Bianca Kelley v. American Country Insurance Company

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 26, 2019
Docket345007
StatusUnpublished

This text of Bianca Kelley v. American Country Insurance Company (Bianca Kelley v. American Country Insurance Company) 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
Bianca Kelley v. American Country Insurance Company, (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

BIANCA KELLEY, UNPUBLISHED December 26, 2019 Plaintiff-Appellant,

v No. 345007 Wayne Circuit Court AMERICAN COUNTRY INSURANCE LC No. 17-010926-NF COMPANY and MICHIGAN AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE PLACEMENT FACILITY,

Defendants-Appellees.

Before: BECKERING, P.J., and BORRELLO and M. J. KELLY, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

In this action for no-fault personal protection benefits (PIP), plaintiff, Bianca Kelley, appeals by right from a final order entered on June 28, 2018 granting the motion for summary disposition filed by defendant American Country Insurance Company (hereafter, “ACIC”). In addition to challenging the court’s grant of ACIC’s summary disposition motion, plaintiff also challenges the trial court’s previous order granting the motion for summary disposition filed by defendant the Michigan Automobile Insurance Placement Facility (hereafter, “the MAIPF”). The trial court granted both motions pursuant to MCR 2.116(C)(10) (no genuine issue of material fact; movant entitled to judgment as a matter of law). For the reasons explained below, we vacate the trial court’s orders and remand the matter for further proceedings.

I. RELEVANT FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

Plaintiff maintains that she suffered injury in an accident that occurred on September 9, 2016. On September 14, 2016, plaintiff filed an application for PIP benefits with the MAIPF, and on July 7, 2017, she filed a complaint for no-fault benefits against ACIC and the MAIPF. During the course of discovery, depositions were taken of plaintiff, Rasheen McKnight, the owner of Mack Transportation, and Oneita (Nita) Peoples, who did Mack Transportation’s billing.

Plaintiff testified that she contacted her health insurance company, Meridian Health, to arrange transportation to an OBGYN doctor’s appointment on September 9, 2016, and a

-1- Meridian representative told her that Mack Transportation would be coming to pick her up. On the appointed day, she got into a gray or silver car. Plaintiff said she did not know whether the car was a Buick; she just remembered the car’s color. She said that the driver did not “really have a conversation” with her when she got into the car or give her a card; instead, the driver talked and texted on her phone during the entire ride. Plaintiff said she was also looking at her phone and not paying attention to her surroundings when she heard “a big boom noise” and saw that they had crashed into the back of a small black Mercedes Benz. Plaintiff recalled that fluid was leaking out of the front of the transport car and you could see the radiator.

Plaintiff testified that after the accident, she got out of the car and sat down on the grass, feeling dizzy. She had hit her head on the headrest and injured her hand trying to brace herself, and her back began “to feel kind of real funny.” She said that the police and fire departments responded to the accident, and she surmised that a police report must have been completed, but she did not talk to the police and had never seen a police report related to the accident. She testified that Emergency Medical Services took her by ambulance to an emergency room, where hospital personnel asked her a few questions, kept her for a little while, and then sent her home. She remembered telling them she had a headache and her back hurt.

McKnight testified as the owner and representative of Mack Transportation, a company that contracts with brokers to provide nonemergency medical transportation. McKnight stated that ACIC insures all of Mack’s vehicles. She further testified that, in 2016, Mack Transportation owned a 2006 gray Buick Lucerne that, as far as McKnight knew, was in service on September 9, 2016. According to McKnight, however, none of Mack Transportation’s vehicles was involved in an accident around the date of plaintiff’s alleged accident.

LogistiCare is one of the broker companies with which Mack Transportation contracts. According to McKnight, LogistiCare sends a message via its internet portal requesting transportation and providing a pickup time, a pickup address, and a drop-off location. Mack Transportation accepts or declines the request. If Mack Transportation accepts a run request, it assigns the pickup to a route. McKnight agreed that plaintiff was “on our manifest,” meaning that LogistiCare did submit a request for Mack Transportation to transport plaintiff on September 9, 2016, that Mack Transportation accepted the request, and that the order was “put en route,” which leads to a driver being assigned. Drivers receive notification of their routes daily by e- mail. McKnight admitted that she did not know to whom the route had been assigned because that is done by email and she no longer has those emails. In order to entitle Mack Transportation (and the driver) to receive payment for the run, Mack Transportation has to provide to Logisticare a pickup time, a drop off time, and the passenger’s signature. McKnight said she looked at all of the drivers’ trip logs for September 9, 2016, but none of them showed the requisite information for plaintiff. She explained that the Buick was currently at a repair shop in Plymouth, the name of which she did not know, and that it had been there since 2016, but she could not remember when it went it.

Peoples testified that she used log sheets submitted to her weekly by the drivers to do the billing for Mack Transportation. Attached as exhibit 2 to her deposition was a log sheet for the week ending September 11, 2016, that contained nine names and one partial name. Plaintiff is the sixth person on the list. The top four names show a September 9, 2016 date of service, LogistiCare job numbers, pickup times, drop-off times, actual trip mileage, mileage billed, and

-2- the passenger’s signature. The remaining names contain a line striking them out. Peoples explained that if a driver drew a line through a client’s name, that meant that the driver talked to the person or went to pick the person up, but the run did not happen. She said that the normal procedure would be to write “cancelled” or “no show” in the blank provided for the client’s name. Viewing the line through plaintiff’s name in light of Mack Transportation’s normal procedures, as well as the fact that she did not sign the trip log, Peoples concluded that plaintiff did not go on the trip. Peoples also provided a LogistiCare Web Batch Report (hereafter, “WBR”) that reflected Mack Transportation’s billing for trips that occurred on or around September 9, 2016, and showed that Peoples did not bill or receive any payments for plaintiff.

On February 20, 2018, the MAIPF filed a motion and supporting brief seeking summary disposition pursuant to MCR 2.116(C)(10). The MAIPF contended that if the accident plaintiff described occurred, the deposition testimony of plaintiff and of McKnight indicated that it had happened while plaintiff was a passenger in a 2006 Buick Lucerne owned and used for business by Mack Transportation and covered by a fleet policy of auto insurance issued by ACIC. ACIC is identifiable and applicable and has not rescinded, or suggested that it might rescind, its policy with Mack Transportation. Therefore, plaintiff was prohibited from claiming PIP benefits through the MAIPF, and the MAIPF was entitled to judgment as a matter of law.

Plaintiff and ACIC both filed briefs in opposition to the MAIPF’s motion for summary disposition. Plaintiff reiterated the basics of her deposition testimony and attached excerpts from her deposition testimony, a September 9, 2016 record from Oakwood Heritage Hospital indicating that she presented for treatment complaining of injuries suffered in a car accident, and her complaint.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Bianca Kelley v. American Country Insurance Company, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bianca-kelley-v-american-country-insurance-company-michctapp-2019.