delivered the opinion of the court:
Plaintiff Beverly D. Ellis appeals from the trial court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of defendant American Family Mutual Insurance Company (American Family). We affirm.
American Family issuеd a motor vehicle insurance policy to Ellis effective from December 12, 1991, to June 12, 1992. The policy contained an endorsement, the “Automobile Accidеntal Death and Specific Dismemberment Benefits Coverage Endorsement.” On May 15, 1992, Ellis’s son Shaun was killed in an automobile accident while driving Ellis’s car. Ellis sought benefits under the endоrsement but American Family denied coverage.
On January 17, 1995, Ellis filed a complaint for declaratory judgment; American Family filed an answer and a counterclaim fоr declaratory judgment. The parties next filed cross-motions for summary judgment. Each was denied. The case languished for two years. Ellis then filed a second motion for summary judgment; American Family filed a response and cross-motion for summary judgment. Ellis’s motion was denied, American Family’s was granted. From this ruling, Ellis appeals.
Three pertinent prоvisions of the policy are at issue. The first two provisions are found in the endorsement:
“Death Benefit: We will pay the maximum benefit shown in the declarations, if the insured рerson dies within 90 days of the accident.
* * *
Insured person or insured persons means you or any relative while occupying, or when struck by, a land motor vehicle or trailer.”
The third provision is found in the base policy, in a section entitled “Definitions Used Throughout the Policy”:
“Relative means a person living in your household related to you by blood, marriage!,] or adoption. *** It excludes any person who, or whose spouse, owns a motor vehicle other than an off-road motor vehicle.”
Amеrican Family offers two theories in support of the trial court’s ruling: (1) Shaun owned his own car, thereby coming under an exception to the policy definition of “relative” and (2) Shaun was not “living in [Eilis’s] household” at the time of his death.
The question whether an individual is a resident of, or living in, a household commonly arises in other automobile policy contexts. The standard automobile policy covers “relatives” as insureds, meaning persons living in the household and related to the insured by blood or marriage. See 625 ILCS 5/7 — 317(a), (b) (West 2000); 215 ILCS 5/143.13(a) (West 2000). A number of cases consider whether a person is a “relative” and accordingly covered as an insured under an automobile liability policy. See, e.g., State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Co. v. Taussig,
The policy definition of “insured persons” includes the policyholder’s relatives. The policy definition of “relative” specifically excludes individuals who own their own vehicles. American Family states that Shaun owned his own vehicle and therefore was not an insured person.
American Family mainly relies upon Ellis’s resрonse to a request for admission tendered pursuant to Supreme Court Rule 216 (134 111. 2d R. 216). American Family’s request No. 7 stated:
“7. That on May 15, 1992, the decedent, SHAUN J. ELLIS, was the owner of his own vеhicle and it was not the 1982 Oldsmobile 88 Royale which was involved in this accident.”
Ellis’s response to the request did indeed explicitly admit the truth of this fact. On appeal, Ellis refers to a portion of her discovery deposition wherein she contradicts her admission:
“DEFENSE COUNSEL: In May of 1992 did Shaun own his own vehicle?
PLAINTIFF: No, not at the time of the accident.
DEFENSE COUNSEL: In your answers to the [r]equest for [a]dmission of [flаcts you were asked whether Shaun was the owner of his own vehicle on May 15th of ’92, and you admitted that. Was that wrong? He didn’t have his own car?
PLAINTIFF: Not at the time he did not.
DEFENSE COUNSEL: Okay. Had he at any time prior to—
PLAINTIFF: Yes.
DEFENSE COUNSEL: — the accident? Okay. When was the last time that he owned a vehicle prior to the accident date of May 15th, ’92?
PLAINTIFF: I don’t honestly remember that.
* * *
DEFENSE COUNSEL: Do you know the reason why Shaun was using your vehicle at that time?
PLAINTIFF: He did not have a car of his own at that time, so until he had decided what he was going to purchase he was using my car.”
Ellis directs our attention to Supreme Court Rule 201(j), which states that “[djisclosurе of any matter obtained by discovery is not conclusive, but may be contradicted by other evidence.” 166 111. 2d R. 201(j).
Rule 216(a) (134 Ill. 2d R. 216(a)) allows a party to request admission of “the truth оf any specified relevant fact,” including an ultimate fact. See also P.R.S. International, Inc., v. Shred Pax Corp.,
“While these requests are designed to clarify and simplify evidentiary issues at trial rather than to further the goals of discovery, they are govеrned by Rule 216 and enforced in accord with the rules pertaining to discovery. Nevertheless, Rule 201(j), which provides that matter disclosed by discovery is not conclusive, shоuld be inapplicable to these requests because their purpose is to obtain judicial admissions.” 4 R. Michael, Illinois Practice § 33.9, at 152 (1989) (Civil Procedure Beforе Trial).
Admissions pursuant to requests to admit constitute judicial admissions, which are binding upon the party making them; they may not be controverted at trial or in a motion for summary judgment. M. Graham, Cleary & Graham’s Handbook of Illinois Evidence § 802.11, at 779 (7th ed. 1999) (hereinafter Cleary & Graham). Only in extraordinary circumstances may a party escape the consequences of a judicial admission. See Cleary & Graham § 802.11, at 781, citing In re Marriage of O’Brien,
Ellis’s attempt to avoid the consequences of her judicial admission cannot be allowed. Answers to requests to admit cannot be controverted at trial or in a motion for summary judgment. Even if Ellis had made a рroper request to be relieved of the consequences of her admission, her equivocal answers at the deposition would not have justified such relief.
Bеcause Ellis had admitted that Shaun owned a vehicle at the time of his death, Shaun was not an insured person under the provisions of the policy, and the grant of summary judgment was proper. Because of our resolution of this issue, we need not consider whether Shaun was “living in [Eilis’s] household,” which, if not true, would also have barred recovery under the endorsement.
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the trial court’s judgment.
Affirmed.
STEIGMANN, EJ., and MYERSCOUGH, J, concur.
