Montano v. Erie Insurance Exchange , 2021 IL App (1st) 201306-U ( 2021 )


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    2021 IL App (1st) 201306-U
    Order filed: June 11, 2021
    FIRST DISTRICT
    FIFTH DIVISION
    No. 1-20-1306
    NOTICE: This order was filed under Supreme Court Rule 23 and is not precedent except in the
    limited circumstances allowed under Rule 23(e)(1).
    ______________________________________________________________________________
    IN THE
    APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS
    FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT
    ______________________________________________________________________________
    LUIS MONTANO,                                   )         Appeal from the
    )         Circuit Court of
    Plaintiff-Appellee,                       )         Cook County.
    )
    v.                                              )         No. 20 MR 2487
    )
    ERIE INSURANCE EXCHANGE,                        )         Honorable
    )         Pamela M. Meyerson,
    Defendant-Appellant.                      )         Judge, presiding.
    ______________________________________________________________________________
    JUSTICE ROCHFORD delivered the judgment of the court.
    Justices Hoffman and Cunningham concurred in the judgment.
    ORDER
    ¶1     Held: Summary judgment in favor of plaintiff is affirmed, where plaintiff was a resident
    of his parents’ household and was therefore entitled to underinsured motorist
    coverage.
    ¶2     Plaintiff-appellee, Luis Montano, filed this lawsuit seeking a declaratory judgment that he
    was entitled to underinsured motorist coverage under an insurance policy issued to his father and
    stepmother by defendant-appellant, Erie Insurance Exchange. The parties filed cross-motions for
    summary judgment, and the circuit court granted summary judgment in favor of plaintiff. For the
    following reasons, we affirm.
    ¶3     Plaintiff filed his complaint for declaratory judgment against Erie on February 27, 2020.
    Therein, he alleged that he was injured when a vehicle in which he was a passenger was involved
    No. 1-20-1306
    in a collision on April 15, 2015. Another insurer provided coverage for the collision in a total
    amount of $100,000 per occurrence, and plaintiff ultimately recovered $41,000 under that policy
    for his injuries. In addition, Erie had issued an insurance policy to plaintiff’s parents, Angel and
    Elana Montano, that was effective at the time of the collision. That policy provided up to $250,000
    per person in underinsured motorist coverage to plaintiff’s parents and their “relatives.” Under the
    policy relatives were defined as “residents” of the Montano’s household related to them by—inter
    alia—"blood, marriage [or] adoption.” Finally, the policy defined residents as follows:
    “a person who physically lives with “you” in “your” household on a regular basis. “Your”
    unmarried, unemancipated children attending school full time, living away from home, will
    be considered “residents” of “your” household.”
    ¶4     After alleging that he was the son of the Montanos and a resident of their household,
    plaintiff asserted that Erie had improperly denied him underinsured motorist coverage on the basis
    that he was not a relative of the Montanos, as defined by the policy. He therefore asked the circuit
    court to enter a declaratory judgment that he was entitled to such coverage as a relative of the
    Montanos.
    ¶5     Erie filed an answer and affirmative defense to plaintiff’s complaint, in which it denied
    plaintiff’s material allegations and asserted that plaintiff was not entitled to coverage under the
    policy it issued to the Montanos because—at the time of the collision—plaintiff was neither
    physically living with the Montanos on a regular basis or living elsewhere while attending school
    full-time. Specifically, the affirmative defense asserted that while plaintiff had previously attended
    college full-time at the University of Wisconsin-Parkside, he received an academic suspension
    following the spring semester of 2014. Thereafter, plaintiff worked for the university providing
    janitorial services until December 2014, when he started working full-time as a factory worker in
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    No. 1-20-1306
    Kenosha, Wisconsin. Plaintiff worked at that factory until the collision in April 2015. He had also
    lived alone in an apartment in Kenosha from November 2014 until the time of the collision. His
    parents did not co-sign the lease for that apartment, and plaintiff never returned to school as a full-
    time student.
    ¶6     Plaintiff filed an answer to the affirmative defense in which he admitted Erie’s factual
    allegations but denied its legal conclusions. Erie then filed a motion for summary judgment.
    Attached to the motion was a transcript of an examination under oath plaintiff sat for on December
    7, 2017. Therein, plaintiff generally confirmed the factual allegations contained in Erie’s
    affirmative defense.
    ¶7     In addition, however, plaintiff stated during his examination under oath that he lived with
    his father in Wisconsin when he graduated high school in 2012. He then attended college in
    Wisconsin for two years, living on campus except for his return to his father’s home for the summer
    break following his first year, until he received an academic suspension following the spring
    semester of 2014. After the collision and a more than two-month stay in the hospital, plaintiff
    returned to live with his father. By that time, plaintiff’s father had moved to Naperville, Illinois.
    ¶8     Plaintiff responded by filing a response and cross-motion for summary judgment, attaching
    an affidavit completed by plaintiff. Therein, he averred that prior to college and during the summer
    after his first year, he lived in Wisconsin with his father and stepmother. He only found
    “temporary” employment and rented a “temporary” apartment in Wisconsin until he would be able
    to apply to re-enroll in college following his academic suspension in the fall of 2015. Plaintiff
    believed that obtaining a job would improve his prospects to be readmitted to college. After
    completing his education, he intended to return to live with his parents. Plaintiff continued to
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    No. 1-20-1306
    “spend a considerable amount of time with [his] family when they lived in Wisconsin, and in
    Naperville” and always had a key to the family home in each state.
    ¶9     As to the family’s move to Illinois, plaintiff averred that he moved to Naperville in
    November 2014 with his father, stepmother, and siblings, after his father started working in Oak
    Brook, Illinois. The family first lived in a rental home while their permanent home was under
    construction. Plaintiff had his own bedroom in each house, and the newly constructed home had a
    fifth bedroom with a private bathroom that was intended for plaintiff’s use and which he still
    occupied. Plaintiff washed his laundry in Naperville, most of his possessions were kept in his
    family home in Naperville, and he “lived with [his] family there on many weekends.” Plaintiff also
    “spent the Christmas/New Year’s holidays in 2014 in [the] family home in Naperville.” Finally,
    plaintiff explained that he was financially dependent upon his father, he received his mail at his
    family’s home, and used the address of his family home as his permanent address for his driver’s
    license, voter registration, bank accounts, tax returns, college correspondence and employment.
    ¶ 10   The parties completed briefing on the cross-motions and following a hearing held on
    November 4, 2020, the circuit court entered an order finding that plaintiff was entitled to
    underinsured motorist coverage under the Erie policy and granted summary judgment in plaintiff’s
    favor. Erie timely appealed, contending that the circuit court improperly denied its motion for
    summary judgment.
    ¶ 11   In construing an insurance policy, a court determines the intent of the parties to the contract
    by construing the policy as a whole, with due regard to the risk undertaken, the subject matter that
    is insured and the purposes of the contract. Outboard Marine Corp. v. Liberty Mutual Insurance
    Co., 
    154 Ill. 2d 90
    , 108 (1992). Where the words in the policy are clear and unambiguous, “a court
    must afford them their plain, ordinary, and popular meaning.” (Emphasis in original.) 
    Id.
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    No. 1-20-1306
    However, any ambiguities in the language of an insurance policy will be interpreted in favor of
    the insured. Valley Forge Insurance Co. v. Swiderski Electronics, Inc., 
    223 Ill. 2d 352
    , 363 (2006).
    “The construction of an insurance policy and a determination of the rights and obligations
    thereunder are questions of law.” Konami (America), Inc. v. Hartford Insurance Co. of Illinois,
    
    326 Ill. App. 3d 874
    , 877 (2002). We review such an issue de novo. Central Illinois Light Co. v.
    Home Insurance Co., 
    213 Ill. 2d 141
    , 153 (2004).
    ¶ 12   As “[t]he construction of an insurance policy” and the determination of the rights and
    obligations thereunder are questions of law for the court, the issues are appropriately addressed by
    way of summary judgment. Crum & Forster Managers Corp. v. Resolution Trust Corp., 
    156 Ill. 2d 384
    , 391 (1993). Summary judgment is appropriate “if the pleadings, depositions, and
    admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if any, show that there is no genuine issue as to
    any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law.” 735 ILCS
    5/2–1005(c) (West 2020). Since the parties here filed cross-motions for summary judgment, they
    conceded that no material question of fact exists and that there is only a question of law which the
    court may decide on the basis of the record. Pielet v. Pielet, 
    2012 IL 112064
    , ¶ 28. We review a
    court's decision as to cross-motions for summary judgment de novo. Home Insurance Co. v.
    Cincinnati Insurance Co., 
    213 Ill. 2d 307
    , 315 (2004).
    ¶ 13   On appeal, the parties vigorously debate issues such as plaintiff’s intent with respect to his
    permanent residence and returning to school, whether he can have more than one legal residence,
    whether he was still a full-time student despite his academic suspension, the exact time at which
    plaintiff had to be a resident of the Montanos’ household to be entitled to coverage, and more. We
    need not address all these issues. Rather, we note the uncontested fact that plaintiff—the son of
    Angel and stepson of Elana—was related to the Montanos by "blood, marriage [or] adoption.” As
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    No. 1-20-1306
    such, we may resolve the question of plaintiff’s entitlement to coverage under Erie’s policy by
    answering the simple question of whether—at the time of the collision—plaintiff was a resident of
    the Montanos’ household because he physically lived with them on a regular basis.
    ¶ 14   In answering this question, we first reject Erie’s factual contention that plaintiff “never
    returned to his parents’ home after moving into his apartment and before the accident.” This
    contention misreads plaintiff’s testimony during his examination under oath, in which plaintiff
    merely acknowledged that he “stay[ed]” at his apartment until the collision, never returning
    thereafter but rather returning to his parents’ home after being released from the hospital. It also
    ignores plaintiff’s affidavit, in which he specifically discusses the various times he stayed at the
    family home in Naperville prior to the collision.
    ¶ 15   We also find several cases cited by the parties to be irrelevant. Erie cites to cases that have
    found no coverage was available under certain circumstances, pursuant to policy language that
    was found to unambiguously restrict insurance coverage to those related to the insured that “live[]
    with” the insured (State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Co. v. Taussig, 
    227 Ill. App. 3d 913
    ,
    915 (1992)) or to relatives that were a “resident of [the insured’s] household” (Farmers Automobile
    Insurance Ass'n v. Gitelson, 
    344 Ill. App. 3d 888
    , 890 (2003)). Plaintiff cites to cases finding
    coverage was available under certain circumstances, pursuant to policy language—often found to
    be ambiguous—that restricted insurance coverage to those related to the insured that “live[] with”
    the insured (Casolari v. Pipkins, 
    253 Ill. App. 3d 265
    , 268 (1993); Murphy v. State Farm
    Automobile Insurance Co., 
    234 Ill. App. 3d 222
    , 226 (1992); State Farm Automobile Insurance
    Co. v. Reinhardt, 
    253 Ill. App. 3d 823
    , 826 (1994)), or to a “resident of the same household” as
    the insured (Coriasco v. Hutchcraft, 
    245 Ill. App. 3d 969
    , 970-71 (1993). However, none of these
    cases presented the exact circumstances presented here, nor did they address the specific policy
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    No. 1-20-1306
    language contained in the Erie policy requiring plaintiff to “physically live[]” in the Montanos’
    household on a “regular” basis.
    ¶ 16    Our primary function is to ascertain and give effect to the intention of the parties, as
    expressed in the policy language. Founders Insurance Co. v. Munoz, 
    237 Ill. 2d 424
    , 433 (2010).
    The word “regular” is not further defined in Erie’s policy. “Where a term in an insurance policy is
    not defined, we afford that term its plain, ordinary and popular meaning, i.e., we look to its
    dictionary definition.” 
    Id. at 436
    . “If a term has multiple reasonable definitions or is subject to
    more than one reasonable interpretation within the context in which it appears *** the term is
    ambiguous,” and such ambiguous terms “will be strictly construed against the insurer who drafted
    the policies.” West Bend Mutual Insurance Co. v. Krishna Schaumburg Tan, Inc., 
    2021 IL 125978
    ,
    ¶ 43.
    ¶ 17    The word “regular” can be defined strictly as an event or action that occurs in a fixed
    pattern, with even or similar amounts of time between one and the next. Collins Dictionary,
    www.collinsdictionary.com/us/dictionary/english/regular (last visited June 4, 2021) (“Regular
    events have equal amounts of time between them, so that they happen, for example, at the same
    time each day or each week.”); Cambridge Dictionary, www.dictionary.cambridge.org/us/
    dictionary/english/regular (last visited June 4, 2021) (defining regular as “existing or happening
    repeatedly in a fixed pattern, with equal or similar amounts of space or time between one and the
    next; even.”). However, “regular” can also be defined more broadly to simply mean “often.”
    Collins Dictionary, www.collinsdictionary.com/us/dictionary/ english/regular (last visited June 4,
    2021) (“Regular events happen often.”); Cambridge Dictionary, www.dictionary.cambridge.org/
    us/ dictionary/english/regular (last visited June 4, 2021) (defining regular as “happening or doing
    something often.”). Considering these multiple, reasonable definitions, the word “regular” as used
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    No. 1-20-1306
    in the Erie policy is ambiguous and must be strictly construed against Erie.
    ¶ 18   Here, it is uncontested that plaintiff did not physically live in the Montanos’ household
    full-time at the time of the collision. However, it is also uncontested that plaintiff always had a key
    to the family home in Naperville, had his own room in that home with an attached bathroom, kept
    most of his possessions there, and washed his laundry there. In addition, while plaintiff had his
    own apartment in Wisconsin at the time of the collision, he also spent a “considerable amount of
    time with [his] family” in Naperville, “lived with [his] family there on many weekends,” and spent
    the Christmas/New Year’s holidays in 2014 in [the] family home in Naperville.” While these facts
    might not be sufficient to satisfy the narrowest definition of the word “regular,” they clearly
    establish that plaintiff physically lived in the Montanos’ household “often” at the time of the
    collision. Because we must strictly construe the ambiguous language in the policy against Erie, we
    conclude that the circuit court properly concluded that plaintiff was entitled to underinsured
    motorist coverage and properly granted summary judgment in his favor.
    ¶ 19   For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the judgment of the circuit court.
    ¶ 20   Affirmed.
    -8-
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 1-20-1306

Citation Numbers: 2021 IL App (1st) 201306-U

Filed Date: 6/11/2021

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 5/17/2024