicious
    prosecution against the City (Sanders suit). For the reasons that follow, we reverse and remand.
    1-18-0158
    ¶2                                          BACKGROUND
    ¶3          In the Sanders suit, filed in the federal court, Sanders brought, among others, a claim of
    malicious prosecution against the City and some of its employees. In it, Sanders alleged that
    members of the City’s police department manipulated and coerced false witness identifications
    of Sanders as being involved in a December 1993 shooting. Sanders also alleged that members of
    the City’s police department made false statements to prosecutors to encourage his prosecution,
    fabricated evidence, and withheld exculpatory information in connection with his prosecution for
    the shooting. As a result, Sanders alleged, he was wrongly convicted of murder, attempt
    (murder), and armed robbery arising out of that shooting
    ¶4          The Sanders suit ultimately settled for $15 million. Under the terms of the settlement, the
    City agreed to pay $2 million of the settlement and United National Insurance Company, the
    City’s insurer at the time Sanders was initially charged with the crimes, agreed to pay $3 million.
    The City also assigned to Sanders its rights to pursue recovery from defendants, the City’s other
    insurers.
    ¶5          Pursuant to that assignment, Sanders became a plaintiff in the present action, joined by
    the City. In their second amended complaint in the present action, plaintiffs alleged that Sanders
    was sentenced to 55 years’ imprisonment on the murder conviction, to run consecutively to his
    25-year sentence on the attempt (murder) conviction and concurrently with his 20-year sentence
    on the armed robbery conviction. In January 2011, Sanders’s convictions were vacated and that
    ruling was affirmed by the Illinois Appellate Court in May 2012. People v. Sanders, 2012 IL
    App (1st) 110373-U. In 2013, Sanders was retried, which resulted in a mistrial. He was retried
    again in July 2014, at which time he was finally acquitted.
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    ¶6          The second amended complaint in the present action further alleged that Illinois Union
    issued primary insurance policies to the City that were collectively in effect for the period of
    November 1, 2010, through November 1, 2014. Starr issued excess insurance policies to the City
    that collectively were in effect from November 1, 2011, through November 1, 2014. 1 Despite the
    City’s repeated demands for coverage for the Sanders suit, Illinois Union and Starr denied
    coverage and refused to contribute to the settlement of the Sanders suit. As a result, plaintiffs
    alleged claims for breach of contract and improper claims practices and sought a declaratory
    judgment that defendants owed coverage under their respective policies for the claims made in
    the Sanders suit.
    ¶7          Defendants filed a motion to dismiss the second amended complaint pursuant to section
    2-619(a)(9) of the Code (735 ILCS 5/2-619(a)(9) (West 2016)). In it, they argued that their
    policies did not provide coverage for the claims in the Sanders suit because the trigger for
    coverage under the policies was the filing of the criminal charges against Sanders, an act that
    took place before defendants’ policies went into effect. Defendants further argued that the retrials
    of Sanders did not qualify as additional coverage triggers because they were simply
    continuations of the original 1994 prosecution. In response, plaintiffs argued that because
    defendants’ policies provided coverage for the “offense” of malicious prosecution, the coverage
    trigger was not the filing of the criminal charges against Sanders but was, instead, the completed
    tort of malicious prosecution. Here, all of the elements of Sanders’s claim for malicious
    prosecution were alleged to have been met upon his exoneration in 2014. The plaintiffs also
    argued that, even if coverage were triggered by the wrongful conduct of the City’s police officers
    1
    Plaintiffs attached to their second amended complaint only defendants’ policies covering the
    period of November 1, 2012, through November 1, 2014, and focused primarily on those policies in their
    allegations against defendants.
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    and not Sanders’s exoneration, then the retrials of Sanders, which occurred while defendants’
    policies were in effect, were additional triggers for coverage.
    ¶8            After a hearing on the matter, the trial court issued its memorandum opinion and order,
    granting defendants’ motion to dismiss. In doing so, the trial court found that the language of the
    policies, in conjunction with existing case law, dictated the conclusion that coverage for a
    malicious prosecution claim under defendants’ policies was triggered by the initiation of
    Sanders’s prosecution, not his subsequent exoneration. The trial court also rejected plaintiffs’
    argument that the retrials of Sanders were additional triggers of coverage, instead concluding that
    they were merely a continuation of the original prosecution.
    ¶9            Following the trial court’s dismissal of the second amended complaint, plaintiffs filed
    this timely appeal.
    ¶ 10                                              ANALYSIS
    ¶ 11          On appeal, plaintiffs argue that the trial court erred in dismissing the second amended
    complaint on the basis that the coverage trigger—the filing of the criminal charges against
    Sanders—occurred outside the effective dates of defendants’ policies. Plaintiffs argue that the
    language of the policies requires a conclusion that coverage was not triggered until the tort of
    malicious prosecution was complete, i.e., Sanders was exonerated, which occurred while
    defendants’ policies were in effect. Alternatively, plaintiffs argue that even if it was the wrongful
    conduct of the City, and not the satisfaction of the elements of the malicious prosecution, that
    triggered coverage under defendants’ policies, then Sanders’s retrials during the effective dates
    of defendants’ policies triggered coverage. For the reasons that follow, we conclude that
    coverage under the policies was triggered upon the completion of the tort of malicious
    prosecution, i.e., Sanders’s exoneration, which occurred while the policies were in effect.
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    Accordingly, the trial court’s dismissal of plaintiffs’ second amended complaint must be
    reversed and the matter remanded for further proceedings.
    ¶ 12          Defendants’ motion to dismiss was brought pursuant to section 2-619(a)(9) of the Code
    (735 ILCS 5/2-619(a)(9) (West 2016)), which provides for the dismissal of a complaint on the
    basis that “the claim asserted against defendant is barred by other affirmative matter avoiding the
    legal effect of or defeating the claim.” In making such a motion, the movant admits the legal
    sufficiency of the complaint but asserts that an affirmative defense or some other matter defeats
    the claims contained therein. Van Meter v. Darien Park District, 
    207 Ill. 2d 359
    , 367 (2003). We
    review dismissals under section 2-619(a)(9) de novo. 
    Id. at 368.
    ¶ 13          The propriety of the trial court’s dismissal of plaintiffs’ second amended complaint turns
    on the interpretation of the insurance policies issued by defendants, namely, whether coverage
    under those policies is triggered by the initiation of the alleged malicious prosecution or the
    exoneration of Sanders. Although plaintiffs alleged in their second amended complaint that
    Illinois Union’s policies covered the collective period of November 1, 2010, through November
    1, 2014, and Starr’s policies covered a collective period of November 1, 2011, through
    November 1, 2014, plaintiffs’ focus on appeal is on defendants’ policies covering the period of
    November 1, 2012, through November 1, 2014, the policies in effect during Sanders’s retrials.
    Accordingly, our focus will be the same.
    ¶ 14          Our supreme court has summarized the principles governing our interpretation of
    insurance policies:
    “Because an insurance policy is a contract, the rules applicable to contract
    interpretation govern the interpretation of an insurance policy. [Citations.] Our primary
    function is to ascertain and give effect to the intention of the parties, as expressed in the
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    policy language. [Citations.] If the language is unambiguous, the provision will be
    applied as written, unless it contravenes public policy. [Citations.] The rule that policy
    provisions limiting an insurer’s liability will be construed liberally in favor of coverage
    only applies where the provision is ambiguous. [Citations.] A policy provision is not
    rendered ambiguous simply because the parties disagree as to its meaning. [Citation.]
    Rather, an ambiguity will be found where the policy language is susceptible to more than
    one reasonable interpretation. [Citations.] While we will not strain to find an ambiguity
    where none exists [citation], neither will we adopt an interpretation which rests on
    ‘gossamer distinctions’ that the average person, for whom the policy is written, cannot be
    expected to understand [citation].” Founders Insurance Co. v. Munoz, 
    237 Ill. 2d 424
    ,
    433 (2010).
    ¶ 15          In its policies, Illinois Union agreed to the following:
    “The Insurer will indemnify the Insured for Damages and Claim Expenses in excess
    of the Retained Limit for which the Insured becomes legally obligated to pay because
    of a Claim first arising out of an Occurrence happening during the Policy Period in
    the Coverage Territory for Bodily Injury, Personal Injury, Advertising Injury, or
    Property Damage taking place during the Policy Period.” (Emphases in original.)
    With respect to “Personal Injury,” “Occurrence” is defined under the Illinois Union policies as
    “only those offenses specified in the Personal Injury Definition.” (Emphasis in original.) The
    definition of “Personal Injury” provides:
    “Personal Injury means one or more of the following offenses:
    a. False arrest, false imprisonment, wrongful detention or malicious prosecution;
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    b. Libel, slander, defamation of character, or oral or written publication of
    material that violates a person’s right of privacy, unless arising out of advertising
    activities in electronic chat rooms or bulletin boards;
    c. Wrongful eviction from, wrongful entry into, or invasion of the right of private
    occupancy of a room, dwelling or premises that a person occupies by or on behalf of
    the owner, landlord or lessor, or by a person claiming to be acting on behalf of the
    owner, landlord or lessor.” (Emphasis in original.)
    ¶ 16            The Starr policies, as excess policies, essentially follow the terms of the primary policies
    issued by Illinois Union. In other words, subject to specific terms and exclusions that are not
    relevant here, if coverage under the Illinois Union policies is triggered, excess coverage under
    the Starr policies is also triggered.
    ¶ 17	           None of the parties dispute that the above provisions require the “offense” of malicious
    prosecution to take place during the relevant policy periods. 2 Rather, the dispute centers around
    when the “offense” of malicious prosecution is deemed to occur under the policies. According to
    plaintiffs, because the policies define an occurrence as the “offense” of malicious prosecution,
    the policies refer to the completed tort of malicious prosecution and, thus, the “offense” of
    malicious prosecution does not happen until all the elements of the tort of malicious prosecution
    are satisfied. In Sanders’s situation, the tort elements of malicious prosecution were not complete
    until he was exonerated in 2014. See Ferguson v. City of Chicago, 
    213 Ill. 2d 94
    , 99 (2004) (“A
    cause of action for malicious prosecution does not accrue until the criminal proceeding on which
    it is based has been terminated in the plaintiff’s favor.”). At that point, according to plaintiffs, the
    2
    The insuring agreement of the Illinois Union policies requires that the “Occurrence happen[ ]
    during the Policy Period.” (Emphases in original.) An occurrence is any “offense” listed in the personal
    injury definition. The definition of personal injury lists malicious prosecution as one of the qualifying
    offenses. Thus, the offense of malicious prosecution must happen during the policy period.
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    offense of malicious prosecution “happen[ed]” and coverage was triggered under defendants’
    policies. In contrast, defendants argue that the “offense” of malicious prosecution is not the
    completed tort of malicious prosecution but is the offensive act of maliciously prosecuting
    someone, i.e., charging someone with malice and without probable cause. Thus, coverage is
    triggered by initiation of the alleged malicious prosecution.
    ¶ 18          None of defendants’ policies define the term “offense.” In situations where an insurance
    policy does not define a term, that term is to be given its plain and ordinary meaning, and courts
    often refer to dictionaries in making this determination. Muller v. Firemen’s Fund Insurance Co.,
    
    289 Ill. App. 3d 719
    , 725 (1997). Black’s Law Dictionary defines “offense” as “[a] violation of
    the law; a crime, often a minor one.” Black’s Law Dictionary (10th ed. 2014). This definition
    suggests that the term “offense” refers to the legal cause of action that arises out of wrongful
    conduct, not just the wrongful conduct itself. After all, crimes and other violations of law, like
    tort causes of action, are typically comprised of a number of elements, only one of which is the
    wrongful act itself. The crime, legal violation, and tort cause of action does not arise or exist
    until all those elements have been satisfied; thus, only upon completion of the final element is a
    wrongful act transformed into a crime or a tort.
    ¶ 19          Although defendants advance other definitions of “offense” that are more favorable to
    them, the other language of the Illinois Union policies supports a conclusion that the term
    “offense” refers to the legal cause of action for malicious prosecution, not the underlying
    wrongful conduct giving rise to a legal cause of action for malicious prosecution. As noted, the
    Illinois Union policies define “personal injury” by reference to a list of “offenses.” Importantly,
    this list of offenses refers exclusively to legal causes of actions by their proper, legal names, e.g.,
    false arrest, false imprisonment, malicious prosecution, libel, defamation, wrongful eviction, etc.
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    Nowhere in the policies’ list of offenses does it refer to the underlying wrongful acts themselves,
    i.e., arresting, imprisoning, or prosecuting someone without probable cause; telling lies about
    someone; or physically removing someone from a property. The policies’ reference to the
    offenses by their proper, legal names instead of by their underlying wrongful conduct makes
    clear that coverage is triggered by the occurrence of the completed cause of action (in this case,
    upon Sanders’s exoneration) and not by merely the underlying wrongful conduct. See Milwaukee
    Guardian Insurance, Inc. v. Taraska, 
    236 Ill. App. 3d 973
    , 975 (1992) (“[T]he provisions of an
    insurance policy should be read and interpreted as an integrated whole, not as isolated parts.”).
    ¶ 20          We believe such an interpretation is consistent with what the average person would
    understand to be covered under the Illinois Union policies. For the reasons discussed above, the
    average person, reading that the Illinois Union policies provided coverage for the “offenses” of
    false arrest, malicious prosecution, libel, wrongful eviction, etc., would believe that the policies
    provided coverage for the legal claims of false arrest, malicious prosecution, libel, wrongful
    eviction, etc. The average person would have no reason to think that although the “offenses”
    were identified by the proper, legal names of whole causes of action, they actually only were
    intended to refer to the underlying wrongful conduct. Thus, at the point the elements of those
    causes of actions were met, the average insured would believe that coverage is triggered. Where
    the term “offense” is coupled with the titles of legal causes of action and does not specifically
    refer to the base wrongful acts alone, to conclude otherwise would be to “adopt an interpretation
    which rests on ‘gossamer distinctions’ that the average person, for whom the policy is written,
    cannot be expected to understand.” Founders Insurance 
    Co., 237 Ill. 2d at 433
    .
    ¶ 21          For the above reasons, we conclude that the plain and ordinary meaning of the term
    “offense,” as it is used in relation to “malicious prosecution” in the Illinois Union policies, refers
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    to the completed, legal cause of action of malicious prosecution. The tort of malicious
    prosecution requires proof of five elements: “(1) the commencement or continuation by the
    defendant of an original judicial proceeding against the plaintiff; (2) termination of the original
    proceeding in favor of the plaintiff; (3) absence of probable cause for the proceeding; (4) malice;
    and (5) special damages.” Grundhoefer v. Sorin, 
    2014 IL App (1st) 131276
    , ¶ 11. Here,
    Sanders’s claim for malicious prosecution was not complete until he was exonerated in 2014.
    See 
    Ferguson, 213 Ill. 2d at 99
    (“A cause of action for malicious prosecution does not accrue
    until the criminal proceeding on which it is based has been terminated in the plaintiff’s favor.”).
    Accordingly, coverage under the defendants’ policies was not triggered until 2014, when Sanders
    was acquitted after his third trial.
    ¶ 22           In opposition, defendants argue that we should follow a line of Illinois cases holding that
    the triggering event for coverage of a claim of malicious prosecution is the initiation of the
    alleged malicious prosecution against the claimant. See First Mercury Insurance Co. v. Ciolino,
    
    2018 IL App (1st) 171532
    ; St. Paul Fire & Marine Insurance Co. v. City of Waukegan, 2017 IL
    App (2d) 160381; County of McLean v. States Self-Insurers Risk Retention Group, Inc., 2015 IL
    App (4th) 140628; Indian Harbor Insurance Co. v. City of Waukegan, 
    2015 IL App (2d) 140293
    ;
    St. Paul Fire & Marine Insurance Co. v. City of Zion, 
    2014 IL App (2d) 131312
    . Of these cases,
    three of them are not applicable here because the relevant policy language was markedly
    different than the language in Illinois Union’s policies. Specifically, the policies in these three
    cases provided that the claimant’s injury or the insured’s wrongful act must take place during the
    policy period. See City of Waukegan, 
    2017 IL App (2d) 160381
    , ¶ 12 (the policy covered
    “ ‘injury or damage that *** happens while this agreement is in effect’ ”); Indian Harbor, 
    2015 IL App (2d) 140293
    , ¶ 4 (the policy covered “ ‘damages resulting from a wrongful act(s),’ ” but
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    required that “ ‘[t]he wrongful act(s) must occur during the policy period’ ”); City of Zion, 
    2014 IL App (2d) 131312
    , ¶ 12 (the policy covered an injury or damage that “ ‘happens while this
    agreement is in effect’ ”). Thus, it is no surprise that these courts concluded that the triggering
    event was the initiation of the wrongful prosecution, as the claimant’s injury occurs immediately
    upon the insured’s wrongful act of filing criminal charges with malice and without probable
    cause. See City of Zion, 
    2014 IL App (2d) 131312
    , ¶ 23. In this case, however, the Illinois Union
    policies require the “offense” of malicious prosecution to happen in the policy period, not the
    injury resulting from or the wrongful act giving rise to malicious prosecution. Accordingly, these
    cases are irrelevant to our analysis.
    ¶ 23          Two of the cases cited by defendants contain similar language to the policies in this case:
    County of McLean and First Mercury. Nevertheless, we conclude that these cases do not govern
    our decision in the present case. In County of McLean, the policy at issue provided coverage for,
    among other things, damages from personal injury, so long as the personal injury was “ ‘the
    result of an occurrence during the policy period.’ ” (Emphases in original.) County of McLean,
    
    2015 IL App (4th) 140628
    , ¶ 16. An occurrence was defined as follows: “ ‘With respect to
    personal injury, only the offenses defined under personal injury. For any claim for personal
    injury, the date of the occurrence is the date that the first offense took place or is alleged to have
    taken place.’ ” (Emphases in original.) 
    Id. ¶ 17.
    The term personal injury was defined in relevant
    part as “ ‘injury (other than bodily injury or property damage) caused by one or more of the
    following offenses: 1. False or wrongful arrest, detention, imprisonment[,] or malicious
    prosecution.’ ” (Emphases in original.) 
    Id. ¶ 24
             Despite the fact that the policy in County of McLean, like the Illinois Union policies here,
    plainly required the “occurrence” to take place during the policy period, the court in County of
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    McLean improperly read the policy as if it specifically required the claimant’s injury to take
    place during the policy period. The court appears to have reached this conclusion by conflating
    the definitions of occurrence and personal injury:
    “Construing the terms as a whole, the policy clearly defines ‘personal injury’ as
    ‘injury *** caused by *** malicious prosecution.’ (Emphasis added.) Accordingly, to
    conclude that the ‘occurrence’ resulting in Beaman’s ‘personal injury’ happened
    within the policy period, the injury caused by the malicious prosecution must have
    taken place within the policy period. In other words, the event that triggers coverage
    is the actual injury suffered by the prosecuted party, not the accrual of the tort of
    malicious prosecution.” (Emphases in original.) 
    Id. ¶ 33.
    As this excerpt of the court’s analysis demonstrates, although the court correctly recognized that
    the “occurrence” must take place within the policy period, it incorrectly equated an occurrence
    with personal injury, which was defined as an injury caused by malicious prosecution. The
    policy, however, specifically provided that an occurrence was any of the offenses listed in the
    personal injury definition; it did not provide that an occurrence was the same as a personal
    injury, i.e., an injury caused by the listed offenses. As a result of this confusion, the court in
    County of McLean focused on the timing of the claimant’s injury and did not actually examine
    when the “offense” of malicious prosecution occurs. Accordingly, although the policy in County
    of McLean, like the Illinois Union policies here, provided that coverage was triggered by the
    “offense” of malicious prosecution, the court in County of McLean interpreted the policy as if it
    provided that coverage was triggered by the claimant’s injury, thereby making the decision
    irrelevant to our analysis.
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    ¶ 25           That brings us to First Mercury, the case on which defendants primarily rely. Like here,
    the issue presented in First Mercury was when coverage was triggered for an underlying claim of
    malicious prosecution—at the initiation of the allegedly malicious prosecution or at the
    claimant’s exoneration. Also like here, the insurance policy at issue was in effect at the time the
    claimant in the underlying malicious prosecution suit was exonerated but was not in effect when
    the claimant was initially charged. First Mercury, 
    2018 IL App (1st) 171532
    , ¶ 7. The insurance
    policy provided that the insurer would cover damages because of personal injury “ ‘caused by an
    offense arising out of your business *** but only if the offense was committed *** during the
    policy period.’ ” 
    Id. ¶ 8.
    The term personal injury was defined as an “ ‘injury, other than “bodily
    injury,” arising out of one or more of the following offenses.’ ” 
    Id. ¶ 9.
    Malicious prosecution
    was included as one of the offenses listed in the definition of personal injury. 
    Id. Thus, like
    in the
    present case, the insurance policy required that the “offense” of malicious prosecution take place
    within the policy period, and the parties disagreed about when that was deemed to have occurred.
    
    Id. ¶ 25.
    ¶ 26           In answering that question, the First Mercury court disagreed with the defendant’s
    contention that the term “offense” referred to the completed tort of malicious prosecution. 
    Id. ¶ 29.
    The court concluded that the use of the word “offense” did not necessarily indicate an
    intent by the parties that coverage under the policy be triggered only by the completed tort of
    malicious prosecution. 
    Id. ¶ 30.
    Instead, the court held that a more straightforward reading of the
    term “offense” was that the policy required the offensive conduct to take place within the policy
    period. 
    Id. “[A]pplying the
    common and popular understanding of the word,” the court
    concluded that “the policy refers to a wrongful act or conduct committed during the policy
    period, regardless of whether the elements of a tort have accrued.” 
    Id. The court
    also observed
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    that it defied common sense to characterize the exoneration of an innocent person as offensive or
    wrongful conduct and, thus, interpreting the word “offense” to include exoneration would distort
    the term’s common and popular understanding. 
    Id. ¶ 32.
    ¶ 27             As discussed above, we disagree with the First Mercury court’s opinion on the common
    understanding of the term “offense,” specifically when it is used to describe a list of legal causes
    of action and not wrongful acts or misconduct. Even putting that fundamental disagreement
    aside, we note an important factor that distinguishes the language of the First Mercury policy
    from the language of the Illinois Union policies. The policy in First Mercury required the offense
    to have been “committed” during the policy period, while the Illinois Union policies provide
    coverage for claims arising out of an occurrence (i.e., the offense) “happening” during the policy
    period.    Merriam-Webster     defines   “commit”     as   “to   carry into    action   deliberately:
    PERPETRATE.”            Merriam-Webster        Online       Dictionary,       https://www.merriam­
    webster.com/dictionary/commit (last visited Jan. 7, 2019) [https://perma.cc/KP7E-NR8H]. In
    contrast, it defines “happen” as “to occur by chance” and “to come into being or occur as an
    event, process, or result.” Merriam-Webster Online Dictionary, https://www.merriam­
    webster.com/dictionary/happen (last visited Jan. 7, 2019) [https://perma.cc/3RKK-DC6X].
    ¶ 28             As these definitions make clear, the use of the word “commit” denotes an affirmative,
    deliberative act by a person, whereas the use of the word “happen” suggests the completion of a
    process or the passive coming into existence of something. Thus, when the term “offense” is read
    in the context of the First Mercury policy, which required that the offense be “committed,” it is
    not unreasonable to conclude that the parties to the policy intended “offense” to refer to an
    affirmative act by the insured, i.e., the initiation of the wrongful prosecution. In contrast, the
    Illinois Union policies refer to malicious prosecution “happening” during the policy period,
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    which supports a conclusion that the parties intended “offense” to refer to the completed tort of
    malicious prosecution and not the initiation of the prosecution. This is because a completed tort
    “come[s] into being,” while, in contrast, the filing of charges is deliberately “carr[ied] into
    action.” Thus, due to this distinction in language and for the other reasons discussed above, we
    disagree that we are bound by the interpretation of “offense” utilized in First Mercury.
    ¶ 29          Defendants make a number of other arguments in support of their position that warrant
    discussion. First, defendants, as some of the courts in the above-discussed cases have, argue that
    the exoneration of a claimant in a wrongful prosecution claim cannot be considered the trigger
    for coverage because there is nothing offensive about the exoneration. Instead, the exoneration is
    the judicial system’s first step in rectifying the wrong done to the claimant. This argument is
    without merit because it misstates the coverage trigger. The trigger of coverage is not the
    exoneration alone but instead is the satisfaction of all the elements of the tort of malicious
    prosecution. Although it is true that the claimant’s exoneration is typically the final element of a
    claim of malicious prosecution to be met, there is nothing about the exoneration itself that
    triggers coverage.
    ¶ 30          Defendants also argue that if coverage is triggered by the completed tort of malicious
    prosecution, then where the same set of facts give rise to claims for both false arrest and
    malicious prosecution, it is possible that one insurer would provide coverage for the false arrest
    claim while a different insurer would cover the malicious prosecution claim. In addition,
    defendants contend that our interpretation of “offense” puts insurers at risk of having to cover
    acts that were committed in years past. We do not disagree that these are potential effects of our
    interpretation, but we do disagree that they render our conclusion incorrect. If defendants or
    insurers do not wish to subject themselves to these possible effects, it is well within their
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    power—in fact, it rests exclusively within their power—to issue policies that limit or preclude
    these effects. Specifically, defendants and other insurers are free to redraft their policies to define
    an occurrence based on the insured’s misconduct rather than on the “offense” of malicious
    prosecution (i.e., the completed tort). In addition, defendants and other insurers are free to
    include retroactive dates in their policies, thereby limiting their risk of exposure for acts
    committed in years past.
    ¶ 31          In sum, we conclude that the language of the Illinois Union policies, when read in
    context, is plain in providing that coverage is triggered by the “offense” of malicious prosecution
    “happening” within the policy period and the offense of malicious prosecution only happens
    once all of the elements of the tort are met. In the present case, that means that the coverage
    trigger was Sanders’s exoneration in 2014, which was well within the effective periods of the
    Illinois Union and Starr policies. Thus, the trial court erred when it dismissed plaintiffs’ second
    amended complaint with prejudice.
    ¶ 32          Because we conclude that Sanders’s exoneration triggered coverage under defendants’
    policies, we need not address plaintiffs’ alternative argument that Sanders’s retrials were
    additional triggers for coverage.
    ¶ 33                                             CONCLUSION
    ¶ 34          For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the circuit court of Cook County is reversed,
    and this matter is remanded for further proceedings.
    ¶ 35          Reversed and remanded.
    ¶ 36          PRESIDING JUSTICE MASON, dissenting:
    ¶ 37          I agree with my colleagues that the language of an insurance policy governs its
    interpretation and that, depending on the policy language, the same occurrence may be covered
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    under one policy and not another. But if the offense of malicious prosecution is not committed
    when the defendant in the underlying case is exonerated (First Mercury, 
    2018 IL App (1st) 171532
    , ¶¶ 35-36), I see no legal or grammatical reason why, under the insurance policies here,
    we should conclude that malicious prosecution happens or takes place upon exoneration. Under
    the clear and unambiguous language of the Illinois Union/Starr policies, the malicious
    prosecution of Sanders happened in 1994 when he was wrongfully charged with murder; it did
    not happen in either 2013, when he was retried, or in 2014, when after his third trial, he was
    acquitted. Because I believe the trial court properly granted summary judgment to defendants, I
    respectfully dissent.
    ¶ 38          Illinois Union agreed to provide coverage for claims arising out of an occurrence
    (defined, in relevant part, as “those offenses specified in the definition of Personal Injury,”
    including malicious prosecution) “happening” during the policy period for “Personal Injury”
    (defined to include “malicious prosecution”) “taking place” during the policy period. If we
    substitute “malicious prosecution” in the policy’s coverage grant, it provides coverage for
    “claims arising out of malicious prosecution happening during the policy period for malicious
    prosecution taking place during the policy period.” This language may be redundant, but it is not
    ambiguous: the occurrence and the personal injury/malicious prosecution giving rise to the claim
    must happen and take place during the policy period.
    ¶ 39          To support the conclusion that the offense of malicious prosecution takes place or
    happens when a defendant is exonerated, my colleagues rely on a definition of “offense” from
    Black’s Law Dictionary, which includes among its definitions “[a] violation of the law; a crime,
    often a minor one.” Black’s Law Dictionary (10th ed. 2014). Black’s Law Dictionary also
    defines “offense” as “an intentional unlawful act that causes injury or loss to another and that
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    gives rise to a claim for damages.” 
    Id. And Merriam-Webster
    defines offense as “something that
    outrages the moral or physical senses”; “the act of attacking”; “the act of displeasing or
    affronting”; or “a breach of moral or social code.” Merriam-Webster Online Dictionary,
    https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/offense         (last    visited    Jan.    7,    2019).
    [https://perma.cc/KG27-NBK9].
    ¶ 40          In my view, any one of these definitions, including the one relied on by the majority,
    suggests that an “offense” is the wrongful conduct or unlawful act. It was a “violation of the law”
    for Chicago Heights police officers to bring false murder charges against Sanders, just as those
    false charges constituted an “intentional unlawful act” and “something that outrages the moral
    sense.” None of these definitions associates “offense” with a completed tort that triggers the
    running of the statute of limitation and the concomitant right to sue. See First Mercury, 2018 IL
    App (1st) 171532, ¶ 30.
    ¶ 41          The overwhelming weight of authority in Illinois supports the conclusion that it is the
    commencement of prosecution, and not exoneration, that triggers coverage for malicious
    prosecution. See 
    id. ¶ 35
    (concluding that “offense” as used in the policy referred to the insured’s
    wrongful conduct that led to the claimant’s conviction rather than the claimant’s exoneration,
    which could not “logically be considered part of an ‘injury’ to the [claimant]”); Indian Harbor,
    
    2015 IL App (2d) 140293
    , ¶ 24 (“[T]he favorable termination of a malicious prosecution marks
    the beginning of the judicial system’s remediation of the wrong committed, not the
    commencement of the injury or damage.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.)); City of
    Waukegan, 
    2017 IL App (2d) 160381
    , ¶ 48 (explaining that “the time of occurrence in insurance
    law is different from the time of accrual in tort law. In insurance law, the time of occurrence is
    used to determine when the operative terms of the policy provide coverage. In tort law, the time
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    of accrual is used to determine when the statute of limitations begins to run, a separate
    consideration ***.”); see also City of Zion, 
    2014 IL App (2d) 131312
    , ¶¶ 12, 26 (claimant
    charged with murder before inception of policy, but exonerated during policy period not entitled
    to coverage under policy covering claims for malicious prosecution that “ ‘happens while this
    agreement is in effect’ ”); County of McLean, 
    2015 IL App (4th) 140628
    , ¶¶ 26, 32-34 (the
    “occurrence” of the alleged “personal injury” was each underlying plaintiff’s “arrest and
    prosecution, not his exoneration”).
    ¶ 42          And Illinois is not alone in reaching this conclusion. See Hampton v. Carter Enterprises,
    Inc., 
    238 S.W.3d 170
    , 177 (Mo. Ct. App. 2007) (“offense” of malicious prosecution occurs upon
    the institution of the underlying action as “[t]hat is the point *** at which the defendant invoked
    the judicial process against the victim maliciously and without probable cause, causing the
    victim’s injury”); Zurich Insurance Co. v. Peterson, 
    232 Cal. Rptr. 807
    , 813 (Ct. App. 1986) (the
    “occurrence” is the filing of criminal complaint, which triggers coverage under insurance
    policy); Harbor Insurance Co. v. Central National Insurance Co., 
    211 Cal. Rptr. 902
    , 907 (Ct.
    App. 1985) (“[a]lthough favorable termination thus serves to confirm the element of lack of
    probable cause, the focus of the wrong is upon the institution of the suit, with malice and without
    such probable cause”).
    ¶ 43          The results reached in these cases dealing with insurance coverage comport with the
    point in time at which a prosecution is determined to be “malicious,” i.e., at its outset. See Miller
    v. Rosenberg, 
    196 Ill. 2d 50
    , 58 (2001) (recognizing that element of claim for malicious
    prosecution is showing that the defendant “instituted the underlying suit without probable cause
    and with malice”); Howard v. Firmand, 
    378 Ill. App. 3d 147
    , 150 (2007) (complaint for
    malicious prosecution arose out of petition for order of protection: There must be “an honest
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    belief by the complainant at the time of subscribing a criminal complaint that another is probably
    guilty of an offense; it is immaterial that the accused may thereafter be found not guilty.”
    (Emphasis in original and internal quotation marks omitted.)); Johnson v. Target Stores, Inc.,
    
    341 Ill. App. 3d 56
    , 72 (2003) (“It is the state of mind of the one commencing the prosecution,
    and not the actual facts of the case or the guilt or innocence of the accused, that is at issue.”
    (Internal quotation marks omitted.)); Turner v. City of Chicago, 
    91 Ill. App. 3d 931
    , 937 (1980)
    (in malicious prosecution case against prosecutor, “[m]alice *** is proved by showing that the
    prosecutor was actuated by improper motives”); see also Beaman v. Freesmeyer, 2017 IL App
    (4th) 160527, ¶¶ 57-58 (in order to find police officer liable in malicious prosecution case when
    decision to prosecute rests with State’s Attorney, plaintiff must show that the “officer pressured
    or exercised influence on the prosecutor’s decision or made knowing misstatements upon which
    the prosecutor relied”). Malicious prosecution focuses on the state of mind of the defendant at
    the time the underlying proceedings were commenced. Here, Sanders’s acquittal, absent a
    showing that the prosecution was malicious, does not give rise to any claim. And because Illinois
    Union’s policy covers malicious prosecution that “happens” and “takes place” during the policy
    period, the trigger of coverage is when the wrongful prosecution was commenced.
    ¶ 44          The majority’s attempt to distinguish relevant Illinois authority based on minor
    differences in policy language is unpersuasive. I find no meaningful difference between Illinois
    Union’s policy language and the language at issue in other Illinois cases, all of which have
    reached uniform conclusions. For example, in First Mercury, a case decided by a different
    division of this district less than a year ago and very closely analogous to this case, the policy
    provided coverage for an “ ‘offense’ ” (read: malicious prosecution) that was “ ‘committed’ ”
    during the policy period. 
    2018 IL App (1st) 171532
    , ¶ 8. Here, the policy covers an occurrence
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    (read: malicious prosecution) “happening” and “taking place” during the policy period. There is
    no sound reason to reach a polar opposite conclusion regarding the trigger of coverage in this
    case, particularly since it unavoidably creates a split of authority within this district.
    ¶ 45           Unlike the majority, I ascribe little weight to the fact that the policy refers to offenses by
    their “proper, legal names” as opposed to the “underlying wrongful acts.” Supra ¶ 20.
    ¶ 46           First, virtually every liability policy providing coverage for such offenses describes them
    by their “proper, legal names.” See, e.g., First Mercury, 
    2018 IL App (1st) 171532
    , ¶ 9 (policy
    referred to the offense of “malicious prosecution”); Allstate Insurance Co. v. Amato, 372 Ill.
    App. 3d 139 (2007) (policy referred to, among other things, offenses of “false arrest,” “wrongful
    entry,” “libel,” “slander,” and “defamation of character” (internal quotation marks omitted));
    John T. Doyle Trust v. Country Mutual Insurance Co., 
    2014 IL App (2d) 121238
    , ¶ 6 (policy
    referred to “wrongful eviction,” “wrongful entry,” and “invasion of the right of private
    occupancy” (internal quotation marks omitted)); Dixon Distributing Co. v. Hanover Insurance
    Co., 
    244 Ill. App. 3d 837
    , 842 (1993) (policy listed offenses of “ ‘libel, slander, defamation of
    character, discrimination, false arrest, false imprisonment, wrongful eviction, wrongful
    detention, malicious prosecution or humiliation’ ”). And, to date, no court has used that common
    language to equate the “occurrence” of these offenses with the accrual of a claimant’s right to
    sue.
    ¶ 47           Second, as a practical matter, it would be impossible to draft an insurance policy that
    described all of the possible wrongful acts that could give rise to a claim for such offenses. For
    example, there are many ways a person can commit the policy’s enumerated offense of
    defamation of character. An insured could publish (by speaking, writing or otherwise
    disseminating (Goldberg v. Brooks, 
    409 Ill. App. 3d 106
    , 110 (2011)) a statement that a third
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    party committed a crime or is infected with a loathsome communicable disease or lacks integrity
    or ability in the performance of duties of office or employment (Tunca v. Painter, 2012 IL App
    (1st) 093384, ¶¶ 41-42) or otherwise “expose[s] [the third party] to hatred, ridicule, or contempt”
    by damaging the party’s personal reputation, financial reputation, or deterring others from
    associating with the third party (Restatement (Second) of Torts § 559 cmt. b, c (1977)). And
    these are by no means all of the ways a person can defame the character of another. The same is
    true of malicious prosecution. The tort may be committed by the police, the complainant in a
    criminal case, the prosecution, or a civil litigant. It can involve, among other things, the
    manufacturing of false evidence, the procurement of false testimony, the withholding of
    evidence, or the pursuit of a case, civil or criminal, without factual or legal justification or for an
    improper purpose. A policy that attempted to articulate all of the wrongful acts that could
    possibly give rise to a claim for one of the enumerated offenses would be verbose in the extreme
    and, for that reason, unintelligible.
    ¶ 48           As Illinois Union pointed out at oral argument, the interpretation of the policy adopted by
    the majority would invite insurers to selectively decline to write or renew insurance once the
    insured’s potential liability for malicious prosecution was raised but before the right to sue—the
    trigger of coverage according to the majority—accrued. This case is an excellent example.
    Sanders was charged with murder in 1994. The policy period at issue here is November 1, 2013,
    through November 1, 2014. By January 2013, in the middle of the previous policy period,
    Sanders had enough information to file a federal civil rights lawsuit in which he made detailed
    factual allegations about fabricated and withheld evidence and asserted claims against Chicago
    Heights and its officers for violations of due process, conspiracy, malicious prosecution, and
    intentional infliction of emotional distress. Since Sanders had not yet been acquitted after his
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    third trial, he admits his malicious prosecution claim was premature. If the majority’s
    interpretation of the date the “offense” of malicious prosecution occurs under Illinois Union’s
    policy is correct, upon being advised of the federal lawsuit, Chicago Heights’ current carrier,
    believing that it could potentially be on the hook for decades of wrongful incarceration, would
    likely decline to renew the municipality’s insurance. Any other insurer, understanding that it was
    assuming the risk of an adverse judgment once Sanders was exonerated, would either charge an
    exorbitant premium, exclude the risk via an endorsement, or refuse to insure the municipality
    altogether.
    ¶ 49          Because I conclude that the offense of malicious prosecution occurs, under the language
    of Illinois Union’s policy, when the prosecution is initiated, I would address Sanders’s
    alternative argument that his retrials were additional triggers for coverage. This court rejected an
    identical argument in City of Waukegan, 
    2017 IL App (2d) 160381
    , which I find persuasive.
    There, the insured argued that the State’s use of a coerced confession and its continued
    withholding of evidence during retrials of the claimant, Juan Rivera, were independent acts
    triggering coverage. 
    Id. ¶ 18.
    We disagreed, stating that “Rivera’s second and third trials were
    continuations of his wrongful prosecution, which increased his damages but were not new
    injuries.” 
    Id. ¶ 36.
    The same holds true here. Retrials are new trials on existing charges; they are
    not new and separate prosecutions. It is the charging of the claimant, not the trial of the claimant
    on those charges, that constitutes an “occurrence” for policy purposes. Other language of Illinois
    Union’s policy also supports this result. In its definition of “occurrence,” the policy provides that
    “[a]ll damages arising out of substantially the same offense [(read: malicious prosecution)]
    regardless of frequency, repetition, the number or kind of offenses *** will be considered as
    arising out of one Occurrence.” Sanders’s initial prosecution and his retrials all arose out of the
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    same false charges against him. As such, the retrials were not independent occurrences triggering
    coverage.
    ¶ 50          For these reasons, I would affirm the decision of the trial court.
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