Frank J. HAHN, Plaintiff,
v.
NORFOLK AND WESTERN RAILWAY COMPANY, a corporation, Defendant and Third-Party Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
CLARK EQUIPMENT COMPANY, Third-Party Defendant-Appellee.
Appellate Court of Illinois, Fifth District.
*685 Thomas W. Alvey, Jr., Kurt E. Reitz, Mary Sue Juen, of counsel, Thompson & Mitchell, Belleville, for defendant and third-party plaintiff-appellant.
Martin H. Katz, John F. Doak, Katz, McAndrews, Balch, Lefstein & Fieweger, Rock Island, Robert Wilson, Evans & Dixon, Edwardsville, for third-party defendant-appellee.
Justice RARICK delivered the opinion of the court:
Norfolk & Western Railway Co. (N & W) appeals from the St. Clair County circuit court's dismissal of its third-party claims for contribution and indemnity against Clark Equipment Co. (Clark).
Plaintiff, Frank J. Hahn, filed an FELA action in February of 1985 against his employer, N & W, for injuries he suffered sometime in 1984 as a carman getting on and off a forklift. The forklift was manufactured by Clark and sold to N & W in 1975. In May of 1990, N & W filed a third-party claim against Clark for contribution in negligence and strict products liability and for indemnity in strict products liability. Clark moved to dismiss N & W's complaint alleging the claims were barred either by the two-year statute of limitations of section 13-202 of the Code of Civil Procedure (Code) (Ill.Rev.Stat.1989, ch. 110, par. 13-202), by the five-year statute of limitations set forth in section 13-205 of the Code (Ill.Rev.Stat. 1989, ch. 110, par. 13-205) or by the product liability statute of repose set forth in section 13-213 of the Code (Ill.Rev.Stat.1989, ch. 110, par. 13-213). The trial court granted Clark's motion on February 13, 1991, two days into the trial of the underlying action. The trial court further entered an order finding no just reason for delaying enforcement or appeal of the dismissal order. N & W ultimately reached a settlement agreement with plaintiff in June of 1991.
N & W argues on appeal the trial court erred in dismissing its claims for contribution and implied indemnity by improperly relying on personal injury statutes of limitations and on the products liability statute of repose. N & W points out that according to the holding of Laue v. Leifheit (1984),
The right of one tortfeasor to recover contribution from other joint tortfeasors was first recognized in Illinois in Skinner v. Reed-Prentice Division Package Machinery Co. (1977),
We start with the premise that the right of contribution arises in inchoate form at the time of a plaintiff's injury. A cause of action for contribution accrues for purposes of statutes of limitations when the underlying action is filed against the third-party plaintiff or, if no underlying action is pending, when payment is incurred by the third-party plaintiff. (See Highland v. Bracken (1990),
Turning to N & W's claim for indemnity, we must find it too to be barred under the circumstances presented here.
Looking to the relationship between indemnity and the Contribution Act, we first note that indemnity is a common law doctrine which shifts the entire responsibility from one tortfeasor who has been compelled to pay the plaintiff's loss to another tortfeasor who actually was at fault. (Galliher v. Holloway (1985),
Prior to the right of contribution being recognized in Illinois, the right to implied indemnity was expanded beyond the original notion of an indemnitee who himself was without personal fault to include active/passive negligence wherein the passively negligent or secondarily liable party was permitted to shift the entire burden of the plaintiff's loss to the actively negligent tortfeasor. (Frazer,
N & W asks us to make our ruling prospective, claiming hardship as a result of justifiable reliance on the established precedent of Laue v. Leifheit. Unfortunately, we cannot oblige N & W's request. First, Laue did not hold all actions for contribution brought within the pendency of an underlying suit were timely, nor did it purport to set forth all of the parameters of contribution. (See Hayes,
For the aforementioned reasons, we affirm the judgment of the circuit court of St. Clair County.
Affirmed.
WELCH and WILLIAM A. LEWIS, JJ.,[*] concur.
NOTES
Notes
[*] Justices HOWERTON and H. LEWIS participated in oral argument. Justices WELCH and W.A. LEWIS were later assigned to this case in substitution for Justices HOWERTON and H. LEWIS, and Justices WELCH and W.A. LEWIS have read the briefs and listened to the audiotape of oral argument.
