This appeal comes to us from the district court’s grant of summary judgment,
I
In 1977, plaintiff Walter Myers purchased a fully occupied ten-unit apartment building in Lacón, Illinois. Subsequently he began to convert the units from oil to electric heat and charge the tenants for the fuel. As a result, the tenants began to leave. The last tenant moved out of her apartment in October or November of 1981. From that time until April 3, 1983, when the apartment building was severly gutted by fire, there were no tenants living there.
Beginning in November 1981, plaintiff began renovating the building. In addition to changing the heating system, plaintiff took steps to rewire the entire building, install drywall and insulation, and convert the building from ten rental units to nine rental units. However, these renovations proceeded somewhat slowly. Plaintiff’s *470 job as a railroad signal worker required him to be on call at all times, and he was also busy building his Missouri retirement home. As a result, plaintiff worked on the apartment building only on weekends when he was not away from Lacón on business for the railroad or at work on his new home in Missouri. Plaintiff conceded that he would be at the apartment building only about once a month, and he was last there in late February 1983.
The apartment building during this time was deserted and unsecured. There was no water or electricity. The apartments were empty, except for some stoves and refrigerators. The last tenant had occupied the basement apartment, and when she moved out she kept the key to the door to that apartment. This tenant, who apparently was the manager of the building, had keys to- several of the apartments, and left without either telling plaintiff or returning any of these keys. The basement door that led into the common areas had no lock. The door to the front porch of the building did have a lock, but the departing tenants, not plaintiff, had the keys to this lock. Moreover, plaintiff never checked to see if this lock worked. The door leading from the front porch to the first floor hallway never had a lock.
The apartment building was insured against loss from multiple perils, including fire, under a policy issued by defendant. The relevant portions of the policy for purposes of this appeal are as follows:
“15. Suit. No suit shall be brought on this policy unless the insured has complied with all the policy provisions____
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“17. Vacancy, Unoccupancy and Increase of Hazard.
(a) This Company shall not be liable for loss occurring while a described building, whether intended for occupancy by owner or tenant, is vacant beyond a period of sixty (60) consecutive days. ‘Vacant’ or ‘Vacancy’ means containing no contents pertaining to operations or activities customary to occupancy of the building, but a building in process of construction shall not be deemed vacant.
(b) Permission is granted for unoccu-pancy.
(c) Unless otherwise provided in writing added hereto this Company shall not be liable for loss occurring while the hazard is increased by any means within the control or knowledge of the insured.”
Defendant denies liability under this policy. Although the district court discussed defendant’s three reasons for denying liability, any one of them is sufficient to relieve defendant of any liability under the policy. We deal only with defendant’s first contention based on the vacancy clause in the policy.
II
Defendant contends that plaintiff violated the vacancy clause contained in If 17(a). Plaintiff counters that the contract is ambiguous on this issue in two respects. First, he argues that the contract fails to define “construction” in the clause in H 17(a) that excepts a building “in process of construction” from the vacancy exclusion, and that his renovations to the building during the alleged period of vacancy constituted construction. Second, he maintains that 1117(b), which grants permission for unoccupancy, is ambiguous when read together with 1117(a) in that it is difficult for a layman like himself to distinguish between “unoccupied” and “vacant.” He contends that these two ambiguities merit a finding in his favor.
We agree with plaintiff that as a general proposition any ambiguities in an insurance policy should be resolved against the insurance company.
Simmons Refining Co. v. Royal-Globe Insurance Co.,
The first ambiguity alleged by plaintiff is that what the policy gives with one hand (permission for unoccupancy in 1117(b)) it takes away with the other (vacancy exclusion in 1t 17(a)), creating an apparent nullity. However, there is no such ambiguity in our case. The terms “vacant” and “unoccupied” are not synonymous: “vacant” means entirely empty
(i.e.,
lack of animate or inanimate objects), while “unoccupied” means the lack of habitual presence of human beings
(i.e.,
lack of animate objects). This construction has been followed by Illinois courts,
Schuermann v. Dwelling-House Insurance Co.,
It is a bit more difficult to imagine an unoccupied but not vacant dwelling in a rental context. Most apartments (including those in the instant case) are rented unfurnished, and so when the animate objects (i.e., the tenants) leave, the inanimate objects tend to follow. Thus, if one tenant leaves a month before the new tenant moves in, the apartment (though of course not the entire building) might well be classified as vacant and not merely unoccupied. Moreover, a tenant in a rental apartment, as opposed to an owner of a home, is less likely to leave the unit for a sufficient length of time 1 for the apartment to be classified as unoccupied, since the tenant must still pay rent during his absence. It would have been preferable for defendant to define both of these terms in the contract and how they interact. Nevertheless, the presence of these two terms in the contract does not create an ambiguity; it merely means that a grant of permission for unoccupancy but not vacancy appears to be less valuable to the policyholder when the insured dwelling is an apartment building with unfurnished apartments.
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Given this distinction between the terms vacant and unoccupied, there can be no doubt that the apartment building in the instant case was vacant and not merely unoccupied. These apartments were entirely empty for approximately eighteen months, lacking both tenants and inanimate objects. Plaintiff at oral argument noted that there were some stoves and refrigerators in the apartments, but such minimal items, without more, do not prevent us from concluding that the building was vacant.
Dunton v. Connecticut Fire Insurance Co.,
Plaintiff also contends that even if the building is vacant, the building was “in process of construction” due to his renovations. At the least, he argues that “construction” is an ambiguous term that includes renovations. We disagree. Several state courts have held that in an insurance policy, the term construction does not include repairs, maintenance, reconstruction, renovation and the like to an already existing structure.
Travelers Indemnity Co. v. Wilkes County,
Since we hold that plaintiff was in violation of the policy’s vacancy exclusion in 1117(a), we need not reach the other grounds on which defendant urges a denial of liability. The district court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of defendant is affirmed.
Notes
. A dwelling is not "unoccupied" when the owners are only temporarily absent for a reasonable time, since if the absence is temporary they are still “habitually present" in the dwelling.
Foley,
