Farmer v. Country Mutual Insurance Co. ( 2006 )


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  •                   NOTICE                          NO. 5-04-0794
    Decision filed 04/28/06. The text of
    this decision may be changed or                     IN THE
    corrected prior to the filing of a
    Petition   for    Rehearing   or   the   APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS
    disposition of the same.
    FIFTH DISTRICT
    ________________________________________________________________________
    BRIAN E. FARMER,                                          ) Appeal from the
    ) Circuit Court of
    Plaintiff-Appellant,                                 ) Madison County.
    )
    v.                                                        ) No. 98-L-847
    )
    COUNTRY MUTUAL INSURANCE                                  )
    COMPANY,                                             ) Honorable
    ) Clarence W. Harrison II,
    Defendant-Appellee.                                  ) Judge, presiding.
    ________________________________________________________________________
    JUSTICE HOPKINS delivered the opinion of the court:
    The plaintiff, Brian E. Farmer, obtained a $1.5 million judgment (the Brady judgment)
    against an insured of the defendant Country Mutual Insurance Company (Country Mutual).
    Farmer then obtained a judgment for $100,000, plus costs and interest, against Country
    Mutual for its failure to defend its insured (the Country Mutual judgment). Farmer filed this
    garnishment action (see 735 ILCS 5/12-701 (West 2004)) against Country Mutual to collect
    on the Country Mutual judgment. In its payout order, the circuit court determined that
    postjudgment interest accrued on the Brady judgment until it entered the Country Mutual
    judgment and that postjudgment interest accrued on the Country Mutual judgment thereafter.
    On appeal, Farmer argues that postjudgment interest continues to accrue on the Brady
    judgment until Country Mutual pays the amount it owes him and that the circuit court erred
    in reducing the postjudgment interest amount to interest accruing on the Country Mutual
    judgment. We reverse and remand.
    FACTS
    1
    Farmer was injured in an automobile collision caused by Brian Brady, who was
    insured by Country Mutual. Country Mutual refused to defend Brady against Farmer's
    action. On November 13, 1998, after an uncontested, nonjury trial, the circuit court entered
    the Brady judgment in favor of Farmer and against Brady for $1.5 million. Farmer released
    Brady from liability on sums in excess of Country Mutual's policy limits, and Farmer, as
    Brady's assignee, filed an action against Country Mutual for wrongfully failing to defend its
    insured. On December 10, 2001, the circuit court entered the Country Mutual judgment,
    holding that Country Mutual was liable to Farmer for the policy limits of $100,000, plus
    costs, plus statutory interest on the $1.5 million Brady judgment. Both parties appealed the
    Country Mutual judgment, and this court affirmed the circuit court's judgment. Farmer v.
    Country Mutual Insurance Co., No. 5-02-0240 (2003) (unpublished order under Supreme
    Court Rule 23 (166 Ill. 2d R. 23)).
    In an affidavit for nonwage garnishment (see 735 ILCS 5/12-701 (West 2002)) filed
    May 2, 2002, Farmer's attorney calculated postjudgment interest after December 10, 2001, on
    the Country Mutual judgment. On June 3, 2002, the circuit court entered an order noting that
    the parties had entered into an agreement regarding the enforcement of the judgment,
    authorizing the garnishee bank to return to Country Mutual any assets it was holding
    regarding the garnishment served on May 2, 2002, and releasing the garnishee bank from any
    further obligation to hold Country Mutual's funds pursuant to that garnishment.
    On June 2, 2004, Farmer filed a second garnishment notice directed to Country
    Mutual. See 735 ILCS 5/12-701 (West 2004). On July 8, 2004, the circuit court entered an
    order requesting that on August 9, 2004, the parties submit proposed calculations of the
    judgment. On August 9, 2004, Farmer filed a written argument wherein he relied on case law
    and the language of the insurance policy issued by Country Mutual to Brady to argue that
    postjudgment interest accrued on the Brady judgment until Country Mutual paid the amount
    2
    it owed.
    The insurance policy issued by Country Mutual to its insured provided, in pertinent
    part:
    "In addition to the limits of liability stated on the declarations page, ***
    ***
    We will also pay interest on the full amount of any judgment even if the
    judgment is higher than our limit of liability. We will pay this interest from
    the day the judgment is entered until we have paid, offered, or deposited our
    portion of the judgment in court. This payment, offer[,] or deposit will not
    exceed our full limit of liability indicated on the declarations page."
    On May 17, 2004, Country Mutual paid Farmer $609,703.27, which Farmer deposited
    on July 13, 2004. On August 18, 2004, the circuit court entered a payout order, calculating
    the judgment of December 10, 2001, as $610,141.57, as of May 17, 2004, "with interest
    accruing thereon at the rate of 9% annually." On August 31, 2004, Country Mutual paid
    Farmer an additional $449.71. On September 8, 2004, Farmer filed a motion to reconsider,
    which the circuit court denied on November 18, 2004. On December 17, 2004, Farmer filed
    his timely notice of appeal.
    ANALYSIS
    Farmer argues that the circuit court erred in calculating the amount of interest that
    Country Mutual owes Farmer. Country Mutual argues that Farmer waived his argument that
    he is entitled to continuing judgment interest on the Brady judgment until Country Mutual
    pays its amount due, because (1) he raises it for the first time on appeal, (2) he requested the
    circuit court to calculate postjudgment interest on the Brady judgment at the time it entered
    the Country Mutual judgment, (3) in an April 24, 2002, letter to opposing counsel, his
    counsel calculated postjudgment interest on the Country Mutual judgment amount, and (4)
    3
    during summary judgment proceedings before the Country Mutual judgment and during the
    prior appeal to this court, he failed to argue that postjudgment interest accrued on the Brady
    judgment until it was paid.
    On August 9, 2004, Farmer filed a written argument wherein he argued that
    postjudgment interest accrued on the Brady judgment until Country Mutual paid the amount
    it owed. Farmer argued his right to continuing interest on the Brady judgment prior to the
    circuit court's payout order of August 18, 2004, from which Farmer appeals. Therefore,
    Farmer did not waive the issue for purposes of appellate review. See Chandler v. Doherty,
    
    299 Ill. App. 3d 797
    , 806 (1998) (the plaintiffs properly asserted their right to interest from
    the date of the underlying judgment in their complaint for a citation and an order of
    garnishment, but because the defendant-insurer did not respond to the plaintiffs' assertion, the
    defendant-insurer waived the issue for appeal). Farmer also argued, in the August 9, 2001,
    motion for a summary judgment at issue during the prior appeal of this case, that Country
    Mutual had a contractual duty to pay interest on the full amount of any judgment, even if the
    judgment is higher than its limit of liability, until it pays the amount due.
    Further, the rule of waiver is a limitation on the parties and not the courts. Geise v.
    Phoenix Co. of Chicago, Inc., 
    159 Ill. 2d 507
    , 514 (1994). Country Mutual concedes that
    interest accrued on the Brady judgment until December 10, 2001. The issue of whether
    interest continued to accrue on the Brady judgment entered on November 13, 1998, or began
    to accrue on the Country Mutual judgment entered on December 10, 2001, did not originate
    until Country Mutual failed to immediately pay the December 10, 2001, judgment amount.
    At that time, the conflict arose regarding whether postjudgment interest was accruing on the
    Country Mutual judgment or the Brady judgment. In its payout order, the circuit court
    reduced the statutory interest amount accruing after December 10, 2001, allowing Country
    Mutual to benefit from the judgment entered against it for failing to defend its insured.
    4
    Accordingly, in exercising our responsibility for a just result and the maintenance of a sound
    and uniform body of precedent, we consider Farmer's argument that postjudgment interest
    continues to accrue on the underlying Brady judgment, until Country Mutual pays its amount
    due. See 
    Geise, 159 Ill. 2d at 514
    .
    Country Mutual also argues that Farmer cannot revitalize the insurance policy's terms
    to argue that he is entitled to postjudgment interest on the Brady judgment until Country
    Mutual pays its amount due, because the insurance policy's terms have become merged into
    the Country Mutual judgment. See Doerr v. Schmitt, 
    375 Ill. 470
    (1941).
    In Doerr, the supreme court held that if a party obtains a final judgment based upon a
    contract, that contract can never again become the basis of a suit between the same parties.
    
    Doerr, 375 Ill. at 472
    . The contract upon which the proceeding was based becomes merged
    in the court's judgment. 
    Doerr, 375 Ill. at 472
    . However, to give just effect to a judgment,
    courts may look behind the judgment to see upon what it is founded. 
    Doerr, 375 Ill. at 472
    ;
    Meeker v. Gray, 
    142 Ill. App. 3d 717
    , 726 (1986).
    In this situation, the defense of merger does not apply because the judgment
    previously obtained on the insurance policy issued by Country Mutual was in the present
    case. See White Way Sign & Maintenance Co. v. Seltzer Pontiac, Inc., 
    56 Ill. 2d 342
    , 344
    (1974); Chandler v. Doherty, 
    314 Ill. App. 3d 320
    , 323-24 (2000) (a garnishment is a
    statutory remedy for the enforcement of a judgment and is not a separate suit but an ancillary
    step in the original action); see also Lincoln Park Federal Savings & Loan Ass'n v. Carrane,
    
    192 Ill. App. 3d 188
    , 192 (1989) (no merger occurred to bar a claim against the guarantor
    because, inter alia, "the judgment order previously obtained on the note was in this same
    action").
    Additionally, we must look behind the Country Mutual judgment to give the judgment
    its just effect. The Country Mutual judgment entered on December 10, 2001, included
    5
    interest on the underlying Brady judgment. To determine whether, after December 10, 2001,
    the statutorily mandated postjudgment interest (see 735 ILCS 5/2-1303 (West 2004))
    continues to accrue on the underlying Brady judgment or begins to accrue on the Country
    Mutual judgment, we must look beyond the Country Mutual judgment, applying
    postjudgment interest rules in light of the insurance policy provisions in question, to give the
    judgment its just effect. See Halloran v. Dickerson, 
    287 Ill. App. 3d 857
    , 864 (1997).
    Country Mutual also argues that Farmer is judicially estopped from arguing that he is
    entitled to continuing interest on the Brady judgment until Country Mutual pays its amount
    due, because he previously took an inconsistent position before the circuit court. Country
    Mutual argues that because Farmer's attorney submitted an affidavit in the first garnishment
    action in 2002 and calculated postjudgment interest on the Country Mutual judgment, Farmer
    cannot now argue that he is entitled to continuing postjudgment interest on the Brady
    judgment. Country Mutual argues that Farmer was successful in asserting this previous,
    inconsistent position because the circuit court entered an order denying Country Mutual's
    motion to stay the enforcement of the judgment pending the prior appeal.
    "The doctrine of judicial estoppel provides that when a party assumes a certain
    position in a legal proceeding, that party is estopped from assuming a contrary position in a
    subsequent legal proceeding." People v. Coffin, 
    305 Ill. App. 3d 595
    , 598 (1999). The
    doctrine has five requirements:
    "First, the two positions must be taken by the same party. Second, the positions must
    be taken in judicial proceedings. Third, the positions must be given under oath.
    Fourth, the party taking the positions must have been successful in maintaining the
    first position, receiving some benefit thereby in the first proceeding. Fifth, the two
    positions must be totally inconsistentBthe truth of one must necessarily preclude the
    truth of the other." (Emphasis in original.) Department of Transportation v. Coe, 112
    
    6 Ill. App. 3d 506
    , 509-10 (1983).
    In the present case, Farmer's calculations were made during this action. See White
    Way Sign & Maintenance 
    Co., 56 Ill. 2d at 344
    (a garnishment is an ancillary proceeding and
    is not a distinct or separate suit from the original action for judgment). Therefore, Farmer's
    calculations were not made in separate proceedings, as required for the doctrine of judicial
    estoppel to apply. See Horwitz v. Bankers Life & Casualty Co., 
    319 Ill. App. 3d 390
    , 400-01
    (2001) (the actions and statements were made during the same action; therefore, the separate-
    proceedings requirement of judicial estoppel was not met).
    Additionally, Farmer did not receive a benefit from his previous position. In an
    affidavit for nonwage garnishment filed on May 2, 2002, Farmer sought a nonwage
    garnishment for the Country Mutual judgment under the calculation that Country Mutual
    now advances, i.e., postjudgment interest applied to the Country Mutual judgment, as
    opposed to the Brady judgment. However, on June 3, 2002, the circuit court entered an order
    noting that the parties had entered into an agreement regarding the enforcement of the
    judgment, authorizing the garnishee bank to return to Country Mutual any assets it was
    holding regarding the garnishment served on May 2, 2002, and releasing the garnishee bank
    from any further obligation to hold Country Mutual's funds pursuant to that garnishment.
    The circuit court did not issue a final order determining the garnishment amount in the 2002
    garnishment proceedings, and Farmer did not execute on the garnished sums. As a result, in
    2004, Farmer was required to file the second garnishment action resulting in the August 18,
    2004, payout order at issue here. See 735 ILCS 5/2-616(a) (West 2002) ("At any time before
    final judgment amendments may be allowed on just and reasonable terms, *** in any matter,
    either of form or substance, in any process, pleading, *** or proceedings, which may enable
    the plaintiff to sustain the claim for which it was intended to be brought ***"). Therefore,
    Farmer did not receive a benefit from his previous position in the 2002 garnishment
    7
    proceedings, as required for the doctrine of judicial estoppel to apply. See Horwitz, 319 Ill.
    App. 3d at 400-01. Accordingly, Farmer is not judicially estopped from requesting
    postjudgment interest to be calculated on the underlying Brady judgment until Country
    Mutual pays its amount due.
    Farmer argues that Country Mutual is liable for interest that accrues on the underlying
    Brady judgment that was entered on November 13, 1998, until Country Mutual pays its
    amount due. Country Mutual argues that interest ceased to accrue on the Brady judgment
    when the circuit court entered a judgment against Country Mutual on December 10, 2001.
    Country Mutual argues that after December 10, 2001, interest accrued only on the Country
    Mutual judgment.
    Illinois law provides for the statutorily mandated accrual of interest after a judgment,
    to compensate the judgment creditor for the use of his money. 735 ILCS 5/2-1303 (West
    2004). Section 2-1303 of the Code of Civil Procedure provides, in pertinent part:
    "Judgments recovered in any court shall draw interest at the rate of 9% per
    annum from the date of the judgment until satisfied ***. When judgment is entered
    upon any award, report[,] or verdict, interest shall be computed at the above rate, from
    the time when made or rendered to the time of entering judgment upon the same, and
    included in the judgment. Interest shall be computed and charged only on the
    unsatisfied portion of the judgment as it exists from time to time. The judgment
    debtor may[,] by tender of payment of judgment, costs[,] and interest accrued to the
    date of tender, stop the further accrual of interest on such judgment notwithstanding
    the prosecution of an appeal[] or other steps to reverse, vacate[,] or modify the
    judgment." 735 ILCS 5/2-1303 (West 2004).
    The "judgment" consists of the verdict amount plus costs plus accrued interest from
    the date of the verdict to the date the judgment is entered. 
    Halloran, 287 Ill. App. 3d at 863
    .
    8
    Although the interest accruing is simple interest and not compound interest, when interest on
    the judgment is computed, a part of the judgment earning interest could be interest that
    accrued between the verdict and the judgment. 
    Halloran, 287 Ill. App. 3d at 863
    -64.
    "Nothing less than full, formal tender in compliance with the statute will operate to stop the
    accrual of interest of the judgment." 
    Halloran, 287 Ill. App. 3d at 862
    .
    We apply postjudgment interest rules in light of the insurance policy provisions in
    question. 
    Halloran, 287 Ill. App. 3d at 864
    . In River Valley Cartage Co. v. Hawkeye-
    Security Insurance Co., 
    17 Ill. 2d 242
    , 243 (1959), Velma Sawyer obtained a judgment for
    $175,000 in a personal injury action against River Valley Cartage Company. Sawyer died
    and her estate commenced garnishment proceedings against the insurance company, which
    had insured River Valley Cartage Company against liability to the extent of $50,000. River
    Valley Cartage 
    Co., 17 Ill. 2d at 243
    . The circuit court entered a judgment against the
    insurance company for $68,350.57, representing $50,000 due under the policy, in addition to
    interest on the entire judgment of $175,000 from the date of its entry to the date of the
    judgment in the garnishment proceeding. River Valley Cartage 
    Co., 17 Ill. 2d at 243
    .
    The supreme court in River Valley Cartage Co. was called upon to interpret the clause
    in the insurer's policy obligating the insurance company to pay " 'all interest accruing after
    entry of judgment until the company has paid, tendered[,] or deposited in court such part of
    the judgment as does not exceed the limit of the company's liability thereon.' " River Valley
    Cartage 
    Co., 17 Ill. 2d at 244
    . The supreme court held that this language created liability for
    interest on the entire $175,000 judgment and that the insurance company's obligation for
    interest on the entire $175,000 continued until the insurer discharged its obligations under the
    policy. River Valley Cartage 
    Co., 17 Ill. 2d at 245
    ; see also Gass v. Carducci, 
    52 Ill. App. 2d 394
    , 402 (1964) (the insurance company must pay interest on the entire judgment rendered
    against its insured, rather than merely on the part of the judgment for which the insurance
    9
    company is liable under its limits-of-liability clause, until the company pays that part of the
    judgment that it is obligated to pay under the contract terms).
    In Halloran, John Halloran died as a result of an automobile accident with another
    vehicle operated by James Dickerson and owned by Debra Roberson. Halloran, 287 Ill.
    App. 3d at 859. Union Automobile Insurance Company (Union) assumed the defense of
    Dickerson and Roberson pursuant to the defense provisions of its insurance policy, and a jury
    returned a verdict in favor of Halloran in the amount of $2.5 million. Halloran, 
    287 Ill. App. 3d
    at 859. In addition to a $25,000-per-person bodily injury limit, the policy issued by Union
    provided that Union would pay " '[i]nterest accruing after a judgment is entered in any suit' "
    it defended and that its duty to pay interest ceased only when Union offered " 'to pay that part
    of the judgment which does not exceed [its] limit of liability for this coverage.' " Halloran,
    
    287 Ill. App. 3d
    at 859-60. On appeal, this court determined that Union was liable for
    $25,000 of bodily injury coverage, along with continuing interest on $2,501,991.60 ($2.5
    million verdict plus $1,991.60 costs) until its $25,000 limit was paid and that the $25,000
    bodily injury coverage liability would not be reduced until all the accrued interest was paid.
    
    Halloran, 287 Ill. App. 3d at 864
    .
    In the present case, the circuit court's payout order calculated postjudgment interest on
    the Brady judgment until December 10, 2001, and then incorrectly calculated postjudgment
    interest on the Country Mutual judgment entered on December 10, 2001. The insurance
    policy issued by Country Mutual obligated it to pay interest on the full amount of the Brady
    judgment until it paid its portion of the judgment. In other words, the policy obligated
    Country Mutual to pay interest on the Brady judgment (Brady judgment = $1.5 million less
    $55,000 paid by State Farm Insurance Company plus costs) until Country Mutual paid that
    part of the judgment which it was obligated to pay under the insurance policy (i.e., amount
    due = $100,000 plus costs plus statutory interest accruing on the Brady judgment until
    10
    Country Mutual pays the amount due). Country Mutual must tender the full amount it owes
    to stop its obligation for interest that accrues on the unsatisfied portion of the Brady
    judgment. See 
    Halloran, 287 Ill. App. 3d at 864
    .
    We therefore remand this cause to the circuit court to determine the amount Country
    Mutual owes Farmer in light of Country Mutual's payment, our order herein, and our decision
    in Halloran (
    287 Ill. App. 3d
    at 869-70). We direct the circuit court to credit the amount paid
    by Country Mutual as a partial payment of the amount owed, apply the payment first to the
    postjudgment interest that has accrued on the unsatisfied portion of the Brady judgment, and
    after all the interest has been paid, reduce the Country Mutual judgment amount. See
    
    Halloran, 287 Ill. App. 3d at 864
    .
    CONCLUSION
    For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the circuit court of Madison County is
    reversed, and the cause is remanded to the circuit court for further proceedings consistent
    with this opinion.
    Reversed; cause remanded.
    GOLDENHERSH and CHAPMAN, JJ., concur.
    11