delivered the opinion of the court:
Michael and Kathy Gregg entered into a real estate contract to buy a house from the defendants, Silvio and Judy DiPaulo. When the Greggs moved in they began redecorating the house. They made a heart-sinking discovery: termites. The house was infested with termites. CNA paid the Greggs for the costs of repair and
The trial judge granted summary judgment to the defendants, finding CNA could not subrogate to its insureds’ collateral contract rights. The court relied entirely on our decision in State Farm General Insurance Co. v. Stewart,
FACTS
According to CNA’s complaint, on or about March 6, 1998, the Greggs entered into a real estate contract to purchase from the defendants certain real property located at 102 Prospect Court, Prospect Heights, Illinois. The parties agreed on a selling price of $465,000. Defendants provided a residential real property disclosure report indicating they were not aware of a current infestation of termites or wood-boring insects or of a structural defect caused by previous infestations of termites or other wood-boring insects. During a house inspection on March 11, 1998, defendants made verbal representations to the Greggs denying any past or current termite infestation. The Greggs’ insurance policy through CNA, effective from May 7, 1998, through May 7, 1999, provided coverage for loss or damage caused by termite infestation. The policy contained language whereby CNA obtained the Greggs’ rights to recover against a third party if it paid for damage to the property. The Greggs closed on the property on June 5, 1998.
On or about September 3, 1998, the Greggs discovered the property was infested with termites. After removing some wallpaper and exposing the drywall, they found pinholes and tunnels caused by termites. They also discovered patchwork on the drywall and other efforts to conceal the termite infestation. CNA made payment pursuant to the homeowner’s policy of $487,623.93 for repair and replacement costs and living expenses incurred during the repair. CNA filed its subrogation claim, based on common law fraud, against the defendants. The trial court entered summary judgment in favor of defendants.
DECISION
There is no factual dispute here. The question is whether the defendants are entitled to summary judgment as a matter of law. 735 ILCS 5/2 — 1005(c) (West 2000). We review de novo the trial court’s grant of summary judgment to the defendants. Morris v. Margulis,
The issue is whether to allow CNA to subrogate to its insured’s claim for fraud against the defendants. The right of subrogation is an equitable remedy that allows one who has involuntarily paid a debt or claim of another to succeed to the rights of the other with respect to that claim or debt. Dix Mutual Insurance Co. v. LaFramboise,
A subrogee “steps into the shoes” of the person whose claim he has paid and may only enforce those rights which the latter could enforce. Continental Casualty Co. v. Polk Brothers, Inc.,
In this case, CNA may assert a right of subrogation against the defendants if: (1) the Greggs could maintain a cause of action against the defendants and (2) it would be equitable to allow CNA to enforce a right of subrogation against the defendants. Dix Mutual Insurance Co.,
First, we examine the status of the Greggs’ “shoes” which CNA seeks to step into. That is, could the Greggs have sued the DiPaulos for common law fraud had they not sought coverage for their losses from CNA? The answer is yes.
Sellers of real estate have a duty to disclose defects that could not be discovered on a reasonable and diligent inspection. Mitchell v. Skubiak,
In this case, CNA alleged the DiPaulos falsely said they were not aware of a termite infestation. They said it in verbal statements to the Greggs and in the written disclosure report. Their purpose, proven successful, was to induce the Greggs to buy the house. The Greggs relied on the false statements and incurred damages as a result. CNA has alleged common law fraud. See Redarowicz v. Ohlendorf,
If the Greggs could sue the DiPaulos for fraud, it would appear to follow that their subrogee, CNA, could sue the DiPaulos. But the trial court found our decision in Stewart was an insurmountable obstacle to CNA’s lawsuit.
In Stewart, Vito DeFrancesco contracted to sell an apartment building to Nancy Stewart. After DeFrancesco delivered the deed and possession to Stewart, but before she paid him the full contract price, the building was destroyed by fire. DeFrancesco collected insurance proceeds for the loss from his insurer, State Farm General. Stewart made a claim against her insurer, Hartford Insurance Company, and collected on her policy. State Farm General, as DeFrancesco’s subrogee, sued Stewart, seeking to recover from the Hartford proceeds
The Stewart decision was grounded in a Minnesota Supreme Court decision, Board of Trustees of First Congregational Church v. Cream City Mutual Insurance Co. of Milwaukee,
There are major differences between Stewart and this case. Those differences condemn the DiPaulos’ position. In fact, Stewart and Cream City support CNA’s subrogation theory.
First, CNA is not trying to assert the Greggs’ contract rights against the DiPaulos. CNA alleges common law fraud, nothing else. The same fraud the Greggs could have asserted against the DiPaulos.
Second, and more importantly, the Stewart and Cream City decisions involved fires that the defendants had nothing to do with. No one suggested Nancy Stewart or the City of Austin was a wrongdoer. The Minnesota court said, and Stewart reiterated:
“ ‘[I]t is the universally accepted rule that an insurer may be subrogated to the insured’s rights against any person wrongfully causing a compensable loss to the insured.” (Emphasis added.) Stewart,288 Ill. App. 3d at 688 , quoting Cream City, 255 Minn, at 353, 96 N.W2d at 695-96.
Further, in Stewart, we said that although State Farm General paid DeFrancesco for his fire-related losses, that payment was independent of Stewart’s contractual debt to DeFrancesco “insofar as Stewart did not cause those losses.” Stewart,
That, according to CNA’s complaint, is exactly what happened in this case — the DiPaulos wrongfully caused the loss to the Greggs.
The DiPaulos cannot sidestep the cause of action by saying, as they do here, they did not cause the termite infestation. That is not CNA’s lawsuit. The claim is the DiPaulos caused loss to the Greggs by concealing the infestation and making false statements about it.
The DiPaulos are right when they say if CNA were to succeed it could recover its payout to the Greggs and also keep the premiums it was paid for the policy. That, they say, is a windfall for CNA. Calling it a windfall is an exaggeration at best, spiced with a measure of gall. It is the DiPaulos who would reap a windfall if they were allowed to commit fraud and keep the purchase price money.
CONCLUSION
We reverse the judgment of the trial court and remand for further proceedings.
Reversed and remanded.
