Illinois Court Determines Duty to Defend Construction Defect Claims

Tred R. Eyerly | Insurance Law Hawaii

    Given the underlying allegations of damage to personal property, the court determined the insurer had a duty to defend. Certain Underwriters at Lloyd’s London v. Metropolitan Builders, Inc., 2019 Ill. App. LEXIS 979 (Ill. Ct. App. Dec. 18, 2019).

    Metropolitan was hired as the general contractor for construction, renovation and demolition at contiguous properties – the 1907 Property, 1909 Property, and 1911 Property. During construction activities, the structures on the 1907 Property and 1909 Property collapsed. The existing structures on the properties were later deemed unsafe and were demolished by the city of Chicago. 

    AIG insured the owner of the buildings and paid over $1.8 million for repairs and associated expenses arising from the collapse. AIG then invoked its rights of subrogation against Metropolitan by filing suit. Metropolitan tendered the suit to its insurer, Lloyd’s, who denied coverage and filed for a declaratory judgment. The trial court found the underlying complaint alleged property damage, but not an occurrence. Summary judgment was awarded to Lloyd’s. 

    The appellate court agreed with Lloyd’s that the damage to the real property was not covered by the CGL policy. Metropolitan was the general contractor with overall responsibility for the renovation and conversion of the existing structures into single-family housing. Metropolitan’s allegedly faulty workmanship led to their collapse and ultimate demolition. Thus, the collapse of the structures was not an “accident” or “occurrence”, but was the natural and ordinary result of faulty workmanship on the contractor’s work product. 

    Metropolitan argued that the underlying complaint alleged damage to parts of the property on which Metropolitan was not working. This, however, did not change the court’s conclusion. The properties were under the responsibility of Metropolitan, as general contractor, to convert the structures into single-family homes. Even if the damage extended to parts of the project on which Metropolitan was not currently working, it was still part of Metropolitan’s scope and responsibility, and thus was part of the project itself. 

    The alleged property damage to personal property deserved a different analysis, however. This was damage to something other than the project itself. The underlying complaint gave no description of what “personal property” of the owner was damaged. But it was not clear from the underlying complaint that AIG did not cover claims of damage to the owner’s person property. The admittedly vague references to damage to the owner’s “personal property” were enough to allege “property damage” caused by an occurrence. The allegations were enough to trigger the insurer’s duty to defend. 

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