Court Opinion

ID: 6327917
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-03-29 20:02:55.54259+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:22:32.966725
License: Public Domain

2022 IL App (1st) 210732-U

                                                                               SECOND DIVISION
                                                                                   March 29, 2022

                                           No. 1-21-0732

NOTICE: This order was filed under Supreme Court Rule 23 and is not precedent except in the
limited circumstances allowed under Rule 23(e)(1).

                                          IN THE
                               APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS
                                 FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT

ASHLEY BOND,                                           )   Appeal from the Circuit Court of
                                                       )   Cook County.
       Plaintiff-Appellant,                            )
                                                       )
v.                                                     )   No. 20 CH 03742
                                                       )
UNITED EQUITABLE INSURANCE GROUP,                      )
                                                       )   Honorable Raymond W. Mitchell,
       Defendant-Appellee.                             )   Judge Presiding.

       JUSTICE HOWSE delivered the judgment of the court.
       Justices Lavin and Cobbs concurred in the judgment.

                                              ORDER

¶1     Held: We affirm the trial court’s order dismissing plaintiff’s complaint. Plaintiff
       failed to follow the procedure required to obligate the insurance company to
       reimburse her for sales tax and title fees.

¶2     After her car was destroyed in an accident, plaintiff Ashley Bond filed a complaint in the

circuit court alleging that her insurer, defendant United Equitable Insurance Group, breached the

insurance contract by failing to include sales tax and title fees when it calculated her payout.

Plaintiff argues that those fees are necessarily incurred when a vehicle is a total loss and that her

policy and Illinois law entitle her to payment for those fees. Plaintiff seeks to represent similarly
1-21-0732

situated individuals in a class action against defendant. Defendant filed a motion to dismiss

arguing that plaintiff failed to follow the required procedure to receive reimbursement for the

taxes and fees from the insurer. The trial court determined that plaintiff failed to comply with the

relevant requirements to obligate the insurance company to pay the taxes and fees and dismissed

plaintiff’s complaint. Plaintiff appeals, and we affirm.

¶3                                        BACKGROUND

¶4     Plaintiff Ashley Bond was involved in a car accident and her vehicle was determined to

be a total loss. Following the accident, she made a claim to her insurer, defendant United

Equitable Insurance Group. It is undisputed that defendant paid plaintiff the proper amount for

her loss, except defendant did not pay for the sums in dispute in this case—the sales tax, title

transfer fees, and tag transfer fees. Those are the costs that plaintiff claims she would necessarily

incur upon replacing her vehicle.

¶5     To operate a vehicle in Illinois, Illinois law requires vehicle owners to secure a title for

the vehicle and register the vehicle. The current fee for titling a vehicle is $95. The fee for

transferring the registration for a vehicle is $25. The State of Illinois currently imposes sales tax

of at least 6.25% on the purchase of a vehicle. Plaintiff claims that defendant breached its

insurance contract with her when it failed to include those amounts in her payout.

¶6     Under the insurance policy at issue in this case, in the event of a total loss, defendant

promised to pay “the cost of replacing the owned automobile.” Defendant’s obligation under the

policy is limited to a maximum of the actual cash value of the insured vehicle. “Actual cash

value” is not specifically defined in the policy. The policy does not specifically mention

reimbursement for sales tax or title fees in the context of paying a total loss claim.

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¶7     Defendant issued a notice to plaintiff that is required by the Department of Insurance’s

regulations. Included in that notice is the regulation that details the steps an insured can take to

obtain reimbursement for sales tax and title fees upon replacing the insured vehicle. The insured

has to actually replace the vehicle and then provide documentation of the replacement to the

insurer. The notice also explains that if the enumerated steps are not followed, the insurer is not

required to pay sales tax and title fees. Plaintiff never notified defendant that she replaced her

vehicle, and she did not seek the payment of sales tax and title fees from defendant within the

time period set forth in the regulation.

¶8     Plaintiff filed the complaint in this case seeking payment for sales tax and title fees.

Plaintiff contends that those costs are encompassed within the “actual cash value” of her vehicle

because those costs are necessarily incurred to replace her vehicle. Plaintiff seeks to represent

similarly situated individuals in a class action against defendant. Defendant moved to dismiss the

complaint, arguing that plaintiff’s claims were defeated by Illinois law and by certain

indisputable evidence. The trial court issued a written ruling in which it dismissed plaintiff’s

complaint with prejudice. Plaintiff now appeals.

¶9                                          ANALYSIS

¶ 10   Plaintiff appeals the dismissal of her complaint. Her complaint was dismissed on

defendant’s motion, and the motion was brought under section 2-619 of the Code of Civil

Procedure (735 ILCS 5/2-619 (West 2020)). The purpose of a section 2-619 motion to dismiss is

to dispose of issues of law and easily proved issues of fact at the outset of the litigation. Jones v.

Brown-Marino, 2017 IL App (1st) 152852, ¶ 20. Although a section 2-619 motion to dismiss

admits the legal sufficiency of a complaint, it raises defects, defenses, or some other affirmative

matter appearing on the face of the complaint or established by external submissions, that defeat

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the plaintiff’s claim. Ball v. County of Cook, 385 Ill. App. 3d 103, 107 (2008). We review the

trial court’s decision to grant a motion to dismiss de novo. Ciolino v. Simon, 2020 IL App (1st)

190181, ¶ 37.

¶ 11    Title 50 of the Illinois Administrative Code covers the subject of insurance. The

Department of Insurance regulations speak specifically to the issue of reimbursement for sales

tax and title fees when an insurance company pays for the total loss of a vehicle.

        “If a cash settlement is provided, and if within 30 days after the receipt of the

        settlement by the insured, the insured has purchased or leased a vehicle, the

        company is required to reimburse the insured for the applicable sales taxes and

        transfer and title fees incurred on account of the purchase or lease of the vehicle

        *** If the insured cannot substantiate such purchase and the payment of such

        taxes and fees, by submission to the company of appropriate documentation

        within 33 days after the receipt of settlement, the company shall not be required to

        reimburse the insured for the sales taxes or transfer or title fees.” Ill. Admin. Code

        tit. 50, § 919.80(c)(3)(A)(1) (West 2020) (effective July 22, 2002).

Plaintiff concedes that she did not comply with this regulation, and she does not allege that she

purchased or leased a replacement vehicle within 30 days of receiving her settlement. Plaintiff

further does not allege that she submitted appropriate documentation to defendant to substantiate

that she made such a purchase, and defendant supplied unrefuted evidence that plaintiff did not

submit the required documentation. Plaintiff does not allege that she ever actually incurred sales

tax or title fees.

¶ 12    Plaintiff, however, argues that notwithstanding the limitations included in the regulation,

her policy entitles her to the payment of sales tax and title fees under Illinois law. Plaintiff

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contends that the regulations are a floor, a minimum standard, for policy benefits. See Ill. Admin.

Code tit. 50, § 919.20 (West 2020) (the regulations set forth the “minimum standards for the

investigation and disposition of claims arising under contracts and certificates issued to residents

of Illinois.”). She argues that she is entitled to the actual cash value of the vehicle and that actual

cash value means the cost to replace the vehicle, including all costs that are reasonably necessary

to effectuate a replacement.

¶ 13   Plaintiff argues that the policy is a promise by defendant to fully indemnify her in the

event of a total loss. She contends that she is required to pay both sales tax and title fees to

replace her vehicle and, because those costs are necessary to replace a vehicle, they are part of

the vehicle’s actual cash value. Plaintiff cites cases from other jurisdictions in which courts have

concluded that sales tax and title fees for replacement vehicles are included in the actual cash

value of a vehicle for purposes of a total loss claim settlement. See e.g., Ostendorf v. Grange

Indemnity Insurance Co., No. 2:19-CV-1147, 2020 WL 134169, at *3 (S.D. Ohio Jan. 13, 2020);

Paris v. Progressive American Insurance Co., No. 19-21761-CIV, 2021 WL 4990900, at *4

(S.D. Fla. Aug. 31, 2021). Further, plaintiff maintains that an insured is entitled to the full actual

cash value regardless of whether she replaces the lost property. She cites cases from other

jurisdictions in which courts have concluded that replacement of the insured property is not a

condition precedent to receiving actual cash value coverage. See e.g., Mills v. Foremost

Insurance Co., 511 F.3d 1300, 1305-06 (11th Cir. 2008); Sos v. State Farm Mutual Automobile

Insurance Co., 396 F. Supp. 3d 1074, 1081 (M.D. Fla. 2019).

¶ 14   We conclude that the specific and unambiguous terms of the regulation targeted directly

at the issue presented in this case control the disposition. If the insured does not take the steps

outlined in the regulation, the Department of Insurance has dictated that the insurer “shall not be

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required to reimburse the insured for the sales taxes or transfer or title fees.” Ill. Admin. Code tit.

50, § 919.80(c)(3)(A)(1) (West 2020).

¶ 15   In Illinois, all state laws are incorporated into all contracts of insurance. Goble v. Central

Security Mutual Insurance Co., 125 Ill. App. 2d 298, 302 (1970); Moran v. Rush Prudential

HMO, Inc., 230 F.3d 959, 967 (7th Cir. 2000). Administrative rules and regulations have the

force of law. People ex rel. Madigan v. Illinois Commerce Commission, 231 Ill. 2d 370, 380

(2008). The cardinal rule of statutory construction, which applies equally to administrative

regulations, is to ascertain and give effect to the intent of the drafter. Haage v. Zavala, 2020 IL

App (2d) 190499, ¶ 38. If the language of an administrative regulation is clear, we must apply it

as written and we will not depart from the plain meaning of the regulation by reading into it

exceptions, limitations, or conditions that conflict with the expressed intent. Id.

¶ 16   When Part 919.80 of title 50 (Ill. Admin. Code tit. 50, § 919.80 (West 2020)) is

considered to be part of or considered alongside the terms of the insurance policy, the regulation

imposed a duty on plaintiff to take affirmative steps to trigger defendant’s obligation to pay sales

tax and title fees. That duty does not conflict with any provisions of the parties’ policy. If an

insured wants to obtain reimbursement for sales tax or title fees as part of an actual cash value

settlement, she is entitled to such reimbursement, but only if she follows the regulatory

requirements. If the insured does not follow the regulatory requirements, the insurer “shall not be

required to reimburse the insured for the sales taxes or transfer or title fees.” Ill. Admin. Code tit.

50, § 919.80(c)(3)(A)(1) (West 2020).

¶ 17   Plaintiff argues that the regulation imposes a minimum standard that sales tax and title

fees are certainly owed when proof of replacement is provided. Plaintiff, however, maintains that

there is nothing prohibiting insurers from choosing to forego including such a provision in their

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policy, thereby giving their insureds more favorable coverage than the minimum established by

the regulation. Plaintiff suggests that in the absence of limiting language in the policy that is

equivalent to the standard expressed in the regulation, the definition of actual cash value that

includes automatic entitlement to sales tax and title fees applies. Plaintiff posits that her

proffered interpretation should particularly apply here because the regulation is remedial in

nature and is meant to protect policyholders from improper practices by insurance companies,

not to create less favorable coverage or place additional burdens on insureds.

¶ 18   If we were to find in plaintiff’s favor, we would be specifically contradicting the

mandatory language in the regulation. The regulation, in clear and obvious plain language,

provides that insurers “shall not be required to reimburse the insured for the sales taxes or

transfer or title fees” if the insured fails to submit documentation concerning the purchase of a

replacement vehicle within the allotted time. Id. As plaintiff acknowledges, the regulation

applies specifically to total loss claims, where the insurer has opted to pay actual cash value. If

actual cash value always meant that sales tax and title fees were automatically payable, as

plaintiff argues, then almost the whole regulation becomes meaningless surplusage.

¶ 19   The United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit had occasion to consider the

same question presented in this appeal. In Sigler v. GEICO Casualty Co., 967 F.3d 658 (7th Cir.

2020), the Seventh Circuit, applying Illinois law, held that in consideration of the applicable

regulation, an insured with an actual cash value policy was only entitled to payment for sales tax

and title fees if he followed the express regulatory requirements: i.e., if he actually replaced the

vehicle and then sought reimbursement for taxes and title fees. Id. at 661-62. Plaintiff argues that

Sigler is either wrongly decided or that it is distinguishable from this case, but we find it to be

neither. As expressed above, when the policy is construed in light of the regulatory framework

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existing in Illinois, plaintiff can only show an entitlement to sales tax and title fees if she meets

the unambiguous regulatory requirements.

¶ 20    As the unrebutted evidence showed, defendant notified plaintiff in writing about the

requirements for receiving payment for sales tax and title fees as it is required to do under

Illinois law. The notice defendant provided to plaintiff informed her that if she did not take

certain steps, defendant would not be required to pay sales tax or the relevant fees. Plaintiff did

not follow the regulatory directives that would trigger defendant’s obligation to pay. Plaintiff,

moreover, did not allege or submit evidence that she actually incurred any of the costs for which

she now seeks payment. Nothing in the parties’ policy goes beyond the general actual cash value

standard contemplated by the regulation to give plaintiff more coverage than any other insured

who is entitled to receive actual cash value and who is subject to this generally applicable

regulation. The regulation is directed at situations just as the one presented here. Nothing in

plaintiff’s policy entitles her to surpass the regulatory requirements and secure automatic

payment for sales tax and title fees in spite of the regulation’s clear requirements.

¶ 21    The Department of Insurance’s administrative regulations require insurers to provide

notice to the insured about the steps the insured is required to take if she wants to receive

payment for sales tax and title fees. Unrebutted evidence was submitted that defendant provided

the required notice of the procedure to plaintiff. The unrebutted evidence further showed that

plaintiff did not comply with the procedure to entitle her to payment. Defendant, therefore,

established that plaintiff is not entitled to payment for the sales tax and title fees she seeks in this

case. The trial court correctly dismissed the complaint.

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¶ 22                             CONCLUSION

¶ 23   Accordingly, we affirm.

¶ 24   Affirmed.

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