Ardis LICCARDI, Indiv. and as Special Adm'r of the Estate of Arthur Farmer, Deceased, Justin Farmer, Larry Farmer, Kenneth Farmer, James Farmer, Ardis Farmer, Antoinette Liccardi, and Melissa Farmer, Plaintiffs,
v.
STOLT TERMINALS (CHICAGO), INC., Defendant and Third-Party Plaintiff-Appellant (Jetstream of Houston, Inc., Technical Specialties, Inc., Jarvis Engineering Company, and Combined Plant Services, Inc., Defendants, Gundersen/Viking, Inc., Third-Party Defendant-Appellee).
Appellate Court of Illinois, First District, Fifth Division.
*1195 Lord, Bissell & Brook, Chicago (Hugh C. Griffin, C. Kevin McCabe and Stephanie A. Burris, of counsel), for Appellant.
Seyfarth, Shaw, Fairweather & Geraldson, Chicago (Jeremy P. Sackmann, Brent I. Clark and Joshua R. Rich, of counsel), for Appellee.
Justice COUSINS delivered the opinion of the court:
The appellant and third-party plaintiff, Stolt Terminals (Chicago), Inc. (Stolt), filed a third-party complaint seeking contribution from appellee and third-party defendant, Gundersen/Viking, Inc. (Gundersen). Stolt contracted with Gundersen for it to clean Stolt's storage tanks, and a Gundersen employee died while waterblasting a tank on Stolt's property. Decedent's relatives sued Stolt pursuant to alleged violations of the Structural Work Act (740 ILCS 150/1 (West 1994)). After Stolt sought contribution from Gundersen, Gundersen moved to limit any contribution award to the amount of its workers' compensation liability, the contribution limit for employers imposed by the supreme court in Kotecki v. Cyclops Welding Corp.,
We reverse and remand.
On October 9, 1990, Gundersen and Stolt entered into a contract where Stolt agreed to pay $3,175 for Gundersen to provide the labor and equipment to waterblast a tank on Stolt's property to remove accumulated rust in the tank's interior. Stolt drafted the contract with the following provisions:
"7. If vendor performs services or constructs, errects [sic], inspects or delivers hereunder, Vendor agrees to indemnify and hold harmless Stolt Terminals (Chicago) Inc. from all loss or the payment of all sums of money by reason of all accidents, injuries, or damages to persons or property that may happen or occur in connection therewith.
8. Vendor represents and warrants that no Federal or State Statute or regulation, or municipal Ordinance, has been or will be violated in the manufacturing, sale, and delivery of any article or service sold and delivered hereunder, and if such violation has or does occur, Vendor shall indemnify and hold harmless Stolt Terminals (Chicago) Inc. from all loss, penalties, or the payment of all sums of money on account of such violation."
On October 17, 1990, Gundersen employee Arthur Farmer died while waterblasting Stolt's tank. Farmer's waterblasting gun sprang a leak, which caused a stream of high-pressure water to hit him in the neck, and Farmer fell from scaffolding erected in the tank.
On October 4, 1991, decedent's mother filed a complaint against Stolt, and decedent's seven brothers and sisters joined as plaintiffs in the fourth amended complaint filed on October 27, 1993. Count IV of that complaint alleged that Stolt had the right to supervise and control the activities of subcontractors, and that it failed to properly supervise and inspect the construction of the tank's scaffolding in violation of the Structural Work Act. The complaint's other counts were directed at defendants who were involved in the manufacture or sale of the waterblasting equipment.
On November 23, 1993, Stolt filed a third-party complaint against Gundersen. Counts I and II sought indemnity for all losses that were the proximate result of wrongful acts or breach of contract by Gundersen. Count III sought contribution to the extent that Gundersen's wrongful acts caused decedent's death.
On December 22, 1993, Gundersen moved to strike the ad damnum clause of count III *1196 of Stolt's complaint for its failure to limit Gundersen's contribution liability to Gundersen's workers' compensation liability, as dictated by Kotecki. The trial court granted the motion on September 6, 1994.
On September 16, 1994, Stolt moved for reconsideration of the order, relying on the August 1994 case of Herington. In Herington, the fifth district held that an employer's contractual agreement to indemnify for its own wrongful acts could waive the Kotecki contribution limit. Gundersen responded that (1) Herington was wrongfully decided, (2) paragraphs seven and eight of the contract sought indemnity rather than contribution and, thus, both violated the Construction Contract Indemnification for Negligence Act (Indemnity Act) (740 ILCS 35/1 (West 1994)), and (3) Gundersen could not have waived its Kotecki rights through a 1990 contract because Kotecki was decided in 1991. Gundersen also moved for summary judgment as to all three counts. On February 2, 1995, the trial court agreed with Gundersen's first rationale and denied the motion to reconsider, stating that it was not persuaded by the logic of Herington and felt constrained to follow Kotecki instead. Gundersen tendered its lien to the court on its worker's compensation payments, and the contribution count against it was dismissed with prejudice. The court also granted summary judgment to Gundersen as to counts I and II.
Stolt filed its notice of appeal on May 3, 1995. Stolt has only challenged the dismissal of its count III for unlimited contribution. Stolt concedes that even if counts I and II seeking indemnity could be construed as requesting contribution, they would be redundant and repetitive of count III. In this appeal, Stolt claims that (1) Herington properly decided that the Kotecki limit could be waived, (2) Herington properly concluded that contracts entered into before the Kotecki decision could affect the Kotecki limit, and (3) Stolt's contract with Gundersen called for contribution and did not violate the Indemnity Act.
I
The trial court felt that Herington was wrongfully decided because it violated public policy as established in Kotecki. We disagree. The fourth district recently followed Herington in Braye v. Archer-Daniels-Midland Co.,
Gundersen first contends that the Herington rule "would deprive the employer of the certainty and security provided by liability limitation." However, if the employer has chosen to bargain away this advantage, it must be receiving a benefit greater than this "certainty and security." Gundersen also argues that Herington undermines the public policies supporting the Joint Tortfeasor Contribution Act (740 ILCS 100/0.01 et seq. (West 1994)) by allowing for contractual contribution. Nevertheless, the contract at issue *1197 does not call for contractual contribution but rather eliminates the Kotecki exception to the Contribution Act, putting the employer in the same position as other joint tortfeasors just as if it had not raised the workers' compensation liability defense. See Braye,
Lastly, Gundersen claims that our decision violates the public policy of the Contribution Act by precluding its ability to settle with the plaintiffs and be dismissed from the case, putting Gundersen in a worse position than other tortfeasors. See 740 ILCS 100/2(d) (West 1994). Gundersen is correct that it cannot settle with plaintiffs for its workers' compensation liability cap and escape any contribution claim when the cap is less than its "good-faith" share of total liability. See 740 ILCS 100/2(c) (West 1994). However, the contract does not preclude Gundersen from settling with Stolt and escaping all litigation in that manner. Our decision follows the Contribution Act's principle that a settlement with the party to whom you have unlimited liability will allow complete dismissal from the case. Gundersen elected to contractually waive its special protection as an employer and that enhanced settlement ability, but Gundersen's overall ability to settle has not been hampered in this matter substantially more than that of a normal defendant.
II
The next issue is whether a contract reached before the Kotecki decision could relax the Kotecki contribution limit. An enforceable contract must include a meeting of the minds or mutual assent to the terms of the contract. Academy Chicago Publishers v. Cheever,
We disagree, as we conclude that the parties mutually agreed that there would be no limit on contribution liability regardless of the outcome of Kotecki, Before Kotecki, the question of whether there was a limit on employer contribution liability remained unanswered. Kotecki,
Gundersen relies on Braye to support its position. However, Braye fully agreed with the Herington decision involving that pre-Kotecki contract, as Braye stated that "we believe the [Herington] employer was liable for unlimited contribution." Braye,
III
The final issue is whether the contractual terms in this matter called for contribution or for indemnity in violation of the Indemnity Act. The Indemnity Act states:
"With respect to contracts or agreements, either public or private, for the construction, alteration, repair or maintenance of a building structure, * * * every covenant, promise or agreement to indemnify or hold harmless another person from that person's own negligence is void as against public policy and wholly unenforceable." 740 ILCS 35/1 (West 1994).
A court will not declare a contract illegal unless it expressly contravenes the law, as public policy itself strongly favors freedom to contract. Rome v. Upton,
We first conclude that paragraph seven allows for indemnity of Stolt's own negligence and therefore violates the Indemnity Act. Paragraph seven states:
"If Vendor performs services * * * Vendor agrees to indemnify and hold harmless Stolt * * * of all sums of money by reason of all accidents, injuries, or damages to persons or property that may happen or occur in connection therewith."
This language calls for full indemnity regardless of the relative fault of the parties, and, thus, paragraph seven is void under the Indemnity Act. Stolt could even be 100% at fault and still receive indemnity from Gundersen. There is nothing in this language that would prevent Gundersen from indemnifying Stolt for its own negligence or calls for distribution of loss according to relative culpability. Thus, paragraph seven is unenforceable and cannot serve to prevent the Kotecki contribution limit from operating. See Braye,
Stolt asserts that the contract cannot indemnify Stolt against its own negligence unless that intention is expressed in explicit and unequivocal terms, relying on Westinghouse Electric Elevator Co. v. La-Salle Monroe Building Corp.,
Examining paragraph eight of the contract, we conclude that it does not *1199 expressly violate the Indemnity Act because its terms can reasonably be construed to preclude any indemnification of Stolt for its own negligence. A contract is properly found ambiguous when the language used is susceptible to more than one meaning (Meyer v. Marilyn Miglin, Inc.,
"Vendor represents and warrants that no Federal or State Statute * * * will be violated in the manufacturing, sale, and delivery of any article or service sold and delivered hereunder, and if such violation has or does occur, Vendor shall indemnify and hold harmless Stolt Terminals (Chicago) Inc., from all loss, penalties, or the payment of all sums of money on account of such violation."
The contract does not address whether the vendee could possibly be associated with the "manufacturing, sale, and delivery" of vendor's services and, thus, is ambiguous as to this issue. However, we believe that in ordinary meaning and under standard custom, a vendee will have no responsibility for the manufacturing, sale, and delivery of a vendor's services. Moreover, after comparing the restrictive nature of paragraph eight to the sweeping language of paragraph seven, we conclude that the phrase "manufacturing, sale and delivery" was likely meant to specifically limit all focus to vendor's conduct. See Wilson v. Wilson,
Gundersen first contends that by using the term "indemnity," the plain meaning of the contract's language calls for indemnity for all losses and not contribution. However, Herington strongly supports our decision, as the language in its contract was almost identical to that of paragraph eight:
"`Subcontractor hereby assumes the entire liability for its own negligence * * * Subcontractor agrees to indemnify and save harmless Contractor and its agents, servants and employees, from and against all loss, expense, damage or injury, including legal fees, that Contractor may sustain as a result of any claims predicated or [sic] said allegations of Subcontractor's own negligence or on Subcontractor's alleged violation of the Structural Work Act as above set forth.'" Herington,266 Ill. App.3d at 491 ,203 Ill.Dec. 348 ,639 N.E.2d 907 .
Herington concluded that its contract called for contribution because the contract allowed recovery according to the parties' relative culpability. See also Stevens v. Silver Manufacturing Co.,
Gundersen next calls on us to construe the contract against Stolt because contracts are construed against the drafter if ambiguity is present. Signal Capital Corp. v. Lake Shore National Bank,
Gundersen also relies on Braye, where the court held that its contract was void because it called for indemnity. The contract in Braye stated, "`except to the extent that any such injury or damage is due solely and directly to [ADM's] or its customer's negligence, as the case may be, [All Trill] shall pay [ADM] for all loss which may result in any way from any act or omission of [All Tri-R] * * *.'" Braye,
Further, Gundersen argues that even a valid contribution provision violates the Indemnity Act if applied within the context of the Structural Work Act, relying on Pettie v. Williams Brothers Construction, Inc.,
While we remand because paragraph eight could allow for unlimited contribution, we express no opinion on whether Stolt will be able to establish the contract's requirements that a statutory violation occurred in the manufacture, sale, or delivery of Gundersen's services. The trial court has not yet confronted this issue, and, thus, we lack the data to make such a determination in this appeal.
For the foregoing reasons, the order of the trial court dismissing count III is reversed and set aside, and the cause is remanded for further proceedings in accordance herewith.
Reversed and remanded.
GORDON and HOURIHANE, JJ., concur.
