This сase comes to us on appeal following the district court’s calculation of damages pursuant to an earlier remand of this case by the Court. Our earlier remand established that defendant J.C. Penney Auto Insurance Company, Inc. (“Penney”) wrongfully failed to defend its insured policyholder Dexter Hopkins (“Hopkins”). This appeal brought by plaintiff Stanley Green (“Green”), as assignee of Hopkins, raises several questions regarding the proper calculation of damages under Illinois law for a breach of an insurance company’s duty to defend its insured policyholder.
I
Because this case is on appeal to this Court for the second time, see
Green v. J. C. Penney Auto Insurance Co.,
Green proceeded to file suit against Hopkins in state court for injuries sustained in the June 17 automobile accident. Penney received notice of this suit, and yet Penney never filed a declaratory action to determine its obligations under Hopkins’ insurance policy, nor did it defend Hopkins under a reservation of rights. Green obtained a default judgment against Hopkins on May 25,1978. On February 25, 1981, a judgment of $122,500 was entered against Hopkins. Green subsequently received from Hopkins an assignment of any rights Hopkins might have against Penney.
The initial district court opinion and appeal to this Court established that Hopkins’ insurance policy was legally in effect at the time of the accident, and so Penney had brеached its duty to defend Hopkins. On the issue of the proper measure of damages, this Court noted that the Illinois Supreme Court, in
Conway v. Country Casualty Insurance Co.,
On remand, the district court found that but for Penney’s breach of its duty to defend Hopkins, the case could have been settled for an amount within Hopkins’ policy limits. Nevertheless, in calculating damages flowing from Penney’s breach of this duty, the district court read this Cоurt’s prior decision as putting a ceiling of $25,000 on the damages it could award. The court also felt that our prior decision prevented it from either awarding attorneys’ fees incurred by Green in prosecuting this declaratory judgment action against Penney or awarding interest on the full amount of the judgment entered against Hopkins. The court did award $480 to Green which represented fees and costs incurred in connection with the bankruptcy petition filed by Hopkins subsequent to the entry of the $122,500 judgment against him. Green appeals from the district court’s calculation of damages, refusal to award interest on the entire $122,500 judgment, and refusal to award fees incurred by Green in the prosecution of this declaratory judgment action. Penney cross-appeals from the $480 of costs and fees awarded by the district court. We address these issues in this diversity case by applying Illinois law.
II
This case involves several questions of state law which have not yet been precisely articulated by the courts of Illinois. It is therefore useful at the outset to keep in mind our duty in a diversity case: we must apply the state law that would be applied in this context by the Illinois Supreme Court.
Hill v. International Harvester Co.,
*762 A
The first issue is whether our prior determination that Penney did not act in bad faith in breaching its duty to defend Hopkins prevents an award of damages against Penney in excess of the policy limits of $25,000. Several aspects of this issue in Illinois are well settled. As a general rule damages in this type of case are usually limited to the policy limits, but there is an exception to this general rule if the insurer committed the breach of his duty to defend in bad faith.
Conway,
The issue of the proper damages for a breach of the duty to defend becomes complicated by subsequent statements made by the Illinois Supreme Court in the
Conway
case. After mentioning the bad faith rule, the Court in
Conway
continued on to say that “
‘[nevertheless,
damages for a breach of the duty to defend are not inexorаbly imprisoned within policy limits, but are measured by the consequences proximately caused by the breach.’ ”
Conway,
The question of whether Illinois law allows an insurer to be liable in excess of policy limits for a breach of its duty to defend its insured, even though the insurer acted in good faith, is squarely raised by the facts of the instant case. We have already determined that Penney did not act in bad faith when it refused to defend Hopkins. However, Green made several settlement offers to Penney within the policy limits which Penney refused, apparently because of Penney’s belief that Hopkins was not covered by the policy. The district court made the factual finding that but for *763 Penney’s wrongful refusal to defend Hopkins, the case could have been settled for an amount within Hopkins’ policy limits.
The district court effectively ruled that this Court’s prior opinion mandated that damages not exceed the policy limit of $25,000. This ruling reads too much into our prior opinion. In the first appeal, this Court merely decided that there was no bad faith by Penney, and thus
under that theory
damages could not exceed the policy limits. We noted that Penney’s liability included not only the policy limit of $25,000 but also “all damages proximately caused by its failure to defend Hopkins, including reasonable attorneys’ fees.”
Green,
As the previous analysis of
Conway
illustrates, the Supreme Court of Illinois has not squarely decided whether an insurer’s failure to accept a settlement offer in the context of a breach of its duty to defend its insured exposes it to liability in excess of the policy limits, where the failure to accept the settlement offer caused a judgment in excess of the policy limits to be entered against the insured. A look at lower Illinois courts and courts generally reveals several different approaches. Some courts adhere solely to the bad faith rule, and view the insurer’s failure to accept a settlement offer only as a relevant piece of evidence in determining whether the insurer acted in bad faith. See,
e.g., Seward v. State Farm Mutual Automobile Ins. Co.,
A third potential approach to this issue is illustrated by some Illinois appellatе courts. Wholly apart from an insurer’s duty to defend its insured, certain Illinois courts have imposed a duty on the insurer to consider in good faith the insured’s interest as well as its own interest in a claim where the recovery may otherwise exceed the policy limits. Under this intermediate approach, if the insurer’s conduct in refusing to settle a claim within policy limits amounts to fraud, nеgligence, or bad faith, it may be held liable for the entire judgment entered against its insured, regardless of policy limits. See,
e.g., Adduci v. Vigilant Ins. Co.,
We consider this third intermediate approach the best legal rule and the one that would be adopted by the Illinois Supreme Court if it had the instant case before it. The rule acknowledges the causation language of Conway and Reis, by allowing an insured to recover the entire judgment where the insurer’s negligеnt failure to accept a settlement offer causes a judgment in excess of policy limits to be entered against the insured party. Since bad faith requires a subjective showing and negligence requires only an objective showing, this rule potentially allows a recovery in excess of the policy limits even though the insurer did not act in bad faith. Additionally, since a negligent refusal of a settlement offer within policy limits is tantamount to a refusal of a reasonable settlement offer, this rule is consistent with the citation of the California case of - State Farm by Reis, and in turn the Illinois Supreme Court’s citation of Reis in Conway.
Applying this rule to the instant case, it is not clear from the record whether Penney’s refusal to accept Green’s settlement offers was unreasonable. We therefore remand this case to the district court and instruct the court to apply the legal rule announced today.
B
The second issue on appeal is whether Green is entitled to interest on the full amount of the judgment entered against Penney from the time judgment was entered until the time defendant tendered the $25,000 owed under the policy. The district court ruled that this Court’s prior opinion mandated that Green not be awarded such interest. However, this ruling misreads our earlier opinion. In the first appeal, this Court never addressed this issue. Our only relevant comment was that Penney’s liability included “all damages proximately caused by its failure to defend Hopkins, including reasonable attorneys’ fees.”
Green,
The resolution of this issue requires a determination of how Illinois law construes the pertinent portions of the insurance policy in question. The policy states that Penney will pay “all interest on the entire amount of any judgment therein which accrues after the entry of the judgment and before the company has paid or tendered or deposited in court that part of the judgment which does not exceed the limit of the company’s liability therein.” Def.Ex.E.
Under the terms of this policy, we hold that Penney must pay interest on the total amount of the $122,500 judgment. There is no ambiguity in the above-cited passage from the policy. In describing Penney’s obligation to pay interest, the policy refers to “the entire amоunt of any judgment.” If this clause were intended to refer only to that part of the judgment within the policy limits, then Penney could easily have drafted the policy to say so. This is particularly true in view of the latter half of the sentence, which limits the term “judgment” in precisely this manner.
Moreover, Illinois case law mandates this construction. The landmark Illinois case is
River Valley Cartage Co. v. Hawkeye-Security Ins. Co.,
Additionally, the Illinois Supreme Court has commented that insurers themselves have agreed with this result. The insurance industry noted the possible ambiguity in the clause construed in
River Valley
and changed it to the clause found in Hopkins’ policy in order to eliminate all doubt and make it clear that the insurer must pay interest on thе entire amount of any judgment until it pays off its liability.
River Valley,
C
The third and final issue raised on appeal is whether Green is entitled to attorneys’ fees for prosecuting this declaratory judgment action agаinst Penney. The district court ruled that our previous disposition of the case prevented such an award of fees to Green. But in our prior opinion we stated that Penney is liable for “all damages proximately caused by its failure to defend Hopkins, including reasonable attorneys’ fees.”
Green,
There seems to be no Illinois Supreme Court case that is dispositive of this issue. Several intermediate appellate court cases hаve held that an insured may not recover attorneys’ fees and costs for bringing a declaratory judgment action against the insurer. See,
e.g., Tuell v. State Farm Fire & Cas. Co.,
In our view,
Trovillion
is the superior rule. Therefore, where an insurer breaches its duty to defend its insured and thereby forces the insured to bear the burden of initiating a declaratory judgment action against the insurer, the insured can recover attorneys’ fees incurred from bringing the declaratory judgment action. Such a holding is entirely consistent with
*766
the Illinois Supreme Court’s statement that “ ‘damages for a breach of the duty to defend ... are measured by the consequences proximately caused by the breach.’ ”
Conway,
[A contrary rule] appears to be unfair to the insured. After all, the insurer had contracted to defend the insured, and it failed to do so. It guessed wrong as to its duty, and should be compelled to bear the consequences thereof. If the [contrary rule were followed], it would actually amount to permitting the insurer to do by indirection that which it could not do directly. That is, the insured has a contract right to have actions against him defended by the insurer, at its expense. If the insurer can force him into a declaratory judgment proceeding and, even though it loses in such action, compel him to bear the expense of such litigation, the insured is actually no better off financially than if he had never had the contract right mentioned above.
J. Appleman, 7C Insurance Law and Practice § 4691, at 283 (1979). We therefore reject Penney’s cross-appeal as to fees already awarded and remand for a calculation of fees incurred by .Green in both the prosecution and appeal of its declaratory judgment action.
For all of the above reasons, the decision of the district court is reversed and the cause is remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
