delivered the opinion of the court:
Navistar International Transportation Corporation, successor in interest to International Harvester Company, filed a third-party action to enforce a contractual indemnity provision between it and third-party defendant, Freight Consolidation Services, Inc. (FCS). Navistar sought to enforce the indemnity agreement following a lawsuit filed against it by one of FCS’s employees who was injured while loading freight into an International Harvester trailer. FCS filed a motion to dismiss Navistar’s complaint, arguing that the ocсurrence that formed the basis for the underlying negligence suit brought by FCS’s employee was not within the scope of the indemnity agreement. The trial court dismissed Navistar’s complaint and Navistar follows with this appeal.
The plaintiff in the underlying action, Leo Allen, wаs an employee of Freight Consolidation Services, Inc. In his complaint, Allen alleged he was injured at the FCS freight terminal while loading freight into a trailer supplied by International Harvester. Allen alleged that at the time of the injury he was using a forklift truck to loаd pallets of freight into the trailer. Affixed to the interior walls of the trailer were devices known as decks. The decks could be lowered and raised by a chain and latch to accommodate the loading of freight onto them. As Allen pulled the chаin of one of the decks to position it for loading, the latch gave way and the deck fell onto him. Allen asserted that his injury was the proximate result of International Harvester having equipped or maintained the deck with a defective latch; failing tо inspect the proper working order of the deck and latch or doing so carelessly and negligently; and improperly maintaining the deck and latch.
The work that Allen was performing at the time he was injured was being done pursuant to a freight consolidаtion contract between Navistar’s predecessor in interest, International Harvester, and FCS. Under the terms of the freight consolidation agreement, FCS agreed to consolidate,
Also under the terms of the consolidation agreement between International Harvester and FCS, FCS agreed to an indemnity clause which reads in pertinеnt part as follows:
“Consolidator, [FCS], shall protect, indemnify, hold and save harmless the Shipper [International Harvester], *** against all claims *** and expenses of whatsoever nature for loss or damage to property of, or for injury or death to, аny person or persons, (including the person and property of [International Harvester] and/or [FCS] and/or the person or property of their respective employees *** and all other persons) resulting in any manner, directly or indirectly, from the services to be performed hereunder by [FCS], its employees, agents, *** and regardless of whether said loss, damage, injury, or death shall be caused by the negligence of [International Harvester].”
In its third-party complaint, Navistar alleged that if Allen was sucсessful in securing a judgment against Navistar, then the language of the indemnity clause of the freight consolidation agreement required FCS to indemnify Navistar for the judgment.
FCS moved to dismiss Navistar’s complaint, arguing in pertinent part that under the standard enunciated in Westinghouse Electric Elevator Co. v. La Salle Monroe Building Corp. (1946),
We believe that the trial court erred in dismissing Navistar’s claim for indemnity against FCS. In interpreting a contract for indemnity, the courts must give the agreement a fair and reasonable interpretation based upon a consideration of the agreement as a whole. (Smart v. International Harvester Co. (1975),
The parties do not disagree that the indemnity agreement provides for instances in which FCS would be obligated to indemnify Navistаr for Navistar’s own negligence. Nor do they dispute that Allen in his suit against Navistar intends to allege a cause of action in negligence. It is FCS’s argument that any negligence in the
This case presents an issue similar to the issue addressed by the court in Burlington Northern R.R. Co. v. Pawnee Motor Service, Inc.,
In Burlington, the injury tо the indemnitor Pawnee’s employee occurred when the employee was on the indemnitee Burlington’s premises for the purpose of picking up a tractor-trailer pursuant to an agreement between Pawnee and Burlington. While conduсting a required inspection of the vehicle, the employee fell into a hole and suffered injuries. The court determined that the negligence alleged by Pawnee’s employee against Burlington was covered by an indemnity agreement between Burlington and Pawnee that specified that Pawnee was to indemnify Burlington for occurrences involving Burlington’s own negligence. The Burlington court pointed out that the scope of the agreement included, as part of those general circumstances triggеring Pawnee’s duty to indemnify, acts caused by reason of the presence of Pawnee’s employees on Burlington property.
The court also reasoned, however, in response to Pawnee’s argument that the agreement failed to spеcify “defects in the premises” that the case of Westinghouse Electric Elevator Co. v. La Salle Monroe Building Corp. (
Like the court in Burlington, we do not believe that the holding in Westinghouse requires that in order to be effective an indemnity agreement must specify the cause of the injury. We therefore do not accept the suggestion in FCS’s argument that the agreement between Navistar and FCS is not enforceable in this case because the agreement addressed only injury caused by Navistar’s negligence and not injury caused by Navistar’s nеgligence in maintaining its equipment.
We also do not believe, as FCS argues, that to be effective in this case the agreement must have at least contained a reference to the injured’s physical presence on the indemnitee’s proрerty. In support of this argument, FCS relies heavily on the case of Smart v. International Harvester Co. (1975),
In the present сase, in addition to the clear and unambiguous language whereby FCS agreed to indemnify Navistar for Navistar’s own negligence, the indemnity agreement between FCS and Navistar provided that FCS would indemnify Navistar for injuries resulting in any manner “directly or indirectly” from the services to be performed under the contract. According to the allegations in plaintiff Allen’s complaint, he was injured while he was in the process of loading freight into the International Harvester trailer. It is undisputed that the loading of freight into trailers was a service encompassed within the freight consolidation contract between FCS and International Harvester. Allen further alleged that, in order to position one of the trailer decks for loading, he pulled on the deck chain. It was at this point that thе latch gave way and the deck fell and injured him. Under the circumstances Allen has outlined, we are not persuaded, as FCS argues, that Allen was “merely present” in International Harvester’s trailer. Rather, we believe that at the time he was injured Allen was, at thе very least, indirectly involved in the performance of a service required under Navistar and International Harvester’s freight consolidation agreement.
We believe that taken as a whole, the indemnity agreement between Navistar and FCS is enforceable against FCS: the agreement clearly and unequivocally provides for FCS to indemnify Navistar for Navistar’s own negligence, and the situation under which Allen’s injury arose falls within the circumstances outlined in the agreement.
In further argument, FCS urges us to affirm the trial cоurt’s dismissal of Navistar’s complaint, at least to the extent Navistar prays for FCS to indemnify Navistar based upon Navistar’s agreement to indemnify Ryder Truck Rental. In support of this argument, FCS cites only to Westinghouse Electric Elevator Co. v. LaSalle Monroe Building Corp. (395 ILl. 429,
For the foregoing reasons, we believe that the trial court erred in dismissing Navistar’s claim for indemnity against FCS. The judgment of the circuit court is accordingly reversed and the cause is remanded for further proceedings.
Reversed and remanded.
LINN and McMORROW, JJ., concur.
