L.A. CONNECTION, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
PENN-AMERICA INSURANCE CO., Defendant-Appellee (Marvin E. White, Administrator of the Estate of Marvin E. White, Jr., Deceased, Defendant).
Appellate Court of Illinois, Third District.
*429 Andrew D. Cassidy (argued), Cassidy & Mueller, Peoria, for L.A. Connection.
Douglas M. DeWitt, James K. Horstman (argued), Iwan Cray Huber Horstman & VanAusdal LLC, Chicago, for Penn-America Insurance Co.
Jeff A. Green, Janssen Law Center, Peoria, for Other Interested Party.
Justice SLATER delivered the opinion of the court:
Marvin E. White, Jr., was shot and killed on the dance floor of plaintiff L.A. Connection, a Peoria bar, on November 11, 2001. White's estate filed a wrongful death action against plaintiff, which tendered defense of the claim to defendant Penn-America Insurance Company ("Penn"). Penn declined to defend or indemnify plaintiff, primarily on the basis of an "assault and battery" exclusion contained in the commercial general liability policy issued to plaintiff. Plaintiff thereafter filed a declaratory judgment action to determine Penn's obligations under the policy. The trial court granted summary judgment to Penn and this appeal followed. We affirm.
Facts
Plaintiff was served with a complaint by White's estate on May 28, 2002. The complaint alleged that Edward Jackson entered plaintiff's premises on November 11, 2001, armed with a handgun and thereafter shot and killed Marvin White. The complaint asserted that plaintiff was negligent in allowing Jackson to enter while armed, in failing to provide security, and in failing to search patrons for weapons.
Plaintiff tendered defense of the suit to Penn on or about June 5, 2002, and Penn denied coverage by letter on June 11. Plaintiff filed the instant declaratory judgment action on August 13, 2002, and Penn filed its answer and cross-claim for declaratory relief on October 3. Plaintiff filed an answer to defendant's cross-claim on November 4, 2002. The next filing contained in the record is Penn's April 1, 2003, motion for a default judgment against plaintiff due to its alleged failure to respond to Penn's cross-claim. It is unclear whether Penn did not receive the November 4 answer filed by plaintiff or if it simply made a mistake. In any event, the filing of the default motion is significant, for reasons which will be explained below. On August 24, 2004, plaintiff filed a motion for summary judgment, to which Penn responded by filing its own summary judgment motion on November 18, 2004.
Citing Korte Construction Co. v. American States Insurance,
"The [c]ourt finds that the defendant insurance company, by filing its answer *430 and cross-claim when it did, took action within a reasonable time of the demand by the insured. The [c]ourt can therefore look beyond the four corners of the original complaint to determine whether it had a duty to defend. Under the uncontested facts presented, the [c]ourt finds that the injuries were caused as a result of a `battery'. The incident therefore was excluded by the insurance contract and was not covered by it."
Analysis
Plaintiff contends that the trial court should have found that Penn was estopped from relying on the assault and battery exclusion contained in the insurance policy due to its breach of the duty to defend. We disagree.
The Estoppel Doctrine
The estoppel doctrine provides that an insurer presented with a claim may not simply refuse the defend its insured under a belief that no coverage exists; it must either defend the lawsuit under a reservation of rights or seek a declaratory judgment that there is no coverage. If the insurer fails to take either of those steps and is found to have wrongfully denied coverage, the insurer is estopped from raising policy defenses, even those that might have otherwise been successful. Employers Insurance v. Ehlco Liquidating Trust,
Duty to Defend
The initial step in an estoppel analysis is determining whether a duty to defend exists. See Ehlco,
In this case, the complaint alleged that plaintiff was negligent in allowing Edward Jackson to enter the bar while armed with a handgun and in failing to provide security. Thereafter, according to the complaint, Jackson "shot and killed" Marvin White. The general liability policy issued by Penn contained an exclusion for injury or damages "resulting from assault and battery or physical altercations that occur in, on, near, or away from" the insured premises, including damages arising out of the insured's failure to properly supervise or keep the premises in a safe condition. Plaintiff argues that the exclusion does not necessarily apply because the complaint does not allege an intentional shooting and could describe an accidental discharge of the firearm. We agree that, construed most liberally in favor of the *431 plaintiff, the allegations of the complaint are not, on their face, clearly encompassed by the assault and battery exclusion and therefore are potentially within the policy's coverage. Accordingly, Penn had a duty to defend its insured which required it to either defend under a reservation of rights or seek a declaratory judgment of no coverage. Ehlco,
Effect of Declaratory Judgment Action by the Insured
Although our supreme court has never addressed the issue, the appellate courts of this state have repeatedly held that the initiation of a declaratory judgment action by the insured, rather than the insurer, is sufficient to avoid estoppel. As this court noted nearly 25 years ago, "[i]t is the fact of the proceeding itself, and not the identity of the party initiating the proceeding, that is of legal import." Ayers v. Bituminous Insurance Co.,
*432 Timing Issues
The final step in the estoppel analysis, after finding the existence of a duty to defend and that a declaratory judgment action has been filed, is determining whether the insurer acted "promptly" (see Household International, Inc. v. Liberty Mutual Insurance Co.,
Faced with these rather vague contours of timeliness, the courts of this state have generally applied one of three standards to measure an insurer's promptness. See S. Nardoni & J. Vishneski, The Illinois Estoppel Doctrine Revisited: How Promptly must an Insurer Act?, 24 N. Ill. U.L.Rev. 211, 220-24 (2004). Some cases have deemed a declaratory judgment action timely as long as it was filed before the underlying lawsuit ends. See Pekin Insurance,
In O'Rourke, this court stated that the "most important factor" in determining whether an insurer had breached its duty to defend was not the mere chronological delay in filing for declaratory relief, "but whether the insurer waited until trial or *433 settlement was imminent." O'Rourke,
We conclude that, under the reasonable time test, Penn did not breach its duty to defend. Plaintiff tendered defense of the suit to Penn on June 5, 2002, and plaintiff subsequently filed its declaratory judgment action on August 13, a little more than two months later. Penn filed its answer and cross-claim less than two months after that. Plaintiff has not cited, and our research has not revealed, any case holding that an insurer breached the duty to defend where a declaratory judgment action was commenced within four months. On the contrary, courts have declined to apply estoppel where the time period between notification to the insurer of the underlying suit and the filing of a declaratory judgment action exceeded that presented here. See Westchester Fire Insurance Co.,
Plaintiff also argues that estoppel should be applied because even after plaintiff filed its declaratory action, Penn failed to take steps to advance the litigation and remained "virtually idle" for two years prior to plaintiff's filing of its motion for summary judgment. We disagree. Penn responded promptly to plaintiff's declaratory judgment action by filing its answer and cross-claim within two months. Thereafter, Penn did not remain "idle"; it filed a motion for default judgment within six months, premised on its apparently mistaken belief that plaintiff had failed to respond to Penn's cross-claim. Beyond that, we find that plaintiff's "failure to advance the litigation" argument is waived. Although it was mentioned in a perfunctory fashion in plaintiff's motion for summary judgment, there is no indication that it was argued to the trial court. "[A]n issue not presented to or considered by the trial court cannot be raised for the first time on review." In re Marriage of Schneider,
Assault and Battery Exclusion
Finally, having determined that Penn is not estopped from raising policy defense, we consider the effect of the assault and battery exclusion contained in the insurance policy. In doing so, we are no longer limited to the allegations of the complaint, but may also consider extrinsic evidence gathered during the discovery *434 process. See Mutlu v. State Farm Fire & Casualty Co.,
For the reasons stated above, the judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.
Affirmed.
LYTTON and BARRY, JJ., concur.
