BOND COUNTY COMMUNITY SCHOOL DISTRICT NO. 2, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
INDIANA INSURANCE COMPANY and Country Mutual Insurance Company, Defendants-Appellees.
Appellate Court of Illinois, Fifth District.
*294 Thomas R. Meites, Lynn Sara Frackman, Paul W. Mollica, Meites, Frackman, Mulder and Burger, Chicago, Thomas Meyer, Meyer & Meyer, Greenville, for appellant.
Clausen Miller Gorman Caffrey & Witous, P.C., Chicago (James T. Ferrini, Richard A. Buchanan, Michael L. Foran, Mark J. Seplak, of counsel), for Ind. Ins. Co.
Robert C. Johnson, William T. Barker, Steven M. Levy, Sonnenschein Nath & Rosenthal, Chicago, Stephen C. Mudge, Reed, Armstrong, Gorman, Coffey, Thomson, Gilbert & Mudge, P.C., Edwardsville, for Country Mut. Ins. Co.
Justice LEWIS delivered the opinion of the court:
Plaintiff, Bond County Community School District No. 2 (school district), sued defendants, Indiana Insurance Company (Indiana Insurance) and Country Mutual Insurance Company (Country Mutual), who had issued "all-risks" property insurance to the school district for all of its school buildings, for asbestos-related property damage to the school district's buildings. Plaintiff sought a declaration of coverage and a monetary award in the amount of its loss. The trial court granted defendants' motions to dismiss (735 ILCS 5/2-619(a)(5) (West 1992)) on the grounds of untimely notice and suit initiation under the terms of the policies.
Two issues are presented by this appeal: (1) whether the school district is immune from the notice-and-suit-limitation provision in the insurance contracts with defendants; and (2) whether Country Mutual's policy for the period of 1977-1980 lacks an effective suit-limitation term, in light of an endorsement that "cancels and replaces" the portion of the policy that contained those terms. We answer both questions in the negative and *295 affirm the trial court's grant of the defendants' motions to dismiss.
On June 22, 1993, the school district filed a complaint against both defendants for a declaratory judgment as to the notice requirements and suit limitation of the policies and for breach of the insurance contracts. The complaint alleged that "[f]rom at least 1971 through the present, Bond County's public school buildings and facilities have contained substantial amounts of asbestos-containing materials," and that the school district had begun a costly and time-consuming removal-and-abatement program, the cost of which was estimated at over $4 million.
The school district alleged that Indiana Insurance issued an "all-risks" policy covering the school district's property, effective 1980 to 1983, that the school district filed its initial claim against Indiana Insurance for asbestos-related coverage on December 27, 1990, and that Indiana Insurance denied the claim on April 1, 1993. As to Country Mutual, the school district alleged that it issued "all-risks" insurance coverage in three separate policies covering periods from 1977 to 1980 and 1983 to 1989. The school district filed its initial claim against Country Mutual on December 27, 1990, and Country Mutual denied the claim on May 26, 1993. The school district alleged, as to both defendants, that it had "satisfied all conditions precedent to recovery under Illinois law" and that both defendants had wrongfully denied the school district's claims for its losses.
The school district attached the letters from defendants denying the claims. The letter from Indiana Insurance stated as follows:
"The facts as developed during the claim analysis show that the asbestos was installed long before the policy issuance. Asbestos consultants were first retained in 1979, and samples were taken and analyzed the same year. Removal of asbestos began in 1984. * * * [T]he District has failed to comply with policy requirements in case of loss. Finally, the time allowed by the policy in which to file suit regarding the claim expired long ago."
Country Mutual denied the claim on the same basis, failure to comply with the policy requirements of notice and suit initiation, among other alleged grounds for denial.
Country Mutual filed a motion to dismiss, pursuant to section 2-619 of the Civil Practice Law (735 ILCS 5/2-619 (West 1992)), alleging that the policies under which Country Mutual was sued contained provisions "requiring any suit under the policy to be brought within one year after the loss occurs," and that it is "undisputed that the alleged loss in this case occurred more than one year prior to the time this suit was filed." Indiana Insurance filed a motion to dismiss the complaint, also pursuant to section 2-619, alleging that the complaint was insufficient at law to state a cause of action against Indiana Insurance because the school district had not given Indiana Insurance immediate written notice of the loss, had not submitted a sworn proof of loss within 60 days after the loss, and had not filed the lawsuit against Indiana Insurance within one year of the loss, all as required by the policy. The school district responded to both motions to dismiss by arguing that "it is immune to the suit and notice provisions upon which defendants rely," based upon the common law doctrine of nullum tempus occurit regi (time does not run against the King).
At the hearing on the motions to dismiss, both defendants argued that the doctrine of governmental immunity, or nullum tempus, applied only to statutes of limitations, not to suit-limitation provisions in the insurance policies issued by defendants, that the school district was bound by the unambiguous provisions of each policy requiring any suit on the policy to be filed within one year after the loss, and that because the school district had not complied with those provisions, the school district's complaint should be dismissed. Indiana Insurance also argued as additional grounds for dismissal that the school district had failed to comply with the notice and proof-of-loss provisions of its policy. Plaintiff argued in response that it does not matter whether the one-year suit limitation is a statute of limitations or a provision of the contract, pursuant to the Illinois Supreme Court's reasoning in Board of Education v. A, C & S, Inc. (1989),
The trial court granted the motions to dismiss, finding that there was no dispute that "property damage by presence of asbestos first occurred in 1971," that the school district did not submit its notice of loss to defendants until 1990, and that the lawsuit was not filed until June 22, 1993. The court stated that its initial concern was "for the broad public interest of the health and welfare of school children." The court determined that the unusual nature of the claimed loss and the public interest involved justified a strict construction of the policies against the insurers, but that the pleadings on file "indicate that the discovery of loss by the school district occurred at the very latest in the mid-1980's." (Emphasis in original.) The court found it clear that plaintiff did not comply with the 60-day notice requirement or the one-year suit-initiation period of any of the policies.
The trial court found that the case law in Illinois was clear:
"A contract is a contract, an agreement is an agreement, whether made by individuals, corporations or public officials; and the parties should therefore be bound. To find otherwise would create absolute uncertainty in all commercial contract transactions with public bodies leading to unpredictable mischief and costs.
Additionally, the burden of insurance rates and expense falls both on the individual insureds [sic] and the taxpayers buying insurance for public bodies. Therefore, there should be some stability in the belief that the language means what it says in all agreements, including insurance contracts provided for public bodies."
Based upon this reasoning, the trial court granted the motions to dismiss with prejudice. This appeal followed.
I. ANALYSIS
We start our analysis, as did the trial judge, with the well-established rule that a governmental entity must abide by its contractual obligations. (Wall v. Chicago Park District (1941),
The idea that a governmental body should be able to renege or avoid its contractual obligations is certainly repugnant to the concept that a government should serve its citizens. This court has previously expressed its misgivings about a governmental unit avoiding its contractual obligations (see Vogt v. Bartelsmeyer (1994),
The issue is whether there are sufficient and exceptional reasons to justify the courts applying the common law doctrine of nullum tempus occurit regi to contractual obligations of a governmental body, so as to relieve the school district of its obligations under insurance policies to give a written notice of a loss within 60 days after the loss and to file its lawsuit within one year of the loss.
This old doctrine may first have been appropriated by our supreme court in City of Alton v. Illinois Transportation Co. (1850),
In 1983, the Illinois Supreme Court decided that the doctrine of governmental immunity from statutes of limitations survived the enactment of the 1970 Illinois Constitution and the judicial abolition of sovereign immunity. (City of Shelbyville v. Shelbyville Restorium, Inc. (1983),
City of Shelbyville appears to be the case that clouds the issue in the case at bar by stating:
"Nor do we find any logic in allowing the designation of the city's action as `public' or `private' to be controlled by the origin of the city's rights in a private contract or local ordinance [citation] or by the fact that part of the relief sought is in the form of damages." (City of Shelbyville,96 Ill.2d at 465-66 ,71 Ill.Dec. at 723 ,451 N.E.2d at 877 .)
City of Shelbyville, however, does not answer the issue in this case, since the contractor in City of Shelbyville raised the statute of limitations, not a provision of a contract between the parties, as a defense.
The next major case applicable to the issue is the supreme court's decision in Board of Education v. A, C & S, Inc. (1989),
In A, C & S, Inc., the supreme court limited its scope of review of the school districts' immunity to the statutes of limitations for the strict liability, negligence, and negligent misrepresentation counts it found viable. (A, C & S, Inc.,
In A, C & S, Inc., the court stated that it must concentrate "on the effects of the interest on the public, the governmental entities[`] obligation to act on behalf of the public and the extent to which public funds must be expended." (A, C & S, Inc.,
Most troublesome in A, C & S, Inc. was the court's ruling in the dismissal of the breach of expressed and implied warranties counts. The Uniform Commercial Code requires the buyer to notify the seller within a reasonable time of discovering a breach of warranty or else the buyer is barred from any remedy. (810 ILCS 5/2-607(3)(a) (West 1992); Berry v. G.D. Searle & Co. (1974),
In summary of the history, all we can deduce is that it was clear under City of Lincoln that the doctrine of nullus tempus did not apply to contractual suit limitations, that the doctrine has never been used to avoid contractual suit limitations, but that now the issue may be clouded by the supreme court's concentration on the effects on the public interest, the duty of the governmental entity to act for the public, and the amount of public money involved.
The school district raises an additional problem, and that is, whether the suit-limitation provision in the insurance contracts issued by defendants is a statute of limitations or simply another provision of the contract. Plaintiff argues that the one-year suit-limitation provision is essentially a statute of limitations, because it is part of the standard fire and lightning insurance policy mandated by the legislature and prescribed by the Illinois Director of Insurance. The defendants elected not to separate fire and lightning from other risks, but instead, defendants intermingled all covered risks under the notice and suit-limitation clauses. The conclusion reached by the plaintiff is that the defendants, by their act of combining all risks, made the notice and suit-limitation clauses as to all risks a statute of limitation.
We agree with plaintiff, in part. To the extent that defendants' insurance contracts with the school district used the same terms as those required for fire and lightning insurance, without separating out terms solely applicable to the risks other than fire and lightning, the case law discussing standard fire and lightning insurance is equally relevant to all other risks insured under the policies, including asbestos abatement. (215 ILCS 5/400 (West 1992); 50 Ill.Adm.Code sec. 2301.60 (1986).) However, we cannot ignore the fact that the Illinois Department of Insurance Regulations provides:
"Such other contracts or endorsements attached to or printed thereon may contain provisions and stipulations inconsistent with the standard policy to the extent they are applicable only to such other perils." *299 (Emphasis added.) (50 Ill.Adm.Code sec. 2301.60 (1986).)
Thus, the school district, as a contracting party, could have insisted or negotiated longer suit-limitation and notice-of-loss provisions than the provisions contained in the standard policy mandated by the Director of Insurance. The fact that the school district agreed, as opposed to being forced by the Director of Insurance, to include all risks under the suit-limitation and notice-of-loss provisions is even more of a reason to construe these provisions as being contractual as opposed to being statutory.
Even if we only consider whether the provisions mandated by the Director of Insurance for fire and lightning are statutory or contractual, there is a split of authority. Two appellate courts have considered this question with opposite conclusions. In Curtis v. Pekin Insurance Co. (1982),
The Second District Appellate Court, when presented with the issue of statutory versus contractual, ruled that the suit-limitation provision in a standard fire and lightning insurance contract was merely a "contractual agreement by which plaintiff affirmatively agreed to commence suit" within one year of the loss that formed the basis of the lawsuit. (Village of Lake in the Hills v. Illinois Emcasco Insurance Co. (1987),
The United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit recently considered the same issue that is before this court in Affiliated FM Insurance Co. v. Board of Education (7th Cir.1994)
The only cases directly on point, Village of Lake in the Hills and Affiliated FM Insurance Co., have held the suit-limitation provisions to be contractual. Defendants cite cases from other jurisdictions that mainly uphold the general rule of law that the government is bound by its contracts (we see no need to cite such cases). The school district did not cite any authority from other jurisdictions that would support its position. Therefore, what little law that exists, other than general contract law, supports the defendants' position.
The supreme court in Stofer v. Motor Vehicle Casualty Co. (1977),
Moreover, we have to recognize the lessening of the value of defendants' rights to subrogation. If the doctrine of nullum tempus does apply, will it also apply to the defendants' subrogation rights to sue the manufacturers and distributors of asbestos? After all, the statute of limitations has long expired against the manufacturers and distributors, as was discussed fully in A, C & S, Inc. Further, the brand of the asbestos or the evidence of sales by certain manufacturers and distributors to the school district dating back to 1971 may be impossible to obtain after the expiration of such a long period of time. If we allow this case to proceed, we are placing, in effect, the complete loss on the defendants, who did nothing wrong, with little or no chance for recovery from the wrongdoers. It would appear that the school district is the only party that has a chance of recouping its losses from the wrongdoers.
What kind of public policy is it that would allow wrongdoers to escape liability because of the neglect of government officials? What incentive is there to make the government officials more diligent in their duties, if we rule that the government does not have to be diligent in protecting its rights?
Finally, the appellate courts have indicated that if a major exception to generally accepted legal principles is created, or if a new public policy is established, the legislature or the supreme court should do so, not an intermediate court of review. (Harrel v. Dillard's Department Stores, Inc.,
II. CANCELLATION OF SUITLIMITATION PROVISION
Plaintiff argues that the first of the three Country Mutual policies, effective 1977-1980, does not contain any suit-limitation provision. Plaintiff bases this argument upon the declarations page of the policy, even though the policy itself has been lost by both plaintiff and Country Mutual. Plaintiff asserts that in two separate places in the policy the general terms of the declaration page are subordinated to the particular terms of the "all-risks" policy, which contains no suit-limitation term.
*301 Country Mutual argues that the form upon which plaintiff relies does not cancel the one-year suit limitation. We agree. The endorsement plaintiff refers to reads as follows:
"With respect to SECTION IPROPERTY COVERAGE, this form cancels and replaces any coverage on buildings or personal property provided under any other form made a part of the policy, but only with respect to such property to which this form is shown to be applicable."
The endorsement, which is the only portion of the policy the parties have been able to find, merely states that it replaces any other specific property coverage. Contrary to plaintiff's assertion, the endorsement does not state that it replaces all other provisions in the policy. This is made even more clear by the next section of the same endorsement upon which plaintiff relies.
"This policy insures against all risks of direct physical loss to Coverage ABuilding[s] and Coverage BPersonal Property, subject to the provisions and stipulations herein and in the policy of which this form is made a part." (Emphasis added.)
Country Mutual argues, and we agree, that by its unambiguous terms, the endorsement indicates that it is subject to the more general provisions of the policy, which includes the same one-year suit-limitation provision found in all fire and lightning insurance policies in the State of Illinois.
This result is consistent with the well-settled law that if an insurance policy is clear and unambiguous, it is enforceable according to its terms. (Waste Management, Inc. v. International Surplus Lines Insurance Co. (1991),
It would be absurd to find that the 1977-1980 policy provided coverage to the school districts for all risks but that it contained absolutely no suit-limitation provision, even though such a provision is required to the extent that the policy covers fire and lightning insurance. To the degree that the comprehensive coverage contained provisions applying to fire and lightning insurance, we have already determined that the insurance companies cannot legally change the requirements of the standard policy without specifically stating the exceptions that apply to the supplementary coverage. (215 ILCS 5/400 (West 1992); 50 Ill.Adm.Code sec. 2301.60 (1986).) Additionally, if we were to accept plaintiff's argument, we would also have to find that the endorsement cancels and replaces all other general provisions of the policy, including provisions voiding the policy for fraud and allowing the insured to cancel the policy at any time. We will not construe the policy to require such absurd results. Therefore, the trial court was correct in dismissing the complaint as to the 1977-1980 Country Mutual policy, as well as to the rest of the policies.
Affirmed.
MAAG, P.J., and WELCH, J., concur.
