C-Spine Orthopedics Pllc v. Progressive Michigan Insurance Company

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 8, 2022
Docket358170
StatusPublished

This text of C-Spine Orthopedics Pllc v. Progressive Michigan Insurance Company (C-Spine Orthopedics Pllc v. Progressive Michigan 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
C-Spine Orthopedics Pllc v. Progressive Michigan Insurance Company, (Mich. Ct. App. 2022).

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

C-SPINE ORTHOPEDICS, PLLC, FOR PUBLICATION December 8, 2022 Plaintiff-Appellant, 9:10 a.m.

v No. 358170 Macomb Circuit Court PROGRESSIVE MICHIGAN INSURANCE LC No. 2020-001710-NF COMPANY,

Defendant-Appellee.

C-SPINE ORTHOPEDICS, PLLC,

Plaintiff-Appellant,

v No. 358171 Macomb Circuit Court PROGRESSIVE MICHIGAN INSURANCE LC No. 2020-000386-NF COMPANY,

Before: GLEICHER, C.J., and MARKEY and PATEL, JJ.

GLEICHER, C.J.

Jose Cruz-Muniz and Sandra Cruz were injured in a motor vehicle accident and received treatment from C-Spine Orthopedics, PLLC. According to C-Spine’s complaint, Progressive Michigan Insurance Company refused to pay its reasonable charges for necessary care it provided to the Cruzes. The Cruzes assigned to C-Spine their rights to seek no-fault personal protection insurance (PIP) benefits from Progressive, and C-Spine brought this first-party no-fault action under MCL 500.3112, which imbues healthcare providers with a statutory right to bring a direct cause of action against an insurer “to recover overdue benefits payable for charges for products, services, or accommodations provided to an injured person.”

-1- Before filing this suit, however, C-Spine entered into assignment agreements of its own with several factoring companies. Factoring companies provide financing to businesses with cash flow issues by purchasing outstanding invoices at a discounted rate. In exchange for sums paid by the factoring companies, C-Spine assigned them its rights to bring first-party lawsuits seeking payment of the outstanding invoice balances. The Cruz invoices were among those bought by the factoring companies.

After the lawsuit was filed, C-Spine and the factoring companies signed counter- assignments and “purchase agreement amendments,” reinvesting C-Spine with the right to bring suits seeking payment of outstanding balances. The issue presented is whether C-Spine is entitled to pursue a reimbursement claim against Progressive despite that when the suit was filed, C-Spine had transferred its interests in the Cruzes’ debt to the factoring companies.

We hold that the counter-assignments and purchase agreement amendments permit C- Spine to maintain its causes of action under MCL 500.3112, and reverse the circuit court’s contrary judgment and remand for further proceedings.

I. THE RELEVANT FACTS

Sandra Cruz’s account balance for C-Spine’s treatment is $249,258.38. Jose Cruz-Muniz’s account balance for C-Spine’s treatment is $37,667.36. Both were treated in 2019. C-Spine filed this lawsuit in May 2020, less than one year after the Cruzes’ initial encounters with C-Spine. The Cruzes signed separate assignment agreements after each visit.

The record related to C-Spine’s contracts with the factoring companies is not nearly as straightforward. Indeed, it may be charitably characterized as messy, thanks in part to the existence of multiple factoring contracts (at least six), and C-Spine’s nondisclosure agreements with several of the factoring companies. Although some of the factoring agreements apparently include the Cruzes’ accounts, it is impossible to discern with certainty which factoring companies received interests in the specific transactions underlying the Cruzes’ debts. Nor does the record contain the actual factoring agreements; rather, C-Spine provided the circuit court with a “sample” agreement, which it represented contains the same language as the actual agreements. These uncertainties do not matter legally because we assume that the factoring agreements assigned the entirety of C- Spine’s interests in the Cruzes’ accounts receivable to one or more factoring companies.

The counter-assignments and purchase-agreement amendments are somewhat clearer. They evidence agreements between the factoring companies and C-Spine to transfer, assign, and convey the rights, title, and interests previously acquired from C-Spine back to C-Spine relative to medical services provided to Sandra and Jose. The counter-assignments and amendments reinvest C-Spine with the right to pursue and settle lawsuits. Although at least one of the counter- assignments is dated before C-Spine’s lawsuit was filed, the record supports that it was back-dated after this litigation commenced. Other counter-assignments and amendments were signed after C- Spine filed suit.

Progressive moved for summary disposition under MCR 2.116(C)(5) and (10), arguing that C-Spine had assigned its interests in the Cruzes’ accounts receivable to the factoring companies and therefore lacked standing, legal capacity, or the legal right to bring claims regarding those

-2- accounts. In response C-Spine relied on the counter-assignments and purchase-agreement amendments, among other arguments.

The circuit court at first denied summary disposition, finding that the counter-assignments had re-conferred an ownership interest in the accounts receivable to C-Spine, rendering C-Spine the real party in interest with standing to file suit. About five months later, however, Progressive again sought summary disposition under MCR 2.116(C)(5) and (10), contending that discovery revealed that at least three of the counter-assignments or amendments to the purchase agreements had been backdated to mislead the court and to disguise that C-Spine had filed suit without any genuine legal interest. C-Spine retorted that although the counter-assignments were executed after the Cruz complaints were filed, C-Spine and the factoring companies had “specified the effective dates” as stated on the face of the counter-assignments, and that “the counter-assignments convey standing to [C-Spine] regardless of the date they were signed.”

The circuit court granted summary disposition to Progressive, ruling that C-Spine lacked standing when the complaints were filed and observing that “[i]t was done retroactively after.” C- Spine appeals by right.

II. ANALYSIS

Under MCR 2.201(B), “[a]n action must be prosecuted in the name of the real party in interest” subject to several qualifications. This procedural rule requires that a complaint be brought by the party to whom a claim belongs, or by a party who has a legal right to bring the action. This concept is distinct from standing, which asks whether a litigant has a right to have a court consider a claim.

Standing is not a barrier to C-Spine’s case because MCL 500.3112 grants C-Spine the right to “assert a direct cause of action against an insurer . . . to recover overdue benefits payable for charges for products, services, or accommodations provided to an injured person.” As a provider, C-Spine has statutory standing to bring a claim on its own behalf. “Statutory standing, which necessitates an inquiry into whether a statute authorizes a plaintiff to sue at all, must be distinguished from whether a statute permits an individual claim for a particular type of relief.” Miller v Allstate Ins Co, 481 Mich 601, 608; 751 NW2d 463 (2008). Whether C-Spine has an actionable claim for relief is a different question than whether it has a right to litigate its current grievance in our courts.

The real-party-in-interest rule does not preclude C-Spine’s suit, either. The court rule anticipates that situations such as this one might arise. MCR 2.201(B)(1) provides:

A personal representative, guardian, conservator, trustee of an express trust, a party with whom or in whose name a contract has been made for the benefit of another, or a person authorized by statute may sue in his or her own name without joining the party for whose benefit the action is brought. [Emphasis added.]

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Bluebook (online)
C-Spine Orthopedics Pllc v. Progressive Michigan Insurance Company, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/c-spine-orthopedics-pllc-v-progressive-michigan-insurance-company-michctapp-2022.