Gassner v. Raynor Manufacturing Company ( 2011 )


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  •                                 No. 2—10—0180
    Opinion filed April 27, 2011
    ______________________________________________________________________________
    IN THE
    APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS
    SECOND DISTRICT
    GUNTHER GASSNER                     ) Appeal from the Circuit Court of
    ) Lee County.
    Plaintiff-Appellant and       )
    Cross-Appellee,               )
    )
    v.                                  ) No. 08—L—35
    )
    RAYNOR MANUFACTURING COMPANY, )
    ) Honorable
    Defendant-Appellee and        ) Daniel A. Fish,
    Cross-Appellant.              ) Judge, Presiding.
    _________________________________________________________________________
    PRESIDING JUSTICE JORGENSEN delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion.
    Justices McLaren and Burke concurred in the judgment and opinion.
    OPINION
    On May 30, 2000, plaintiff-appellant and cross-appellee, Gunther Gassner, sustained a work-
    related back injury and, following surgery for the injury, a staphylococcal (staph) infection originating
    in his back area. On May 1, 2002, in settlement thereof, the Industrial Commission (Commission)
    approved a “settlement contract” between Gassner and his employer, defendant-appellee and cross-
    appellant, Raynor Manufacturing Company (RMC). The settlement contract contained an “open
    medical provision,” the scope of which is at the center of the instant appeal. In that provision, despite
    No. 2—10—0180
    Gassner’s general release, RMC agreed to pay for certain approved treatment for a year following
    the Commission’s approval of the settlement contract. After the approval, the staph infection spread
    to Gassner’s heart, and Gassner incurred approximately $190,000 in medical expenses for treatment
    to his heart. Gassner thought that the open medical provision covered the expenses related to the
    staph infection surrounding his heart (provided he could prove that it was the same staph infection
    that began in his back), but RMC disagreed.
    On October 31, 2008, Gassner petitioned for entry of judgment pursuant to section 19(g) of
    the Illinois Workers’ Compensation Act (Act), which allows for a circuit court to enter judgment in
    accordance with an arbitration award (or a Commission-approved settlement contract). 820 ILCS
    305/19(g) (West 2008). RMC moved to dismiss, arguing that the statute of limitations barred
    Gassner’s claim. The trial court denied the motion to dismiss. RMC then moved for summary
    judgment, and the trial court granted the motion. Gassner appeals, arguing that the trial court erred
    in granting summary judgment to RMC. RMC maintains that summary judgment was proper, but it
    cross-appeals, arguing that the trial court erred in denying its motion to dismiss. For the reasons that
    follow, we affirm the trial court’s denial of RMC’s motion to dismiss, we reverse the trial court’s
    grant of summary judgment to RMC, and we remand the cause.
    I. BACKGROUND
    On May 30, 2000,1 Gassner fell down the stairs while at work for RMC. As a result, Gassner
    1
    There is some confusion regarding the date of the initial injury. In his brief, Gassner states
    that the initial injury occurred on November 1, 1999. However, the settlement contract states that
    the initial injury occurred on May 30, 2000. In its brief, RMC attempts to correct Gassner, noting
    the discrepancy, and, in his reply brief, Gassner does not challenge the May 30, 2000, date.
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    suffered a herniated disk at L4-L5, which required a fusion that was performed on February 25, 2002.
    Following the surgery, Gassner developed a deep staph infection at the site of the surgical incision.
    He was treated with oral and intravenous antibiotics. Gassner and RMC subsequently entered into
    an agreement entitled “Illinois Industrial Commission Settlement Contract Lump Sum Petition and
    Order” (settlement contract). The settlement contract stated in pertinent part:
    “Terms of Settlement: Attach a recent medical report signed by the physician who
    examined or treated the employee.
    [RMC] offers and [Gassner] accepts the sum of $47,500 [less attorney fees and
    expenses], subject to approval by the Industrial Commission, in full settlement of all claims,
    known or unknown, including all claims for specific loss, temporary total compensation[,] or
    compensation pursuant to Sections 8(d)(1), 8(d)(2) or 8(f) of the Act resulting from said
    alleged accident of 5/30/00 and any other accident, injury, or aggravation of a pre-existing
    condition arising out of and in the course of [Gassner’s] employment with [RMC] to the date
    he signed this contract, involving alleged disability to any portion of [Gassner’s] anatomy.
    This general release includes but is not limited to the rights under Sections 8(a) and 19(h) of
    the Act, [which] are expressly and mutually waived. *** Liability, causality, necessity and
    propriety of certain medical care, and nature and extent of permanent disability are the matters
    in issue. This settlement shall not be construed as a commutation of or a substitution for
    periodic payments; rather it represents a compromise of each disputed issue and has been
    effectuated to terminate litigation. Notwithstanding anything to the contrary contained
    herein, as additional consideration, [RMC] agrees to pay reasonable and necessary medical
    expenses for treatment to the low back causally related to the alleged injury of 5/30/00 for
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    a period of one year after the date of approval of this settlement contract, but not
    thereafter.” (Emphasis added to the controversial “open medical provision.”)
    Additionally, the signature line of the contract, which Gassner signed, read:
    “PETITIONER’S SIGNATURE. Attention, petitioner. Do not sign this contract
    unless you understand all of the following statements. I have read this document, understand
    its terms, and sign this contract voluntarily. I believe it is in my best interests for the
    Commission to approve this contract. I understand that I can present this settlement contract
    to the Industrial Commission in person. I understand that by signing this contract, I am giving
    up the following rights:
    1. My right to a trial before an arbitrator;
    2. My right to appeal the arbitrator’s decision to the Commission;
    3. My right to any further medical treatment, at the employer’s expense, for the results
    of this injury;
    4. My right to any additional benefits if my condition worsens as a result of this
    injury.”
    The Commission approved the settlement contract on May 1, 2002.
    A few months later, in September 2002, Gassner began to experience chest pain, shortness
    of breath, and fever. By late October 2002, doctors diagnosed Gassner with septic pericardis near
    his heart, and Gassner underwent multiple surgeries as a result of the infection. Between May 1,
    2002, and May 1, 2003, Gassner incurred $190,000 in medical expenses for treatment of his heart
    infection. Dr. Jeffrey Coe examined Gassner, and Dr. Coe provided the opinion that Gassner’s heart
    infection was caused by the same bacteria responsible for Gassner’s low back infection.
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    On October 1, 2003, Gassner petitioned the Commission to enforce2 the settlement contract
    pursuant to sections 8(a) and 19(h) of the Act, seeking payment for expenses related to the heart
    infection. 820 ILCS 305/8(a), 19(h) (West 2008). On November 19, 2007, the Commission entered
    an order (which is contained in the record), noting that the parties had become involved in a
    disagreement concerning the interpretation of the “reasonable and necessary medical expenses” for
    which RMC was responsible under the open medical provision. The Commission found, however,
    that it lacked subject matter jurisdiction to hear the case, because the settlement contract stated that
    all statutory rights of review, including but not limited to the “rights under sections 8(a) and 19(h)
    of the Act, are expressly and mutually waived.” The Commission then advised that Gassner could
    pursue relief in the circuit court under section 19(g) of the Act.
    Nearly one year after the entry of the Commission’s order, on October 31, 2008, Gassner
    petitioned the trial court for entry of judgment pursuant to section 19(g) of the Act, which states:
    “(g) Except in the case of a claim against the State of Illinois, either party may present
    a certified copy of the award of the Arbitrator, or a certified copy of the decision of the
    Commission when the same has become final, when no proceedings for review are pending,
    providing for the payment of compensation according to this Act, to the Circuit Court of the
    2
    Although Gassner’s petition was entitled an enforcement petition, we note that the
    Commission has no authority to enforce its contracts (that is the province of the circuit court, as
    provided by section 19(g)). The Commission more accurately characterized the petition as one of
    review under section 19(h). 820 ILCS 305/19(h) (West 2008).
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    county in which such accident occurred or either of the parties are residents, whereupon the
    court shall enter a judgment in accordance therewith.” 820 ILCS 305/19(g) (West 2008).
    In his section 19(g) petition, Gassner alleged that RMC did not pay all of the medical expenses that
    it had agreed to cover in the open medical provision. Gassner attached the bills in question, which
    in large part pertained to the staph infection surrounding his heart (which, according to Gassner,
    originated in his low back) and which totaled approximately $190,000. Gassner contended that these
    expenses were covered by the open medical provision because they were incurred between May 1,
    2002, and May 1, 2003, and the open medical provision stated that RMC would “pay reasonable and
    necessary medical expenses for treatment to the low back causally related to the alleged injury of
    5/30/00 for a period of one year after the date of approval of this settlement contract [i.e., May 1,
    2002], but not thereafter.”
    On December 9, 2008, RMC moved to dismiss pursuant to section 2—619 of the Code of
    Civil Procedure (Code) (735 ILCS 5/2—619 (2008)), arguing that Gassner’s section 19(g) petition
    was time-barred. RMC asserted that the five-year limitations period set forth in section 13—205 of
    the Code applies because that section governs “awards of arbitration *** and all civil actions not
    otherwise provided for.” 735 ILCS 5/13—205 (West 2008). RMC noted that Gassner’s “purported”
    cause of action accrued on May 1, 2003, the last day on which Gassner could arguably seek
    compensation for his medical expenses, and that Gassner did not file his petition until October 31,
    2008, more than five years later.
    On April 30, 2009, the trial court denied RMC’s motion to dismiss. The court found that the
    limitations period was tolled from October 1, 2003, to November 19, 2007, when Gassner’s petition
    to enforce the settlement contract was pending before the Commission. The court reasoned that,
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    therefore, Gassner satisfied a five-year limitations period. Rather than end its analysis there, however,
    the court continued, stating that, in any case, the applicable limitations period was 10 years as set
    forth in section 13—206 of the Code, not 5 years as set forth in section 13—205. 735 ILCS
    5/13—206 (West 2008). In reaching this conclusion, the court cited two cases that together
    represented an appellate court split on the appropriate time period within which a claimant must file
    for judgment under section 19(g) of the Act: Blacke v. Industrial Comm’n, 
    268 Ill. App. 3d 26
    (1994) (Third District) (characterizing a section 19(g) action based on an arbitration award as an
    action to enforce liability resulting from a statute, i.e., a “civil action[] not otherwise provided for,”
    for which a 5-year limitations period was appropriate (735 ILCS 5/13—205 (West 2008))); and
    Givens v. Givens, 
    192 Ill. App. 3d 97
    (1989) (First District) (characterizing a section 19(g) action
    based on an approved settlement contract as an action based on a “written contract[]” for which a
    10-year limitations period was appropriate (735 ILCS 5/13—206 (West 2008))). The court noted
    that the instant case involved an approved settlement contract, and so it would follow Givens.
    On October 28, 2009, RMC moved for summary judgment, arguing that the settlement
    contract did not cover the $190,000 in expenses incurred in treating Gassner’s heart infection. RMC
    attached two affidavits to its motion for summary judgment, one by a claims adjuster, Evelyn Harper,
    and one by RMC’s attorney, James M. O’Brien. Harper attested that RMC (through its insurer, St.
    Paul Travelers) had paid $24,000 for treatment to Gassner’s low back between May 1, 2002, and
    May 1, 2003. O’Brien attested that the terms of the settlement contract obligated RMC to pay only
    “for treatment to the low back causally related to the alleged injury of 5/30/00 for a period of one
    year after the date of approval of this settlement contract, but not thereafter.” (Emphases added to
    language of the settlement contract by O’Brien.) O’Brien stated that, based on his experience as a
    workers’ compensation and personal injury attorney, he was familiar with the type of medical records
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    submitted by Gassner and that, upon his review, the only “unpaid medical treatment bills produced
    by Gassner that might pertain to ‘treatment to the low back’ during the period from May 1, 2002[,]
    through May 1, 2003[,] are, at most [$283].” ” (Emphases original to the affidavit.)
    Each side argued on the motion for summary judgment through a written memo and at a
    hearing. RMC argued that, according to the “four corners” rule governing contracts, a court may
    not look beyond the plain language of a contract unless a facial ambiguity exists, and here no facial
    ambiguity exists. According to RMC, it was obligated to pay for future medical expenses only if
    those expenses met three conditions precedent:
    1. The subject medical treatment had to be “treatment to the low back” (i.e., not
    treatment “to” the head, knee, heart, lung, etc.).
    2. The “treatment to the low back” had to occur between May 1, 2002, and May 1,
    2003 (“for a period of one year after the date of approval of this settlement contract [May 1,
    2002], but not thereafter”); and
    3. The “treatment to the low back” occurring between May 1, 2002, and May 1, 2003,
    must be “causally related to the alleged injury of 5/30/00” (i.e., not related to some new back
    injury, fall, auto accident, etc.). (Emphases added.)
    RMC essentially contended that any factual question whether the heart infection was causally related
    to the initial injury (third condition precedent) is irrelevant because, as a matter of law, the treatment
    for Gassner’s heart infection cannot be characterized as “treatment to the low back” (first condition
    precedent).
    Gassner argued that “the term ‘treatment to the low back’ itself incorporates treatment for
    injuries causally related to that approved treatment.” Gassner argued that, at least provisionally, a
    court may look to extrinsic evidence for the limited purpose of determining whether an ambiguity
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    exists. And, according to Gassner, a provisional review of the extrinsic evidence supports his
    interpretation of the phrase, “treatment to the low back.” For example, when the parties entered into
    the settlement contract, Gassner had already undergone surgery directly to his back and was at that
    time undergoing physical therapy as well as treatment for the staph infection that began at the site
    of the surgical incision, for which RMC paid under the settlement contract. Gassner pointed out that
    treatment for the staph infection originating at the site of the incision was not administered directly
    to that site but, rather, was treated with intravenous and oral antibiotics. Thus, Gassner essentially
    argued that even RMC acknowledged some flexibility to the term “treatment to the low back,” at
    least to the extent that “treatment to the low back” need not mean “treatment [administered] to the
    low back.” Gassner further argued that workers’ compensation case law supported his interpretation
    of the phrase “treatment to the low back,” because the case law establishes that injuries causally
    related to those injuries arising out of and in the course of employment are compensable under the
    Act. See, e.g., International Harvester Co. v. Industrial Comm’n, 
    46 Ill. 2d 238
    , 245 (1970); Shell
    Oil Co. v. Industrial Comm’n, 
    2 Ill. 2d 590
    , 595 (1954).
    RMC responded that the cases to which Gassner cited in support of his position that the
    phrase “treatment to the low back” should be read to include treatment causally related to that
    approved treatment (i.e., Shell Oil and International Harvester) are inapposite because they do not
    involve settlement contracts. Rather, they stand for the simple proposition that injuries causally
    related to those injuries arising out of and in the course of employment are compensable under the
    Act.
    The trial court granted RMC’s motion for summary judgment, finding dispositive O’Brien’s
    affidavit. The court, citing Abrams v. City of Chicago, 
    211 Ill. 2d 251
    , 257 (2004), stated that “a
    party may not rely upon his own unverified pleadings to oppose a motion for summary judgment
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    when [the] movant has supplied evidentiary material, which[,] if uncontradicted[,] would entitle him
    to judgment as a matter of law.” The court noted that the affidavit was evidence that there are no
    unpaid medical bills pertaining to the treatment of the low back, while Gassner did not offer any
    evidence to the contrary. Based on this, the court concluded that “[RMC’s] evidence goes unrefuted
    and must be accepted as true, leaving no issue of fact as to whether there are any unpaid bills arising
    out of [Gassner’s] low back injury,” and that, “[b]ecause [Gassner] has not offered any contrary
    evidence ***, the Court does not get to consider the terms of the contract or whether an ambiguity
    exists.”3 (Emphasis added.) This appeal followed.
    II. ANALYSIS
    A. Statute of Limitations
    3
    Although the trial court never directly addressed the issue of contract interpretation, it
    seemed to implicitly accept Gassner’s interpretation. For example, the trial court stated: “[Gassner]
    offered *** no competent evidence supporting a claim [that he] has unpaid medical bills arising out
    of his low back injury”; “[Gassner] has offered *** only argument *** to establish which bills are
    unpaid and that they arise out of [his] low back injury”; and “[RMC’s] evidence goes unrefuted and
    must be accepted as true, leaving no issue of fact as to whether there are any unpaid bills arising out
    of his low back injury.” (Emphases added.) In other words, the trial court implicitly found that the
    contract would have provided for, or at least did not preclude, expenses related to the staph infection
    surrounding Gassner’s heart, if only Gassner had offered “competent evidence” supporting his claim
    that the heart staph infection “ar[o]se out of his low back injury” and that bills for the treatment of
    the staph infection remained unpaid. On this point, we would disagree, as Gassner, through Dr.
    Coe’s medical opinion and the bills attached to the petition, did provide competent evidence that the
    staph infection that affected Gassner’s heart “arose out of his low back injury.”
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    We first address RMC’s cross-appeal. As a threshold matter, RMC contends that the trial
    court should have granted its motion to dismiss because Gassner’s petition is barred by the statute
    of limitations. A statute of limitations’ applicability to a cause of action presents a question of law,
    subject to de novo review. Travelers Casualty & Surety Co. v. Bowman, 
    229 Ill. 2d 461
    , 466 (2008).
    RMC contends that section 13—205 of the Code controls. That section provides that
    “actions on *** awards of arbitration *** and all civil actions not otherwise provided for[] shall be
    commenced within 5 years next after the cause of action accrued.” 735 ILCS 5/13—205 (West
    2008). RMC notes that the action accrued May 1, 2003, one year after the settlement contract was
    approved (i.e., the date by which any expenses covered by the contract would have been incurred),
    and that Gassner did not file his petition with the trial court until more than five years later, on
    October 31, 2008. In support of its position that a five-year limitations period should apply, RMC
    cites Ahlers v. Sears, Roebuck Co., 
    73 Ill. 2d 259
    , 265 (1978), for the proposition that the
    Commission’s approval of a settlement contract has the “legal effect” of an arbitration award.
    Though Ahlers was not a statute-of-limitations case, RMC uses the above-mentioned proposition as
    a stepping stone to reach its conclusion that the settlement contract at issue here should be treated
    as an arbitration award (subject to the section 19(g) remedy of reducing the arbitration award to
    judgment). RMC then relies upon Blacke, which characterized arbitration awards approved by the
    Commission and subject to enforcement under section 19(g) as actions arising from statute and,
    therefore, as “civil action[s] not otherwise provided for,” governed by a five-year limitations period.
    (Internal quotation marks omitted.) 
    Blacke, 268 Ill. App. 3d at 29
    .4
    4
    It is not entirely clear why the Blacke court sought to establish an arbitration award as a
    “civil action[] not otherwise provided for,” when section 13—205 sets forth a five-year limitations
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    Gassner responds that the trial court correctly determined that section 13—206 of the Code
    controls. That section provides that actions on written contracts “shall be commenced within 10
    years next after the cause of action accrued.” 735 ILCS 5/13—206 (West 2008). Gassner argues
    that a settlement contract should be characterized as a written contract and relies upon Givens, 
    192 Ill. App. 3d 97
    , which held the same. Gassner notes that, as the action accrued on May 1, 2003, and
    he filed his petition on October 31, 2008, he clearly did not violate the 10-year limitations period.
    We agree and see no reason to depart from Givens.
    Finally, we reject RMC’s argument that this court should consider the settlement contract to
    be an oral contract, subject to a five-year limitations period. RMC, relying on Armstrong v. Guigler,
    
    174 Ill. 2d 281
    , 287 (1996), asserts that, where the language of a written contract is ambiguous such
    that a party requests the court to look to parol evidence to determine one of the contract’s essential
    terms, then the contract is deemed oral for the purposes of determining the limitations period, and
    an oral contract is subject to a five-year limitations period. RMC posits that, from Gassner’s
    perspective, the term “treatment to the low back” can at best be considered ambiguous and therefore
    Gassner will have to resort to parol evidence to support his claim.
    We find that RMC has improperly extended the rule set forth in Armstrong, and therefore we
    reject RMC’s argument. In Armstrong, the court held that, where one party is claiming breach of a
    written contract but the existence of that contract or one of its essential terms must be proven by
    parol evidence, the contract is deemed oral and the five-year statute of limitations applies.
    
    Armstrong, 174 Ill. 2d at 287
    . Here, parol evidence is not necessary to establish the existence of an
    period for both arbitration awards and for civil actions not otherwise provided for. 735 ILCS
    5/13—205 (West 2008).
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    essential term. Rather, the purpose of parol evidence in this case would be to interpret a term, the
    existence of which is evident.
    Because we determine that a 10-year statute of limitations applies, we need not address
    whether the limitations period was tolled while Gassner attempted to assert his cause in the wrong
    forum.
    B. Summary Judgment
    Gassner challenges the trial court’s grant of summary judgment, arguing that the trial court
    erred in finding that O’Brien’s affidavit was uncontradicted such that no question of fact remained
    whether there were any unpaid medical bills arising out of Gassner’s low back injury and in thereby
    failing to reach the contract-interpretation issue. A summary judgment is a drastic remedy that is to
    be awarded and reviewed with care and caution. Bloomer Amusement Co. v. Eskenazi, 
    75 Ill. App. 3d
    117, 118 (1979). A motion for summary judgment should be granted only where the pleadings,
    depositions, and admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if any, show there is no genuine issue
    of material fact and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. 735 ILCS
    5/2—1005(c) (West 2008). If the facts are not in dispute but are subject to conflicting inferences,
    or if a reasonable person can draw different inferences and conclusions from the undisputed facts,
    summary judgment is not appropriate. Bloomer, 
    75 Ill. App. 3d
    at 118-19. A grant of summary
    judgement is subject to de novo review. Id at 119.
    1. The Court Erred in Failing to Reach the Contract-Interpretation Issue
    As to whether the trial court properly granted RMC’s motion for summary judgment, Gassner
    first argues that the trial court erred in finding that O’Brien’s affidavit was uncontradicted such that
    no question of fact remained whether there were any unpaid medical bills arising out of Gassner’s low
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    back injury and in thereby failing to reach the contract-interpretation issue. We agree with Gassner
    that the trial court erred on this point.
    It is true that a party may not rely upon his or her own verified pleadings to oppose a motion
    for summary judgment when the movant has supplied evidentiary material, such as an affidavit, that,
    if uncontradicted, would entitle him or her to judgment as a matter of law. See, e.g., 
    Abrams, 211 Ill. 2d at 257
    . However, summary judgment affidavits must contain not conclusions but only
    evidentiary facts to which the affiant is capable of testifying. Jones v. Dettro, 
    308 Ill. App. 3d 494
    ,
    499 (1999) (citing Ill. S. Ct. R. 191(a) (eff. Aug. 1, 1992)). Unsupported assertions, opinions, and
    self-serving or conclusory statements do not comply with the rule governing summary judgment
    affidavits. 
    Id. Here, O’Brien
    attested that the terms of the settlement contract obligated RMC to pay only
    “for treatment to the low back causally related to the alleged injury of 5/30/00 for a period of one
    year after the date of approval of this settlement contract, but not thereafter.” (Emphases added to
    language of the settlement contract by O’Brien.) O’Brien stated that, based on his experience as a
    workers’ compensation and personal injury attorney, he was familiar with the type of medical records
    submitted by Gassner and that, upon his review, the only “unpaid medical treatment bills produced
    by Gassner that might pertain to ‘treatment to the low back’ during the period from May 1, 2002[,]
    through May 1, 2003[,] are, at most [$283].” (Emphasis original to the affidavit.)
    These statements are conclusory in that they assume the very interpretation of the open
    medical provision that Gassner challenges: that the term “treatment to the low back” means treatment
    administered to or directed at healing the low back only, not treatment for a spreading injury/illness
    that originated in the low back and not subsequently required treatment arising out of the approved
    treatment. O’Brien does not dispute that RMC refused to pay $190,000 in medical expenses that
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    Gassner incurred for the treatment of his heart infection, as set forth in Gassner’s answers to various
    interrogatories and in his submission of medical records. Rather, O’Brien asserts that the settlement
    contract released RMC from any obligation that it may have otherwise had under the Act to pay for
    the treatment of Gassner’s heart infection. Gassner’s answers to RMC’s interrogatories and his
    medical bills are sufficient to stand in response to O’Brien’s affidavit. In sum, O’Brien’s affidavit is
    insufficient to resolve the controversy as a matter of law, and the trial court erred in failing to address
    the contract-interpretation issue. Although the trial court failed to address the issue, we will do so
    because, as set forth below, the issue is subject to de novo review.
    2. Contract-Interpretation Issue
    The parties dispute the scope of the open medical provision, which is contained within the
    general release. A release is a contract and, therefore, is governed by contract law. Janowiak v.
    Tiesi, 
    402 Ill. App. 3d 997
    , 1014 (2010). General words in the release are restrained by specific
    recitals contained in the document. 
    Id. Releases are
    strictly construed against the benefitting party
    and must be written with great particularity. 
    Id. Additionally, an
    oft-cited principle in release cases
    is that “[t]he intention of the parties controls the scope and effect of the release, and this intent is
    discerned from the release’s express language as well as the circumstances surrounding the
    agreement.” 
    Id. (quoting Fuller
    Family Holdings, LLC v. Northern Trust Co., 
    371 Ill. App. 3d 605
    ,
    614 (2007)).
    Courts have used two approaches in discerning the intent of the parties in typical contract-
    interpretation cases: the four corners rule and the provisional admission approach. The traditional,
    four corners rule of contract interpretation states:
    “An agreement, when reduced to writing, must be presumed to speak to the intention of the
    parties who signed it. It speaks for itself, and the intention with which it was executed must
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    be determined from the language used. It is not to be changed by extrinsic evidence.”
    (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Air Safety, Inc. v. Teachers Realty Corp., 
    185 Ill. 2d 457
    , 462 (1999) (quoting Western Illinois Oil Co. v. Thompson, 
    26 Ill. 2d 287
    , 291 (1962)).
    In applying the four corners rule, a court initially looks to the language of the contract alone. 
    Id. at 462.
    If the language of an agreement is facially unambiguous, then it is interpreted as a matter of law,
    without resort to parol (or extrinsic) evidence. 
    Id. If, however,
    a facial ambiguity is present, then
    parol evidence may be admitted to aid the trier of fact in resolving the ambiguity. 
    Id. at 462-63.
    Whether an ambiguity is present is a matter of law, subject to de novo review. Installco, Inc. v.
    Whiting Corp., 
    336 Ill. App. 3d 776
    , 783 (2002).
    The provisional admission approach, also known as the extrinsic ambiguity approach, can be
    summed up as follows:
    “Under the provisional admission approach, although the language of [the] contract
    is facially unambiguous, a party may still proffer parol evidence to the trial judge for the
    purpose of showing that an ambiguity exists which can be found only by looking beyond the
    clear language of the contract. [Citation.] Under this method, an extrinsic ambiguity exists
    ‘when someone who knows the context of the contract would know if the contract means
    something other than what it seems to mean.’ [Citation.] *** [I]f, after ‘provisionally’
    reviewing the parol evidence, the trial judge finds that an ‘extrinsic ambiguity’ is present, then
    the parol evidence is admitted to aid the trier of fact in resolving the ambiguity.” Air 
    Safety, 185 Ill. 2d at 463
    .
    The theory behind the provisional admission approach is that it corrects for flaws inherent in a strict
    application of the four corners rule. According to advocates of the provisional admission approach,
    the four corners rule is flawed because “it assumes precision in language that cannot exist and
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    requires the judge to determine the true intent of the parties in a transaction that is removed from time
    and circumstances.” 
    Id. at 465.
    The provisional admission approach allows for the consideration of
    negotiations leading up to the agreement so that parties’ use of particular words and phrases may be
    better understood. Arrington v. Walter E. Heller International Corp., 
    30 Ill. App. 3d 631
    , 637
    (1975). Therefore, the provisional admission approach is more similar to the oft-quoted principle in
    release cases, that “[t]he intention of the parties controls the scope and effect of the release, and this
    intent is discerned from the release’s express language as well as the circumstances surrounding the
    agreement.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.) 
    Janowiak, 402 Ill. App. 3d at 1014
    .5
    5
    Although releases are governed by contract law, we have found no release case discussing
    the four corners rule verses the provisional admission approach and favoring one approach over the
    other. However, release cases have repeatedly stated that the parties’ intent is to be determined from
    the express language as well as the circumstances surrounding the agreement, which is more similar
    to the provisional admission approach. We leave for another court to determine whether what seems
    to be the current trend back to the four corners rule (see, e.g., River’s Edge Homeowners’ Ass’n v.
    City of Naperville, 
    353 Ill. App. 3d 874
    , 880 (2004)) applies to release cases in particular.
    A history of the debate between the four corners rule and the provisional admission approach
    runs as follows. In the 1980s and 1990s, Illinois appellate courts frequently applied the provisional
    admission approach. Air 
    Safety, 185 Ill. 2d at 463
    -64 (citing Ahsan v. Eagle, Inc., 
    287 Ill. App. 3d 788
    , 790 (1997), Meyer v. Marilyn Miglin, Inc., 
    273 Ill. App. 3d 882
    , 889 (1995), USG Corp. v.
    Sterling Plumbing Group, Inc., 
    247 Ill. App. 3d 316
    , 318 (1993), Rybicki v. Anesthesia & Analgesia
    Associates, Ltd., 
    246 Ill. App. 3d 290
    , 298-300 (1993), Zale Construction Co. v. Hoffman, 145 Ill.
    App. 3d 235, 241-42 (1986), URS Corp. v. Ash, 
    101 Ill. App. 3d 229
    , 234-35 (1981), and Keep
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    No. 2—10—0180
    Productions, Inc. v. Arlington Park Towers Hotel Corp., 
    49 Ill. App. 3d 258
    , 263 (1977)). Federal
    courts have also acknowledged that Illinois intermediate courts frequently applied the provisional
    admission approach. See Home Insurance Co. v. Chicago & Northwestern Transportation Co., 
    56 F.3d 763
    , 767-69 (7th Cir. 1995). However, the Illinois Supreme Court in Air Safety expressly
    declined to rule on whether the provisional admission approach may be used when the contract at
    issue does not contain an express integration clause. Air 
    Safety, 185 Ill. 2d at 464
    n.1.
    Shortly after the release of Air Safety, Illinois appellate courts continued to apply the
    provisional admission approach. See, e.g., Fleet Business Credit v. Enterasys Networks, 
    352 Ill. App. 3d
    456, 470 (2004) (First District) (citing Air Safety as though Air Safety had adopted the approach
    rather than merely acknowledging it and refraining from ruling on its propriety). A federal court
    predicted that, following Air Safety, Illinois courts would ultimately adopt the provisional admission
    approach. See Evergreen Investments, LLC v. FCL Graphics, Inc., 
    334 F.3d 750
    , 756 (8th Cir.
    2003) (stating that there is no evidence to suggest that the Illinois Supreme Court will categorically
    reject the provisional admission approach and further stating that, when a state’s highest court has
    not yet ruled on an issue, the federal court must follow the decisions of the state’s intermediate
    courts).
    However, in 2004, this court in River’s Edge stated that we were bound to follow the four
    corners approach as set forth in the Illinois Supreme Court case of Armstrong Paint & Varnish Works
    v. Continental Can Co., 
    301 Ill. 102
    , 106 (1921). River’s 
    Edge, 353 Ill. App. 3d at 880
    . We
    implicitly found that none of the Illinois appellate decisions applying the provisional admission
    approach were proper, reasoning that “[a]fter the supreme court has declared the law with respect
    to an issue, this court must follow that law because only the supreme court has the authority to
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    No. 2—10—0180
    In any case, under both the four corners rule and the provisional admission approach, the first
    step is to determine whether an ambiguity exists. An ambiguity exists where there is doubt as to the
    true sense or meaning of the words themselves or an indefiniteness in the words’ expression, resulting
    in a difficulty in the application of the words under the circumstances of the dispute that the contract
    is supposed to govern. Central Illinois Light Co. v. Home Insurance Co., 
    213 Ill. 2d 141
    , 153
    (2004); 18 Christine Gimeno et al., Ill. L. & Prac. Evidence §290 (2011) (using the “difficulty in
    application” definition) (citing Martindell v. Lake Shore National Bank, 
    15 Ill. 2d 272
    , 280-81 (1958)
    overrule or modify its decisions.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.) 
    Id. (quoting Illinois
    Labor
    Relations Board v. Chicago Transit Authority, 
    341 Ill. App. 3d 751
    , 758 (2003)). We therefore
    found we were bound to follow the four corners rule. 
    Id. The First
    District has cited River’s Edge with approval, and federal courts have now predicted
    that a strict application of the four corners rule will become the law in Illinois. See Lease
    Management Equipment Corp. v. DFO Partnership, 
    392 Ill. App. 3d 678
    , 686 (2009) (First District)
    (adopting the River’s Edge rationale); In re Montgomery Ward & Co., 
    428 F.3d 154
    , 162 nn.18-19
    (3rd Cir. 2005) (recognizing Pennsylvania to be more permissive than Illinois in that it allows for the
    admission of extrinsic evidence to establish a latent ambiguity and stating that, following Air Safety,
    Illinois appellate courts will probably more strictly adhere to the four corners rule); Union Pacific
    R.R. Co. v. Kansas City Southern Ry Co., No. 07—CV—0320—MJR (S.D. Ill. Aug. 3, 2009). But
    see Bright Horizons Children’s Centers, LLC v. Riverway Midwest II, LLC, 
    403 Ill. App. 3d 234
    ,
    247 (2010) (First District) (reciting the provisional admission approach without acknowledging a shift
    since River’s Edge); 
    Janowiak, 402 Ill. App. 3d at 1014
    (regarding the standard by which parties’
    intent in forming a release is to be discerned).
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    No. 2—10—0180
    (finding ambiguous the phrase “ ‘[d]ebentures paid and discharged by the new corporation shall not
    thereafter be available for purchase by the Buyer under [the] option’ ” (emphasis added) because,
    if one considers the primary relationship between the parties to be that of lender and borrower, the
    option granted by the agreement seems to be an unconditionally revocable offer, but, in the context
    of the case, if one considers the primary relationship between the parties to be that of buyer and seller,
    then the option was not revocable at the seller’s whim and only those debentures paid and discharged
    in the normal course of business would no longer be available for purchase by the buyer)).
    Additionally, when dealing with a settlement contract involving a work injury that would be covered
    under the Act, a court construes the contract strongly against the drafter, and the risk of ambiguity
    and lack of clarity is on the drafting party. Johnson v. State, 
    55 Ill. Ct. Cl. 410
    , 412 (2002) (dealing
    specifically with such a settlement contract); see also Dowd & Dowd, Ltd. v. Gleason, 
    181 Ill. 2d 460
    ,
    479 (1998) (ambiguity in the contract must be resolved against the drafter of the disputed provision).6
    With this background, we proceed to determine whether the disputed language in the contract
    is ambiguous so as to require the introduction of parol evidence and preclude summary judgment.
    The disputed language reads:
    “Notwithstanding anything to the contrary contained herein, as additional consideration,
    [RMC] agrees to pay reasonable and necessary medical expenses for treatment to the low
    6
    We acknowledge that the concept of resolving ambiguities against the drafter, as is typically
    expressed in cases such as Gleason, is premature to our summary judgment analysis, which does not
    seek to resolve an ambiguity but seeks to determine if an ambiguity exists. It is for that reason that
    we have cited Johnson, which expresses the drafter’s burden in a manner more on point to the instant
    case.
    -20-
    No. 2—10—0180
    back causally related to the alleged injury of 5/30/00 for a period of one year after the date
    of approval of this settlement contract, but not thereafter.”
    In particular, the parties dispute whether the phrase “treatment to the low back” creates a facial
    ambiguity. Black’s Law Dictionary defines the word “treatment” as “[a] broad term covering all the
    steps taken to effect a cure of an injury or disease; including examination and diagnosis as well as
    application of remedies.” Black’s Law Dictionary 1502 (6th ed. 1990). Dorland’s Medical
    Dictionary defines “treatment” as “the management and care of a patient for the purpose of combating
    disease or disorder.” Dorland’s Medical Dictionary 1388 (26th ed. 1981).
    Gassner’s primary argument is that the plain language of the open medical provision includes
    treatment for the heart staph infection, provided that he can establish that the heart staph infection
    was the same infection that originated in his low back and was causally related to the initial injury.
    That would, of course, be an issue for trial. Thus, Gassner requests that this court remand the cause
    for a determination of whether the staph infection surrounding his heart was the same infection that
    originated in his low back and was causally related to his initial injury. Alternatively, Gassner
    contends that the terms of the open medical provision are, at the very least, ambiguous, requiring a
    remand for a determination of the parties’ intent regarding the scope and extent of the open medical
    provision. Gassner notes that RMC was well aware of the staph infection, then localized near the site
    of the surgical incision, when the parties entered into the open medical provision, and he posits that
    the open medical provision was an acknowledgment of and agreement to pay for Gassner’s then-
    unresolved health issue (the staph infection) for the next year only.
    RMC, on the other hand, argues that the plain language of the open medical provision
    includes treatment administered to or directed at healing the low back only, regardless of whether a
    condition originating in the low back spreads to other parts of the body. At oral argument, RMC set
    -21-
    No. 2—10—0180
    forth that it was aware that Gassner had a staph infection when the parties entered into the settlement
    contract, and it noted that it (RMC) had paid for treatment of Gassner’s staph infection up to that
    point. However, it was RMC’s position that the term “treatment to the low back” unambiguously
    excluded treatment of the staph infection and released RMC from any further duty to pay for such
    treatment. In other words, RMC posited that the purpose of the open medical provision was to limit
    its obligation to paying for treatment to the low back (in the muscular-skeletal, chiropractic sense),
    so long as it was causally related to the initial injury, for a term of one year,.
    RMC’s preferred reading of the open medical provision, i.e., that it was not obligated to pay
    for treatment of the staph infection even while it remained localized in the low back, is not obvious
    from the language of the provision. To the contrary, absent any parol evidence, we read the term
    “treatment to the low back” to include treatment for a staph infection manifesting in the low
    back—the open medical provision does not specify the type of low-back medical condition (muscular-
    skeletal injury or infectious illness) and requires only that the low-back condition be causally related
    to the initial injury. RMC, as the drafter of the settlement contract, should have set forth the terms
    of the release with a greater degree of clarity. If it meant to exclude treatment for the staph infection,
    it should have so stated.
    Once one considers the obligation to pay for treatment as including an infection manifesting
    in the low back, it becomes difficult to define the limits of the obligation. Assuming that the facts
    later show that the infection in the heart was the same infection as that originating in the back, is
    RMC obligated to pay for treatment aimed at the infection or merely for treatment aimed at the
    resulting damage? The former interpretation is more consistent with the term “treatment,” i.e., a
    broad term covering all steps to effect a cure, while the latter more readily lends itself to literal
    compliance with the open medical provision’s reference to the “low back.”
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    No. 2—10—0180
    The fact that the health issue for which coverage is disputed is an infection, as opposed to a
    more discrete injury such as a broken arm, creates the greatest difficulty in applying the terms of the
    open medical provision. By way of counter-example, if, within the year following the approval of the
    settlement contract, the initial injury caused Gassner to have a spasm that in turn caused him to fall
    and break his arm, treatment for his arm would not be covered under the open medical provision.
    Even though the broken arm would arguably be causally related to the initial injury, it would not be
    covered because its treatment could in no way be construed as treatment to the low back. In
    contrast, treatment of an infection originating in the low back, once bloodborne, is not so easily
    localized. The infection was not treated at the site of origin but, rather, was treated by intravenous
    and oral antibiotics. If Gassner is able to establish before a trier of fact that the infection surrounding
    his heart was the same infection as the one that originated in his low back, then, in order to “treat”
    the infection that originated in the low back, i.e., in order to “effect a cure of the [condition],” it
    would seem that one would have had to treat the entire infection, however it may have manifested,
    evolved, or spread.
    In sum, even under a four corners approach, the contract is ambiguous. The open medical
    provision does not, as a matter of law, exclude treatment for Gassner’s staph infection. Summary
    judgment was therefore inappropriate. Should Gassner continue to pursue his claim in the trial court,
    we allow for the introduction of (reliable) parol evidence to determine the intent of the parties in
    entering into the release and in creating the open medical provision. Whether the parties created the
    open medical provision to include or exclude treatment of the staph infection is a question of fact to
    be decided in the trial court, as is the question of whether the staph infection that damaged Gassner’s
    heart is the same infection that originated in his low back as a result of the low back surgery that
    corrected the initial work injury.
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    No. 2—10—0180
    III. CONCLUSION
    For the aforementioned reasons, we affirm the trial court’s denial of RMC’s motion to
    dismiss, we reverse the trial court’s grant of RMC’s motion for summary judgment, and we remand
    the cause.
    Affirmed in part and reversed in part; cause remanded.
    -24-