Beth Bracy v. Yolanda Yvette Nichols

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 19, 2019
Docket341837
StatusUnpublished

This text of Beth Bracy v. Yolanda Yvette Nichols (Beth Bracy v. Yolanda Yvette Nichols) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Beth Bracy v. Yolanda Yvette Nichols, (Mich. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

If this opinion indicates that it is “FOR PUBLICATION,” it is subject to revision until final publication in the Michigan Appeals Reports.

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

BETH BRACY, UNPUBLISHED September 19, 2019 Plaintiff-Appellee, and

ZMC PHARMACY, LLC, and MICHIGAN SPINE & PAIN,

Intervening Plaintiffs-Appellees, and

RIVERVIEW MACOMB HOME & ATTENDANT CARE,

Intervening Plaintiff,

v No. 341837 Wayne Circuit Court YOLANDA YVETTE NICHOLS, LC No. 15-016675-NF

Defendant, and

FARMERS INSURANCE EXCHANGE,

Defendant/Cross-Plaintiff-Appellee, and

GEICO INDEMNITY COMPANY,

Defendant/Cross-Defendant- Appellant.

Before: LETICA, P.J., and M. J. KELLY and BOONSTRA, JJ.

BOONSTRA, J. (dissenting).

-1- I respectfully dissent, not because I necessarily disagree with all or any of the majority’s legal reasoning, but rather because I believe that we are putting the cart before the horse and reaching conclusions that might or might not prove to be supported were the legal process to run its course—as it has not yet in this case—in the usual and proper manner. It is sometimes tempting for appellate courts to cut to the chase and to decide all issues with finality even when they have not yet been fleshed out in the trial court. I believe that this is one of those cases, and that this Court should resist that temptation. While we may believe that all of the material facts in this case are undisputed, in my view this is a circumstance in which prudence would dictate that the trial court make that assessment first. See, e.g., Rambin v Allstate Ins Co; 495 Mich 316, 334-337; 852 NW2d 34 (2014) (concluding that the Court of Appeals made improper factual findings and erred by concluding that the material facts presented to the trial court were undisputed).

First, I am constrained to point out that the trial court did not articulate a comprehensible rationale for ruling as it did in denying defendant/cross-defendant-appellant GEICO Indemnity Company’s (GEICO) motion for summary disposition and in granting defendant/cross-plaintiff- appellee Farmers Insurance Exchange’s (Farmers) motion for summary disposition. I will not repeat in full what the trial court stated on the record as a basis for its ruling, but I found it seriously wanting in both clarity and detail. The trial court’s statement left us with little basis on which we could properly evaluate its reasoning on appeal.1

I believe the majority recognizes this, inasmuch as the majority was itself left to “infer that the trial court found GEICO’s proofs inadequate to establish fraud warranting rescission of the subject policy.” But the trial court did not say that it had found such inadequacy, or why it did, other than the general statements that I have noted and found insufficient.

That said, the majority—while reversing the trial court’s ruling—does not do so on the basis of the ruling itself. Rather, the majority evaluates anew whether (1) GEICO was the insurer of the owner, registrant, or operator of the 1993 Chevrolet Lumina that struck plaintiff, and whether, therefore, GEICO had an obligation to pay plaintiff’s personal protection insurance

1 The trial court noted that GEICO had supported its motion for summary disposition with an unsigned affidavit, and stated that “an unsworn unsigned affidavit cannot be considered in a Motion for Summary Disposition.” Yet, while acknowledging that the record had been supplemented with a signed affidavit—which the record reflects occurred three days before the hearing—the trial court merely noted that “at the time the Court read the motion the affidavit was unsigned.” (emphasis added). The court further stated, as a general proposition, that “summary disposition cannot be avoided merely by a parties [sic] conclusory assertions in an affidavit that conflict with the actual historical conduct of the party.” Yet, the court offered no explanation of how that general proposition applied to this case or the affidavit in question. Finally, the court stated that it was granting Farmers’s motion “[f]or those reasons and as more fully set forth in [Farmers’s] brief,” without in any manner addressing what those further grounds may have been. The trial court’s subsequent order merely stated that it found there to be no genuine issue of material fact, without further explanation.

-2- (PIP) benefits under MCL 500.3115(1), and (2) whether Marcus Nichols (Marcus)2 lacked an insurable interest in the vehicle, rendering the GEICO policy (the Policy) void. And it makes a yeoman’s effort to answer these questions. But these are questions that the trial court never addressed. Farmers, of course, did not raise these issues in its summary disposition motion. GEICO principally based its motion on its assertion of fraud, while addressing in only summary fashion the issues that the majority now decides for the first time. Even on appeal, the parties only address these issues in cursory fashion and engage in little, if any, analysis of the Policy’s actual language. They do not address, for example: (1) whether an “additional driver” is entitled to PIP coverage under the Policy, (2) the effect of the Policy’s coverage of the Lumina (particularly since the Policy provided for a $454.20 six-month PIP premium for the Lumina),3or (3) the proper interpretation of the Policy language as applied to the facts of this case and the interrelationship of various Policy provisions.

I note, for example, that the PIP provisions of the Policy appear to provide for benefits to a pedestrian (such as plaintiff) who is struck by an “insured auto.”4 “Insured auto” is defined as “an auto with respect to which you are required to maintain security under Chapter 31 of the Michigan Insurance Code and to which the Bodily Injury liability coverage of this policy applies and for which a specific premium is charged.”

As noted, the Policy does reflect that a specific premium was charged for PIP coverage in relation to the Lumina. Additionally, a $186.60 six-month premium was charged for Bodily

2 The record reflects that the Policy was issued to Marcus Nichols, and that, effective August 24, 2013, he added the Lumina to the Policy and added his mother, Yolanda Nichols, as an additional driver on the Policy. 3 As the trial court noted, the Policy attached to GEICO’s brief on appeal includes a Declarations Page reflecting coverage for the September 9, 2013 – March 9, 2014 time period; the accident underlying this cause of action occurred on August 23, 2014. I find it problematic that the Policy that we are being asked to apply includes a Declarations Page reflecting coverage for a time period other than when the accident occurred. Whether at the time of the accident the applicable Policy was the same as that which is in the record before us is, in my judgment, a critical detail that should be fleshed out in the trial court rather than simply assumed on appeal. On this record, however, we have only the Policy before us to assess. 4 Analyzing MCL 500.3115(1), the majority focuses on whether GEICO was the “insurer” of the owner/operator of the auto, Yolanda Nichols. However, the Policy does not use the term “insurer,” and the PIP portion of the Policy does not even use the term “insured.” Conceivably, the majority’s analysis may end up in the same place, but so far no one—not the parties, not the trial court, and not even the majority—has undertaken an analysis of the specific applicable Policy provisions. I do note, in relation to the majority’s framing of the issue, however, that the PIP provisions of the Policy define “Eligible injured person” to include ‘[a]ny . . .

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Related

Morrison v. Secura Insurance
781 N.W.2d 151 (Michigan Court of Appeals, 2009)
Rambin v. Allstate Insurance Company
852 N.W.2d 34 (Michigan Supreme Court, 2014)
Crossman v. American Insurance
164 N.W. 428 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1917)
Allstate Insurance v. State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance
584 N.W.2d 355 (Michigan Court of Appeals, 1998)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Beth Bracy v. Yolanda Yvette Nichols, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beth-bracy-v-yolanda-yvette-nichols-michctapp-2019.