Dolenga v. Aetna Casualty & Surety Company

463 N.W.2d 179, 185 Mich. App. 620
CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 2, 1990
DocketDocket 113198
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 463 N.W.2d 179 (Dolenga v. Aetna Casualty & Surety 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
Dolenga v. Aetna Casualty & Surety Company, 463 N.W.2d 179, 185 Mich. App. 620 (Mich. Ct. App. 1990).

Opinion

Per Curiam.

Plaintiffs appeal from an order of the circuit court granting summary disposition in favor of defendants on plaintiffs’ claim for tortious interference with an advantageous business relationship. Although the trial court’s order fails to state under which subrule summary disposition was granted, it was presumably granted under MCR 2.116(C)(10), no genuine issue of material fact. We reverse.

Plaintiff Dolenga, through his business, plaintiff Disability Services, Inc., is engaged in providing rehabilitation services to a variety of clients, in- *622 eluding workers’ compensation claimants. In the instant case, Richard Bobier had sustained a rotator cuff injury while in the employment of Bechtel and working at The Detroit Edison Belle River plant. Bobier was treated by Dr. Michael Baghdoian, an orthopedic surgeon. During the course of treatment, Dr. Baghdoian suggested the option of vocational rehabilitation and referred Bobier to plaintiffs. Bobier had a meeting with Dolenga and his associate, Eva Guerra.

. After that meeting, Guerra sent a letter to defendant Aetna Casualty & Surety Company which requested authorization for a rehabilitation evaluation as part of Bobier’s workers’ compensation benefits. Defendant Joanne Shankin, a registered nurse in the employment of Aetna as a rehabilitation coordinator, responded with a letter to Guerra stating that they were denying authorization for plaintiffs to work with Mr. Bobier, that Dr. Baghdoian had no authority to make referrals for vocational rehabilitation to any vendor, and that Aetna would be making other arrangements for vocational rehabilitation, presumably with a different vendor. On the same date, Shankin sent a letter to Dr. Baghdoian noting that he had referred Bobier to plaintiffs and further directing Baghdoian and his associates to cease making any referrals to any specific rehabilitation vendors, and in particular to plaintiffs. Shankin’s letter further claimed to reserve its "right” under the Workers’ Disability Compensation Act to make its own referrals.

Thereafter, plaintiffs instituted the instant action on the basis of defendants’ alleged tortious interference. Apparently, the Bobier matter has not been the only dispute between the parties.

Over the course of a number of motion hearings, the trial court ruled that defendants had the right *623 to select the rehabilitation vendor and that there was no genuine issue of material fact concerning whether defendants did anything improper in denying authorization for Bobier to work with plaintiffs and, instead, referring Bobier to a different vendor.

On appeal, plaintiffs first argue that the trial court erred in ruling that an insurance carrier has the right to select a rehabilitation vendor for the employee where the employee’s physician has referred the employee to another vendor. We agree. Defendants, both in Shankin’s letters to Dr. Baghdoian, and apparently others, and during the course of litigation, have maintained that a workers’ compensation insurance carrier has a right to select a rehabilitation vendor for the employee. In support of this presumed right, defendants rely upon MCL 418.319; MSA 17.237(319), the provision in the compensation act which relates to rehabilitation services. Defendants’ reliance is misplaced. While it is true that under that section an employee is entitled to receive rehabilitation services if necessary and, in fact, the employer may insist that the employee receive rehabilitation services, the fact that the act allows the employer or the employer’s insurance carrier to voluntarily offer to provide those services does not, as defendants seem to conclude, equate to the employer or carrier having the right to select the vendor of those services. Nothing in § 319 either explicitly or implicitly grants such a right to a workers’ compensation carrier.

On the other hand, neither does the act explicitly grant the right of selection to the claimant as suggested by plaintiffs. Plaintiffs rely on MCL 418.315; MSA 17.237(315), which provides that an employee has the right to select the physician of his choice after ten days from the inception of *624 medical care. However, since Mr. Dolenga, to our knowledge, is not a physician, this section is inapplicable.

It does, however, seem reasonable to conclude that the person receiving the services, the claimant, should normally be the person who selects the vendor. If, at that point, the employer or carrier is dissatisfied with the employee’s choice of vendor, it can petition the bureau for a resolution of the dispute under MCL 418.319(2); MSA 17.237(319X2). Both defendant Aetna and defendant Shankin misapprehend the role and authority of the compensation carrier in providing these benefits. That role is to pay for the treatment, not provide it. Ultimately, since it is the claimant who receives the medical treatment or rehabilitation services, it ought normally to be the claimant who chooses the provider of those services, subject to the dispute resolution procedures under the act if the claimant’s choice is objectively unreasonable. Plaintiffs are correct to the extent that they point out that §315 at least implicitly recognizes that it is the worker’s choice of whom to utilize for the providing of services, not that of the employer or carrier. The trial court’s conclusion to the contrary was incorrect.

Of course, to say that it is the employee’s right to choose the provider of a particular service does not compel the conclusion that the employer or carrier cannot voice an opinion on which provider a claimant should consider for those services. That is, there is nothing wrong, as a general proposition, with the carrier recommending to a claimant a particular provider. For that matter, it is probably to be expected that the carrier would at least initially select the provider when it does offer the rehabilitation services and insist that the employee take advantage of those services as is the *625 carrier’s right under § 319. We are not, however, faced with a situation in this case where the carrier instigated the utilization of rehabilitation services. We are cognizant of the fact that defendants represent in their brief on appeal that they voluntarily offered rehabilitation services. We are also cognizant that this is a flagrant misrepresentation of the facts of this case by defendants. The undisputed truth of the matter is that the claimant, in essence, initiated the issue of utilizing rehabilitation services upon the recommendation and referral of his treating physician. The only "voluntary offer” posed by defendants was defendant Shankin’s offer to have a different vendor provide rehabilitation services to the claimant following her refusal to authorize the providing of those services by plaintiffs. 1

For the above reasons, we conclude that neither an employer nór a compensation carrier has the right to unilaterally reject a claimant’s choice of a rehabilitation services vendor and insist upon its own choice by way of denying authorization to the vendor selected by the claimant and referring the claimant to the carrier’s own vendor.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
463 N.W.2d 179, 185 Mich. App. 620, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dolenga-v-aetna-casualty-surety-company-michctapp-1990.