Great American Insurance Company v. Old Republic Insurance Company

448 N.W.2d 493, 180 Mich. App. 508
CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedAugust 2, 1989
DocketDocket 106613, 106614
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 448 N.W.2d 493 (Great American Insurance Company v. Old Republic 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
Great American Insurance Company v. Old Republic Insurance Company, 448 N.W.2d 493, 180 Mich. App. 508 (Mich. Ct. App. 1989).

Opinion

Per Curiam.

Defendant, Old Republic Insurance Company, appeals as of right from orders of the trial court granting summary disposition in favor of plaintiffs, Great American Insurance Company and Continental Insurance Company. Plaintiffs cross appeal from an order of the trial court *510 setting aside defendant’s deemed acceptance of the mediation evaluations. On both matters, we affirm.

We deal first with plaintiffs’ cross appeal. Mediation of this suit occurred on November 18, 1987, and resulted in evaluations in favor of plaintiffs. Plaintiffs accepted the evaluations. Defendant was deemed to have accepted the evaluations due to its failure to file an acceptance or rejection within twenty-eight days. 1 Defendant subsequently moved to set aside its acceptance. The trial court granted the motion.

This Court will reverse a trial court’s decision to set aside an acceptance of a mediation evaluation only where there has been an abuse of discretion. 2 An acceptance should be set aside only where necessary to prevent substantial injustice. 3 Defendant claimed that its failure to file a rejection was the result of mistake, inadvertence, or excusable neglect. 4 Whether an act of neglect is "excusable” is for the trial court to decide. 5

Following the evaluations, defense counsel informed plaintiffs’ counsel, by phone, of his client’s rejection of the evaluations. The parties proceeded with discovery. At the settlement conference, defense counsel again voiced his client’s desire for a "decision on the merits.” The trial court then set a trial date. 6 In granting defendant’s motion to set aside the acceptance, the trial court stated:

It was obvious to me at the time, 1 think every *511 body, that there was no acceptance of that mediation award. I will set aside the award.

It was clear to all concerned that defendant desired to reject the mediation evaluations. Substantial justice was properly served by setting aside defendant’s deemed or fictitious "acceptance.” In this context, we can find no abuse of discretion.

We now turn to defendant’s appeal from the orders of summary disposition in favor of plaintiffs.

This action involves a dispute as to defendant’s liability as a no-fault automobile insurer to pay for property damage resulting from a fire.

Complete Auto Transit, Inc., owned several trailers that haul automobiles. They hired plaintiff Autohaul Industries, Inc., to modify these trailers. 7 The purpose of the modifications was to stretch or lengthen the trailers by four to five feet, thereby enabling each trailer to carry one or two extra cars. The modification process entailed the removal of the ramps and hydraulic cylinders, insertion of new material to lengthen the trailer, and then, installation of new tracks and a new hydraulic system.

While working on one of the trailers, an employee of Autohaul was using a cutting torch to cut off the metal pins which were holding the original hydraulic cylinders in place. Sparks from the torch ignited a nearby wall. The resulting fire caused extensive property damage to Autohaul’s premises and to certain property being stored on those premises by plaintiffs John and Nancy Wright. Plaintiff Great American, the general lia *512 bility insurer for Autohaul, paid Autohaul $161,941.25 for its damages. Plaintiff Continental, the Wrights’ insurer, paid the Wrights $3,772 for their damages. Each plaintiff insurer brought an action seeking recovery from defendant as the no-fault insurer of Complete Auto, owner of the trailers. The actions were consolidated. The trial court then granted summary disposition in favor of plaintiffs.

MCL 500.3121(1); MSA 24.13121(1), part of Michigan’s no-fault act, provides in pertinent part as follows:

Under property protection insurance an insurer is liable to pay benefits for accidental damage to tangible property arising out of the ownership, operation, maintenance or use of a motor vehicle as a motor vehicle.

The dispute here first centers upon whether Autohaul’s employee was performing "maintenance” on the trailer 8 at the time of the fire.

In Miller v Auto-Owners Ins Co, 9 our Supreme Court stated:

The meaning of the term "maintenance,” in addition to appearing from the common sense of the word, has been established in the case law: "The 'maintenance’ aspect of the 'ownership, maintenance, use’ clause covers the act of repairing the covered automobile.”

In adopting a liberal construction of the term *513 "maintenance,” 10 the Supreme Court seems to have rejected 11 the narrow approach evidenced in Liberty Mutual Ins Co v Allied Truck Equip Co, 12 wherein a panel of this Court had stated:

"Maintenance” is defined in Webster’s New Collegiate Dictionary as "keeping in an existing state.” . . . [T]he installation of an auxiliary gas tank might arguably fall outside this strict definition.

Accordingly, the fact that the work being done is intended to make the vehicle "better-than-new” by way of improvement, as opposed to merely being an attempt to preserve the vehicle’s original operational condition, does not necessarily serve to render that work outside the scope of "maintenance.”

Support for this conclusion may be found in Michigan Basic Property Ins Ass’n v Michigan Mutual Ins Co. 13 In that case, damages were incurred in a fire caused by a vehicle owner’s use of a cutting torch while attempting to replace his car’s factory-installed exhaust system with high-performance "headers.” We concluded that the vehicle owner was engaged in maintenance, stating:

[W]e believe the Legislature did not intend to differentiate between replacement with stock parts and replacement with other parts. Allowing the defendants’ argument would lead to confusing attempts to define "stock” parts and "high-perfor *514 manee” parts and may cause legal differences when a mechanic uses a "better” or "worse” brand instead of a replacement part built by an automobile manufacturer. The no-fault act is intended to simplify liability questions, not muddy them with fine distinctions.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
448 N.W.2d 493, 180 Mich. App. 508, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/great-american-insurance-company-v-old-republic-insurance-company-michctapp-1989.