delivered the opinion of the court:
Plaintiff, Lenny Szarek, Inc. (Szarek), appeals the grant of summary judgment to defendant Maryland Casualty Company (Maryland) on its counterclaim for declaratory judgment. Szarek contends the circuit court erred in concluding that the territoriality provisions of Maryland’s insurance policy precluded coverage for a worker’s compensation claim filed in Illinois and that the lack of coverage was clear to the point that Maryland was not even required to provide a defense against such a claim. We agree with Szarek and reverse.
FACTUAL BACKGROUND
Szarek’s and Maryland’s pleadings reveal the following undisputed facts.
Szarek is a carpentry contractor and an Illinois corporation, headquartered in McHenry County. We take notice that McHenry is one of Illinois’ northernmost counties, sharing a border with the State of Wisconsin. Szarek does business in both Illinois and Wisconsin.
On June 23, 1994, Maryland issued a policy of worker’s compensation insurance to Szarek, with coverage retroactive to May 23, 1994, and continuing through June 23, 1995. Maryland’s policy provided: “We will pay promptly when due the benefits required of you by the workers compensation law.” The policy defined “workers compensation law” as follows:
Szarek also entered into a separate employer’s liability pooling agreement, a form of self-insurance, covering the same period of time as the Maryland policy. The agreement also provided that workers’ compensation benefits would be paid “when due the benefits required of you by the workers’ compensation law.” However, the agreement defined “the workers’ compensation law” as “the workers’ or workmen’s compensation law and occupational disease law of Illinois.” The agreement appointed Management Services, Inc. (also known as Risk Management Association, and hereinafter referred to as RMA), as its administrator.
On November 7, 1994, Thomas Cholewinski, a Szarek employee, was hurt while working in Kenosha, Wisconsin. Cholewinski was an Illinois resident and filed his worker’s compensation claim in Illinois. Szarek tendered this claim to RMA. RMA, unaware of the existence of the Maryland policy at the time, began to pay benefits and incur expenses on the claim in the amount of $33,412.80.
When RMA became aware of the Maryland policy, it tendered the claim to Maryland on January 19, 1996, for ongoing administration, and sought compensation for the benefits it had paid and the costs of administration it had incurred. Maryland, however, denied any liability for Cholewinski’s claim on March 8, 1996, explaining it would “not be able to provide benefits on *** [the] claim under *** [its] workers’ compensation policy issued for the State of Wisconsin.” Cholewinski subsequently filed for an adjustment of his claim before the Illinois Industrial Commission, naming Szarek and Maryland as defendants. Maryland did not participate in the proceeding, however, and the final settlement of $22,980.75, reached on April 15, 1997, was paid out of the self-insurance pool. All told, Szarek, through its contributions to the self-insurance pool, paid $69,316.01 for benefits to Cholewinski and for defense against his claim.
Litigation over Maryland’s denial of coverage commenced in the law division of the circuit court of Cook County sometime in 1999,
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originally between RMA and Maryland, but later between Szarek and Maryland in the chancery division.
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Szarek’s complaint alleged that Cholewinski’s claim was covered under the Maryland policy, that Maryland had wrongfully failed to defend and indemnify Szarek for the claim, and that, as a result, Szarek paid for the costs of defense and workers’ compensation benefits itself. In its answer to the complaint, Maryland denied that Cholewinski’s claim fell within the terms of the policy and therefore denied that it owed a defense and indemnification of his claim. Maryland also filed a counterclaim the same day it filed its answer, seeking a declaration from the circuit court that it had no duty to defend or indemnify Szarek against Cholewinski’s claim. Maryland conceded that Cholewinski had a valid claim under either Wisconsin or Illinois law, but nevertheless contended that its
On June 30, 2003, Szarek moved the chancery court for summary judgment on its complaint. In response, Maryland cross-motioned for summary judgment on its counterclaim. In its motion, Szarek contended that benefits were due under Wisconsin worker’s compensation law once Cholewinski was injured in Wisconsin, and therefore Maryland owed coverage. Maryland, on the other hand, argued that the plain language of its policy limited coverage to claims filed in Wisconsin. The chancery court denied Szarek’s motion and granted Maryland’s motion, stating “the Maryland worker’s compensation coverage *** [does] not apply to the Illinois worker’s compensation claim ***. As a result, Maryland had no obligation to defend Szarek; no obligation to indemnify Szarek and no obligation to make payments to Szarek ***.” Szarek appeals.
II. ANALYSIS
The law is clear that summary judgment should be granted when “the pleadings, depositions, and admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if any, show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact” and the moving “party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law.” 735 ILCS 5/2 — 1005(c) (West 2002). In this case, the parties present no factual disputes and instead argue over the legal question of the construction of an insurance policy. We review de novo both the construction of insurance contracts (State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Co. v. Villicana,
“To ascertain the meaning of [an insurance] policy’s words *** [a] court must construe the policy as a whole ***.” Outboard Marine Corp. v. Liberty Mutual Insurance Co.,
On appeal, Maryland contends that under the language of the policy it is only liable for defense and indemnification of worker’s compensation claims as “required” by Wisconsin’s worker’s compensation act, which it contends means that the claim must be filed in Wisconsin. Szarek, on the other hand, argues that “as required” under Wisconsin’s worker’s compensation law means that a claim should be evaluated and paid under Wisconsin law regardless of where the claim is filed. Szarek therefore sees the provision not as limiting coverage to claims brought in a particular forum, but rather as a choice of law provision limiting benefits to what would have been granted under the state law specified in the policy. Szarek further contends that the law required Maryland to include an express exclusion in the policy for claims filed outside Wisconsin, if that was Maryland’s desired limitation of coverage, and that public policy demands the negation of provisions limiting the territorial
These issues, considered under virtually identical policy provisions as that at issue in this case, have produced two divergent lines of decisions. One line of cases agrees with Szarek that alleged territorial limitation provisions are in fact choice of law provisions, not limiting coverage based on where the employee chooses to file his claim, but only to restrict benefit eligibility and to set indemnification limits based on the state law specified in the policy. This line of cases includes Smith & Chambers Salvage v. Insurance Management Corp.,
We find the Pennsylvania Supreme Court’s decision in Weinberg instructive. Mrs. Gotkin, the employee in Weinberg, was injured in Pennsylvania, but filed a worker’s compensation claim in her home state of New Jersey. The State Workmen’s Insurance Fund, under which the plaintiff, a Pennsylvania business, was covered, provided that the Fund agreed to “assume the whole liability of this Insured Employer under the Workmen’s Compensation Act of Pennsylvania.” (Emphasis in
In Kacur, the employer was a Maryland resident also doing business in Pennsylvania. The employee was injured in Maryland and filed his worker’s compensation claim there. The insurer had promised “to pay promptly when due all compensation and other benefits required of the insured by the workmen’s compensation law,” and specified that the coverage “appliefd] to the Workmen’s Compensation Law *** of each of the following states: PENNSYLVANIA.” Kacur,
We agree with these courts and hold that the substantially identical language of the Maryland policy should be construed as setting forth only a choice of law provision to be applied regardless of where the claim is filed, and only restricting benefits to the extent that they are payable under Wisconsin law, not restricting coverage to claims filed in Wisconsin. This approach is consistent with the general principle previously noted that where the language of an insurance policy is capable of more than one interpretation it should be construed against the insurer and in favor of coverage. Outboard Marine Corp.,
Maryland, however, argues that the appellant’s contentions ignore the Illinois case of Ohio Casualty Co. v. Southwell,
Thus, as Szarek contends, the result in Southwell hinged exclusively on the resolution of a choice of law question, the answer to which mandated that California law be used to interpret any and all provisions in the policy. The fact that the Southwell court concluded that California’s interpretation would not violate Illinois’ public policy (Southwell,
Finally, Maryland would not have us reach our coverage conclusion by asserting that the cases on which we rely are all premised on the employer being left uninsured in the event the court did not impose coverage on the insurer. See generally Weinberg,
For all the foregoing reasons, we reverse the judgment of the circuit court and remand for a determination as to whether Cholewinski’s injuries would have been compensable under Wisconsin’s worker’s compensation act. Should the circuit court find that claim eligible for compensation under Wisconsin law, judgment should be entered for Szarek and damages computed based on the benefits schedule of the Wisconsin’s worker’s compensation act (Toebe, 114 N.J. Super, at 50,
Reversed and remanded with instructions.
O’MALLEY and McNULTY, JJ., concur.
Notes
The first complaint has not been included in the record so we cannot specify the date.
The procedural history surrounding RMA’s complaint, the transition from RMA to Szarek as named plaintiff, and the switch between divisions in the circuit court are unimportant for purposes of this appeal.
Maryland also contends, in a footnote, without citation to authority, that “it is questionable whether Szarek even has standing to pursue the action it has brought against Maryland” based on a provision in the agreement in which EMA claims the rights of the insured for purposes of recouping their “payments from anyone liable for the injury.” Initially, we note that Maryland has waived this issue by not timely raising it in the trial court. Greer v. Illinois Housing Development Authority,
In a petition for rehearing on this question, Szarek contends that, since Maryland breached its duty to defend against Cholewinski’s worker’s compensation claim, it is not entitled to equitable contribution under the canon that an insurer is estopped from asserting policy defenses and taking advantage of provisions of a contract it has already substantially breached. See Progressive Insurance Co.,
