MEMORANDUM OPINION
Thеse cases present the question whether an insured person or entity may under Illinois common law maintain a claim against an insurer for its bad faith conduct in handling a claim under an insurance policy. We are invited to reconsider our recent holding in
Kelly v. Stratton,
An Illinois statute, Ill.Rev.Stat. ch. 73, § 767 (1981), provides for an award of attorney’s fees, costs, and a limited penalty upon a showing that an insurer acted vexatiously and unreasonably in connection with an insurance claim.
1
Some districts of the Illinois Appellate Court have interpreted the most recent version of § 767 as precluding any common law recovery based upon an insurer’s bad faith.
See Hamilton
v.
Safeway Insurance Co.,
Given the lack of an Illinois Supreme Court ruling on the effect of § 767 and the divergent appellate holdings, the issue we
*539
faced in
Kelly
presented difficult questions of determination of state law under
Erie R. Co. v. Tompkins,
I
The first question is the effect of the various Illinois intermediate appellate decisions concerning § 767. In
Kelly,
we held that while the appellate court decisions provided “data” for our determination of state law, they were not controlling.
Kelly,
It is true, as Judge Shadur suggests, that we must avoid applying a rule that would permit a litigant to forum shop by choosing to bring his action in federal court if he found the law of the relevant statе appellate district unfavorable, hoping to find a more sympathetic ear on the federal bench.
See Bernhardt v. Polygraphic Co. of America, Inc.,
The proposition that we must act as state trial judges stems from a misapprehension of the commands of
Erie
and its progeny.
Erie
requires a federal court to apply the substantive law of the forum state; we take this to mean that we must apply the law that
ultimately
would be applied were the case to be litigated in the
*540
state courts. While intermediate appellate decisions exert upon us a high degree of persuasive force, and while they may be binding upon state trial courts, the law we must apply is that which the state supreme court would apply.
5
In a given case we may choose to follow an intermediate appellate ruling, but we may not end our analysis of state law with mere citation to such rulings where we are persuaded that the state supreme court would rule otherwise.
See generally In re Air Crash Disaster Near Chicago, Illinois on May 25, 1979,
The policy behind this principle is Erie’s concern with avoiding forum shopping between state and federal courts. Applying the law that the state supreme court would follow is necessary if we are to avoid creating an incentive for such forum shopping. The “state trial court” approach creates an incentive for forum shopping in that it requires the federal courts to give more weight to state intermediate appellate decisions than they would be given in the state system. This may be illustrated by three examples.
In a case in which no supreme court decision exists and the appellate district of proper state venue has not yet taken a position on an issue,
Commercial Discount
would require a federal court to follow the law as declared by the other appellate districts.
Commercial Discount,
The same is true even where “First District law” exists. The First District has five divisions. It appears that the different divisions do not consider themselves bound by the holdings of other divisions.
See, e.g., Bonnano v. Potthoff,
To note an example of recent origin, a controversy existed within the First District over the question whether a prosecutor must justify his or her use, within a particular case, of peremptory challenges to exclude minority group members from a jury.
Compare People
v.
Gosberry,
The third type of forum shopping permitted by Commercial Discount is somewhat more subtle. The.doctrine of that case requires federal courts to give more weight to state appellate decisions than the rendering courts themselves would give them. The “state law” that Erie requires us to follow also includes the power of a state court to reexamine its earlier holdings based upon “data” not considered in the earlier decision; Erie, we think, permits a federal court to exercise the same authority. As two noted commentators have stated,
Unless a federal court is allowed this much freedom and flexibility, the Erie doctrine simply would have substituted one kind of forum-shopping for another. The lawyer whose case was dependent on an ancient or shaky state court decision that might no longer be followed within the state would have a strong incentive to bring the suit in or remove it to federal court, hoping that the state decision *542 could not be impeached under the mechanicаl application of existing state precedents that the Erie doctrine was once thought to require. Moreover, to give state court decisions more binding effect than they would have in the state court system would undermine the ability of the federal courts to ensure that the outcome of the litigation be substantially the same as it would be if tried in a state court and subjected to that system’s appellate process.
19 C. Wright, A. Miller & Cooper, Federal Practice and Procedure § 4507 at 89-91 (1982) (emphasis supplied). 9
Thus, Commercial Discount does permit forum-shopping of a sort, in that a federal court is required to give state intermediate appellate precedent more weight than it would carry in other state appellate tribunals and even in the rendering panel itself. These are “uncertaint[ies] already present in state law.” Commercial Discount, 552 F.Supp. at 852 (emphasis in original). The view we espoused in Kelly — application in all cases of the “Supreme Court predictive” approach — has the disadvantage of being something less than a bright line, easily applicable rule. 10 It is, however, faithful to Erie and its progeny. 11
In addition to its potential for encouraging forum shopping, Commercial Discount will, at least in some cases, give rise to a waste of litigants’ and courts’ resources. Where a state apрellate court has ignored a critically important “datum” of state law- — in Kelly v. Stratton, certain doctrines of statutory construction — and has reached a result that is incorrect even as a matter of state law, Commercial Discount *543 would require us to follow the appellate court ruling and reach a similarly erroneous result, despite the existence of persuasive reasons for believing that the state supreme court would not so hold. 12 As Judge Shadur presumably would not require a federal appellate court to act as a state trial court (because the two are not “counterparts”), the result is to require the district court to commit error and leave it to the court of appeals to correct the error. 13 So read, Commercial Discount elevates form over substance and promotes the needless expenditure of courts’ and litigants’ resources. 14 We do not find in Erie or its progeny the rigidity that Commercial Discount appears to require.
The principles of Illinois stare decisis to which we have made reference must be recognized by a federal diversity court if it is to avoid the forum shopping potential recognized by Wright and Miller in the quoted passage. Again, the central principle is that we must give appellate court holdings their due where the supreme court has not spoken, but we must not give them more than their due. This will require resort to the “Supreme Court predictive approach,” but to do otherwise would be to ignore the policy of Erie and its progeny. That policy is the avoidance of forum shopping. When we apply the law that ultimately would be applied were the case litigated in state court, we are fully faithful to Erie. By contrast, to act as a state trial court, following intermediate appellate decisions that are erroneous as a matter of state law, not only would violate the policy of Erie, but would also elevate form over substance, as the court of appeals, assuming the role of its state counterpart, would apply the correct rule of state law. 15
Erie requires us, in all cases, to apply the rule of law that the state supreme court would follow. Despite our rejection of the state trial court approach, however, we are not east adrift without a rudder. Several general rules exist to guide our construction of state law.
One such rule is that a federal court should not attempt “dramatic innovation” in state law.
Murphy v. White Hen Pantry Co.,
Another set of guideposts is set forth in
McKenna
v.
Ortho Pharmaceutical Corp.,
An accurate forecast of [a state’s] law, as it would be expressed by its highest court, requires an examination of all relevant sources of that state’s law in order to isolate those factors that would inform its decision. The primary course that must be analyzed, of course, is the decisional law of the [state] [s]upreme [c]ourt. In the absence of authority directly on point, decisions by that court in analogous cases provide useful indications of the court’s probable disposition of a particular question of law.... [R]elevant state precedents must be scrutinized with an eye toward the broad policies that informed those adjudications, and to the doctrinal trends which they evince.
Considered dicta by the state’s highest court may also provide a federal court with reliable indicia of how the state tribunal might rule on a particular question .... [However,] [a]s Professor Charles Alan Wright has written, “much depends on the character of the dictum.” Of somewhat less importance to a prognostication of what the highest state court will do are decisions of lower state courts and other federal courts. Such decisions should be accorded “proper regard” of course, but not conclusive effect.
Id. at 662 (footnotes omitted). 17
In addition, it is clear that we may not disregard intermediate state appellate decisions in determining state law.
See, e.g., West v. A.T. & T. Co.,
*545
The approach we advocate does not have the advantage of being a bright line rule. However, a federal court cannot avoid, at least in somе cases, gazing into a crystal ball. While it is true that
Erie
requires us to parrot state law rather than determine the “better rule,” we must avoid the danger of “giving ‘a state court decision a more binding effect than would a state court of that state under similar circumstances.’ ”
McKenna v. Ortho Pharmaceutical Corp.,
II
We must next apply these general rules to the cases at bar. First, we will briefly describe the present cases.
A
Roberts v. Western-Southern Life Insurance Co., (No. 82 C 6789) was removed from the Circuit Court of Cook County. Plaintiffs, two minor children and their mother, allege that they are the beneficiaries of three life insurance policies taken out by their father and husband. Mr. Roberts was killed in February 1981, allegedly while attempting to defend himself from a person wielding a gun. Plaintiffs allege that they complied with all conditions precedent to recovery on the policies but that the insurers refused to pay, without reasonable cause. The company denied coverage under an exclusion relating to death while committing or attempting to commit a felony. Plaintiffs request recovery on the policies and unspecified “compensatory and punitive damages.”
Union National Bank of Chicago v. United States Fire Insurance Co., (No. 82 C 5628) was filed in this court. Defendants are alleged to be incorporated and to have their principal places of business in states other than Illinois. As best we can tell, had the case been filed in state court, it could have been brought in any Illinois county. See Ill.Rev.Stat. ch. 110, § 2-101 (1981). The plaintiffs are both banks that purchased insurance policies to protect themselves against losses resulting from having extended credit, acquired, sold, delivered, given value, or assumed liability on the faith of any security, document, or instrument that proves to have been counterfeited, lost, stolen, or altered, or that carries forged signatures. They claim they filed timely and proper claims under the policies but that defendants refused to pay. Plaintiffs claim in counts 2 and 4 that defendants’ conduct violated certain standards set forth in Illinois statutes for the settlement of claims, including the lack of a good faith attempt to settle and the absence of reasonable standards for the payment of claims. They also allege that defendants’ conduct was “willful and malicious.” They request compensatory relief amounting to the sums due on the policies, punitive damages, prejudgment interest, and attorneys’s fees.
In Roberts, defendants have moved to strike plaintiffs’ punitive damages claims. In Union National Bank, defendants have moved to dismiss the counts containing the punitive damages claims.
B
As was implicit in Kelly v. Stratton, the question whether the Illinois Supreme *546 Court would recognize a common law cause of action for damages based on an insurer’s bad faith conduct is actually composed of two sub-questions. The first is that of the preclusive effect of Ill.Rev.Stat. ch. 73, § 767 (1981). If we determine that the legislature did not intend § 767 to limit the courts’ common law authority, we must then determine whether the supreme court would recognize the common law tort. We will address these questions in turn.
1
The earliest version of § 767 was enacted in 1937. It provided that upon a court’s determination that an insurer’s refusal to pay acclaim, or its suit to cancel a policy, was “vexatious and without reasonable cause,” it could award a prevailing insured person “reasonable attorney’s fees, as a part of the taxable costs in the action and in addition to all other costs,” not to exceed a specified sum. 20 In 1967, the legislature amended § 767, increasing the amount of attorney’s fees a court could award. 21
In 1977, the legislature again amended the statute to its current version, which provides that the court may award the insured reasonable attorney’s fees and a separate amount, not to exceed certain specified sums. 22 The legislature also changed slightly the wording of the finding needed to make the award, from “vexatious and without reasonable cause” to “vexatious and unreasonable.” Ill.Rev.Stat. ch. 73, § 767 (1981).
Defendants first argue that the 1937 statute operated to preclude the courts’ authority to recognize a common law bad faith tort. They read the 1967 and 1977 amendments as merely changing the amounts awardable under the statute and thus as retaining whatever preclusive effect the 1937 statute had. We do not agree with either of these arguments.
In 1937, and indeed in 1967, no Illinois court had yet recognized that an insured could maintain a lawsuit against an insurer for its bad faith handling of a first party insurance claim
23
Defendants argue that because the legislature wrote on a clean slate in 1937, the remedy provided by the statute must be considered exclusive.
See Hall v. Gillins,
The present case differs from
Hall
and
Cunningham,
and not merely in degree. Both of those cases rejected common law actions seeking greater relief than the maximum allowed by statute where the elements of the common law action and thе elements of damages recoverable were substantially similar to those of the statutory actions. Because there was an identity between the two actions, it was thought unreasonable to hold that the legislature intended the courts to permit recovery of amounts greater than those the legislature had concluded were justified for exactly the same conduct, and for the same “items” of damages.
See Hall,
In
Lynch v. Mid-America Fire and Marine Insurance Co.,
We turn next to the effect of the 1977 amendment. In determining the legislature’s intent in 1977, we do not find
Hall v. Gillins
and
Cunningham v. Brown
controlling. In 1977, the legislature was no longer writing on a clean slate, for in 1975,
Ledingham
had been decided and as of 1977 had not been contradicted. Thus, in 1977,
*548
an Illinois appellate-level court had recognized a common law right of recovery based on an insurer’s bad faith conduct,
28
and no court had yet considered the preclusive effect, if any, of § 767. In these circumstances,
Hall v. Gillins
does not control because the “common law,” such as it was in 1977, had recognized a right to recover in the
Ledingham
situation.
29
See Wright v. Central Du Page Hospital Assn.,
Like the pre-1977 statute, the post-1977 statute aims at something different than the common lаw tort and does so in a different manner than the common law action. As we will discuss
infra,
the statute permits a penalty — punitive damages — to be awarded on a showing of “vexatious and unreasonable” conduct, probably an objective standard,
see Evaluation Systems, Inc. v. Aetna Life Insurance Co.,
In addition, the court in
Smith
suggested that the “compensatory damages” still available under the
Tobolt
view of § 767— recovery on the insurance policy, attorney’s fees, and costs — duplicate those available under the common law tort. However, in a common law action, other compensatory damages may be available, for example, other pecuniary losses caused by the insurer’s conduct.
See generally Fletcher v. Western National Life Insurance Co.,
To determine the legislature’s intent when it amended § 767, we look first to the language of the statute.
See, e.g., Potts v. Industrial Commission,
In addition, even apart from what we have termed the “legislative history” of the 1977 amendment, upon which
Kelly v. Stratton
was in large part based, established tools of statutory construction would require us to construe the statute so as not to cover the field.
Ledingham
was, as of 1977, binding on all Illinois trial courts.
See Commercial Discount,
The circumstances surrounding the adoption of the 1977 amendment provide further support for this conclusion. In
Kelly
we noted that during final consideration of the amendments, the floor manager in the Illinois House of Representatives noted that the bill had “[come] out of the Insurance Laws Study Commission,” and that the original version had been amended “to conform with some of the problems that the industry had.”
Kelly v. Stratton,
Given our discussion of the applicable Illinois doctrines of statutory construction, we need not refer to the Final Report to support the conclusion that § 767 does not *550 evince a preclusive intent. In any event, Western-Southern’s arguments that we should not consider the report fall short of the mark.
Western-Southern’s main argument is based on the affidavit of former State Representative Bernard E. Epton (“Epton”), prepared for the purposes of this case. Epton was a member of the general assembly from 1969 through 1983, a member of the House Insurance Committee, and chairman of the Insuranсe Laws Study Commission (“Commission”) from 1971 through 1983. He signed the Final Report, along with the other Commission members. In his affidavit (“Epton Aff.”), he states that he, industry representatives, and other members of the Commission were of the view that § 767, both before and after the 1977 amendment, “provided the sole source of recovery in Illinois by a first party insurance claimant” for an insurer’s bad faith conduct in handling a claim. Epton Aff. ¶ 6 at 5. Epton terms this an “expressed understanding.”
Id.
We wonder where it was “expressed”; it certainly was not in the Final Report or the statute. In any event, the opinions of individual legislators as to the meaning of legislation do not appear to be relevant under Illinois law, nor does the action of any lobby involved in the passage of legislation.
See Eddy v. Morgan,
Epton also asserts that the insurance industry was behind the bill, as evidenced by the nearly unanimous votes of both houses of the legislature. 34 This, he contends, indicates a consensus that the bill, as amended, “struck an acceptable balance between affording a first party insurance claimant a limited and statutory right to recover a punitive amount from a first party insurer on the one hand and setting a maximum recovery limit for such punitive recovery on the other hand.” Epton Aff. ¶ 6 at 4-5. Under Eddy v. Morgan and Skelton, Epton’s interpretation of the vote does not appear relevant. As we have noted, the legislature is clearly able to make statutory remedies expressly exclusive when it wishes to do so. If such a “consensus” actually existed, we wonder why it was not inserted into the statute or at least reflected in the legislative history. In any event, one need not disagree with Epton’s conclusion to deny it any great weight. While the legislature may have intended to limit the penalties recoverable under the statute, it did not intend to limit an insured’s common law remedies. 35 Epton’s affidavit does not detract from the weight of the Final Report. 36
*551
We must next consider the Illinois decisions concerning the post-1977 statute.
Hoffman v. Allstate Insurance Co.,
85 Ill.App.Bd 631,
None of these cases considered the contemporaneous conditions surrounding the passage of the 1977 amendment to § 767, nor did they consider the doctrines of statutory construction to which we have adverted. We think that the Illinois Supreme Court, were it to consider the impact of § 767, would base its decision on these well-settled doctrines.
See Kelly v. Stratton,
We cannot draw from § 767 legislative intent to limit recovery of compensatory or even punitive damages under common law. It is at least as likely that it meant to create a penalty that an insured could recover with a showing less than that needed to recover punitive damages under common law and that could be recovered even absent a showing justifying an award of compensatory damages. By doing so, however, the legislature did not necessarily mean to preclude recovery of a common law award, in a proper case. In light of the doctrines of statutory construction referred to earlier, this is, in our view, the correct reading of the statute. Following the “Supreme Court predictive approach” to the Erie question presented here, we think that the Illinois Supreme Court would read the statute as we have. 38
*552 2
Our holding that § 767 was not meant to cover the field of compensation for an insurer’s bad faith conduct does not end the inquiry. In order to decide the present motions, we must go on to consider whether the Illinois Supreme Court would follow Ledingham and recognize a common law “bad faith claims practices” tort. We look first to the intermediate Illinois appellate decisions on the issue.
Ledingham v. Blue Cross Plan,
In
Kelsay v. Motorola, Inc.,
Ledingham
is emphatically not “an isolated deviation from the strong current of precedents — a derelict on the waters of the law.”
Lambert
v.
California,
... the law implies in every contract a covenant of good faith and fair dealing. The implied promise requires each contracting party to refrain from doing anything to injure the right of the other to receive the benefits of the agreement. * * * * * *
. .. [an] insurer, when determining whether to settle a claim [within a third-party liability insurance policy], must give at least as much consideration to the welfare of its insured as it gives to its own interests.
The implied covenant imposes obligations not only as to claims by a third party but also as to those by an insured. In both contexts the obligations of the insurer are merely two different aspects of the same duty. When the insurer unreasonably and in bad faith withholds payment of the claim of its insured, it is subject to liability in tort. For the insurer to fulfill its obligation not to impair the right of the insured tо receive the benefits of the agreement, it again must give at least as much consideration to the latter’s interests as it does to its own.
The insured in a contract like the one before us does not seek to obtain a commercial advantage by purchasing the poli *554 cy — rather, he seeks protection against calamity.
The special relationship between the insurer and the insured illustrates the public policy considerations that may support exemplary damages in cases such as this.
As one commentary has noted, “The insurers’ obligations are ... rooted in their status as purveyors of a vital service labeled quasi-public in nature. Suppliers of services affected with a public interest must take the public’s interest seriously, where necessary placing it before their interest in maximizing gains and limiting disbursements ...” The obligations of good faith and fair dealing encompass qualities of decency and humanity inherent in the responsibilities of a fiduciary. Insurers hold themselves out as fiduciaries, and with the public’s trust must go private responsibility consonant with that trust. Furthermore, the relationship of insurer and insured is inherently unbalanced; the adhesive nature of insurance contracts places the insurer in a superior bargaining position.
Id.
at 818-19, 820,
Ledingham,
like the California cases on which it relied, was bаsed in part-upon an extension to the first-party insurance context of the duty of good faith developed in third-party insurance “duty to settle” cases,
see generally Conway v. Country Casualty Insurance Co.,
It does not necessarily follow [in the first-party insurance context] that the insurer is completely free of any obligation of good faith and fair dealing to its insured, since the latter duty is based on the reasonable expectations of the insured and the unequal bargaining positions of the contractants, rather than the insurance company’s “control” of the litigation.
Id. at 569 (citation omitted). 42
Illinois recognizes the “public service” nature of the insurance business, and the unequal bargaining positions of insurer and insured, by way of its statutory scheme governing insurers. For example, Ill.Rev. Stat. ch. 73, § 766.6 (1981) sets forth an extensive list of “improper claims practices” the commission of which may give rise to administrative action by the state department of insurance. 43 See also, e.g., Ill.Rev. Stat. ch. 73, § 767.9 (1981) (requiring “policyholder security deposit accounts” to protect policyholders against insurer’s insolvency); Ill.Rev.Stat. ch. 110, § 2-209(a)(4) (long-arm provision applying to those “contracting to insure any person, property or risk located within this State”); id. § 2-103(e) (action against insurer incorporated or doing business in Illinois may be brought in any county in which a plaintiff resides).
We think that the Illinois Supreme Court, were it faced with the issue, would follow the California line of cases and hold that an insured may maintain a cause of action in tort against an insurer that has acted in bad faith or dealt unfairly with the *555 insured. 44 It would also hold, we believe, that the existence of the limited remedy permitted by Ill.Rev.Stat. ch. 73, § 767 (1981) does not preclude or weigh against recognition of such a tort remedy 45 Neither of these holdings works a “dramatic expansion” in state law, for, as we have noted, the Illinois courts have split both on the preclusive effect of § 767 and on the availability of a “bad faith” tort cause of action apart from any question of preemption. 46
The contours of the “bad faith” tort may be briefly sketched out.
47
While punitive damages may be available in some cases, they clearly are not available in all cases. Under Illinois law, punitive damages may be awarded only where the defendant has acted in a fraudulent, malicious, wanton, or oppressive manner.
Kelsay
v.
Motorola, Inc.,
Ill
For the reasons expressed above, the motion to dismiss No. 82 C 6789 is denied, and the motion to dismiss counts 2 and 4 of the complaint in No. 82 C 5628 is denied. Defendants are ordered to answer in 14 days. Discovery/trial scheduled heretofore established to stand.
Notes
. The pertinent portion of the statute reads:
Attorney Fees. In any action by or against an insurance company wherein, there is in issue the liability of a company on a policy or policies of insurance or the amount of loss payable thereunder, or for an unreasonable delay in settling a claim, and it appears to the court that such action or delay is vexatious and unreasonable, the court may allow as part of the taxable costs in the action reasonable attorney fees, other costs, plus an amount not to exceed any one of the following amounts:
(a) 25% of the amount which the court or jury finds such party is entitled to recover against the company, exclusive of all costs;
(b) $5,000;
(c) the excess of the amount which the court or jury finds such party is entitled to recover, exclusive of costs, over the amount, if any, which the company offered to pay in settlement of the claim prior to the action.
Ill.Rev.Stat. ch. 73, § 767 (1981).
. Actually,
Tobolt
appears to be based on the pre-1977 version of § 767, which did not provide for a separate penalty. However, the court also indicated that the 1977 amendment provided further support for its conclusion as to the pre-1977 statute.
Tobolt,
. In addition to the state court decisions discussed
supra,
there are several federal court decisions construing Illinois law on this point. Nearly all of them follow
Tobolt
and
Debolt. See Smith v. Metropolitan Life Insurance Co.,
. Judge Shadur also stated that unconflicting intermediate appellate decisions must be followed by a federal court in this district, even where no “First District law” exists.
Commercial Discount,
.
See Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Estate of Bosch,
. We recognize that in both Bonanno and Commercial Discount, Judge Shadur held that where different divisions are in conflict, the so-called “Supreme Court predictive” approach must be followed. We agree. Here we refer to the potential of division within the First District to make the point that absent unanimity of all divisions within that district, a federal court cannot be sure what the “law” of the First District is. To apply a non-unanimous First District holding may result in giving that holding more weight than it would be given in the First District itself.
. The same appears to be the case as between different panels of other districts.
Compare Anderson v. Wagner,
. For a detailed account of the confusion engendered by the failure of the various districts and divisions of the appellate court to follow each others’ rulings, see T. Mattis & K. Yalowitz, Stare Decisis Among (Sic) the Appellate Court of Illinois, 28 DePaul L.Rev. 571 (1979). While this is perhaps lamentable, it nevertheless reflects “state law” within the meaning of Erie and we are therefore required to take account of it.
. In
Kelly,
The problem of indeterminate state venue undermines the apparent advantage of bright-line predictability in
Commercial Discount.
In Illinois, venue is generally proper in the county of residence of any defendant. IlI.Rev.Stat. ch. 110, § 2-101 (1981). Domestic and authorized foreign corporations are, for venue purposes, “residents” of any county in which they do business or have an office.
Id.
§ 2-102(a). In a case originally brought in federal court to which § 2-101 and 2-102(a) would apply, one cannot be sure that the plaintiff has “chosen” the First Appellate District, as the federal district in which we sit is geographically broader than the First District. See
Kelly,
. A federal court is not, however, entirely without guideposts. We will describe some general rules we think we are required to follow infra at 543-545.
. It might be objected that our examples of the type of forum shopping that Commercial Discount may encourage result from an overly broad reading of that decision. One might argue that while a federal district court must act as a state trial court, a federal court of appeals is to act as a state appellate court. If this is the rule of Commercial Discount, we think that it promotes the needlеss expenditure of litigants’ resources, as we will further discuss infra.
. In this regard, it should be noted that denial of leave to appeal by the Illinois Supreme Court carries no connotation of approval or disapproval of the appellate court’s decision.
See People v. Vance,
. If Commercial Discount requires the federal court of appeals to act as a state trial court and thus to ratify the district court’s error of state law, the potential for forum shopping suggested earlier reaches full flower. Under such a rule, no court would apply the law in the way the Illinois Supreme Court would, and given the United States Supreme Court’s relative disinclination to grant certiorari, most incorrect determinations of state law would go unreviewed by that court as well. We cannot believe that Erie requires such a result.
. Such a rule also would conflict with the well established doctrine that where no authoritative resolutfon of a legal issue has been rendered by the state courts, a federal district court’s construction of state law is entitled to great weight on appellate review.
Bernhardt v. Polygraphic Co. of America, Inc.,
. In
Commercial Discount
Judge Shadur notes,
. As we will explain infra, we did not violate this rule in Kelly v. Stratton.
.
See also, e.g., In re Air Crash Disaster,
. To posit an extreme case, one could envision a
Kelly v. Stratton-like
situation in which every state appellate district had followed
Debolt
and
Toboit.
However, in examining the state decisions, the federal court in the hypothetical finds that in none of them was a hypothetical conference committee report on § 767 considered. That report contains a statement that the legislature did not intend to preclude a common law “bad faith” right of action. In such a case, a federal court would be constrained to hold that a common law cause of action exists, in our view. This hypothetical is not altogether different from cases in which state precedent exists but is so ancient and undermined by intervening developments that the federal court need not give it conclusive weight.
Cf. Bernhard v. Polygraphic Co. of America, Inc.,
. However, as noted supra at n. 9, given the problem of indeterminate state venue in actions brought initially in federal court, Commercial Discount may provide considerably less predictability than might appear at first blush.
. The 1937 statute provided that the award of attorney’s fees was not to exceed any of the following sums: 25% of the amount that the court or jury found the insured was entitled to recover, exclusive of costs; $500; or the excess of the court’s or jury’s award (exclusive of costs) over the company’s offer of settlement prior to the lawsuit. Ill.Rev.Stat. ch. 73, § 767 (1937).
. After the 1967 amendment, the statute read the same as it did in 1937, see n. 20 supra, with the exception that the second amount that the fee award was not to exceed was increased to $1,000 from $500. Ill.Rev.Stat. ch. 73, § 767 (1967).
. The pertinent portions of the statute are quoted supra at n. 1.
. Moreover, even the developments in California law upon which Ledingham relied came after 1967.
.
See also, e.g., Knierim v. Izzo,
. It has long been the law in Illinois that attorney’s fees may not be awarded absent a statute authorizing the award.
See, e.g., Murczek v. Powers Label Co.,
. The court in
Lynch
also disagreed with a significant statement in
Tobolt v. Allstate Insurance Co.,
. None of the federal cases defendants cite considered the impact of the pre-1977 statute. While
Strader v. Union Hall, Inc.,
In arguing that the pre-1977 statute preempted the field of compensation for an insurer’s bad faith, Western-Southern relies upon two unsuccessful attempts to amend § 767. However, neither of these bills was voted down by the legislature; rather, each died in committee without a vote. We fail to see how we can draw any conclusion whatsoever from the lack of success of these proposals, and certainly not the conclusion urged by Western-Southern: it is just as likely, for example, that the 1972 proposal failed because the legislature felt the amendment unnecessary to express what it meant in the pre-1977 act.
. Western-Southern attempts to avoid the effect of
Ledingham
by arguing that because the defendant there was a “health care service corporation” not subject to the Illinois Insurance Code,
see
Ill.Rev.Stat. ch. 32, § 553 (1981), the case has no application in the insurance context and cannot be considered authority for the existence of a bad faith tort action against an insurer. While it may be true that the defendant in
Ledingham
was exempt from § 767, the case cannot be read so narrowly. The court’s decision, which referred to the parties’ relationship as one between “health insurance insurer and [ ] policy holder,”
Ledingham,
. Moreover, in 1973, a different panel of the same court that decided
Ledingham
implicitly recognized the possibility of a common law bad faith action against an insurer.
See Wallace v. Prudential Insurance Co.,
. Western-Southern argues that the phrase “[i]n any action,” as used in § 767, means “in
every
action.” We agree.
See, e.g., People ex rel. Ocean Accident & Guarantee v. Van Cleave,
. Despite its reliance on a California decision,
Ledingham
was not contrary to Illinois decisional law. It has long been the law in Illinois that despite the existence of contractual duties between two parties, the law sometimes imposes “implied” duties the breach of which is tortious.
See Nevin v. Pullman Palace Car Co.,
. This also disposes of Epton’s statement that the Commission did not draft the bill. Epton Aff. ¶ 4 at 2. Our consideration of the Final Report was not based on any indication that it represented the “intent” of the Commission’s members. This also means that Epton’s statements that the Commission did not hold hearings on the bill, id., while interesting, do not undermine our consideration of the Final Report.
. This principle also disposes of Epton’s conclusion that the report was drafted in haste and is misleading. Epton Aff. ¶¶ 5, 6 at 3-4.
. We find interesting the implication that the bill would not have done so well had the industry not backed it.
. This is not an incongruous interpretation, for as we have noted, the standard for recovery of the § 767 penalty is lower than that for recovery of common law punitive damages. Thus, one may read § 767 as limiting the recovery available on the lesser statutory showing but leaving open the possibility of additional recovery on a different and greater showing.
. Western-Southern also contends, along with Epton, that the Commission’s legislative man *551 date had expired and that the Report thus somehow is a nullity. Our reliance on the Final Report was based on its description of the context in which the amendment to § 767 was passed. The expiration of the Commission’s mandate does not detract from the Report’s weight on that score.
.
Tobolt’s
only addition to
Debolt
was the statement that the 1977 amendment indicates the legislature’s “agreement” with the conclusion that § 767 is preemptive.
See
n. 26
supra.
That statement was unsupported, and
Erie
does not require us to follow it.
See In re Air Crash Disaster,
. Western-Southern makes several other arguments. First, it relies on several unsuccessful proposed amendments to § 767 after 1977. All of these proposals died in committee; none came to a vote. Unsuccessful attempts to amend legislation generally are an uncertain guide to legislative intent,
see Red Lion Broadcasting Co. v. FCC,
. The fact that three Illinois appellate districts have recognized, in one way or another, the tort of bad faith claims handling indicates that our holding in Kelly v. Stratton that the supreme court would follow Ledingham was not a “dramatic innovation in state law.” See discussion at p. 543 supra.
. The court cited
Ledingham
for this proposition, a citation that may connote approval of the holding in that case. Indeed, the court in
Lynch,
. Although not all of the jurisdictions recognizing the tort have adopted it in the same form, the following states have adopted it in one way or another:
Alabama: Chavers v. National Security Fire Ins. Co.,
Jurisdictions rejecting the “bad faith” tort include:
Florida: Shupack v. Allstate Insurance Co.,
. While Craft concerned Indiana law, the statements made by the court go beyond mere interpretation of Indiana law and thus are relevant here.
. We recognize that this list does not give rise to a private right of action for damages caused by a listed practice,
e.g., Hamilton v. Safeway Insurance Co.,
. The fear that such a holding would eliminate the “barrier” between tort and contract and lead generally to the awarding of punitive damages in all breach of contract cases is unwarranted. Permitting an insured to maintain a cause of action in tort is justified primarily on the basis of the “public service” nature of the insurance business and the unequal bargaining relationship between insurer and insured. These circumstances do not exist in all, or even in most, contracts.
. The existence of an extensive regulatory scheme does not militate against recognition of the “bad faith” tort. Nearly all of the states that have recognized the tort, see n. 41 supra, have similar regulatory schemes. The same is true of the limited remedy provided in § 767. It is important to keep in mind exactly what the legislature did and did not do in § 767. It did not provide for damages to compensate the insured for losses caused by the insurer’s bad faith — for example, collateral financial results such as loss of a house protected by a credit life or disability policy. It did impose a limited penalty on offending insurers, but it did so by relaxing the standard for the award of such penalties. One might reasonably infer that the legislature, despite Western-Southern’s protestations to the contrary, actually did intend to add on an additional penalty for such conduct, over and above common law remedies available upon a greater showing by a plaintiff. We need not address at this juncture whether a court would have to subtract from a common law punitive damages award a penalty awarded in the same case under § 767.
. While one of the two cases at bar, No. 82 C 6789, was originally filed in an Illinois court within the First Appellate District, our holding that we must apply the law the state supreme court would follow controls here. We have examined the First District holdings on both the preclusion and recognition questions and have found that they omit certain “data” that the supreme court would in our view find critical. In addition, we think that we may properly consider holdings from other states concerning the “bad faith” tort. The supreme court, in
Kelsay v. Motorola, Inc.,
. At least one court has held that a state “unfair trade practices” statute provides a cause of action in favor of insureds for an insurer’s bad faith conduct. See
Morgan v. American Family Life Assurance Co.,
