Home-Owners Insurance Company v. Great Northern Insurance Company

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 26, 2018
Docket339158
StatusUnpublished

This text of Home-Owners Insurance Company v. Great Northern Insurance Company (Home-Owners Insurance Company v. Great Northern 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
Home-Owners Insurance Company v. Great Northern Insurance Company, (Mich. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

HOME-OWNERS INSURANCE COMPANY, UNPUBLISHED June 26, 2018 Plaintiff-Appellee,

v No. 339158 Ingham Circuit Court GREAT NORTHERN INSURANCE COMPANY, LC No. 16-000712-CB

Defendant-Appellant.

Before: CAMERON, P.J., and METER and BORRELLO, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

In this dispute between insurance companies over the order of priority for paying personal protection insurance (PIP) benefits under the no-fault act, MCL 500.3101 et seq., defendant, Great Northern Insurance Company, appeals as of right the trial court’s order granting summary disposition in favor of plaintiff, Home-Owners Insurance Company, pursuant to MCR 2.116(C)(10); declaring defendant to be the higher priority insurer responsible for paying the PIP benefits at issue; and entering a judgment in favor of plaintiff for $50,625.25. For the reasons set forth in this opinion, we reverse the order of the trial court and remand this matter for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

I. BACKGROUND

This case arises out of an accident involving a single vehicle that occurred on May 28, 2016. Matthew Theisen was at home that day when Susan Tyson arrived. At that time, Theisen and Tyson were married, and they had an automobile insurance policy with plaintiff covering their personal vehicles. Tyson arrived in a van that was owned by her employer, Advanced Inventory Solutions, and that was insured by defendant. The home was located in a trailer park. Theisen’s truck was parked directly across the street from his home in an empty space where no trailer was parked. Tyson parked her work van between Theisen’s home and his truck, apparently in the road. The van was parked perpendicular to the back end of the truck.

Theisen testified during his deposition that he and Tyson got into an argument when she arrived. At some point, Tyson took the registration and proof of insurance out of Theisen’s truck, and Theisen followed Tyson back to her work van. While the van door was still open, Theisen got between the door and the driver’s seat, where Tyson was sitting, and asked for his paperwork back. Tyson put the paperwork on the center console of the van, and Theisen reached

-1- over her to grab the paperwork from the center console. Theisen explained what happened next during the following exchange:

[Theisen]: And then as I went to go reach for my paperwork, she threw it into drive. The next thing I know I got caught up into something. I was dragged it felt like forever. I don’t know what I was caught on. I could not see because I was too busy on the ground, dragging.

[Plaintiff’s Counsel]: When she put the vehicle into gear, did you grab onto the door at all to stabilize yourself? Like the frame of the door, do you know if you were on that at all to try to keep from falling?

[Theisen]: I could have been, but I’m not a hundred percent sure what I grabbed. I don’t even think I grabbed anything. I’m not a hundred percent sure. It all happened so fast.

Theisen also testified that he remembered grabbing something in the car, that “[i]t was either the frame or the seat belt,” and that he did not know what he was holding. Theisen further explained, “I was on—it felt like I was on the vehicle, like on the side of the vehicle” and that the vehicle was carrying him. One foot was dragging and one foot was up in the air. He thought that he was dragged for “maybe 5 to 8 feet.” Theisen was holding onto the van while it was moving in order to avoid falling. Theisen testified that he did not intend to get into the vehicle, that he was not inside the vehicle, and that he was not standing on any part of the vehicle at the time. According to Theisen, he was eventually “released” and then the back wheel of the van rolled over him. Theisen sustained injuries.

Tyson, in her deposition, described Theisen’s initial approach to the van as follows:

As soon as I had sat down in my vehicle, as I was putting it in drive I was actually closing my door. And that’s when he grabbed ahold of the door and ripped it open as I had just started to move. He put his one hand—left hand on my—the door, where the door handle is on the van, and he put his right hand on my arm. And I yelled at him and I told him to let go of me and he said no.

. . . And I says, “Matt, you need to let go of me.” And he said, “No.” And then he took his hand off of the door and grabbed ahold of my steering wheel. And by this time I had already started moving.

Tyson further explained that Theisen used his right hand to grab her left hand or arm, which was resting on her left leg. Tyson testified that Theisen was outside the vehicle at this point, standing next to the van. The door was open. Theisen moved his left hand from the outside door handle to the steering wheel. Tyson also testified that Theisen grabbed her left arm with both of his hands and never attempted to reach over her to get the paperwork from the van. According to Tyson, as the van started moving forward, Theisen was walking next to the van. Tyson admitted that she could not see Theisen’s feet, but she assumed that he was walking because he was not “dipped down.” She did not think that Theisen was ever standing on the running board of the vehicle. Tyson explained that Theisen was at eye level with her during the incident and that “if you stand next to the van that’s where he would be at, because the running -2- board is a good foot and a half off the ground.” Tyson did not know how Theisen fell off, and she did not realize that he had fallen until she felt the back of the van run over him.

Kyle Radics, a coworker and friend of Tyson’s, testified during his deposition that he was a passenger in Tyson’s work van on the day of the accident. Radics was in the front passenger seat of the van, and he was still inside the van when Tyson got inside after taking the registration and insurance from Theisen’s truck. According to Radics, Tyson was closing the driver side door to the van and the van was already in drive when Theisen swung the door open and tried to reach over Tyson. Theisen never reached through the driver side window. Radics testified that he saw Theisen’s hand on Tyson’s arm and that Theisen never reached past Tyson’s left arm. Radics further testified that Theisen was “hanging out of” the van, that he did not know if Theisen was actually holding any part of the van, and that Tyson’s arm was the only thing Theisen was holding. Radics thought that Theisen was walking alongside the van at first, and he did not think that Theisen could have been dragged by the vehicle once he fell to the ground. According to Radics, the van never went in reverse during the incident. Although Radics’ statement in the police report indicated that Theisen let go of Tyson after being dragged and before the van ran over him, Radics maintained in his deposition that he never indicated that Theisen was dragged by the van.

Larry Aldrich, a neighbor of Theisen’s, testified during his deposition that he was driving home that day when he saw Theisen and Tyson outside the van arguing. As Aldrich was backing into his own driveway, he saw Theisen reaching into the van through the driver side window with his feet on the ground. Aldrich was approximately 50 yards away. Aldrich described the accident as follows:

And then I saw the van go into reverse and pull out into the road. He fell off of the van. She put it in drive to take off and I think that’s when she ran over him.

According to Aldrich, Theisen was hanging onto the van and being carried by it as the van backed up. Aldrich did not know what Theisen was holding. Aldrich explained that the incident “happened really quick” and that he looked away at one point. According to Aldrich, the door to the van was closed while Theisen was reaching his arm through the window.

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Home-Owners Insurance Company v. Great Northern Insurance Company, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/home-owners-insurance-company-v-great-northern-insurance-company-michctapp-2018.