Daniel Wiedyk v. John Paul Poisson

CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJune 24, 2011
Docket138260
StatusPublished

This text of Daniel Wiedyk v. John Paul Poisson (Daniel Wiedyk v. John Paul Poisson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Daniel Wiedyk v. John Paul Poisson, (Mich. 2011).

Opinion

Order Michigan Supreme Court Lansing, Michigan

June 24, 2011 Robert P. Young, Jr., Chief Justice

138260(36) Michael F. Cavanagh Marilyn Kelly Stephen J. Markman Diane M. Hathaway DANIEL WIEDYK, Mary Beth Kelly Plaintiff-Appellant, Brian K. Zahra, Justices v SC: 138260 COA: 280214 Midland CC: 06-009751-NI JOHN PAUL POISSON and TRAVERSE CITY LEASING, d/b/a HERTZ, Defendants-Appellees. _________________________________________/

On order of the Court, the motion for reconsideration of this Court’s December 1, 2010 order is considered, and it is DENIED, because it does not appear that the order was entered erroneously.

YOUNG, C.J. (concurring).

We have reached the point again where the Legislature must speak if it wishes to preserve the no-fault act’s compromise between the provision of quick, generous insurance benefits without proof of fault and the act’s restrictions on access to additional tort recovery. No one actually attempts to justify having both the most generous automobile insurance benefits in the nation and a tort system where virtually any auto injury would satisfy the noneconomic damages exception to no-fault. Yet, while Kreiner v Fischer1 preserved that distinction, McCormick v Carrier2 ignored and eliminated it.

Even though I joined and continue to subscribe to Justice MARKMAN’s dissenting opinion in McCormick, I concur in this Court’s decision to deny defendant’s motion for reconsideration from our order remanding this case in light of McCormick, wherein defendant asks this Court to reconsider whether McCormick was correctly decided. I write to emphasize Justice MARKMAN’s concerns that “[b]y nullifying the legislative compromise, which was grounded in concerns over excessive litigation, the

1 471 Mich 109 (2004). 2 487 Mich 180 (2010). 2

overcompensation of minor injuries, and the availability of affordable insurance, the Court’s decision [in McCormick] will resurrect a legal environment in which each of these hazards reappear and threaten the continued fiscal integrity of our no-fault system.”3 As I noted in my original concurrence to the remand in this case, the factual scenario presented here brings to life these concerns.4

The reappearance of these hazards that threaten the viability of Michigan’s no- fault system does not represent a new development. In Kreiner v Fischer, we thoroughly traced the development of this Court’s caselaw interpreting MCL 500.3135’s provisions governing when a no-fault plaintiff may recover noneconomic damages.5 From this rocky history, two trends emerge and are noteworthy in consideration of this case. First, this Court’s interpretation of the threshold standard for noneconomic recovery, MCL 500.3135, has not been consistent for more than a thirty-year span. Even more troubling, the changed interpretations articulated in DiFranco v Pickard6 and McCormick represented a significant departure away from the interpretation that enforced the Legislature’s strict requirements. Second, in response to these changing interpretations, the Legislature has found it necessary to amend the language used in this statute as the means of compelling Michigan courts to enforce its stated intent limiting noneconomic recovery.7

3 McCormick, 487 Mich at 227 (MARKMAN, J., dissenting). 4 See Wiedyk v Poisson, ___ Mich ___ (2010) (YOUNG, J., concurring). 5 Kreiner, 471 Mich at 114-122; see also McCormick, 487 Mich at 233-259 (MARKMAN, J., dissenting). 6 427 Mich 32 (1987). 7 In 1995, the Legislature enacted a bill that amended MCL 500.3135. The purpose of this bill was to “modify tort liability arising out of certain accidents.” The necessity of this bill arose only because this Court’s decision in DiFranco v Pickard, 427 Mich 32 (1986), discarded the then-controlling standard implementing the Legislature’s limitations on recovery. The DiFranco majority overruled Cassidy v McGovern, 415 Mich 483 (1982), which was still cooling on the presses. The Legislature’s 1995 amendments reinstituted Cassidy nearly in its entirety as the governing standard. As the McCormick dissent astutely noted, the McCormick majority reinstituted what essentially amounted to the DiFranco test, notwithstanding the fact that the Legislature made clear that DiFranco did not reflect the policy of this State. See McCormick, 487 Mich at 239- 240 (MARKMAN, J., dissenting). 3

It is a particularly unfortunate development when the Legislature must act to countermand a decision of the Supreme Court where this Court refused to enforce the unambiguous language used in the no-fault statute after a prior corrective legislative amendment. The deconstruction of the Legislature’s work product that took place in McCormick is strikingly similar to the deconstruction DiFranco achieved in the past that also necessitated a legislative correction. Demonstrating that history truly does repeat itself, I find it difficult to improve on what this Court stated nearly 30 years ago: “If every case is subject to the potential of litigation on the question of noneconomic loss, for which recovery is still predicated on negligence, perhaps little has been gained by granting benefits for economic loss without regard to fault.”8

Kreiner provided an accurate construction that appropriately enforced the clear language of MCL 500.3135. Equally as important, Kreiner recognized that these provisions affect every Michigan driver due to the mandatory nature of no-fault automobile insurance. Thus, this Court’s duty to apply consistently the Legislature’s policy choices takes on particular importance because of the direct impact that the Court’s decisions have on such a substantial number of Michigan’s citizens. McCormick has now undone much of this, and as a result produced a regime of seemingly unlimited liability that will require courts to wrestle with the question of what constitutes a “serious impairment of body function.”9 Accordingly, courts may now find compensable in tort as a matter of law routine injuries not intended by MCL 500.3135 to be compensated beyond the full panoply of benefits otherwise conferred by the no-fault act.

I encourage the Legislature to judge for itself whether the current interpretation provided in McCormick for what constitutes a “serious impairment of body function” is truly the interpretation it originally contemplated. Should the Legislature determine that McCormick undermines the “grand compromise” of Michigan’s unique no-fault act, as I believe it does, that body may find it necessary to correct this Court’s McCormick construction that, in my opinion, fails to give meaning to the Legislature’s policy choices.

CAVANAGH, J. (concurring).

8 Cassidy v McGovern, 415 Mich 483, 500 (1982). 9 It is impossible to conceive that, when the Legislature chose the language “death, serious impairment of body function, or permanent serious disfigurement” as the threshold standard for noneconomic recovery, a majority of this Court would hold, as a matter of law, that an impairment of a body function that merely “influences some of the plaintiff’s capacity to live in his or her normal manner of living” meets the statutory threshold. See McCormick, 487 Mich at 215 (emphasis added). In McCormick, plaintiff broke his ankle. 4

I concur in the order denying defendants’ motion for reconsideration. I write only to respond to Chief Justice YOUNG’s concurrence, in which he attacks this Court’s recent opinion in McCormick v Carrier, 487 Mich 180 (2010).

Impassioned hyperbole aside, an unbiased reading of McCormick aptly illustrates that McCormick did not resuscitate DiFranco v Pickard, 427 Mich 32 (1986), nor did it turn a blind eye to the will of the Legislature.10 Indeed, McCormick’s analysis faithfully applied the clear and unambiguous language of MCL 500.3135.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

McCORMICK v. CARRIER
795 N.W.2d 517 (Michigan Supreme Court, 2010)
Kreiner v. Fischer
683 N.W.2d 611 (Michigan Supreme Court, 2004)
DiFranco v. Pickard
398 N.W.2d 896 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1986)
Cassidy v. McGovern
330 N.W.2d 22 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1982)
Robinson v. City of Detroit
613 N.W.2d 307 (Michigan Supreme Court, 2000)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Daniel Wiedyk v. John Paul Poisson, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/daniel-wiedyk-v-john-paul-poisson-mich-2011.