Court Opinion

ID: 9411129
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-07-25 20:13:06.595297+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:21:03.986152
License: Public Domain

2023 IL App (1st) 221708-U

      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).

                                                                                  SECOND DIVISION
                                                                                       July 25, 2023
                                       No. 1-22-1708
      ______________________________________________________________________________

                                          IN THE
                              APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS
                                      FIRST DISTRICT
      ______________________________________________________________________________

      MHM CORRECTIONAL SERVICES, INC.,                             )
      CENTURION OF MINNESOTA, LLC, CENTURION                       )
      OF MISSISSIPPI, LLC, and MASSACHUSETTS                       )      Appeal from the
      PARTNERSHIP FOR CORRECTIONAL                                 )      Circuit Court of
      HEALTHCARE, LLC,                                             )      Cook County
                                                                   )
                            Plaintiffs,                            )      No. 15 CH 18000
                                                                   )
          v.                                                       )      The Honorable
                                                                   )      Sophia H. Hall and
      EVANSTON INSURANCE COMPANY,                                  )      Clare J. Quish,
                                                                   )      Judges Presiding.
                            Defendant-Appellee                     )
                                                                   )
      (Centurion of Mississippi, LLC, Plaintiff-Appellant).        )

                 PRESIDING JUSTICE FITZGERALD SMITH delivered the judgment of the court.
                 Justices Howse and Ellis concurred in the judgment.

                                                 ORDER

¶1   Held: Insurer initially undertaking defense subject to reservation of rights was not estopped from
           disclaiming coverage prior to obtaining judicial ruling on duty to defend. Underlying
           federal complaint was not constructively amended by order granting motion for class
           certification. Letter tendering defense of state department of corrections to insured
           pursuant to insured’s contractual undertaking was not a demand for monetary damages
           triggering insurer’s duty to indemnify insured’s payment of department’s defense costs.

¶2        The plaintiff, Centurion of Mississippi, LLC (Centurion), appeals the trial court’s entry of
     No. 1-22-1708

     summary judgment in favor of the defendant, Evanston Insurance Company (Evanston), based

     upon its finding that Evanston owed no duty to defend or indemnify Centurion in an underlying

     class action pending in a Mississippi federal court. We affirm the judgment of the trial court.

¶3                                           I. BACKGROUND

¶4        This appeal arises out of a declaratory judgment action brought by four related companies

     that provide health care services within correctional institutions. Each plaintiff sought to establish

     its respective entitlement to insurance coverage from Evanston for six separate underlying class-

     action lawsuits challenging the constitutional adequacy of the medical care provided within

     various correctional facilities. In a previous interlocutory appeal, this court addressed Evanston’s

     duty to defend two of the four plaintiffs in three of the six underlying cases. MHM Correctional

     Services, Inc. v. Evanston Insurance Co., 2021 IL App (1st) 200552-U. There we held that the

     policy language at issue imposed a duty to defend upon Evanston in those cases, regardless of

     whether the underlying class plaintiffs sought damages or merely injunctive relief. Id. ¶ 1.

¶5        Centurion, the appellant here, was not a party to that earlier appeal. It is a provider of medical

     and mental health services in Mississippi. Effective July 1, 2015, it entered into a contract with the

     State of Mississippi Department of Corrections (MDOC) to provide medical and mental health

     care services for inmates in the MDOC’S custody, including those at the East Mississippi

     Correctional Facility (EMCF). As part of that contract, Centurion expressly undertook the duty to

     defend and indemnify the MDOC and its officials and employees in a lawsuit that had been

     pending against them since 2013, Dockery et al. v. Epps et al., No. 3:13-cv-00326-WHB-JCG

     (S.D. Miss.) (Dockery lawsuit).

¶6        The Dockery lawsuit was a class action filed on behalf of prisoners at EMCF, a facility

     intended for the treatment of prisoners with mental illness, against the MDOC’s commissioner, its

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     deputy commissioner for institutions, and its chief medical officer. The aspect of the complaint

     pertinent to this appeal alleged in summary that the medical and mental health needs of prisoners

     there are systematically untreated and ignored by prison staff, thereby violating inmates’

     constitutional right to be free from cruel and unusual punishment. With respect to mental health

     care, it alleged that inmates at EMCF are provided with minimal, if any, individual or group mental

     health treatment; they are over-medicated with tranquilizing anti-psychotic medications; their

     mental health symptoms are exacerbated by an environment of chaos and isolation that exists there;

     and they are subjected to discipline if they attempt to seek help from medical staff.

¶7        With respect to medical care provided to inmates, the complaint alleged that EMCF is not

     sufficiently staffed to provide inmates with adequate medical treatment, that they experience long

     delays in being seen by healthcare providers, that treatment is often provided by nurses regardless

     of the nature or seriousness of the problem, and that inmates do not receive prescribed medications

     as ordered. It also alleged that inmates are denied treatment for chronic medical conditions and

     pain management, that they receive untimely and insufficient dental and other medical care, that

     they are required to wait extended periods of time to see outside specialists, and that prison officials

     often deny treatment plans and corrective surgeries recommended by outside specialists.

¶8        The complaint alleged that these deficiencies in the provision of health care are due in part

     to the defendants’ utilization of private, for-profit contractors to provide medical and mental health

     services at EMCF, their entry into contracts with them that call for a level of staffing inadequate

     to meet the treatment needs of inmates, and their failure to monitor the actions of these contractors.

     The contractor that had provided healthcare services at EMCF at the time the complaint was filed

     was Health Assurance LLC, and the complaint alleged that the defendants hired Health Assurance

     despite the MDOC experiencing prior problems with its mistreatment of inmates at other facilities

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       and knowing that it was ill-equipped to operate a psychiatric prison or to provide inpatient-level

       care to seriously mentally ill prisoners. The complaint sought injunctive relief, including that the

       defendants develop and implement a plan for the provision of timely access to adequate medical

       care and treatment for mental illness and for adequate monitoring and performance remediation of

       the private healthcare contractors to which the defendants delegated the operation of EMCF. It is

       undisputed that, once Centurion took over as the new healthcare service provider at EMCF on July

       1, 2015, the complaint in the Dockery lawsuit was never amended to name Centurion as a

       defendant or to allege any conduct on Centurion’s part.

¶9          On July 1, 2015, the Attorney General of Mississippi sent a letter to Centurion formally

       requesting that it undertake the defense and indemnification of the MDOC officials in the Dockery

       lawsuit pursuant to the terms of its contract. On July 20, 2015, Centurion responded by agreeing

       that it would defend the MDOC “on a going forward basis,” subject to a reservation of rights.

       Centurion asserted that its obligation to defend and indemnify only extended to claims arising out

       of or caused by Centurion’s performance or nonperformance of its contract with the MDOC.

¶ 10        Around this same time, Centurion tendered the defense of the MDOC officials in the Dockery

       lawsuit to Evanston under the liability insurance policy at issue. On August 31, 2015, Evanston’s

       claim service manager (Markel) responded by agreeing to defend subject to a reservation of rights.

       The reservation of rights largely pertained to the fact that all claims in the Dockery lawsuit

       preceded the time when Centurion became the healthcare service provider for the MDOC.

¶ 11        On September 29, 2015, the federal district court in the Dockery lawsuit entered an order

       granting a motion for class certification. See Dockery v. Fischer, 253 F. Supp. 3d 832 (S.D. Miss.

       2015). That order articulated that the issue in the case was whether the “current” policies and

       practices at EMCF subjected class members to a substantial risk of serious harm or injury from,

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       inter alia, inadequate medical and mental health care, thus violating their constitutional rights. Id.

       at 842. The class and various subclasses were comprised of individuals who are “currently” or who

       will in the future be confined at EMCF. Id. at 856-57. The order did not mention Centurion.

¶ 12        On December 21, 2015, Evanston’s attorneys notified Centurion that Evanston was

       disclaiming coverage for Centurion and any obligations to the MDOC officials named as

       defendants in the Dockery lawsuit. The present declaratory judgment action was filed by that time,

       and on February 25, 2016, the complaint was amended to add counts on behalf of Centurion

       concerning the Dockery lawsuit, asserting that Evanston was obligated under the applicable policy

       to provide a defense and indemnification in that case and that its refusal to do so was in bad faith.

¶ 13        A bench trial in the Dockery lawsuit commenced on March 6, 2018. The district court then

       ordered the parties’ expert witnesses to file supplemental posttrial reports concerning the then-

       existing conditions at EMCF. The district court ultimately entered judgment in favor of the MDOC

       officials on all the class plaintiffs’ claims, and that judgment was affirmed on appeal. See Dockery

       v. Hall, 443 F. Supp. 3d 726 (S.D. Miss. 2019), aff’d, 7 F.4th 375 (5th Cir. 2021).

¶ 14        On August 30, 2018, the trial court below entered an order denying Centurion’s motion for

       summary judgment on the issue of Evanston’s duty to defend and indemnify in the Dockery

       lawsuit. Central to the trial court’s ruling was the fact that the complaint in the Dockery lawsuit

       had been filed in 2013, two years prior to the time when Centurion began providing services to the

       MDOC. Thus, the trial court found, no potential existed that any of the allegations in that complaint

       could be referring to services or conduct by Centurion. Based on this, the trial court reasoned that

       coverage could not be extended to the MDOC under the policy’s additional insured endorsement,

       which limited coverage of an additional insured solely to claims or expenses “arising from

       Professional Services rendered by the Named Insured” (i.e., Centurion). The trial court further

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       noted that the policy was a claims-made policy, in which the insuring agreement provided that

       Evanston shall pay sums “which the Insured shall become legally obligated to pay as Damages as

       a result of Claims first made against the Insured during the Policy Period.” (Emphasis added). The

       trial court reasoned that the fact that the Dockery lawsuit had been on file since 2013 meant that

       no claim was “first made” during the policy period of July 1, 2015, to July 1, 2016.

¶ 15        Centurion thereafter filed a motion to reconsider, in which it argued that the trial court had

       erred by limiting its analysis to the allegations of the underlying complaint. Centurion argued that

       the trial court’s conclusion that the underlying complaint could never concern its services was

       erroneous “because federal practice recognizes that a complaint can be constructively amended by

       pretrial rulings and party conduct to encompass claims beyond those initially pleaded.” It

       contended that the record in the Dockery lawsuit, which it had asked the trial court to consider

       before issuing its prior decision, showed that the complaint had been constructively amended to

       encompass claims involving Centurion’s services. On May 10, 2019, the trial court denied

       Centurion’s motion to reconsider, rejecting its constructive amendment argument.

¶ 16        While Centurion’s motion to reconsider was pending, Centurion also filed a separate motion

       for summary judgment on Evanston’s duty to indemnify it for the amounts it had paid as defense

       costs to counsel for the MDOC officials in the Dockery lawsuit. On September 15, 2021, the trial

       court denied that motion. Recognizing that the policy’s insuring agreement limited Evanston to

       payment of sums that an insured became legally obligated to pay as “Damages” as a result of

       “Claims” first made against the insured during the policy period, the trial court first concluded that

       Centurion was not seeking coverage for a “Claim” as defined in the policy. Specifically, it rejected

       Centurion’s argument that the Attorney General’s letter of July 1, 2015, which tendered the

       MDOC’s defense and indemnification in the case to Centurion, met the policy’s definition of a

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       “Claim,” reasoning that it did not demand “monetary damages.” In doing so, the trial court also

       rejected Centurion’s argument that its response to the Attorney General, agreeing to defend the

       MDOC on a going-forward basis only, constituted a “settlement” that brought its payments to

       defense counsel within the policy’s definition of “Damages.”

¶ 17        In that same ruling, the trial court again rejected Centurion’s argument that a “Claim” was

       made against Centurion through constructive amendment of the complaint in the Dockery lawsuit.

       The trial court found that, despite the references to “current” healthcare services and inmates in

       the federal court’s class certification order, that order did not result in constructive amendment of

       the pleadings to add Centurion as a defendant. Finally, the trial court considered and determined

       that the policy’s contractual liability exclusion applied and excluded coverage for the MDOC’s

       defense costs that Centurion contractually agreed to pay.

¶ 18        On November 12, 2021, Evanston filed its own motion for summary judgment on all counts

       of the complaint by Centurion pertaining to coverage for the Dockery lawsuit. It contended that,

       for the same reasons that the trial court had denied the various motions by Centurion set forth

       above, Evanston was entitled to summary judgment in its favor.

¶ 19        On October 24, 2022, the trial court granted Evanston’s motion for summary judgment. It

       first found no duty to defend. It reasoned that the policy was a claims-made policy in which

       coverage was limited to claims first made against the insured during the policy period of 2015-

       2016, and the Dockery lawsuit was not a claim first made during that period. In so ruling, it rejected

       Centurion’s argument that Evanston was estopped from raising coverage defenses because, by

       agreeing to defend under a reservation of rights but withdrawing prior to obtaining a declaratory

       judgment on coverage, it had breached its duty to defend. The trial court found that Centurion had

       shown no prejudice by Evanston’s withdrawal of its defense. Also, the trial court again rejected

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       the argument that the class certification order had resulted in the constructive amendment of the

       complaint in Dockery to implicate Centurion’s conduct. The trial court found no duty to indemnify,

       for largely the same reasons set forth in its prior order denying Centurion’s motion for summary

       judgment on indemnification. Finally, it found that Centurion’s failure to establish coverage under

       the policy precluded any claim that Evanston denied coverage in bad faith. This appeal followed.

¶ 20                                             II. ANALYSIS

¶ 21        Centurion raises three principal arguments on appeal in challenging the trial court’s

       determination that Evanston owed no duty of defense or indemnification in the Dockery lawsuit.

       First, it contends that Evanston is liable for Centurion’s costs of defending the MDOC officials in

       the Dockery lawsuit because it withdrew its defense without obtaining a declaratory judgment of

       noncoverage. Second, it argues that the complaint in the Dockery lawsuit should be deemed to

       have been constructively amended by the class certification order, so as to trigger Evanston’s duty

       to defend. Third, it argues that its agreement to pay the defense costs of the MDOC officials should

       be considered money paid as a “settlement,” thereby bringing the payments within the scope of

       the policy’s insuring agreement. Additionally, it argues that it had a meritorious bad faith claim.

¶ 22        The entry of summary judgment on the basis that an insurer owes no duty to defend or

       indemnify under an insurance policy presents a legal question that we review de novo. Aetna

       Casualty & Surety Co. v. O’Rourke Bros., Inc., 333 Ill. App. 3d 871, 878 (2002). Summary

       judgment is properly granted where no genuine issue exists as to any material fact in the case and

       the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law. 735 ILCS 5/2-1005(c) (West 2022).

¶ 23                                       A. Withdrawal of Defense

¶ 24        Centurion’s first argument is that Evanston’s initial agreement to defend under a reservation

       of rights obligated Evanston to continue providing that defense until it obtained a judicial

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       determination that the claim was not covered by the policy. Accordingly, Centurion argues,

       because Evanston withdrew its defense prior to obtaining a declaratory judgment of noncoverage,

       Evanston is liable for Centurion’s defense costs in the Dockery lawsuit.

¶ 25        This court has rejected a nearly identical argument in State Farm Fire & Casualty Co. v.

       Martinez, 384 Ill. App. 3d 494, 498-99 (2008). There, three defendants in a dog-bite action sought

       coverage under a homeowner’s policy issued by State Farm. Id. at 495. State Farm initially agreed

       to defend all three defendants, subject to a reservation of rights to contest coverage on issues

       concerning whether the defendant who owned the dog qualified as an insured under the policy

       issued to the other two defendants. Id. at 496. About five weeks after its initial agreement to defend,

       State Farm denied coverage to the dog’s owner without pursuing any action for declaratory

       judgment. Id. The underlying case against the dog’s owner settled with a consent judgment and

       assignment of any rights to recovery against State Farm. Id. at 497. Only then did State Farm file

       a declaratory judgment action, two years after its disclaimer of coverage. Id.

¶ 26        The argument on appeal was that State Farm was estopped from raising any defenses to

       coverage because it breached its duty to defend by initially agreeing to defend but then abandoning

       that defense without filing a timely declaratory judgment action. Id. at 498. This court rejected that

       argument, setting forth the law that an insurer taking the position that its policy does not provide

       coverage has two options: (1) seek a declaratory judgment to determine its obligation to defend or

       (2) defend under a reservation of rights. Id. “An insurer who notifies its insured that it is defending

       the insured under a reservation of rights and identifies the policy provisions that may preclude

       coverage is not estopped from subsequently denying coverage.” Id. This court held that State

       Farm’s actions complied with its duty to defend and that it was not estopped from asserting

       coverage defenses by its withdrawal of its agreement to defend. Id. at 498-99.

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¶ 27        The reasoning of Martinez likewise leads us to reject Centurion’s argument that Evanston’s

       withdrawing of its initial defense prior to obtaining a declaratory judgment of coverage rendered

       it liable for Centurion’s costs to defend the MDOC officials in the Dockery lawsuit. Evanston,

       faced with a demand for coverage, initially agreed to provide a defense subject to a reservation of

       rights. That reservation of rights largely concerned the fact that the Dockery lawsuit was already

       pending by the time Centurion began providing services to the MDOC on July 1, 2015, and thus

       the injuries at issue in the case did not arise from Centurion’s services. Within four months,

       Evanston’s counsel sent a letter to Centurion disclaiming coverage and withdrawing its defense on

       multiple grounds, including that no claim was asserted against Centurion, the policy excluded

       claims for liability assumed by contract, and the claims at issue occurred prior to the policy period.

       Within two months of that disclaimer, the complaint in this declaratory judgment case was

       amended to add counts for Centurion’s claim against Evanston concerning its coverage obligations

       in the Dockery lawsuit. The fact that Evanston defended a declaratory judgment action initiated

       by Centurion instead of filing its own action does not constitute a breach of its duty, particularly

       where only two months passed before the complaint was amended. See L.A. Connection v. Penn-

       America Insurance Co., 363 Ill. App. 3d 259, 263-66 (2006). Accordingly, Evanston was at all

       times in compliance with its obligations to either defend under a reservation of rights or to litigate

       a timely coverage action, and it was not estopped from raising coverage defenses on the basis that

       it withdrew its initial agreement to defend subject to a reservation of rights.

¶ 28        We reject the notion advanced by Centurion that Illinois recognizes a rule of law whereby an

       insurer that initially provides a defense under a reservation of rights must, at the risk of being held

       liable for all defense costs regardless of the existence of a duty to defend, always continue such a

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       defense until it obtains a final judicial determination of noncoverage. 1 It cites the following

       statement from a 1968 second district case: “If [an insurer] elects to defend under a reservation of

       rights, it must continue such defense until there is a final determination that the claim is not covered

       by the policy.” Country Mutual Insurance Co. v. Murray, 97 Ill. App. 2d 61, 73 (1968). However,

       this statement in Murray flowed in part from the since-rejected rule that an insurer wishing to

       assert policy defenses to coverage must either “secure” a declaratory judgment while defending

       the insured under a reservation of rights or adjudicate coverage in a supplemental suit after

       defending its insured under a reservation of rights. See id. Our supreme court has since held that

       an insurer is not required to “secure” a declaratory judgment on coverage before the underlying

       suit concludes; it is required only to seek a declaratory judgment in a timely manner, and the issue

       of coverage may be determined after the conclusion of the underlying suit. State Farm Fire &

       Casualty Co. v. Martin, 186 Ill. 2d 367, 374 (1999). Further, the statement from Murray relied

       upon by Centurion cites California law exclusively, and it appears never in 55 years to have been

       cited by any Illinois reviewing court for the proposition advanced by Centurion here.

¶ 29         The two other cases cited by Centurion, Trovillion v. United State Fidelity & Guaranty Co.,

       130 Ill. App. 3d 694 (1985), and General Agents Insurance Co. v. Midwest Sporting Goods Co.,

       215 Ill. 2d 146 (2005), likewise do not support the existence of such a rule. In Trovillion, when the

       fifth district stated that an insurer undertaking defense subject to a reservation of rights cannot

       withdraw but is obliged to seek a declaration of coverage, it was applying a rule that an insurer

       breaches its duty to defend by refusing to participate in underlying litigation and waiting for the

       insured to initiate a declaratory judgment action. Trovillion, 130 Ill. App. 3d at 698-99. More

               1
                 Centurion insists that the rule of law for which it is arguing in this aspect of its argument is not an
       application of the doctrine of estoppel.

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       modern cases, including those from this district, do not distinguish between whether a declaratory

       judgment action is filed by the insured rather than the insurer, provided the issue is timely litigated.

       See L.A. Connection, 363 Ill. App. 3d at 263-64 (collecting cases). Trovillion also applied the

       since-rejected rule discussed above that an insurer must “secure” a declaratory judgment “before

       or pending trial of the original action.” Trovillion, 130 Ill. App. 3d at 700. Accordingly, we do not

       find Trovillion to provide support for Centurion’s argument.

¶ 30        In General Agents, the supreme court’s statement that an insurer had remained obligated to

       defend its insured until a court declared that it had no duty to defend was made in the context of a

       discussion about whether the insurer was entitled to reimbursement of its defense costs based on

       an ultimate determination of noncoverage. General Agents, 215 Ill. 2d at 165-66. The court made

       this statement in the context of observing that the case had presented an uncertain question of

       coverage, that the insurer had thus rightly defended under a reservation of rights until the issue of

       coverage was resolved, and that the later finding that no duty to defend existed was not controlling

       on the issue of reimbursement. Id. The supreme court was not addressing a situation in which an

       insurer had withdrawn a defense provided under a reservation of rights, and we do not interpret its

       statement as setting forth a rule applicable in such instance.

¶ 31        In addition to arguing for the existence of the rule of law addressed above, Centurion also

       argues that Evanston waived its right to withdraw the defense it provided without obtaining a

       judicial determination of coverage. Waiver involves the voluntary relinquishment of a known

       right, and it arises from an affirmative, consensual act that intentionally relinquishes the known

       right. Center Partners, Ltd. v. Growth Head GP, LLC, 2012 IL 113107, ¶ 66.

¶ 32        In support of its waiver argument, Centurion cites the statement in Evanston’s reservation of

       rights letter that it reserves the right “to withdraw from the Insured’s defense if it is determined

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       that there is no coverage for the claim.” (Emphasis added.) Centurion argues that this amounts to

       an agreement by Evanston not to withdraw without a judicial determination, “because insurers

       consistently use the phrase ‘if it is determined’ in this context to mean determination by a court.”

       However, none of the cases cited by Centurion involve a court finding waiver under similar facts.

       They are simply examples of insurers using the phrase “if it is determined” in reservation of rights

       letters. We disagree that this statement in the reservation of rights letter amounted to a consensual

       and intentional relinquishment by Evanston of its right to withdraw it defense prior to obtaining a

       judicial determination of coverage. We thus find no waiver.

¶ 33        Finally, Centurion argues that it detrimentally relied to its prejudice on Evanston’s agreement

       to defend the MDOC officials in the Dockery lawsuit and that, because of this prejudice, Evanston

       is estopped from withdrawing its defense. Centurion cites Western Casualty & Surety Co. v.

       Brochu, 105 Ill. 2d 486, 499-500 (1985), which recognized that “[a]n insurer may be estopped

       from asserting a defense of noncoverage if it undertakes the defense of an action and that

       undertaking results in some prejudice to the insured.” We note that this argument involves

       equitable estoppel, which normally applies where an insurer initially undertakes a defense without

       reserving its rights and later seeks to dispute coverage; the rule in such instances is that the insurer

       is not equitably estopped from denying coverage unless prejudice exists. See United Farm Family

       Mutual Insurance Co. v. Frye, 381 Ill. App. 3d 960, 969 (2008).

¶ 34        We agree with the trial court’s conclusion that Centurion has failed to show evidence that it

       was prejudiced by Evanston’s decision to withdraw its defense. The only evidence cited by

       Centurion is a purported judicial admission involving Evanston’s answer to the allegation in the

       amended complaint that, “[w]ith the approval of Western Litigation and Markel, in a letter dated

       July 20, 2015, Centurion-Mississippi agreed to defend MSDOC in the DePriest and Dockery

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       Litigations ‘on a going forward basis’ subject to a reservation of rights.” Even if Evanston made

       an evasive answer to this allegation of the amended complaint that constituted a judicial admission,

       this does establish or raise an issue of fact about prejudice. Although we find Centurion’s argument

       to be less than clear about why this admission shows that it suffered prejudice from the withdrawal,

       the suggestion seems to be that it detrimentally relied on a promise by Evanston to assume or pay

       for the defense when Centurion initially agreed to defend the MDOC in the Dockery lawsuit.

       However, we find that the purported admission is not sufficient as evidence to support such an

       inference. Accordingly, we hold that Evanston was not equitably estopped from withdrawing its

       defense on the basis of prejudice.

¶ 35                        B. Constructive Amendment of Underlying Complaint

¶ 36        Centurion’s second argument on appeal is that the complaint in the Dockery lawsuit should

       be deemed to have been “constructively” amended by the district court’s class certification order

       of September 29, 2015. Centurion cites that order’s identification of the “current” conditions at

       EMCF as being the issue in the case. Centurion thus argues that the adequacy of the services it

       was providing at EMCF by that time became “the issue for litigation.” Accordingly, it contends,

       under the reasoning of the prior interlocutory appeal in this case, the MDOC officials qualified as

       additional insureds that Evanston was required to defend. See MHM Correctional Services, 2021

       IL App (1st) 200552-U, ¶¶ 51-55. The policy’s additional insured endorsement provides that an

       additional insured includes any person or organization to whom or which a named insured is

       obligated by virtue of a written contract to provide insurance or indemnity, “but only for claims

       made against the Additional Insured with respect to professional services rendered by the Named

       Insured.”

¶ 37        In general, an insurer may justifiably refuse to defend an action against an insured only where

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       it is clear from the face of an underlying complaint that the allegations set forth in it fail to state

       facts that bring the case within or potentially within the insured’s policy coverage. General Agents,

       215 Ill. 2d at 154 (citing United State Fidelity & Guaranty Co. v. Wilkin Insulation Co., 144 Ill.

       2d 64, 73 (1991)). A court determines whether a duty to defend has arisen by comparing the

       allegations in the underlying complaint to the policy language. General Agents, 215 Ill. 2d at 154-

       55 (citing Outboard Marine Corp. v. Liberty Mutual Insurance Co., 154 Ill. 2d 90, 125 (1992)). If

       the underlying complaint alleges facts within or potentially within the policy’s coverage, then the

       insurer is obligated to defend, even if the allegations are groundless, false, or fraudulent. General

       Agents, 215 Ill. 2d at 155.

¶ 38        In this case, there is no dispute that the actual complaint in the Dockery lawsuit neither named

       Centurion (as a defendant or otherwise) nor included any allegations arising from the services that

       Centurion provided at EMCF. This is because it was filed on May 30, 2013, over two years before

       Centurion began providing any services to the MDOC. No amended complaint was ever filed.

¶ 39        Accordingly, a comparison of the actual complaint in the Dockery lawsuit to the policy leads

       inevitably to the conclusion that its allegations are not within the policy’s coverage. The policy

       imposes a duty to defend “any Claim to which coverage under this policy applies.” It is a “claims

       made” policy, meaning that the risk insured against is that a claim will be brought by a third party

       during the policy period. See Uhlich Children’s Advantage Network v. National Union Fire Co. of

       Pittsburgh, 398 Ill. App. 3d 710, 715 (2010). It thus provides that Evanston will pay sums that an

       insured becomes legally obligated to pay “as Damages as a result of Claims first made against the

       Insured during the Policy Period,” which was July 1, 2015, to July 1, 2016. A “Claim” may be

       either a “demand for monetary damages or services involving Professional Healthcare Services”

       or the “service of a suit *** against the Insured involving Professional Healthcare Services.”

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       Because the actual complaint was filed and served in 2013 against the MDOC officials (who are

       the purported insureds by virtue of the additional insured endorsement), any “Claim” against them

       was not “first made” during the policy period and is therefore not within the policy’s coverage.

¶ 40        In an effort to surmount this, Centurion argues that we should consider the underlying

       complaint to have been constructively amended by the class certification order to add a claim

       arising from the services provided at EMCF by Centurion. For its part, Evanston asserts that no

       authority exists for a court to find a duty to defend or indemnify based on a theory of constructive

       amendment.

¶ 41        We see no need to undertake a discussion about whether constructive amendment of a federal

       complaint could ever give rise to a duty to defend, because we find it clear in this case that the

       class certification order did not have the effect of constructively amending the complaint or

       otherwise placing the services rendered by Centurion at issue in the Dockery lawsuit. The

       gravamen of the allegations in the 2013 complaint against the three MDOC officials was that they

       had abdicated their responsibilities to care for the inmates in their custody by relying on private,

       for-profit contractors which lacked proper qualifications and experience and had “strong incentive

       to maximize profits at the expense of prisoner wellbeing.” It further alleged that the MDOC

       officials had entered into contracts with these for-profit contractors that called for levels of staffing

       at EMCF that were not adequate to meet the needs of inmates. And it alleged that the MDOC

       officials failed to conduct adequate oversight of the actions taken by the contractors it hired.

¶ 42        Specific to medical and mental health care, it alleged that in April 2012 the MDOC officials

       had retained Health Assurance as EMCF’s healthcare contractor, despite experiencing prior

       problems with Health Assurance at a different facility and knowing that it lacked experience

       operating a psychiatric prison or providing inpatient-level care to inmates with serious mental

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       No. 1-22-1708

       illnesses. The complaint provided the example that the contract that the MDOC had entered into

       with Health Assurance required it to provide an on-site psychiatrist only twice a week, whereas

       previously a psychiatrist had been at EMCF every day. Thus, the claim was that these kinds of

       failures by the MDOC officials to ensure that EMCF was adequately staffed with qualified medical

       professionals led to various problems that inmates were experiencing as of May 2013: minimal

       levels of mental health treatment, over-medication with tranquilizers, long delays to see medical

       professionals, treatment by nurses instead of physicians, failure to receive medications as ordered,

       and the like. This claim of inadequate staffing and oversight of private contractors was also what

       the injunctive relief requested in the compliant was intended to address: that plans be developed

       and implemented by the MDOC for the provision of timely access to adequate medical care and

       treatment for mental illness and for adequate monitoring and performance remediation of the

       private healthcare contractors to which the MDOC delegated the operation of EMCF.

¶ 43        Therefore, when the September 2015 class certification order stated that the “current”

       conditions at EMCF were at issue in the case, it was not injecting a claim into the case that was

       any different than the claim that had been raised in the complaint. The pertinent issue remained

       whether the MDOC was contracting with private service providers and ensuring that EMCF was

       staffed in a way that provided prisoners in its care with levels of medical and mental health care

       that were constitutionally adequate. The fact that the MDOC terminated its relationship with

       Health Assurance and hired Centurion as its new healthcare service provider during the course of

       the litigation did not cause a new or different claim to be made with respect to services rendered

       by Centurion. We thus reject any argument that the complaint was constructively amended by the

       class certification order so as to give rise to a duty to defend on the part of Evanston.

¶ 44        Furthermore, we reject Centurion’s argument that Evanston made a judicial admission in its

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       No. 1-22-1708

       answer to the amended complaint that the Dockery lawsuit included claims based on services

       provided by Centurion during the 2015-2016 policy period. The amended complaint alleged that

       Centurion had retained a law firm to defend the MDOC in the Dockery lawsuit on a forward-

       looking basis, and in connection with the MDOC’s tender of the Dockery lawsuit, that law firm

       “has been representing individual MSDOC defendants for medical claims which have arisen since

       July 1, 2015, under the MSDOC Contract.” Evanston’s answer admitted these allegations. The

       trial court found that Evanston was not, by its answer to these allegations, admitting that the

       Dockery lawsuit involved claims against Centurion or claims implicating services that Centurion

       provided. We agree with the trial court’s assessment and conclusion that this admission does not

       establish a duty to defend.

¶ 45                                 C. Duty to Indemnify for Defense Costs

¶ 46        Centurion’s third argument is that it is entitled to indemnification from Evanston for the

       defense costs it paid on behalf of the MDOC, because those defense costs were payments in

       “settlement” of a claim for money due to alleged failures in the health care services provided by

       Centurion. It reasons that this was a “settlement” because the Attorney General of Mississippi, by

       its letter of July 1, 2015, made a broad demand for the full defense and indemnification of the

       MDOC; Centurion then countered that it would provide a limited defense to the MDOC on a going-

       forward basis; and the settlement was then effected when the MDOC accepted without objection

       the more-limited defense that Centurion offered and provided. From this premise, it asserts that

       the Attorney General’s letter was a “Claim” under the policy’s definition, as it was “[a] demand

       for monetary damages *** involving Professional Healthcare Services” made during the 2015-

       2016 policy period. And it reasons that its payment of defense costs met the policy’s definition of

       “Damages,” which includes “the monetary portion of any *** settlement.”

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       No. 1-22-1708

¶ 47        We find no merit to this argument. Generally, a duty to indemnify arises only when the

       insured becomes legally obligated to pay damages in the underlying action that gives rise to a

       claim under the policy. Traveler’s Insurance Co. v. Eljer Manufacturing, Inc., 197 Ill. 2d 278, 293

       (2001). In this case, the MDOC officials prevailed in the underling action, and thus neither the

       MDOC nor Centurion ever became liable to pay damages to the class plaintiffs. Further, because

       the duty to indemnify is narrower than the duty to defend, no duty to indemnify will exist if there

       is no duty to defend. Crum & Forster Managers Corp. v. Resolution Trust Corp., 156 Ill. 2d 384,

       398 (1993). Normal application of these legal principles leads to the conclusion that no duty to

       indemnify arose in this case.

¶ 48        Our review of the policy’s indemnification provision does not change this conclusion. That

       provision obligates Evanston to pay sums “which the Insured becomes legally obligated to pay as

       Damages as a result of Claims first made against the Insured during the Policy Period.” The

       payments for which Centurion is seeking indemnification here involve money it paid to counsel

       for the MDOC as defense costs. Centurion’s argument that these defense costs were paid pursuant

       to a “settlement” is unavailing. This is an attempt to fit this payment within the policy’s definition

       of “Damages,” which is “the monetary portion of any judgment, award or settlement.” However,

       the “settlement” contemplated by this definition unambiguously refers to a payment to a plaintiff

       or claimant in compensation for a loss that gives rise to the claim in the underlying litigation, made

       as part of an agreement that terminates all or part of that underlying litigation. The defense costs

       for which Centurion is seeking reimbursement here were clearly not a payment of this nature.

       Likewise, the Attorney General’s letter was not demanding a payment of this nature when it

       requested defense and indemnification of the MDOC by Centurion, and for that reason the letter

       did not constitute a “Claim” made under the policy. For all these reasons, we hold that Centurion

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       No. 1-22-1708

       is not entitled to indemnification from Evanston for the defense costs it paid to the MDOC.

¶ 49                                              D. Bad Faith

¶ 50        Based on our determination that Evanston had no duty to defend or indemnity Centurion in

       the Dockery litigation, we have no reason to reach Centurion’s final argument that Evanston’s

       denial of coverage was in bad faith, thus entitling Centurion to its attorney fees in this coverage

       action. The parties agree that this issue is governed by a Virginia statute, as the policy was issued

       in Virginia. Under that statute, the costs and attorney fees allowable to an insured suing an insurer

       in a coverage action “shall not be awarded unless the court determines that the insurer, not acting

       in good faith, has either denied coverage or failed or refused to make payment to the insured under

       the policy.” Va. Code Ann. § 38.2-209 (2022). As such, the existence of coverage is a prerequisite

       to a bad faith claim under the Virginia statute. Builders Mutual Insurance Co. v. Dragas

       Management Corp., 709 F. Supp. 2d 432, 440 (E.D. Va. 2010) (citing Brenner v. Lawyers Title

       Insurance Corp., 240 Va. 185, 193 (1990)). Here, our holding that Evanston owed no coverage

       with respect to the Dockery lawsuit precludes any claim by Centurion that Evanston’s denial of

       coverage or refusal to pay was in bad faith. We therefore conclude that the trial court properly

       granted summary judgment in favor of Evanston on Centurion’s bad faith claim.

¶ 51                                           III. CONCLUSION

¶ 52        For the reasons set forth above, the judgment of the trial court is affirmed.

¶ 53        Affirmed.

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