In this insurance dispute, insurer State Auto Property and Casualty Insurance Company seeks a declaratory judgment that it has no duty to defend insured Brumit Services, Inc., because the latter failed to provide prompt notice of an accident that eventually led to a lawsuit. The district court concluded that the insured’s 21-month delay in notifying the insurer was reasonable and awarded judgment to the insured. We disagree. Brumit’s failure to prоvide prompt notice of the accident was inexcusable under Illinois law. Therefore, we reverse the judgment of the district court.
I. Background
Carl Brumit owns Brumit Services, Inc., a small business that performs residential concrete construction work. The company has two employees and operates out of Brumit’s home. On behalf of the company, Brumit purchased a Business Auto Liability insurance policy from State Auto to cоver the truck he used for the business.
On September 6, 2018, Brumit was in the parking lot of a Phillips 66 gas station in Columbia, Illinois, with the covered truck. When he backed out of his parking space, he unwittingly struck 68-year-old Delores Menard with the truck’s tail-gate. Menard fell and suffered scrape wounds on her elbow and knee. She was treated by an EMT and declined a trip to the hospital, instead choosing to drive herself home. For his part, Brumit was unaware that he had hit Menard until a by-stander alerted him as he was driving away. He then came back to the scene, called for an ambulance, and provided the police officer at the scene with a statement. He observed that Me-nard was sitting down and “may have had a scratch on her knee.”
After everyone parted ways, Brumit thought the incident so minor that he was not required to report it to State Auto. But on June 22, 2015, he was served with a lawsuit in Illinois state court in connection with the accident. Menard alleged in the
The next day, Brumit notified State Auto that he had been sued. State Auto then sought a declaratory judgment in the district court that it had no duty to defend Brumit in the lawsuit because Brumit had breached the policy’s notice requirement. The parties filed cross-motions for summary judgment; the district court granted Brumit’s motion and denied State Auto’s. State Auto Prop. & Cas. Ins. Co. v. Brumit Servs., Inc.,
II. Analysis
A. Standard of Review and Governing Law
This case comes tо us on cross-motions for summary judgment with no disputed facts, so we review the district court’s legal conclusions de novo. “Where facts are not disputed, if a district court grants one party’s motion for summary judgment and denies the other party’s cross-motion, this court can reverse and award summary judgment to the losing party below.” Glass v. Dachel,
B. Overview of Applicable Law
“In construing an insurance policy, we must ascertain and give effect to the intentions of the parties, as expressed in the policy language.” West Am. Ins. Co. v. Yorkville Nat'l Bank,
The Illinois Supreme Court has repeatedly held that notice provisions in insurance policies are reasonable. As the court explained in Barrington Consolidated High School v. Americаn Insurance Co.,
When a notice provision becomes the subject of a dispute, Illinois courts have read such provisions as requirements that the insured provide notice within a reasonable time. See id. (citing Yorkvillе,
C. Application of the Yorkville Factors
The district court held that each Yorkville factor weighed in favor of Brum-it’s position that his 21-month delay in notifying State Auto was reasonable. We disagree. Instead, we conclude thаt each factor tilts in favor of the unreasonableness of the delay. We discuss each factor in turn.
1. Policy Language
We begin with the language of the. policy. Its terms are unmistakably clear: State, Auto will- have “no duty” to .defend an insured unless the insured provided "prompt notice” of, the accident at issue,, and the insured “must”; report any accident. The notice provision is “couched in mandatory terms.” Am. Standard Ins. Co. of Wis. v. Slifer,
Despite the unambiguous language, the district court concluded that it wouldn’t make sense for State Auto to want to know about “eaсh and every -accident its insureds are involved in,” because its “phones would never stop ringing.” State Auto,
Here, any reasonable driver would rec-ogriize that the accident might lead to a claim. Although everyone at the scene on the day of the accident apparently viewed it as minor, it is fairly common for individuals involvеd in automobile accidents to experience injuries that don’t manifest themselves until days, - weeks, or even months after the accident. Brumit even testified that he was aware such latent
2. Brumit’s Sophistication
The second factor is Brumit’s sophistiсation in matters of commerce and insurance. The district court held that Brumit “falls somewhere on the unsophisticated end of the spectrum.” Id. at 1059. Again, we disagree. Brumit is a high school graduate who has taken two years of college courses and had about eight years of experience working elsewhere when he started his own business. When the accident occurred, he had operated the business for four years and provided income for two employees. He had also purchased several insurance policies for himself, his home, and his business, and over’ several years surely had to renew those policies. His company also participates in workers’ compensation insurance. A person in his position should be expected to possess a better-than-average understanding of commerсe and insurance. Surely it is safe to say that Brumit is probably more sophisticated than a majority of insured drivers on Illinois roads.
Moreover, for the purposes of sophistication, Illinois courts have distinguished automobile insurance policies from other types of insurance, such as homeowners’ insurance. In Farmers Auto Insurance Association v. Hamilton,
The cases cited in opposition are all distinguishable on the ground that they iiivolved either insureds far less sophisticated than Brumit or policies more complex than an automobile insurance policy. For example, the insured in Grasso v. Mid-Century Insurance Co.,
The approach taken by the district court and advocated in ' this court by Brumit and Menard would render most
3. Awareness of Possible Claim
The third factor we consider is Brumit’s awareness that a claim might be filed. Here, the district court reasoned that “the incident was trivial, resulted in no apparent jiarm, and furnished no reasonable ground for Brumit to believe that a claim might arise, particularly given his lack of sophistication in insurance matters.” State Auto,
Cases such as Berglind and National Bank of Bloomington v. Winstead Excavating of Bloomington,
The upshot is that “[a]n insured cannot simply roll the dice with the insurer’s funds, hiding behind the statistical probabilities it has assigned to the case outcome.” Kerr v. Ill. Cent. Ry. Co.,
4. Brumit’s Diligence
The fourth Yorkville factor is Brumit’s diligence in ascertaining whether the accident would be covered. Here, we strongly disagree with the district court’s conclusion that “[tjhere is very little [Brumit] could have done to be more diligent.” State Auto,
5. Prejudice to State Auto
The final factor we consider is to what extent Brumit’s delay prejudiced State Auto.
6. Summation of the Yorkville Factors
We conclude that each of the factors for consideration under Illinois law weighs in favor of a finding that Brumit’s 21-month delay was unreasonable as a matter of law. Brumit breached a mandatory notice provision without a reasonable excuse. As a small-business owner with two years of college and multiple insurance рolicies, he was sophisticated enough to understand that striking a person with his truck'might lead to an insurance claim or a lawsuit. But instead of notifying State Auto, he relied on his own assumptions that turned dut to be wrong. In doing so, he deprived State Auto of the opportunity to do its own investigation into the accident and the source of Menard’s injuries. That mistake means he cannot now rely on State- Auto’s defense in Menard’s lawsuit.
III. Conclusion
Insurance policies are contracts like any other. The job of a court when presented with a contractual dispute is to determine the rights and responsibilities of the parties -under the contract. In this case, it was Brumit’s responsibility to notify State Auto that he had been in an accident that might lead to a claim. He failed to do so, and his failure was inexcusable under Illinois law. Therefore, under the terms of the contract, State Auto has no duty to defend or indemnify Brumit in the personal injury suit arising out of the accident. State Auto is entitled to declaratory relief to that effect.
Reversed
Notes
. For clarity, we use "Brumit” to refer interchangeably to Brumit Services and Carl Brumit personally.
. For example, the insured in BergUnd was uneducated, had never owned real estate, . didn't know whether .he was the company's registered agent, regularly threw away mail he didn’t understand, and аllowed a default to be entered against him before he took any steps to notify his insurance agent.
. We note that the Illinois Supreme Court has held that an insurer need not prove that it was prejudiced in order to insist upon compliance with a notice requirement. Livorsi Marine,
