delivered the opinion of the court:
Production Engineering Company (Production) appeals from the denial of its motion for summary judgment and the grant of summary judgment in favor of Cam Fran Tool Company (Cam Fran). Production contends that the trial court erred in its determination of the triggering date of the limitations period involved in this indemnity action and in its determination that Cam Fran had not waived the limitations defense. Production asks that we reverse the trial court’s entry of summary judgment for Cam Fran and denial of Production’s motion, enter summary judgment for Production and deny Cam Fran’s motion, and remand the cause to address damages. For the following reasons, we affirm.
BACKGROUND
In 1979, Production and Cam Fran entered into a contract in which Production would sell, and Cam Fran would buy, a punch press machine. Part of this contract included Form PE-77, which stated Cam Fran was to indemnify Production for “any claims, damages, losses, costs and expenses *** including but not limited to attorney’s fees [and] court costs *** arising out of or resulting from” work performed under the contract. Form PE-77 also made clear that “any legal action taken to enforce any of the provisions of this contract must be commenced within one (1) year after such cause of action arises.”
In 1994, Manuel Medrano (Medrano), an employee of Cam Fran, was injured while operating the punch press machine. In February 1995, Medrano filed a complaint naming Production as a party defendant. On July 10, 1995, Production was served with Medrano’s complaint. Soon after, in October 1995, Production filed its answer and appearance in the cause.
On April 15, 1997, Production filed a third-party complaint against Cam Fran seeking indemnification for all costs it expended in relation to Medrano’s underlying action. Cam Fran answered, denying all liability but failing to include the affirmative defense of the one-year limitations period found in Form PE-77 of the sales contract.
Production filed a motion for summary judgment against Medrano, which was granted in May 2000. However, that order was not final and appealable. Production then filed a motion for summary judgment against Cam Fran. Cam Fran responded by filing a cross-motion for summary judgment, arguing that because the contract set a one-year limitations period for indemnification purposes, and because that period began to run no later than October 1995 when Production answered Medrano’s complaint, Production’s April 15, 1997, claim against Cam Fran for indemnification was time-barred. Production responded that Cam Fran had waived the limitations defense because it had not raised it in its August 1999 answer to Production’s complaint but instead waited until its cross-motion to argue it. Production also insisted that even if this defense was not waived, Production’s indemnification claim arose not in October 1995, but in May 2000, when it received summary judgment against Medrano. Cam Fran presented arguments to refute these contentions and asked the trial court for leave to file an amended answer which would include the limitations defense. Cam Fran submitted this proposed amended answer to the trial court in the form of a footnote in its reply in support of its cross-motion for summary judgment.
Meanwhile, the underlying cause of action was settled on October 5, 2000. The trial court allowed Production and Cam Fran to file briefs on the indemnity issue and held a hearing on their motions. On December 20, 2000, the trial court issued a written order. In it, the court found that Form PE-77 of the sales contract established a one-year limitations period for Production’s indemnification claim. Then, relying on Guzman v. C.R. Epperson Construction, Inc.,
As for Cam Fran’s motion for leave to file its amended complaint, the trial court did not address it in the written order. Cam Fran pointed this out to the court. Production objected, but did so only on the ground that Cam Fran had not raised the limitations defense before. In response, the court held that Cam Fran’s amended answer “should be a part of the record.”
ANALYSIS
Production appeals from the trial court’s denial of its motion for summary judgment. “The purpose of summary judgment is to determine whether a question of fact exists ***.” West v. Northeastern Illinois R.R. Corp.,
A. The Triggering Date of the Limitations Period
Production’s first contention on appeal is that the trial court erred in finding that the limitations period on its indemnity claim against Cam Fran began to run on July 10, 1995, the date Production was served with Medrano’s complaint.
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Instead, Production, relying heavily on Kerschner v. Weiss & Co.,
It is undisputed that Production and Cam Fran entered into a valid contract for the sale of the punch press machine, a contract which included an indemnity provision and a one-year limitations period. That is, both parties agreed in Form PE-77 that Production would have one year from the date a legal cause of action arose to institute an indemnity claim against Cam Fran. The parties chose to shorten the general statute of limitations applicable to these cases, which would have allowed for a longer period. See 735 ILCS 5/13 — 214 (West 2000). Even were Production to now challenge this change, it is well established that parties to a contract may agree upon a shortened contractual limitations period to replace a statute of limitations, as long as it is reasonable. See Florsheim v. Travelers Indemnity Co. of Illinois,
Nor does either party contest that Production was served with Medrano’s complaint, the underlying action, on July 10, 1995. Therefore, the question at issue is when exactly was the trigger date for the contractual one-year limitations period.
Production cites Kerschner for the proposition that its indemnity claim did not arise until the underlying action was decided, i.e., on either May 10, 2000, or October 5, 2000. Thus, its April 15, 1997, claim for indemnity was not time-barred by the contract’s one-year limitations period.
In Kerschner, several partners in an accounting firm retained an attorney to provide professional advice and services to help them leave their firm and create a new one. In the underlying action, the partners sued their former firm, demanding that the firm surrender certain client files. The former firm then filed a separate action against the partners. The partners brought a third-party complaint against the attorney for negligence in relation to his professional advice. The trial court awarded summary judgment to the attorney.
On appeal, the main issue was whether the partners could maintain this third-party action against the attorney for implied indemnity. See Kerschner,
While Production correctly cites Kerschner, more on point, both factually and legally, is the Illinois Supreme Court’s recent disposition of Guzman upon review. See Guzman v. C.R. Epperson Construction, Inc.,
The trial court granted summary judgment for the subcontractors, holding that the letters showed that Epperson knew about the allegations in 1990, that the four-year statute of limitations began to run at that time, and that, because Epperson did not file its third-party indemnity actions until 1996, they were time-barred. See Guzman,
Our supreme court then analyzed this case, vacating the decision of the appellate court and reversing the decision of the trial court. See Guzman,
From all this, it is clear that Guzman is more similar to the instant case than Kerschner and should be followed. While Guzman has not explicitly overruled Kerschner, we note that Guzman comes from our state supreme court, some six years after our district decided Kerschner. Moreover, the issue in Kerschner was quite different from that in the instant case. Kerschner generally asked whether a third-party implied indemnity action may be maintained in that particular fact situation. Guzman, meanwhile, presented the supreme court with the same specific issue the instant case does: on what date is the limitations period for a third-party indemnity action triggered? Also, Production’s arguments regarding the proper time for filing match Epperson’s, which the supreme court found unpersuasive — much as Epperson claimed that its indemnity action did not arise until it suffered an injury when the homeowners filed their complaint or voluntarily dismissed it, Production insists it could not have sued Cam Fran until Production paid attorney fees and/or Medrano’s underlying claim was resolved. Furthermore, the instant case deals with a claim of express indemnity, originating from a specific contractual provision between Production and Cam Fran. Kerschner concerned only the special situation of implied indemnity, while Guzman involved claims for both express and implied indemnity. The supreme court noted that its decision — i.e., that a limitations period for a third-party action begins to run on the date of service of the underlying complaint— applied to all third-party actions, including ones based on express indemnity.
The parties here expressly agreed in Form PE-77 that Cam Fran would indemnify Production for costs Production would incur from the work done, as long as Production commenced this legal action within one year from when the cause of action for indemnity arose. Pursuant to our supreme court’s holding in Guzman, the trigger date for this limitations period was July 10, 1995, the day when Production was served with Medrano’s complaint. At that moment, Production knew that specific allegations were being brought against it arising from the punch press machine it had sold to Cam Fran. Production, then, was required to file its indemnity claim against Cam Fran within one year — July 10, 1996. However, Production chose to wait some 21 months and instead filed the claim on April 15, 1997. This is unacceptable under Guzman. Therefore, because we find no genuine issue of material fact as to when Production was required to file its indemnity claim, we conclude that the trial court properly granted summary judgment in favor of Cam Fran, since Production’s claim was time-barred.
B. Waiver of the Limitations Defense
Production next contends on appeal that the trial court erred in finding that Cam Fran did not waive its one-year limitations period defense by first raising it in its cross-motion for summary judgment. Production argues that Cam Fran, in order to successfully argue this affirmative defense, needed to raise it in its answer to Production’s third-party indemnity complaint. Production also asserts that while it may have been acceptable for Cam Fran to wait until its summary judgment motion, Cam Fran failed to present the defense in a proper procedural manner. Even were we to bypass our conclusion above that already resolves this case (that Production’s indemnity claim against Cam Fran was time-barred), and instead choose to address the merits of the present argument, we disagree with Production.
As noted, Production filed its indemnity claim against Cam Fran in April 1997. Cam Fran filed its answer in August 1999. In this answer, Cam Fran denied liability but failed to assert the one-year limitations period found in its contract with Production as an affirmative defense. The case progressed and Production moved for summary judgment. Cam Fran responded with its own cross-motion for summary judgment in October 2000. At this time, it first asserted the limitations period as an affirmative defense and asked the trial court for leave to file an amended answer, a proposal of which it included in a footnote in its reply in support of its cross-motion for summary judgment. After the trial court granted Cam Fran’s motion for summary judgment, Cam Fran pointed out that the court failed to address its motion for leave to amend. The court held that Cam Fran’s amended answer “should be a part of the record.”
We acknowledge Production’s argument that defenses such as the statute of limitations, or as in this case a contractual limitations period, are to be set out completely and plainly in a party’s answer to a complaint. See 735 ILCS 5/2 — 613(d) (West 1998); Rognant v. Palacios,
In fact, several cases have addressed the same situation now presented to us, in which a party first asserts a limitations period defense in its motion for summary judgment instead of in its answer. Those cases have found that the requirement that this affirmative defense be set forth in an answer “does not place a restriction on motions for summary judgment.” Salazar v. State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Co.,
Therefore, although Cam Fran first raised the one-year limitations period as an affirmative defense in its cross-motion for summary judgment rather than in its August 1999 answer to Production’s indemnity complaint, Cam Fran did not waive this defense. Rather, based on the authority cited above, we find that the trial court properly considered this defense.
Production asserts that even if Cam Fran did not waive this defense by failing to include it in its answer, the trial court erred in considering it because Cam Fran never filed an amended answer, has yet to do so, and presented this defense in an inappropriate manner — in a footnote in its reply in support of its cross-motion for summary judgment. We disagree. First, we note that Production has waived this argument. When Production objected to Cam Fran’s insistence that the trial court address the amendment, it did so only on substantive grounds, never on the ground that the proposed amendment was procedurally improper (was not a separate document, had no affidavits attached, etc.). See People ex rel. Foreman v. Village of Round Lake Park,
Despite waiver, the record does indicate that Cam Fran, upon asking the trial court for leave to amend its answer, presented the court with the limitations period defense, not as a separate document, but rather as a footnote to its written reply. Also, at oral argument in this case, Cam Fran admitted that it has yet to officially file an affirmative defense to include the limitations period. However, contrary to Production’s contentions, this is not fatal to Cam Fran.
A trial court may allow a party to amend its answer and add new defenses at any time before final judgment is entered in the cause. See 735 ILCS 5/2 — 616(a) (West 1998); Ocasek v. City of Chicago,
Here, it can easily be said that Cam Fran knew of the one-year contractual limitations period and that it would come into play the moment Production filed the indemnity claim against it. The record indicates that Cam Fran neglected to include the period as a defense in its answer, and upon realizing this, sought leave to amend. However, the record also shows that Production suffered little, if any, prejudice. First, Production certainly could not claim surprise at Cam Fran’s raising of the limitations defense; Production wrote the contract for sale between the parties, including Form PE-77, which contained the limitations provision. It knew, just as Cam Fran did, that any cause of action for indemnity would focus on this contract and, more likely than not, on the contents of Form PE-77. In conjunction with this, Production could not contend that it did not have time to respond to this “new” defense. See Horwitz,
Finally, “[i]t has been said that a test for whether a trial court’s discretion has been properly exercised is whether the amendment furthers the ends of justice.” Foreman,
From all this, then, it is obvious that Production was not prejudiced by what occurred here. And from the court’s desire to include Cam Fran’s amendment as “part of the record,” it is clear that remanding this case to demand that Cam Fran follow certain procedural aspects of amending its answer is simply an unnecessary exercise. Accordingly, we find no abuse of discretion on the part of the trial court below in including as part of the record, and considering, Cam Fran’s proposed amended answer to add the contractual one-year limitations period as an affirmative defense in this case.
C. SECTION 13 — 204
Production’s final contention on appeal is that the trial court erred in relying on section 13 — 204(b) (735 ILCS 5/13 — 204(b) (West 2000)) to decide this cause. In its appellate brief, Production asserts section 13 — 204(c) makes clear that section 13 — 204(b) did not apply to this case, and thus, Guzman and the trial court’s reliance on it is wholly inapplicable to the instant case. Moreover, Production argues that if we hold section 13 — 204 does apply, that section then extends the statute of limitations in this case to two years from any trigger date fashioned by the court. Cam Fran, in its brief, agrees that section 13 — 204 does not apply, but for other reasons; that is, the parties formed a contractual limitations period, and whereas section 13 — 204 deals with limitations periods created by statute when no contract exists, it has no relevance here. Production then counters in its reply brief that Cam Fran’s concession to the inapplicability of section 13— 204 means that we are left with no trigger date imposed by statute and thus Kerschner, requiring that judgment or settlement be entered before an indemnity claim may be filed, defines when the statute of limitations begins to run. While we agree that section 13 — 204 does not apply to the instant case, we disagree with Production’s proposed result.
Section 13 — 204 provides the statute of limitations our legislature has devised for indemnification claims. Subsection (b) states what the statute of limitations is in instances where an underlying action has been filed (two years), and describes the trigger date (when a party is served with the underlying action or when it knows/should have known of the act or omission giving rise to the indemnity claim, whichever is later). Subsection (c) then clarifies that subsection (b)
“shall preempt, as to contribution and indemnity actions only, all other statutes of limitation or repose, but only to the extent that the claimant in an underlying action could have timely sued the party from whom contribution or indemnity is sought at the time such claimant filed the underlying action.” 735 ILCS 5/13 — 204(c) (West 2000).
From this, Production reasons that because Medrano was an employee of Cam Fran when he filed his underlying complaint and could not “timely sue” Cam Fran, subsection (b), under the conditions of subsection (c), does not apply here. Production extends this argument to conclude that because of this, the trial court’s “reliance on” subsection (b) in writing its order, as well as on Guzman which too cites subsection (b), was erroneous. However, Production mischaracterizes several aspects of what occurred.
First, and most significantly, Production fails to acknowledge a vital concept here: section 13 — 204 deals with the statute of limitations for indemnity actions — in essence, the law that governs when the parties involved make no other provision for when such an action will accrue, i.e., a default plan. It is true that section 13 — 204 will “preempt” other statutes of limitation, but it does not apply here. However, this is not because Medrano could not timely sue Cam Fran. Rather, section 13 — 204 is inapplicable because the parties in the instant case formed and agreed upon a contractual limitations period, which, as long as it is reasonable, does not allow them to fall back upon the default-statute of limitations. See Florsheim,
Though we understand Production’s claim of error, it is clear upon review of the trial court’s written order that, contrary to Production’s assertions, the court did not “rely on” subsection (b) in arriving at its decision that the limitations period in this case was one year. The court did mention section 13 — 204(b), and in fact cited its language. However, Production takes this out of context. The court was reviewing Form PE-77 and found that its “plain terms” indicated that Production was required to commence the indemnity claim within one year of the underlying cause of action in order for it to be timely. Then, in an attempt to legally support the conclusion that this period began to run when Production was served with Medrano’s complaint, the court highlighted section 13 — 204(b)’s language, in bold letters, that no indemnity action may be commenced more than two years after the party “has been served with process in the underlying action.” 735 ILCS 5/13 — 204(b) (West 2000). The court did this to point out that our legislature, in fashioning the default-statute of limitations provision, declared that the trigger date is the date of service and that this should not change in the instant case simply because a contract is involved. There is no indication, as Production seems to indicate, that the trial court was using the actual statutory two-year period in making its decision. To the contrary, the court, at various times, declared that the contract between Production and Cam Fran governed and its one-year limitations period was determinative.
As for Production’s contention that Guzman too was inapplicable, that fails on similar grounds. Again, from the context of the trial court’s order, it is clear that the court referred to Guzman because it was a very recent case that analyzed trigger dates in third-party indemnity actions. The Guzman court had to rely upon section 13— 204’s two-year statutory period because the parties in that case, unlike those here, never contracted to change it. In other words, the statutory default came into play. The trial court did not use Guzman for the proposition that section 13 — 204(b)’s two-year period governed Production and Cam Fran’s situation. Again, the main issue here was to find when the one-year contractual limitations period started, not whether the statutory two-year period preempted this contractual one. The court referred to Guzman, just as it had referred to section 13— 204(b), to emphasize that a limitations period in an indemnity action, whatever it may be, begins to run when the underlying cause is filed and the party is served. Guzman, thus, was quite on point with the instant case.
Therefore, we conclude that the trial court did not err in mentioning section 13 — 204 or Guzman in its written order. It relied on these for their legal analysis, not their factual outcomes, and merely applied their analysis to the operative facts in the instant case. We find no abuse of discretion.
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons we affirm the holding of the trial court.
Affirmed.
Notes
The note for the record that Production cites February 28, 1995 (the initial filing of Medrano’s complaint), and October 11, 1995 (the filing of Production’s answer to Medrano’s complaint), in its appellate brief and asserts that the trial court designated them, without any legal authority, as “alternative dates” on which the limitations period began to run. However, it is clear from the trial court’s written order that this is incorrect. The court firmly designated only one date, July 10,1995 — the day Production was served with Medrano’s complaint — as the date triggering the limitations period on the indemnity action.
Unlike in the instant case, the parties in Guzman had not contracted for a shorter, or different, limitations period. Therefore, the four-year statute of limitations set forth in section 13 — 214 (735 ILCS 5/13 — 214 (West 2000)) governing construction and design controlled.
