MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
This matter comes before the Court on cross-motions for partial summary judgment (Docs. 63, 65). The defendant, Hanover Fire and Casualty Insurance Company (Hanover), has responded to plaintiffs’ motion (Doc. 68), and plaintiffs have replied to the response (Doc. 69). Plaintiffs did not file a separate response to Hanover’s motion. Hanover claims, hоwever, that they responded in their reply to its response. Hanover has thus filed a reply in opposition to the arguments raised in plaintiffs’ reply (Doc. 70). Plaintiffs contend that Hanover’s reply is really a sur-reply, and have moved to strike the motion pursuant to Southern District of Illinois Local Rule 7.1(c) (Doc. 71). Hanover has responded to the motion to strikе (Doc. 72). For the following reasons, the Court will GRANT Hanover’s motion for partial summary judgment (Doc. 63) and DENY plaintiffs’ cross motion for summary judgment and plaintiffs’ motion to strike (Docs. 65, 71).
BACKGROUND
Fire destroyed the homes of Theresa Harriel, Angela and Oka Williams, and Curtis Warner on October 20, 2005, November 11, 2005, and December 5, 2005. Harriel, the Williams, and Warner (plaintiff-applicants) obtained insurance policies from Hanover. On their applications, they initialed the following statement: “I am the owner of record and occupant of the property described above. _(initial).” (Doc. 64, Exs. A, B, C). They also signed this certification:
I hereby apply for the amount to be insured and declare that the answers to the questions on this Application аre complete and true to the best of my knowledge and belief. It is understood and agreed that, upon payment of the initial premium with this application, the insurance will be effective on the date of issue of the Policy.
(Id.).
The essential dispute in this case is whether plaintiff-applicants made material misrepresentations on their apрlications for insurance. Because plaintiff-applicants entered into unrecorded contracts for deed with certain entities — Harriel with Golden Properties, Inc. (Golden), the Williams with Arrow Realty, Inc. (Arrow), and Warner with E.J. Sieron (Sieron) (collectively the Sieron Entities) — Hanover claims plaintiff-applicants were not the owners of record. As рlaintiff-applicants did not hold their properties subject to mortgages, Hanover also contends they falsely listed the Sieron Entities as mortgagees. Rely *964 ing on an affidavit from the underwriter who approved plaintiff-applicants’ applications, Ross Miller (now its current president), Hanover contends that it would not have issued the plaintiff-applicants’ policies if it had known they were not owners of record. (Doc. 64, Ex. M).
Plaintiff-applicants contend that they did not materially misstate their interests in their respective properties on their insurance applications. They argue that a contract for deed is the functional equivalent of, if not the same as, a mortgage. Given their pоssession of the properties and other incidents of ownership, they claim they were the owners for all practical purposes. Even if their representations were false, plaintiff-applicants claim they were not material to the risk involved or the hazard assumed. Finally, plaintiffs maintain Hanover waived its right to rescind the policies undеr the Illinois Conformative Amendment Rider, which states, “[I]n no event may this policy be rescinded after the policy has been in effect for one year, or on policy period, whichever is less.” (Doc. 51 Ex. K at 8).
ANALYSIS
I. Motion to Strike
Southern District of Illinois Local Rule 7.1(c) states: “Under no circumstances will sur-reply briefs be accepted.” After reading the briefs, the Court finds that Hanovеr’s purported sur-reply brief is, in fact, a reply brief. Plaintiffs clearly address Hanover’s summary judgment arguments in their reply to Hanover’s response to their motion for summary judgment. If the Court were to construe Hanover’s reply as a sur-reply, it would deprive Hanover of its right to respond to these arguments — a right Hanover possesses under the Court’s local rules. This ruling has nо practical significance, however, because Hanover has added nothing new in its response. The Court hereby DENIES the motion to strike.
II. Hanover’s Motion for Partial Summary Judgment
A. Standard on Summary Judgment
Summary judgment is appropriate where “the pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories, and admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if any, show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(c);
see Celotex Corp. v. Catrett,
If the moving party meets its burden, the nonmoving party has the burden “to go beyond the plеadings and affirmatively demonstrate, by specific factual allegations, that there is a genuine issue of material fact which requires trial.”
Borello v. Allison,
B. Merits
The parties have not been able to find any cases that squarely address the issues presented in this case. For its part, Hanover relies principally on two early decisions of the Supreme Court of Illinois construing “sole and unconditional ownership” clausеs in fire insurance policies:
Capps v. National Union Fire Ins. Co.,
In Pollock, the court reaffirmed Capps and reached a similar conclusion. Discussing the rationale for upholding the application of sole and unconditional ownership clauses, the court said the following:
Generally speaking, insurances against fire are made in the сonfidence that the assured will use all the precautions to avoid the calamity insured against, which would be suggested by his interest. The extent of this interest must always influence the underwriter in taking or rejecting the risk, and in estimating the premium. So far as it may influence him in these respects, it ought to be communicated to him. Underwriters do not rely so much upon the principlеs, as on the interest, of the assured; and it would seem, therefore, to be always material, that they should know how far this interest is engaged in guarding the property from loss.
Pollock,
Plaintiffs duly оbserve that the force of these decisions has been undercut by the Supreme Court of Illinois’ recognition of the doctrine of equitable conversion. In
Shay v. Penrose,
Plaintiff-applicants do not dispute that they did not have legal title to their properties when they acquired insurance from Hanover.
2
They claim, however, that their equitable title made them owners for purposes of their policies. In support of their arguments that their statements as to ownership were not false, plaintiff-applicants cite a number of decisions — primarily in the area of land trusts and taxation— which recognize the fluidity of the term “owner.” In
People v. Chicago Title & Trust Co.,
The term “owner,” as applied to land, has no fixed meaning applicable under all circumstances and as to any and every enactment. It usually denotes a fee simple estate, but in Illinois it may include one who has the usufruct, control, or occupation of land with a claim of ownership, whether his interest be an absolute fee or a less estate. Title to property does not necessarily involve ownership of the property. Title refers only to a legal relationship to the land, while ownership is comparable to control and denotes an interest in the real estate other than that of holding title thereto.
(internal quotation marks and citations omitted);
see also S.R.A., Inc. v. State of Minn.,
In
Chicago Title & Trust Co.,
the State of Illinois sought to recover unpaid real estate taxes on various parcels of land held in land trusts; it named the trustees in their individual capacities, the trustees in their capacities as trustees, and the beneficiaries of the trust as defendants.
The Court distinguished revenue collection cases, which are concerned “with the realities of ownership” rather than “the refinements of title,” and other disputes where the “primary issue involves ownership rather than title,” from disputes where the primary concern is title.
Id.
at 543-44 (citing
Corliss v. Bowers,
The Court’s research has not disclosed any case that has specifically addressed whether the dispute presented here “involves ownership rather than title.”
Chicago Title & Trust Co.,
The phrase “owner of record,” unlike the term “ownеr,” is not subject to different interpretations depending on context. Blacks Law Dictionary defines “owner of record” as “A property owner in whose name the title appears in the public records.”
Blacks Law Dictionary
1138 (8th ed.2004). Though the cases rarely make it explicit, it is clear that this is the one and only definition of the phrase in Illinois.
See, e.g., Ciacco v. City of Elgin,
The remaining question is whether thеse statements were material. As Hano
*968
ver notes (and plaintiff-applicants do not dispute), materiality “is determined by whether or not reasonably careful and intelligent persons would regard the facts as stated to substantially increase the chances of the event insured against, so as to cause a rejection of the applicаtion.”
Small v. Prudential Life Ins. Co.,
Plaintiff-applicants have not cited any cases dealing specifically with fire insurance or suggesting that a vendee under an exeсutory contract is an owner of record. In the context of fire insurance, the Supreme Court of Illinois, quoting Justice Marshall, has said, “Underwriters do not rely so much upon the principles, as on the interest, of the assured; and it would seem, therefore, to be always material, that they should know how far this interest is engaged in guarding the property from loss.”
Pollock,
While plaintiff-applicants have offered cases that undercut the force of
Capps
and
Pollock
with respect to a cоntract vendee’s having equitable title, they have not presented any case discounting their holdings on the significance of an insured misstating his interest in the property he seeks to have insured. The Supreme Court of Illinois has held that seemingly minor distinctions of this sort might reasonably cause an insurer to decline to insure an individual.
Pollock,
III. Hanover’s Power to Rescind
The Illinois Conformative Amendment Rider to the policy states, in pertinent part, “[I]n no event may this policy be rescinded after the policy has been in effect for one year, or on policy period, whichever is less.” (Doc. 51, Ex. K at 8). Plaintiff-applicants argue that Hanover waived its right to rescind the policy by not acting within one year from the dates of their losses. The parties have not briefed the issue fully and there appear to be a number of issues in this case that could potentially complicate the inquiry. Accordingly, the Court declines to address the issue at this time.
CONCLUSION
The Court hereby GRANTS Hanover’s motion for partial summary judgment (Doc. 63) and DENIES plaintiffs’ motion *969 for partial summary judgment (Doc. 65) and motion to strike (Doc. 71).
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Notes
. The provision read as follows: "This entire policy shall be void if ... the interest of the insured be other than unconditional and sole ownership.”
Capps,
. In discovery, plaintiff-applicants admitted they did not hold legal title to the properties when they applied for insurance. (Doc. 64, Exs. G, H, I).
. As explained in Chicago Title & Trust Co.,
In a land trust the legal and equitable title lies with the trustee and the beneficiary retains what is referred to as a personal property interest. It is important to note, howevеr, that though referred to as personal property, most of the usual attributes of real property ownership are retained by the beneficiary under the trust agreement. In fact, the only attribute of ownership ascribed to the trustee is that relating to title, upon which third parties may rely in transactions where title to the real estate is of primary importance. A third party, even the State, may generally rely on the title of the trustee in such cases.
