In
its recent decision in Windmill Nursing
Pavilion v. Cincinnati Ins. Co., 2013 IL. App. (1st) 122431, the Appellate
Court of Illinois, First District, had occasion to consider the scope of
products-completed operations coverage as it relates to a Telephone Consumer
Protection Act violation.
In
an underlying lawsuit, Windmill Nursing Pavilion (“Windmill”) brought a class
action against Unitherm, Inc. for sending unsolicited faxed advertisements to
Windmill and the class members. Cincinnati Insurance Company insured Unitherm
under consecutive commercial general liability and umbrella liability policies. The renewal policies contained a modification
that barred coverage for “bodily injury,” “property damage,” or “personal and
advertising injury” arising out of “any action or omission” that violated the
Telephone Consumer Protection Act of 1991 (“TCPA”).
Windmill,
Unitherm, and Cincinnati eventually settled the class action lawsuit for $7
million. Cincinnati agreed to provide a $3 million settlement fund (the
combined general aggregate and umbrella limits under the first general
liability and umbrella policies issued to Unitherm), but denied coverage under
its renewal policies with the TCPA exclusion.
Windmill brought a declaratory judgment action against Cincinnati
seeking recovery of the remaining amount. Windmill argued that the TCPA
exclusion in the renewal policies was invalid, as Cincinnati failed to provide
proper notice at the time of renewal. Windmill argued that in the alternative, it
was entitled to coverage under the initial policies’ products/completed
operations aggregate limits, in addition to the general aggregate limits, as
its faxes should be considered its “work” or “product.”
Cincinnati
countered that the “products-completed operations hazard” did not apply because
fax advertisements did not constitute Unitherm’s “work” or “product.”
Cincinnati further took the position that the “products-completed operations
hazard” was not an independent and supplemental limit of the available coverage
for Windmill’s claims because the general limit of the policy meant the “sum
total” of available coverage. The circuit court granted judgment in favor of
Cincinnati and Windmill appealed.
On
appeal, the court first analyzed whether the TCPA exclusion in the renewal
policy was valid. The court applied Ohio law, stating that modifications in the
terms of a renewal policy are valid only if the insurer provided adequate
notice of the modifications to the insured. The court found that Cincinnati indeed
provided sufficient notice to Unitherm since forms containing the exclusion
were separately attached in the quote and binder materials, on individual
pages, and the exclusion was clearly worded in large, bold, capital letters.
Thus, the court agreed that there was no coverage under the renewal policies.
The court next analyzed whether there was
separate coverage available under the original policies pursuant to the “products-completed
operations hazard” coverage. The court
agreed with the circuit court’s determination, concluding that the faxed
advertisements did not constitute Unitherm’s “products,” “goods,” or “work”
under the policy because Unitherm was not in the business of selling the
advertisements themselves. Among other
things, the court agreed that the faxes did not pertain to any representations
or warranties made by Unitherm with respect to its products. Thus, the court
held that the faxed advertisements did not come within the products-completed
operations hazard coverage such that additional policy limits were triggered.
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