delivered the opinion of the court:
Thе lone issue presented in this appeal is whether an insurer that has a pending claim for rescission of an insurance contract must initially provide to the insured a defense in an underlying action, during the pendency of the rescission action. Under the circumstances presented here, we hold that an insurer’s obligation to act on its duty to defend is delayed until the conclusion of the rescission action. If the insurer eventually loses in the rescission action, it will be liable for the cost of the defense, both during and after the rescission action, to the extent dictated by the governing insurance policy. If the insurer succeeds in the rescission action, it will not be liable for any of the cost of the defense.
Plaintiffs, those certain underwriters at Lloyd’s individually and severally subscribing to policy certificate number 03HPOM210, filed a two-count complaint for declaratory judgment on August 8, 2004, against defendants, Professional Underwriters Agency, Inc., PUA Professional Insurance Services, Ramkrishna H. Chandarana, and Sandip R. Chandarana. The complaint alleged that defendants, an insurance agency specializing in professional liability insurance, made material misrepresentations in securing an “Insurance Brokers and Agents Errors and Omissions Insurance Policy” from plaintiffs, and both counts of the complaint sought rescission of the parties’ insurance contract. After a negligence and fraud action was filed by J.E. Dunn Construction, which is not a party to this suit, against defendants, defendants tendered defense of the Dunn action to plaintiffs pursuant to the terms of the parties’ insurance policy. Citing its rescission of the parties’ policy, plaintiffs refused to defend defendants in the Dunn action and instead filed a second amended complaint, which realleged the first two counts for rescission of the parties’ insurance policy and also added five new counts. Count III sought a declaration that plaintiffs owed defendants no coverage for the Dunn claim due to the alleged materially false representations defendants made on their insurance appliсation to plaintiffs. Count IV sought a declaration that plaintiffs owed defendants no coverage for the Dunn claim because the Dunn claim included a claim of fraud, and fraud was excluded under the parties’ policy. Count V sought a declaration that plaintiffs owed no coverage for any punitive damages arising out of the Dunn action, because punitive damages were excluded under the parties’ insurance policy. Count VI sought a declaration that plaintiffs owed no coverage for the Dunn claim to the extent the claim was a result of defendants’ intentional acts, because intentional acts were excluded from coverage under the policy. Finally, count VII sought a declaration that plaintiffs owed defendants no duty to defend the Dunn claim because the parties’ poliсy was rescinded pursuant to the allegations made in the first two counts of the complaint.
On March 22, 2005, defendants filed a motion to stay all counts of the complaint except count VII on the basis that the ultimate facts in the Dunn lawsuit overlapped with the ultimate facts in the present lawsuit. Defendants pointed out that the basis for rescission in counts II and III of the complaint involved facts related to defеndants’ coverage of Dunn. Defendants also noted that counts I\£ V, and VI claimed that plaintiffs owed no coverage for portions of the claims of the Dunn lawsuit and thus were contingent on the outcome of the Dunn lawsuit. Regarding count I, which alleged that defendants falsely claimed on their insurance application not to have underwritten any business between June 8, 2002, and August 4, 2003, defendants averred that, in order to determine whether defendants’ application claim was actually false, the court would have to “determine what [defendants] did to place the Dunn insurance policies, *** what representations [defendants] made to Dunn and [defendants’] intent in making those representations.” We note, however, that count I of the complaint made no reference to any relationship with Dunn, nor did it make any refеrence to a need to show intent. Indeed, in their response to defendants’ motion to stay, plaintiffs explained that “Count I of the Complaint does not rely upon any allegation of fact regarding the Dunn Lawsuit, or the placement of insurance for Dunn.” (Emphasis in original.) In their reply, defendants argued that their coverage of Dunn occurred between October 2002 and June 2003, and thus they covered Dunn for some рart of the range between June 8, 2002, and August 4, 2003. Based on that, defendants concluded that the issue of whether defendants “ ‘underwrote’ the five policies for Dunn directly bears on [plaintiffs’] claim for rescission as alleged in Count I.” On May 12, 2005, in a written order, the trial court granted defendants’ motion to stay the first six counts of the complaint. The trial court subsequently granted plaintiffs’ motion for partial summary judgment on count VII of the cоmplaint, 1 and defendants timely appealed. We do not see any connection between count I and the Dunn lawsuit that would have warranted the stay of count I, but that issue has not been raised. We note this because resolution of count I would moot the only question before us, which is whether an insurer’s duty to defend continues during the pendency of a claim for rescission of the contract of insurance.
Summary judgment is appropriate where the pleadings, depositions, admissions, and affidavits on file, when taken together in the light most favorable to the nonmovant, show that there is no genuine issue of material fact and that the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. State Farm Insurance Co. v. American Service Insurance Co.,
Plaintiffs rely (and the trial court relied) heavily on our supreme court’s decision in State Farm Fire & Casualty Co. v. Martin,
Our supreme court reversed the lower court holdings. It rejected the argument that the insurer was estopped from denying coverage because it breached its duty to defend the defendant. Martin,
Defendants attempt tо distinguish the rule in Martin by noting that there the supreme court addressed only the issue of whether the insurer was estopped from later denying coverage to the insured because it had filed a declaration that it owed no coverage instead of defending the insured under a reservation of rights. Defendants correctly recite part of the holding in Martin, but they overlook its holding that an insurer may opt to file a declaratory judgment action instead of defending the insured and thus suspend the duty to defend pending the resolution of the declaratory judgment action.
Defendants take the position that an insurer must secure a judicial finding of rescission before it can stop defending. This is precisely the view of the dissenting opinion in Martin. Martin,
Dеfendants state that “Illinois case law is clear that *** once a duty to defend is determined [in the insured’s favor] in a declaratory judgment proceeding, the insurer must defend the insured.” (Emphasis added.) This seems to undercut defendants’ argument. Defendants want there to be an “immediate” duty to defend during the pendency of the declaratory judgment action as opposed to “once a duty to defend is determined in the declaratory judgment proceeding.” Second, defendants note that, “[i]n cases where the underlying action has terminated by the time that the defense obligation is terminated, the insured is entitled to reimbursement of its defense costs.” This statement actually supports plaintiffs’ argument, because, in order to owe reimbursement of defense costs, the insurer must not have defended in the first place. Defendants also rеfer at least twice to an “immediate” duty to defend. Again, these comments support plaintiffs’ argument, because talking about an “immediate” duty to defend implies the existence of a nonimmediate duty to defend, i.e., one that may be suspended. Finally, defendants argue that this case should have been allowed to progress to the point of determining the duty to defend. We note that it was defendants who successfully sought the stay. In any event, regardless of the trial court’s and our ruling, the defense issue cannot be adjudicated until the rescission claim is determined, because the defense issue ultimately hinges on the rescission claim. The issue here is not the ultimate question of whether plaintiffs owe a duty to defend — it is whether they owe a duty to act on their duty to defend before the resolution of the rescission claim.
Defendаnts cite General Star Indemnity Co. v. Lake Bluff School District No. 65,
Defendants characterize our decision in Valley Forge Insurance Co. v. Swiderski Electronics, Inc.,
In pressing their argument, defendants quote two passages from Valley Forge Insurance Co. First, defendants quote the passage saying that “ ‘ “[the insurer] remained obligated to defend [its insured] so long as there remained any question as to whether the underlying claims were covered by the policies.” ’ ” Valley Forge Insurance Co.,
Defendants also cite several cases from outside jurisdictions holding that an insured must secure a declaration that it does not owe a duty to defend before it can refuse to defend its insured. See Federal Insurance Co. v. Kozlowski,
Defendants argue that applying the Martin rule in the instant case would be unfair, because allowing an insurer to refuse to defend based on the mere assertion of a basis to rescind the contract would deprive insureds of “protection from financial harm that insurance policies are presumed to give.” We disagree. As defendants note in their reply brief, once a court has ruled that an insurer breached its duty to defend, the insurer will be liable to its insured for defense costs. General Star Indemnity Co.,
Defendants’ concern that the above holding provides incentive for insurers to put forth baseless accusations as a pretense to filing declaratory judgment actions for noncoverage, and thus to suspend the duty to defend, is misguided. Aside from the fact that such an insurer may be held liable for all the defense costs it should have paid once the declaratory judgment action is adjudicated, insurers take two additional risks in adopting the posture defendants describe. First, an insurer that is found to have denied a defense vexatiously may be assessed a penalty beyond its liability based on the insurance contract. 255 ILCS 5/155 (West 2004). Second, an insurer that opts to file for a declaration that it owes no defense, as оpposed to defending the insured under a reservation of rights, trades the burden of initially providing the cost of the defense for the ability to protect the insurer’s potential interest in the underlying litigation. See General Agents Insurance Co.,
“I sit here as a court of equity, and if there were compelling circumstances brought to my attention, which there were not in this case, of extreme financial circumstances which may exist in an individual policy, *** then I think that the *** rules as set forth here could have some variation.”
Indeed, despite defendants’ protestations, our holding today is consistent with well-established principles of insurance law. Generally, when an insurance company asserts that a claim against an insured falls outside the insurance policy, the insurer is presented with an “urgent strategical problem.” Apex Mutual Insurance Co. v. Christner,
An insurer electing not to follow this path has three available solutions. Insurance Co. of Illinois v. Markogiannakis,
An insurer chooses the last option at its own peril, because, if it is later found to have wrongfully denied a defensе to its insured, it will have breached its insurance contract. Markogiannakis,
An insurer opting to defend its insured under a reservation of rights, on the other hand, avoids estoppel in a subsequent policy suit because it forestalls the insured’s claim that he or she was prejudiced by the insurer’s conflict of interest or monopolization of the defense. Royal Insurance Co. v. Process Design Associates, Inc.,
Thus, the filing of the declaratory judgment action is simply a means for the insurance company to avoid the estoppel in a subsequent suit to determine whether the insured is covered under the policy, 2 and an insurer alleging a policy defense against its insured, just like an insurer seeking rescission, is under no obligation to act on its alleged duty to defend until after the declaratory judgment action. An insurer of course has the option of paying the costs of defense up front under a reservation of rights, but it also has the option of filing a declaratory judgment action and waiting to act until after its policy obligations are determined, at which time the insurer may be liable to reimburse the insured for any costs of defense the insurer should have paid. The lаw is no different where the insurer seeks rescission.
For the foregoing reasons, we hold that the duty of an insurer to act on its duty to defend its insured under an insurance contract is suspended pending an action for rescission of the contract. Accordingly, we hold that the trial court did not err in granting summary judgment to plaintiffs on this issue.
Affirmed.
BOWMAN and KAPALA, JJ., concur.
Notes
Count VII of the complaint sought a declaration that plaintiffs owed no duty to defend, but plaintiffs’ partial summary judgment motion sought a declaration that there was no current duty to defend defendants.
This formulation is also consistent with the statement that an insurer has two distinct options: defending under a reservation of rights or filing a declaratory action. If an insurer were obligated to act on its duty to defend during the pendency of the declaratory judgment action, then that option would not differ from the insurer’s tendering a defense under a reservation.
