A сonsumer fraud lawsuit alleged DER Travel Service, Inc. (“DER”) engaged in a scheme to intentionally defraud its customers. DER’s insurance company, Connecticut Indemnity Company (“Connecticut”), brought this diversity action seeking a declaratory judgment that it had no obligation to defend DER in the lawsuit. The district court determined that Connecticut had a duty to defend the suit. Because the district court viewed the underlying complaint in contravention of Illinois law, we reverse.
BACKGROUND
DER was sued in the Circuit Cоurt of Cook County, Illinois, captioned Harter, et. al. v. Auto Europe, Inc., et al. (“Harter ”). The Harter suit is a class action alleging that DER, along with other car rental companies, violated the Illinois Consumer Fraud and Deceptive Business Practices Act, 815 ILCS § 505/2. This appeal centers upоn the content of the complaint filed in that suit.
The plaintiffs in the Harter case alleged that the value added tax (“VAT”) imposed on car rentals in European countries was due only on the actual cost of the car rental but the defendants applied the VAT percentage to both the cost of the car rental and the booking fee they charged consumers. Plaintiffs state that no VAT was due on the booking fee earned by the defendants.
With specific referencе to DER, plaintiff Edward Sadlowski claimed that DER overcharged him when he booked a rental car by inflating the size of the VAT; that is, when DER calculated the dollar amount of the VAT, it applied the VAT percentage rate to the entire рrice, including DER’s booking fee. The complaint adds that DER failed to disclose that the VAT was not due on the booking fee. This, the Harter complaint states, violated the Consumer Fraud Act through “deceptive pricing and other deceptivе acts” which were “intentionally and willfully effected in disregard of law.” DER notified its insurer, Connecticut, about the Harter suit and requested coverage.
DER is insured under Connecticut’s Travel Agents’ Professional Liability Policy, which covers, inter alia, any sums DER:
shall become legally obligated to pay as “dаmages” because of:
Coverage C — Any negligent act, error, or omission of the “insured” or any other person for whose acts the “named insured” is legally liable in the conduct of “travel agency operations” by the “named insured.”
However, Exclusion (p) of the policy expressly excludes irom Coverage C:
liability arising out of any act, error, or omission which is wilfully dishonest, fraudulent, or malicious, or in willful violation of any penal or criminal statute or ordinance, and is committed (or omitted) by or with the knowledge or consent of the “insured.”
Upon receiving notice of the complaint, Connecticut notified DER that it would provide no defense in the lawsuit; it denied coverage because, it sаid, the alleged conduct fell within the scope of Exclusion (p). Connecticut then filed this complaint seeking a declaratory judgment that it had no obligation to defend DER in the state suit.
*349 On cross-motions for summary judgment, the district court held that thе Har-ter complaint did not clearly preclude the plaintiffs from establishing liability under a negligence standard; that the complaint did not clearly exclude a non-intentional claim under the Consumer Fraud Act and that, since a possibility remаined that coverage clause C covered the claim in the Harter action, Connecticut was obligated to defend DER. Connecticut appeals.
ANALYSIS
We review a district court’s decision to grant summary judgment
de novo.
The district court determined that Illinois law governed this dispute, which neither party contests. Illinois law treats the interpretation of an insurance policy as a question of law that the court may resolve summarily.
Crum & Forster Managers Corp. v. Resolution Trust Corp.,
Whether an insurer must defend the insured is a question resolved by comparing the allegations of the underlying complaint against the insured to the insurance policy.
Lapham-Hickey Steel Corp. v. Protection Mut. Ins. Co.,
There is no dispute between the parties about the insurance policy itself. The terms of the policy clearly limit coverage to only negligent acts, errors, or omissions. So we focus our attention on the Harter complaint to determine whether its allegations potentially fall within the generous strictures of a claim for negligence.
The pertinent paragraphs of the complaint are as follows:
18. In every rental (basic or inclusive) whether by partial or full payment, the customer pays an add-on which is not for tax or insurance but is simply an extra fee to the broker, i.e., or a disguised increase in the base price.
19. This is done by the mechanism of the broker calculating the foreign sales tax as a percentage of the base price.
20. The base price includes the broker’s booking fee, on which no foreign sales tax is due, because thе booking by the broker occurs entirely in the United States.
21. Nonetheless, this spurious extra charge shows up on the booking acknowledgment, either broken out separately as tax, or simply put into the final or total base pricе, with a statement on the booking acknowledgment that this total base price “includes tax.”
22. While it is technically true that the total base price on the booking acknowledgment “includes tax,” the statement and the very presentation of this price information are designed to mislead and conceal from the customer that there is an add-on which is going directly to the broker as a disguised increase in the base price, and not for any tax or legiti *350 mate add-ons for insurance or other benefits.
23. All threе defendant brokers follow the same industry scheme of deceptive pricing by giving the broker an add-on which defendants intend the consumer to believe is a part of a “sales tax” or “VAT.”
24. There are thousands of customers who are deceptively overcharged in this manner every year, and the defendant brokers collect millions of dollars in such overcharges annually without customers realizing how they are being deceived.
25. The scheme or devicе described here is inherently deceptive and is intended to deceive and mislead customers such as plaintiffs who would object to payment of any add-on presented falsely as a sales tax when in fact the amount is going to the broker.
A review of these paragraphs reveal not a hint of negligent conduct alleged. The complaint lucidly sets forth that DER purposefully engaged in a scheme to deceive consumers. The question then is whether thе conduct alleged in the complaint is at least arguably within a category of wrongdoing covered by the policy. We have considered this question and conclude it is not. This answer is deduced from the clear and unambiguous languаge of the Harter complaint. The facts, as presented in the complaint, are consistently couched in terms of intentional deception and fraud.
The paragraphs under Count VII allege, inter alia:
135. Plaintiff sues DER under the Illinois Consumer Fraud Act, 815 ILCS § 505/2 on behalf of himself, and on behalf of all class members who booked a car from DER.
137. DER has violated the rights of all class members under the Illinois Consumer Fraud Act who booked a car from DER while residing outside of Illinois because the deceptive pricing and other deceptive acts took place at the defendant DER’s principal place of business which is Illinois.
140. The actions of the DER are intentionally and willfully effected in disregard of law.
However, these paragraphs paint only part of the picture: there are also the paragraphs incorporated by reference to Count VII, most notably those paragraphs depicting the alleged scheme. The Harter complaint is barren of any mention of negligence, inadvertence, error, or mistake, or anything even implying such conduct. Instead, the complaint speaks only that DER deceived, schemed, and defrauded consumers.
The factual allegations of intentional schemes notwithstanding, DER points to the fact that the plaintiffs could have asserted a negligence claim under the Consumer Fraud Act. Illinois courts have interpreted the Consumer Fraud Act in a manner such that plaintiffs do not have to provе a defendant intended to deceive them.
See, e.g., Rubin v. Marshall Field & Co.,
While the district court correctly observed that negligent conduct is actionable under the Consumer Fraud Act, it is the *351 actual complaint, not somе hypothetical version, that must be considered. 1
In
United Fire and Cas. Co. v. Jim Maloof Realty,
CONCLUSION
We acknowledge the well-settled doctrine that an underlying complaint must be liberally construed in favor of the insured and that any doubts be resolved in favor of the insured.
Lexmark Int’l, Inc. v. Transp. Ins. Co.,
Reveksed And Remanded.
Notes
. The district court relied, in part, on our decision in
Solo Cup Co. v. Federal Ins. Co.,
. We are cognizant of the First Circuit's position in
Auto Eur., L.L.C. v. Conn. Indem. Co.,
