This is a diversity suit, governed by the law of Illinois, for the breach of a contract of liability insurance. The plaintiff is a physician, Dr. Rozenfeld, who in 1970 had prescribed the drug Mebaral, an anti-convulsive drug, for an epileptic woman named Karen Herman. He represcribed the drug for her in 1972. Two years lаter, in April of 1974, Mrs. Herman, who was now pregnant, called Dr. Rozenfeld (whom she had not seen in the interim) and told him, for reasons that are unclear, that he was damaging her baby. Apparently the reference was to his having prescribed Mebaral for her. The prescription that he had given hеr in 1972 had long since run out (it was only for a four-month supply of the drug), but her father, himself a physician, had refilled it. At all events, in this telephone conversation, and another one later in the month, Dr. Rozenfeld told Mrs. Herman to reduce the dosage gradually to zero.
A month later she came to see him. She was no longer taking the drug, and he told her to stay off it as long as she was doing well. This was the last time he saw her until after her baby was born. In August, Mrs. Herman had a gran mal seizure. The baby was born the following month with serious birth defects. Dr. Rozenfeld put Mrs. Herman back on Mebaral in November. In 1983 a suit for medical malpractice was brought against Rozenfeld on behalf of the injured child. Medical Protective Company (“Med Pro”), a malpractice insurer, defended Dr. Rozenfeld. The parties settled for $300,000, but Med Pro refused to pay more than $200,-000, precipitating this suit.
Dr. Rozenfeld had three policies from Med Pro. The first provided coverage from July 13, 1973, to July 13, 1974, the second from July 13, 1974, to July 13, 1975, and the third from July 13, 1976, to July 13, 1977. The first policy, which is the one Med Pro believes applicable to the malpractice suit, had a limit of only $200,000 per occurrence. The second policy, which is the one that Rozеnfeld believes applicable, had a limit of $1 million. The district judge agreed with Rozenfeld and so awarded him $100,000 in damages. But the judge declined to hold that Med Pro’s denial of coverage had been “vexatious and unreasonable” and so declined to award Rozenfeld the limited punitive damages authorized by 215 ILCS 5/155(1), which preempts the common law right to punitive damages in a suit against an insurance company for denying coverage unreasonably or in bad faith.
Cramer v. Insurance Exchange Agency,
The first and second policies insured Rozenfeld аgainst “any claim for damages, at any time filed, based on professional services rendered or which should have been rendered ... in the practice of the insured’s profession ... during the term of this policy.” Med Pro argues that the professional service upon which the Hermans’ claim was based was Rozenfeld’s direction to Mrs. Herman in April and May of 1974, dining the term of the first policy, to phase out and then stay off Mebaral. This interpretation of the policy is consistent with the policy’s language. The policy speaks of “professional services rendered or whiсh should have been rendered,” rather than of the tort of medical malpractice. A tort does not occur when the tortfeasor violates his duty of care to the victim, but when the tortfeasor injures the victim.
Town of Thornton v. Winterhoff
Med Pro asks us to distinguish between the breach of the duty of care and the “manifestation” of the injury resulting from that breach. The suggested distinction is imprecise. There is the breach of the duty of care; there is the injury resulting from it; and therе is the
manifestation
of that injury, which may be long delayed. A physician who makes a mistake during an operation may injure tissues yet the injury produce no symptoms for many years. The injury and its manifestation would not coincide. The distinction is primarily relevant to the statute of limitations, although it sometimes arises in cаses in which it is unclear when exactly the injury insured against took place. See
Eljer Mfg., Inc. v. Liberty Mutual Ins. Co.,
If thе policies issued to Dr. Rozenfeld had said that he was being insured against claims arising from torts committed during the policy period, then it would be clear that the second policy was applicable rather than the first, because there is no tort without injury and there was no injury until the second рeriod. It would be only slightly less clear if the policies covered “accidents.” If you step on the accelerator when you mean to step on the brake, the “accident” does not occur until, as a consequence of your mistake, you plow into the car in front of you. And so with Dr. Rozenfeld’s having taken his patient off Mebaral — this set the stage for the “accident,” the convulsion that injured Mrs. Herman’s fetus, but was not the accident. The general rule, and it is the rule followed in Illinois, is that an “accident” does not “occur,” within the meaning of a policy of liability insuranсe, until the person claiming against the insured is injured.
Great American Ins. Co. v. Tinley Park Recreation Comm’n,
The policies in issue here do not use “accident,” or some equivalent wоrd connoting impact or injury; and some cases that construe policies which, like the ones here, define coverage by reference to the acts or omissions of the insured, rather than to the accidents (and hence injuries) caused by those acts or omissions, have hеld that coverage exists if the act or omission occurs during the policy period. E.g.,
Travelers Ins. Co. v. National Union Fire Ins. Co.,
Med Pro places much greater weight on another recent decision by the intermediate appellate court,
Hartford Casualty Ins. Co. v. Medical Protective Co.,
The case law is obviously in disarray and the “general rule” so confidently stated in Couch on Insurance and elsewhere may well be an overgeneralization. Cf. 2 Windt, supra, § 11.04, pp. 200-01. The best “rule” may be to attend carefully to the specific wording of the policy and the character of the liability insured against — whether the act or omission giving rise to the liability and the injury resulting from that act or omission are usually very close together in time or often more separated in time.
The most natural interpretation of the policies at issue in this case is that they insure Dr. Rozenfeld against the consequences of a tort of malpractice during the policy period; and the tort did not take place until the convulsion. After all, these are
liability
policies, and there is no liability until the insured commits a tort, and there is no tort until there is an injury. But in reaching this conclusion we place no weight on the language of the third policy, which provides that “all injury resulting from a series of acts or omissions in rendering professional services to one person” shall be “considered as arising from one occurrence,” presumably the first act or omission. As is so often true of subsequent enactments, see, e.g.,
Telegraph Savings & Loan Ass’n v. Schilling,
The policy of the
Hartford
decision against stacking would be undermined if an insured could characterize a breach of the duty of care as a continuing rather than onetime violation of that duty — continuing over successive policy periods until the injury resulting from the breach ended, which might, of course, not be until the plaintiff had died; this may be the cаse here, if the birth defects are permanent, as we gather they are, since they include mental retardation. But this is not the simple case in which the physician commits a single breach of care and the injuries from it unfold over a lifetime. When Dr. Rozenfeld, knowing that Mrs. Herman was pregnant, tоok her off anti-convulsive medication, he should have known that he was endangering her fetus. His action in taking her off the medication could be thought to have created a duty in him to monitor her condition in order to protect the fetus. At the very least he should have
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warned her gynecologist. Perhaps he did. All we have to go on is the complaint in the Hermans’ suit. The complaint alleges failure to monitor as a separate act of medical negligence; and because the case was settled before there was any judicial determination of Rozenfeld’s liability, we must accept the allegations of the complaint as true for purposes of determining Rozenfeld’s rights under the insurance policy.
American Home Assurance Co. v. Dykema, Gossett, Spencer, Goodnow & Trigg, supra,
The best argument that we can think of against the district court’s interpretation of the policies is one that Med Pro does not make. It is that the interpretation may actuаlly disserve insureds as a group, though benefiting Dr. Rozenfeld in this case — and this apart from the possibility that the policy limits might have been reversed (that is, the higher limit might have been in the first rather than in the second policy) or that in the second period the insured might have switched from an occurrencе or acts and omissions policy to a claims-made policy. Consider a case in which the insured commits an act of patent and potentially very harmful medical negligence during the current policy period but, as in this case, no injury occurs during that period. Then he will not be cоvered by the policy in force during the period. When at the end of the period he comes to renew the policy he will be obligated to advise the insurance company of any potential liability of which he is aware,
Giles v. Allstate Ins. Co.,
Consistent with this analysis we held in
Eljer Mfg., Inc. v. Liberty Mutual Ins. Co., supra,
that “physical injury” within the meaning of a liability insurance policy oсcurred when the insured, a plumbing manufacturer, installed defective pipe in houses rather than when the pipe started to leak, since by the time that happened the amount of loss would be known to a sufficient certainty to make it impossible or nearly so for the manufacturer tо insure. Similarly,
Travelers Ins. Co. v. National Union Fire Ins. Co., supra,
Affirmed.
