Great West Casualty Company v. Cotts ( 2006 )


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  •                                                           THIRD DIVISION
    FILED: March 31, 2006
    No.    1-05-3122
    GREAT WEST CASUALTY COMPANY,                       )      APPEAL FROM THE
    )      CIRCUIT COURT OF
    Plaintiff-Appellant,                   )      COOK COUNTY
    )
    v.                        )      NOS. 05 CH 3731
    )            98 L 13503
    NANCY JEAN COTE, JOHN JOHANNESSON,                 )
    WALCO TRANSPORT, INC., and WALCZYNSKI              )
    ENTERPRISES, INC.,                                 )      HONORABLE
    )      ALEXANDER P. WHITE,
    Defendants-Appellees.                  )      JUDGE PRESIDING.
    PRESIDING JUSTICE HOFFMAN delivered the opinion of the court:
    The plaintiff, Great West Casualty Company (Great West),
    appeals   from     an   order   of   the   circuit      court    dismissing    its
    declaratory judgment action as untimely and an earlier order
    entered in a consolidated case, finding that it failed to tender
    the full amount of monetary coverage remaining under its policy of
    insurance in partial satisfaction of a judgment entered against its
    insureds.    For the reasons which follow, we reverse the circuit
    court=s order dismissing the declaratory judgment action and remand
    this   matter    with   directions     and   for       further   proceedings    in
    conformity with the opinions expressed herein.
    The facts necessary to an understanding of our disposition of
    this appeal are not in dispute. Nancy Jean Cote filed an action in
    the Circuit Court of Cook County seeking damages by reason of
    1-05-3122
    injuries she sustained on November 22, 1996, when the vehicle she
    was driving collided with a semi-tractor and trailer driven by John
    Johannesson.        Named    as    defendant's       in    Cote's     complaint      were
    Johannesson and his employer, Walco Transport, Inc.(Walco).                           The
    case   was   docketed    in       the    circuit     court     as   No.    98   L    13503
    (hereinafter referred to as the "underlying case").                        Following a
    trial, the jury returned a verdict in Cote's favor and against both
    Johannesson    and     Walco,      fixing       Cote's    recoverable      damages     at
    $2,052,750. Thereafter, the trial court entered judgment on the
    verdict.      The     judgment      was    subsequently        amended     to   include
    Walczynski     Enterprises,         Inc.    in     response     to    Cote's        motion
    suggesting     that    Walco       had     changed       its   name   to    Walczynski
    Enterprises, Inc. (Walczynski).
    Johannesson and Walco filed post-trial motions which the
    trial court denied.         In addition, the trial court imposed monitary
    sanctions against their attorneys for meritless pleading.
    Johannesson and Walco filed a notice of appeal, and Cote filed
    a timely notice of cross-appeal.                On review, we reversed the order
    assessing sanctions against the attorneys representing Johannesson
    and Walco and affirmed the circuit court's judgment and orders in
    all other respects.         Cote v. Walco Transport, Inc., No. 1-02-3857
    (2004) (unpublished order under Supreme Court Rule 23).
    At all times relevant, Walco was insured under a policy of
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    1-05-3122
    commercial lines insurance issued by Great West which provides
    $1,000,000 in liability coverage (hereinafter referred to as the
    "Policy").     In its brief, Great West acknowledges that Johannesson
    and Walczynski are additional insureds under the Policy.
    On October 14, 2004, Great West tendered two checks payable to
    Cote and her attorney.           The first check was in the sum of $995,000,
    representing what Great West claimed was the remaining limit of
    liability coverage under the Policy.            The second check was in the
    sum of $402,901.56, representing accrued interest on the entire
    judgment in favor of Cote in the underlying case through the date
    of tender.     Cote refused the tendered sums, contending that Great
    West had failed to tender the Policy=s full $1,000,000 limit of
    liability coverage.
    On November 11, 2004, Johannesson, Walco, and Walczynski
    (hereinafter collectively referred to as the "defendants") filed a
    motion in the underlying action seeking an order finding that the
    judgment in favor of Cote had been partially satisfied to the
    extent of $995,000 and that interest on the judgment had been paid
    to   the    extent   of    $402,901.56.       Additionally,    the   defendants
    requested an order providing that, if Cote refused to accept the
    tender of the two checks from Great West, the sums be deposited
    with the court.        On November 15, 2004, the trial court entered an
    order      directing      that    the   defendants   deposit     the   sum   of
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    1-05-3122
    $1,397,901.56, the total sum tendered by Great West, with the
    Northern Trust Company as escrowee for the benefit of Coat and her
    attorney.      The order also provided that the deposit would be
    without prejudice to Cote=s right to contest the adequacy of the
    tender or to maintain that interest continued to run on the full
    amount of the judgment.
    On December 1, 2004, Cote filed a motion in the underlying
    case requesting, inter alia, that the trial court find that the
    defendants= insurance carrier, Great West, had not made a "perfect
    tender so as to stop the post judgment interest from running on the
    full amount" and that the defendants and Great West still owe Cote
    interest on the full amount of the judgment.            On February 4, 2005,
    the trial court entered an order finding that "there has been an
    improper    tender   of   the   judgment    plus   accrued    interest"   and
    directing Cote=s attorney to tender the amounts previously paid back
    to the defendants= attorneys within 30 days.
    On February 25, 2005, Great West filed a declaratory judgment
    action in the Circuit Court of Cook County which was docketed as
    No. 05 CH 03731.      Named as defendants in that action were Cote,
    Johannesson, Walco, and Walczynski.           Great West sought findings
    that: the maximum limit of its liability for indemnification under
    the   Policy   is    $1,000,000;   the     limit   of   its   liability   for
    indemnification under the Policy was reduced by $2,000 paid to Cote
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    1-05-3122
    for damage to her property and an additional $3,000 it paid to
    State Farm Insurance Company as reimbursement for Cote=s medical
    expenses; its October 14, 2004, tender to Cote of $995,000 plus
    $402,901.56 in accrued interest fulfilled its obligations under the
    Policy and that it was not obligated to pay any additional sums to
    Cote.        In addition, Great West sought an order directing Cote to
    execute a partial satisfaction of judgment reflecting the payment
    of $995,000 plus $402,901.56 in accrued interest through and
    including October 14, 2004.
    On    April   28,   2005,   the   circuit   court   entered   an   order
    consolidating Great West=s declaratory judgment action and the
    underlying case.            Thereafter, Cote filed a motion pursuant to
    section 2-619 of the Code of Civil Procedure (Code) (735 ILCS 5/2-
    619 (West 2004)) seeking the dismissal of Great West=s declaratory
    judgment action.        In that motion, Coat asserted, inter alia, that:
    the declaratory judgment action is untimely because Great West
    never raised any issues of coverage prior to the entry of the
    judgment in the underlying case; no actual controversy exists
    between Great West and Cote, as all matters relating to the
    adequacy of the October 14, 2004, tender were resolved in the
    underlying action with the trial court=s order of February 4, 2005;
    and Great West=s request for a finding that the limit of its
    liability for indemnification under the Policy was reduced by the
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    $3,000 it paid to State Farm Insurance Company as reimbursement for
    Cote=s medical expenses is untimely pursuant to the provisions of
    section 2-1205.1 of the Code (735 ILCS 5/2-1205.1 (West 2004)).
    On August 22, 2005, the trial court entered a Memorandum
    Decision and Judgment Order, dismissing Great West=s declaratory
    judgment action, finding that the action was untimely and "an
    attempt to reduce Cote=s recovery in violation of 735 ILCS 5/2-
    1205.1."    In addition, the trial court found that interest on Cote=s
    judgment     would     continue   to     accrue   "until   proper   tender   is
    attained."       Thereafter, Great West initiated this appeal with the
    filing of a notice of appeal from the circuit court=s orders of
    August 22, 2005, and February 4, 2005.            In urging reversal of the
    circuit court=s orders, Great West argues that: 1) the dismissal of
    its declaratory judgment action as untimely was error, as no case
    or controversy arose until Cote refused its October 14, 2004,
    tender; 2) the trial court erred in finding that it made an
    "improper tender" of its policy limits to Cote; and 3) the trial
    court    erred    in   finding    that   its   declaratory   judgment   action
    violated section 2-1205.1 of the Code.
    The circuit court=s Memorandum Decision and Judgment Order of
    August 22, 2005, states that it was entered in response to Cote=s
    motion to dismiss which was brought pursuant to section 2-619 of
    the Code.    Section 2-619 affords a defendant a means of obtaining a
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    1-05-3122
    summary disposition of an action based upon issues of law or easily
    proven issues of fact.     Kedzie and 103rd Currency Exchange, Inc. v.
    Hodge, 
    156 Ill. 2d 112
    , 115, 
    619 N.E.2d 732
     (1993).    An appeal from
    a dismissal pursuant to this section of the Code is a matter given
    to a de novo review. Guzman v. C.R. Epperson Construction, Inc.,
    
    196 Ill. 2d 391
    , 397, 
    752 N.E.2d 1069
     (2001).        Our function on
    review is to "determine whether the existence of a genuine issue of
    material fact should have precluded the dismissal or, absent such
    an issue of fact, whether dismissal is proper as a matter of law."
    Guzman, 
    196 Ill. 2d at 397
    .
    For its first assignment of error, Great West argues that the
    circuit court erred in dismissing its declaratory judgment action
    as untimely.   We agree.
    Cote argued, and the trial court agreed, that, when an
    insurance carrier waits to bring a declaratory judgment action
    until after the underlying case has been resolved, the declaratory
    judgment action is untimely as a matter of law. See Employers
    Insurance of Wausau v. Ehlco Liquidating Trust, 
    186 Ill. 2d 127
    ,
    157, 
    708 N.E.2d 1122
     (1999) (Wausau).     Great West acknowledges the
    holding in Wausau, but argues that it has no application to the
    facts in this case.   According to Great West, the proposition of
    law set forth in Wausau, and relied upon by the circuit court, is
    applicable only in situations where an insurer denies coverage for
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    1-05-3122
    the underlying case and neither defends its insured under a
    reservation of rights or brings a declaratory judgment action prior
    to or during the pendency of the underlying case to determine its
    obligations.   Great West asserts that this case presents an
    entirely different fact situation as it never denied coverage and
    did, in fact, defend its insureds in Cote's underlying action.
    Great West contends that no actual controversy arose between the
    parties relating to the monetary limit of coverage remaining under
    the Policy until after there was a finding of liability on the part
    of its insureds in the underlying case and Cote refused its tender
    of October 14, 2004.     Great West maintains that any declaratory
    judgment action filed prior to that time would have been premature.
    See Batteast v. Argonaut Insurance Co., 
    118 Ill. App. 3d 4
    , 6, 
    454 N.E.2d 706
     (1983).
    As Great West correctly notes, the holding in Wausau upon
    which the circuit court relied in dismissing its declaratory
    judgment action as untimely was promulgated in the context of a
    case involving an insurer that had denied that the underlying case
    fell within the coverage afforded under its policy of insurance and
    neither defended its insured under a reservation of rights or
    sought a declaratory judgment prior to or during the pendency of
    the underlying action.   Wausau, 
    186 Ill. 2d at 150-57
    .   The Wausau
    Court specifically stated that its holding was based on an estoppel
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    1-05-3122
    theory and was applicable only to an insurer that had breached its
    duty to defend. Wausau, 
    186 Ill. 2d at 151
    .     In this case, Great
    West neither denied coverage or declined to defend its insureds.
    To the contrary, Great West has always acknowledged that Cote's
    action fell within the coverage afforded under the Policy, and it
    discharged its contractual duty to defend its insureds.
    Simply put, the holding in Wausau upon which the circuit court
    relied to dismiss Great West's declaratory judgment action as
    untimely has no application to the facts of this case.     However,
    our review is de novo, and we can affirm the trial court's
    dismissal of the action on any ground warranted, regardless of
    whether the reason given by the trial court was correct.        See
    Beckman v. Freeman United Coal Mining Co., 
    123 Ill. 2d 281
    , 286,
    
    527 N.E.2d 303
     (1988).   Consequently, we will address directly the
    question of whether Great West's declaratory judgment action was
    untimely.
    Section 2-701(a) of the Code provides that the circuit "court
    may, in cases of actual controversy, make binding declarations of
    rights, having the force of final judgments."   735 ILCS 5/2-701(a)
    (West 2004).   By the very terms of the statute, a declaratory
    judgment action may not be maintained unless and until an actual
    controversy exists between the parties.   As the court in Stokes v.
    Pekin Insurance Co., 
    298 Ill. App. 3d 278
    , 280-81, 
    698 N.E.2d 252
    9
    1-05-3122
    (1998), held: "[A]n 'actual controversy' exists where there is a
    legitimate     dispute    admitting   of    an    immediate   and    definite
    determination of the parties' rights, the resolution of which would
    help terminate all or part of the dispute."
    The controversy in this case relates to the amount that Great
    West is required to pay Cote under the terms of the Policy.             Great
    West never denied that Cote's action fell within the coverage
    afforded its insureds; rather, the parties' dispute relates only to
    the amount owed.    Therefore, until Great West's insureds were found
    liable to Cote, any declaration as to the amount of coverage
    available under the Policy would have been purely advisory and
    premature.     Stokes, 
    298 Ill. App. 3d at 283-84
    ; Batteast, 
    118 Ill. App. 3d at 6
    .     As the court in Batteast observed, if the issue of
    the amount of coverage available under a policy of insurance were
    ripe for resolution prior to a determination of the liability of
    the carrier's insured in the underlying action, every plaintiff,
    upon the filing of a personal injury action, could concomitantly
    file a declaratory judgment action to determine the amount of
    coverage available in the event that liability was subsequently
    established.     Batteast, 
    118 Ill. App. 3d at 6
    .
    Our analysis leads us to conclude that, in cases such as this
    where    an   insurance   carrier   has    not   denied   coverage   and   has
    undertaken the defense of its insured, a declaratory judgment
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    1-05-3122
    action to determine the amount of insurance coverage available
    under the carrier's policy is not ripe for adjudication until the
    liability of the insured has been determined in the underlying
    action.   Great West filed its declaratory judgment action after the
    liability of its insureds to Cote had been established and Cote had
    rejected its tender in partial satisfaction of her judgment.                     The
    dispute between Great West and Cote as to the adequacy of the
    tender was certainly ripe for adjudication, and no argument has
    been   made   that    it    is     barred    by   any    applicable    statute    of
    limitations.      For      these    reasons,      we    find   that   Great   West's
    declaratory judgment action was not untimely and the circuit court
    erred in dismissing it on that basis.
    Next, Great West argues that the trial court erred in finding
    that its declaratory judgment action violated section 2-1205.1 of
    the Code.     In support of its dismissal of Great West's action, the
    trial court found that Great West was not entitled to any reduction
    in the sums owed to Cote by reason of the provisions of section 2-
    1205.1, as no motion to reduce her judgment was made within 30 days
    of its entry.        However, Great West disclaims any reliance upon
    section 2-1205.1 in support of its contention that the tender of
    October 14, 2004, was a complete tender of the then remaining
    liability coverage under the Policy.                    In point of fact, Great
    West's entire declaratory judgment action rests on the proposition
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    1-05-3122
    that, under the terms of the Policy itself, the $1,000,000 limit of
    the liability coverage had been reduced by the $5,000 it had
    previously paid to "reimburse for [Cote's] *** property damage and
    medical expenses."    The issue of whether Great West is obligated to
    indemnify its insureds for post-judgment interest accruing on the
    full amount of Cote's judgment after October 14, 2004, rests on a
    construction of the Policy to ascertain whether Great West's tender
    of October 14, 2004, constituted a complete tender of the remaining
    balance of liability coverage available under the Policy, not on
    whether Cote's judgment has been reduced by $5,000 pursuant to the
    provisions   of   section   2-1205.1    of   the   Code.   As   Great   West
    correctly asserts, its declaratory judgment action has nothing
    whatever to do with an application of section 2-1205.1.                  We
    conclude, therefore, that the trial court also erred in finding
    that Great West's declaratory judgment action is an attempt to
    reduce Cote's judgment contrary to section 2-1205.1 of the Code and
    in dismissing the action on that basis.
    Based upon the foregoing analysis, we reverse the trial
    court's judgment of August 22, 2005, dismissing Great West's
    declaratory judgment action.
    Finally, Great West argues that the trial court erred when, in
    its February 4, 2005, order, it found that Great West made an
    "improper tender" of the Policy's remaining limit of liability
    12
    1-05-3122
    coverage.    However, for the reasons which follow, we conclude that
    it would be inappropriate to address the merits of the issue at
    this time.
    In its order of February 4, 2005, the trial court found that
    there had been "an improper tender of the judgment and accrued
    interest."    The order was entered in Cote's underlying action in
    response to her motion requesting a finding that the defendants and
    their insurance carrier, Great West, had not made a "perfect tender
    so as to stop the post judgment interest from running on the full
    amount" of her judgment and that the defendants and Great West
    still owe her additional interest on the full amount of that
    judgment.    The trial court=s order of February 4, 2005, can hardly
    be termed a final order as it did not fully and finally resolve the
    dispute existing between the parties.   See People ex rel. Scott v.
    Silverstein, 
    87 Ill. 2d 167
    , 171, 
    429 N.E.2d 483
     (1981). It was not
    until the entry of the August 22, 2005, judgment that the trial
    court found that interest on Cote=s judgment would continue to
    accrue until a proper tender is made.      However, the August 22,
    2005, judgment was entered in response to a section 2-619 motion,
    requesting only that Great West's declaratory judgment action be
    dismissed as untimely, either because it was not filed until after
    her underlying case had been disposed of or because Great West was
    attempting to obtain a reduction in her judgment past the 30 days
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    1-05-3122
    provided in section 2-1205.1 of the Code.             Had Cote desired a
    judicial determination of the issue of whether interest continues
    to accrue on her judgment in the underlying case, she could have
    filed a counter-claim for a declaratory judgment and, thereafter,
    moved for summary judgment on the issue, or she might have sought
    such a finding in the context of a section 2-615 motion for
    judgment    on   the   pleadings   (735   ILCS   5/2-615(e)    (West   2004))
    addressed to Great West's complaint for declaratory judgment.            Cote
    did neither.      Rather, in the reply memorandum that she filed in
    support of her section 2-619 motion, Cote, for the first time,
    requested affirmative relief in the form of a judicial declaration
    that, "as a matter of law, there has not been a tender to stop
    interest from continuing to run, either by the nature of the tender
    and/or the policy language."        The procedure employed by Cote in
    this regard was wholly inappropriate and the affirmative relief she
    sought should not have been entertained, as a section 2-619 motion
    is not a vehicle for obtaining affirmative relief in the form of a
    summary determination in favor of a defendant on one of several
    major issues raised in a plaintiff's complaint.               However, Great
    West never objected to the request, the trial court ruled on the
    issues, and Great West has not claimed that it was prejudiced by
    the procedure.         Nevertheless, we must decline to address the
    question of the propriety of the trial court's finding.
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    1-05-3122
    The question of whether Great West's tender of October 14,
    2004, constituted a complete tender of the remaining balance of
    liability   coverage   under   the    Policy    rests   entirely   upon   a
    construction of the terms of the Policy.        The record reflects that
    both Cote and Great West addressed the coverage afforded under the
    provisions of the Policy, but the trial court declined to address
    their arguments, and appears instead to have rested its conclusion
    that Great West's tender was not "legally sufficient" based upon
    its finding that Great West was attempting to receive a set-off
    contrary to the provisions of section 2-1205.1 of the Code.          As we
    have already concluded, however, an application of section 2-1205.1
    has nothing whatever to do with Great West's claim that it made a
    complete tender of the remaining balance of liability coverage
    under the Policy.      Whether, the October 14, 2004, tender was
    "legally sufficient" or "improper" is an issue which can be decided
    only by construing the terms of the Policy, an inquiry which we are
    not inclined to conduct for the first time on appeal.
    Additionally, the trial court's findings in its August 22,
    2005, judgment provided the finality rendering its interlocutory
    order of February 4, 2005, appealable.         Having reversed the August
    22, 2005, judgment, the basis for the exercise of our jurisdiction
    to review the February 4, 2005, order may well have evaporated.
    We believe that the prudent course of action, in light of our
    15
    1-05-3122
    conclusion that the issue of the adequacy of Great West's tender of
    October 14, 2004, must be decided based upon a construction of the
    Policy and our misgivings as to whether we have jurisdiction to
    address the propriety of the February 4, 2005, order on the merits,
    is to remand the matter to the circuit court with directions to
    vacate that portion of its February 4, 2005, order finding that
    "there has been an improper tender of the judgment plus accrued
    interest" and to resolve the issue based upon a construction of the
    terms of the Policy.
    For the reasons stated, we reverse the trial court's judgment
    of August 22, 2005, and remand this cause with directions to vacate
    portions of the February 4, 2005, order and to conduct further
    proceedings in conformity with the opinions expressed herein.
    Reversed and remanded with directions.
    KARNEZIS and ERICKSON, JJ., concur.
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