The plaintiff-appellant, West Suburban Bank of Darien (“West Suburban”), sued the defendant-appellee, Badger Mutual Insurance Company (“Badger”), for recovery under the provisions of a fire insurance policy after fire destroyed a restaurant located in Bolingbrook, Illinois, insured by Badger. 1 West Suburban held two loans on the destroyed building and its contents: the first was secured with a mortgage on the property, and the second was secured through a collateral assignment of benefiсial interest in a land trust which held title to the property. After the fire, and after the sale of the land, the funds realized were insufficient to satisfy West Suburban’s interest on the two loans. West Suburban brought suit after Badger refused to make good on the loan covering the beneficial interest in the land trust holding title to the property. The district court denied West Suburban’s claim that it was entitled to recover for the loan secured by the beneficial interest under the provisions of the fire insurance policy and entered summary judgment in favor of Badger, holding that the provisions of Badger’s insurance policy did not cover the collateral assignment of beneficial interests in the land trust. We affirm.
I. BACKGROUND
Theodore and Frances Somenek were the president and vice president, respectively, of Dough, Inc. (“Dough”), owner of Aurelio’s Family Pizzeria (“the Pizzeria”) in Bolingbrook. On February 10, 1988, West Suburban loaned Dough $580,000. As collateral for the loan, Dough and West Suburban executed two promissory notes, a mortgage and a security assignment of the beneficial interest in a land trust which was the owner of the Pizzeria property. One promissory note for $315,000 was secured by a mortgage on the Pizzeria. The other promissory note obligat *723 ed Dough for $265,000 and was secured by the Someneks’ assignment of their beneficial interest in the land trust to West Suburban. The assigning instrument stated that in the event of default by either Dough or the Someneks, West Suburban would have all rights and remedies “respecting the sale or other dispоsition of said beneficial interest.” The assigning instrument did not make any mention of the underlying property, or res, in which Dough conducted its pizza business.
On April 28, 1994, Badger issued a commercial insurance policy to Dough. Among other coverages, the contract insured against loss to the Bolingbrook business premises and commercial property in the event of fire. The policy named and referred to Dough as the insured party and West Suburban as the mortgagee. The policy provided in rеlevant part:
If mortgagee (mortgage holder) is named in this policy, loss to buildings shall be paid to the mortgagee and you [i.e., Dough, the named insured] as interest appears____ The insurance for the mortgagee continues in effect even when your insurance may be void because of your acts, neglect, or failure to comply with the coverage terms.
This provision protected West Suburban against the risk of fire loss by guaranteeing payment on the mortgage debt secured by the insured premises.
As stated earlier, on July 5, 1994, fire destroyed the Pizzeria and its contents. At the time of the fire, the $315,000 note (secured by the mortgage) had an unpaid balance of $233,082.96, and the $265,000 note (secured by the beneficial interest in the land trust) had an unpaid balance of $148,309.90. In order to effectuate the property’s sale, West Suburban released its mortgage lien on the property after the fire. The proceeds from the sale totaled $315,000, an amount insufficient to cover the balance due on both loans. West Suburban placed the $315,000 in an escrow account, and after Dough filed a proof of loss with Badger, West Suburban filed a claim under the insurance policy as mortgagee, demanding payment.
After Badger repeatedly failed to respond to West Suburban’s requests for payment, West Suburban filed suit against Badger on April 6, 1995. West Suburban then filed a motion for summary judgment, contending that as the insured mortgagee under the policy, it was entitled to recover the unрaid balance plus accrued interest on both notes, which, less the proceeds from the property’s sale, amounted to $106,197.74. Badger filed a cross-motion for summary judgment, arguing that West Suburban should not be permitted to recover insurance proceeds for either note because: (1) West Suburban, by selling the property, had released its lien; and (2) an assignment of a beneficial interest is not a “mortgage” because a beneficial interest is only an interest in personal property, not an interest in land. On September 25, 1996, the district court granted summary judgment in favor of Badger, concluding that Badger owed West Suburban nothing for the assigned trust interest. Specifically, the district judge ruled that West Suburban was not a “mortgagee” because West Suburban’s beneficial interest was merely an interest in personal property and not an interest in real property. The court also ruled that West Suburban could not recover under the mortgage note because it had extinguishеd the debt underlying the mortgage when it sold the property and released its mortgage. 2
II. ISSUE
On appeal, West Suburban contends that the district court committed error in concluding that West Suburban was precluded from collecting insurance proceeds from Badger because the assignment of the beneficial interest in an Illinois land trust is distinct from a mortgage. West Suburban claims that its beneficial interest, a secured personal property interest, falls within the definition of “mortgage,” and therefore, West Suburban should be permitted to collect proceeds from Badger.
III. DISCUSSION
“ ‘The construction of an insurance policy and a determination of the rights and
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obligations thereunder are questions of law for the court which are appropriate subjects for disposition by way of summary judgment.’ ”
Hurst-Rosche Eng’s., Inc. v. Commercial Union Ins.,
We next consider which state’s law governs the interpretation of the insurance policy at issue. A federal court exercising diversity jurisdiction must consult the choice-of-law rules of the state in which the court sits to determine which state’s substantivе law should apply.
See GATX Leasing Corp. v. National Union Fire Ins. Co.,
[ajbsent an express choice of law, insurance policy provisions are generally governed by the location of the subject matter, the place of delivery of the contract, the domicile of the insured or of the insurer, the place of the last act to give rise to a valid contract, thе place of performance, or other place bearing a rational relationship to the general contract.
Lapham-Hickey Steel Corp. v. Protection Mut. Ins. Co.,
Under Illinois law, an insurance policy is construed so as to give effect tо the intention of the parties as expressed in the contract.
See Bull v. Sun Life Assur. Co. of Canada,
Based on the terms of Badger’s insurance policy and Illinois ease law concerning the rights of holders of beneficial interests in land trusts, the district court was correct in its determination that West Suburban is not entitled to recover for the $265,000 note, secured only by a beneficial interest. First, the terms and language of the policy were unambiguous and were set forth with sufficient clarity to preclude a beneficial interest holder from recovering under the mortgage clause. Second, Illinois law does not support West Suburban’s contention that a secured personal property interest falls within the definition of “mortgage.”
A The Unambiguous Language of Badger’s Policy
West Suburban contends that the term “mortgage,” as used in the policy, is
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defined under the common law to include both assignments of personal property as well as transfers of real property, thereby entitling it to recоver under the provisions of the fire insurance policy. The declarations page of the policy identified West Suburban as the insured “mortgagee.” Based on the reference in the policy, West Suburban argues that a beneficial interest holder falls within the plain and ordinary use of the term “mortgagee.” However, when the language of an insurance policy is unambiguous, as in this factual situation, the provision should be taken and understood according to its plain, ordinary, and popular meaning.
See Sell v. Country Mut. Ins. Co.,
The mortgagor is regarded as the owner of the land for all beneficial purposes, subject only to the rights of the mortgagee. After condition broken, the mortgagee is, as between himself and the mortgagor, the owner of the fee, and he may maintain ejectment against the mortgagor or the owner of the equity redemption. Upon default he has the right to possession against the mortgagor____
Wolkenstein v. Slonim,
B. Collateral Assignment of Beneficial Interest in Illinois Land Trust is not the Legal Equivalent of a Mortgage
Because this case turns on the legal status of a land trust beneficial interest, we will initially consider the distinctive characteristics of Illinois land trusts. First, the trustee holds both the legal and equitable title to the trust property.
See Estate of Bowgren v. C.I.R.,
In considering West Suburban’s claim, we must determine whether the assigned interest in this case amounts to an equitable mortgage or a beneficial interest in personal property. An equitable mortgage is controlled by Illinois mortgage law, while a beneficial interest is regulated under the Uniform Commercial Code and interpreted by Illinois case law. U.C.C. § 9-101 et seq.
Under Illinois law, there are significant differences between the benefits and consequences attached to mortgages and personal property interests in land trusts. “The purpose of using this technique [assignments of beneficial interests in Illinois land trusts as security for loans], from the borrower’s point of view, is to save the time and expense of a real estate transaction, and, from the lender’s point of view, to avoid the necessity
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of foreclosure in the event of a default.”
Wambach v. Randall,
Although the courts have sometimes treated beneficial interests in land trusts as equitable mortgages, beneficial interests that do not provide for the sale of the realty res of the trust upon default are routinely held to be personal property interests only.
See Melrose,
This Court relied on the
Melrose
reasoning in
Capitol Bank & Trust of Chicago v. Fascetta,
In limited circumstances, Illinois courts have treated collateral assignment of beneficial interest as an equitable mortgage. In
DeVoigne v. Chicago Title & Tmst Co.,
In this case, the beneficial interest in the land trust assigned to West Suburban neither provided for the sale of the trust res upon default nor referred to the real estate in question. Thus, under thе first Homey criteria, the $265,000 loan secured by the assignment of the beneficial interest is an interest in personal property, not real property. Without a real property interest, West Suburban is precluded from recovering its losses secured by the assignment of the beneficial interest because the mortgage clause of the fire insurance policy only provides coverage to mortgagees.
In the alternative, West Suburban asserts that cases resolving redemption rights which differentiate between mortgages and personal property interests are not applicable to insurance disputes because an Illinois land trust is a fiction. As such, the beneficiary’s interest, when classified as personal property, is substantively indistinguishable from a mortgage. West Suburban argues that under Illinois law, a mortgage or a trust deed is “a conveyance of real estate or assignment of personal property ... as security for the performance of some act, usually the payment of money.”
A.S.S. Wrecking Co. v. Guaranty Bank & Trust Co.,
There are practical reasons for the courts’ dissimilar treatment of beneficial interests and mortgages. If a beneficial interest and a mortgage were indistinguishable, then West Suburban, as beneficial interest holder in the land trust, would enjoy all the benefits of an Illinois land trust (e.g., secrecy, ease of transfer, avoidance of tort and tax liability, protection from statutory liens, etc.), while avoiding the financial risk of redemption and the extra premium costs needed to insure its mortgage. A review of the insurance policy reveals that the policy covered one mortgage to a limit of $250,000. If West Suburban believed, as it claims, that the insurance policy issued by Badger covered both its mortgage and its beneficial interest totaling $580,-000, then it should have adjusted for the limited coverage of the policy at the time of contract. Furthermore, under West Suburban’s financial strategy, any type of security interest would give an investor the same protected rights as a mortgagee. For example, in states that use closely held corporations to achieve the same result as an Illinois land trust, a pledge of corporate stock would grant the investor the rights of a mortgagee without the usual risks and liabilities involved in real estate holdings. Moreover, the predominant purpose for creating beneficial interests in land trusts is to remove ownership *728 from the context of real estate, thereby allоwing application of the UCC to transactions in which beneficial interests are used as collateral. See Henry W. Kenoe, Land Trust Financing and the Uniform Commercial Code, C.B.R. 418, 420 (June 1971). “It may be that language [regarding beneficial interest in land trusts] dealing with assignments of rents, receivers, and similar provisions dealing particularly with the real estate itself moves too closely to real estate mortgage documentation and may persuade the courts to characterize the transaction as a mortgage____ It appears advisable to rely upon the equity powers of the courts to protect the lender in these circumstances [when collateral is threatened] rather than have the security agreement approximate the language of the mortgage.” Id.
West Suburban also attempts to rely on
Redfield v. Continental Cas. Corp.,
In deciding whether plaintiff Redfield may sue for breach of the insurance contracts, we must also keep in mind the well-settled principle disfavoring forfeitures of insurance policies on technical grounds which bear no substantial relationship to the insurer’s risk.... We are thus faced with a situation where a beneficial owner has suffered a substantial loss resulting from the destruction of his property by fire, but the proper parties to maintain an action to recover under the fire insurance policies which are in effect at the time of the loss cannot do so.
Id. West Suburban highlights this Court’s statement that “[t]he Illinois land trust, a unique creation of Illinois law, is in essence only a form of real property ownership.” Id. at 607. In the ease under consideration, however, equity does not demand that this Court blur the lines between beneficial interests and mortgаges because the proper parties are not precluded from bringing suit under the insurance policy. Furthermore, Redfield’s discussion of real property ownership focused on land trusts; in its brief discussion of beneficial interests, this Court recognized that “[t]he original owner is designated as the beneficiary of the trust and retains an assignable personal property interest in the trust.” Id. (emphasis added).
IV. CONCLUSION
We think it is clear that, under Illinois law, the fire insurance policy issued by Badger covers only West Suburban’s interest as a mortgagee, not as a land trust beneficiary. Moreover, West Suburban cannot recover for the loan secured by its beneficial interest in the land trust as a “mortgagee” because a mortgage is secured by real property and provides that the property may be sold upon the mortgage’s default, while West Suburban’s beneficial interest is an interest in personal property.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. On April 28, 1994, Badger issued a commercial insurance policy insuring the property, naming Dough, Inc., doing business as Aurelio’s Family Pizzeria, as the insured and West Suburban as the mortgagee.
. West Suburban retained in its escrow account, however, the $315,000 in proceeds from the sale of the property.
