Kenya Alisha Frost v. Progressive Michigan Insurance Company

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 28, 2016
Docket316157
StatusUnpublished

This text of Kenya Alisha Frost v. Progressive Michigan Insurance Company (Kenya Alisha Frost 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
Kenya Alisha Frost v. Progressive Michigan Insurance Company, (Mich. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

KENYA ALISHA FROST, GENERAL MOTORS UNPUBLISHED ACCEPTANCE CORPORATION (GMAC), and July 28, 2016 ALLY FINANCIAL, INC.,

Plaintiffs,

and

CITIZENS INSURANCE COMPANY OF AMERICA,

Intervening Plaintiff-Appellee,

v No. 316157 Wayne Circuit Court PROGRESSIVE MICHIGAN INSURANCE LC No. 11-002947-NF COMPANY, a/k/a PROGRESSIVE MARATHON INSURANCE COMPANY,

Defendant-Appellant.

ON REMAND

Before: OWENS, P.J., and JANSEN and O’CONNELL, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

Defendant Progressive Insurance Company appeals by right the circuit court’s order granting summary disposition in favor of intervening plaintiff Citizens Insurance. We again vacate the summary disposition order and remand to the circuit court.

In April 2010, plaintiff Kenya Frost obtained a liability insurance policy from Progressive to cover her car. The following month, the car was destroyed. The month after that, Frost’s minor daughter was injured in an accident while an occupant in an uninsured car. The Assigned Claims Facility assigned Frost’s daughter’s claim to Citizens. In September 2010, Progressive informed Frost that her policy was rescinded ab initio, alleging that Frost had

-1- procured the policy through fraud. In 2011, Frost filed suit against Progressive seeking reimbursement for losses incurred when her car was destroyed.1 Citizens intervened as a party plaintiff to seek reimbursement from Progressive benefits that Citizens had paid on behalf of Frost’s daughter.

Citizens and Progressive filed cross-motions for summary disposition pursuant to MCR 2.116(C)(10) and MCR 2.116(I)(2) respectively. Citizens argued that Progressive could not void a policy of insurance ab initio where an innocent third party is affected. Defendant argued that Frost committed actionable fraud, and that, pursuant to the Michigan Supreme Court’s decision in Titan Ins Co v Hyten, 491 Mich 547; 817 NW2d 562 (2012), the claims of an innocent third party do not bar rescission of the policy ab initio.

The circuit court found that the accident had occurred before Progressive had attempted to rescind the policy, and that once the accident occurred, Progressive lost its ability to rescind as to Frost’s daughter. The court entered an order granting Citizens’ motion for summary disposition and denying Progressive motion. This Court vacated and remanded in Frost v Progressive Mich Ins Co, unpublished opinion per curiam of the Court of Appeals, issued September 23, 2014 (Docket No. 316157), which the Michigan Supreme Court vacated for reconsideration in light of Bazzi v Sentinel Ins Co, ___ Mich App ___; ___ NW2d ___ (2016) (Docket No. 320518). Frost v Progressive Mich Ins Co, 497 Mich 980; 860 NW2d 636 (2015).

In Bazzi, the action arose out of a motor vehicle accident in which both first-party and third-party claims ensued.2 The trial court denied Sentinel’s motion for summary disposition on Bazzi’s claim for PIP benefits premised on the innocent third-party rule. Bazzi, ___ Mich App at ___; slip op at 2. In this Court, the Bazzi majority construed the issue to be addressed as “whether the so-called ‘innocent third-party’ rule, which this Court established in State Farm Mut Auto Ins Co v Kurylowicz, [67 Mich App 568; 242 NW2d 530 (1976), overruled in Hyten, 491 Mich at 550,] survived our Supreme Court’s decision in Titan Ins Co v Hyten.” Bazzi, ___ Mich App at ___; slip op at 2 (citation omitted). The Bazzi majority concluded “that it did not.” Id.

While Hyten did not involve a claim for PIP benefits, the Bazzi majority found the decision in Hyten to be determinative and concluded that “there is no innocent third-party rule as to a claim for [PIP] benefits. That is, if an insurer is entitled to rescind a no-fault insurance policy based upon a claim of fraud, it is not obligated to pay benefits under that policy even for PIP benefits to a third party innocent of the fraud.” Bazzi, ___ Mich App at ___; slip op at 3. In other words, if an insurer is able to establish that the subject insurance policy was “procured by fraud,” the insurer will not be “obligated to pay no-fault benefits.” Id.

1 Frost was eventually joined by plaintiffs GMAC and Ally Financial, Inc., who dismissed their claims against defendant and are not parties in the instant appeal. 2 “Sentinel successfully pursued a third-party complaint against Hala and Mariam Bazzi seeking to rescind the policy based on fraud.” Bazzi, ___ Mich App at ___; slip op at 2.

-2- In its analysis, the Bazzi majority determined that the “easily ascertainable” rule and the “innocent third-party rule” are effectively indistinguishable in “that they are one and the same [rule].” Id. Denying that the decision in Hyten was focused solely “on how ascertainable the fraud is,” the majority determined that it was “also relevant that we are dealing with a third-party claimant.” Id. at ___; slip op at 4. Finding the issue in Hyten to comprise “whether an insurer may avail itself of traditional legal and equitable remedies to avoid liability under an insurance policy on the ground of fraud in the application for insurance, when the fraud was easily ascertainable and the claimant is a third party,” the Bazzi majority asserted that Hyten recognized the necessity “that both conditions must apply before the insurer is prevented from raising a fraud defense.” Bazzi, ___ Mich App at ___; slip op at 4, citing Hyten, 491 Mich at 560, 564. Further, the majority observed that Hyten served to overrule Kurylowicz, “its progeny,” and other decisions, such as Ohio Farmers Ins Co v Mich Mut Ins Co, 179 Mich App 355; 445 NW2d 228 (1989), overruled in Hyten, 491 Mich at 564, “to the extent that it held ‘that an insurer is estopped from denying coverage on the basis of fraud when it could have easily ascertained the fraud[.]’ ” Bazzi, ___ Mich App at ___; slip op at 4-5, quoting Hyten, 491 Mich at 551 n 1.

The Bazzi majority further concluded that the decision in Hyten extended to “mandatory no-fault benefits.” Bazzi, ___ Mich App at ___; slip op at 5. In reaching this conclusion, the majority quoted the following language in Hyten:

[T]hat an insurer is not precluded from availing itself of traditional legal and equitable remedies to avoid liability under an insurance policy on the ground of fraud in the application for insurance, even when the fraud was easily ascertainable and the claimant is a third party. [Bazzi, ___ Mich App at ___; slip op at 5, quoting Hyten, 491 Mich at 571.]

Indicating that the above-referenced statement from Hyten lacked any qualification regarding whether the benefits were statutorily mandated, the Bazzi majority asserted:

Thus, if there is a valid policy in force, the statute controls the mandated coverages. But what coverages are required by law are simply irrelevant where the insurer is entitled to declare the policy void ab initio. [Bazzi, ___ Mich App at ___; slip op at 5.]

Therefore, according to Bazzi, the question becomes, “not whether PIP benefits are mandated by statute, but whether that statute prohibits the insurer from availing itself of the defense of fraud.” Id. Indicating the failure of the litigants to identify a provision within the no-fault act that statutorily restricts the use of the fraud defense with regard to PIP benefits, the majority proceeded to address MCL 257.520 and the discussion regarding this statutory provision in Hyten, stating that the Hyten Court “concluded that [the] limitation on the fraud defense contained in MCL 257.520(f)(1) does not apply to all automobile insurance policies.” Bazzi, ___ Mich App at ___; slip op at 5-6.

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Related

Titan Insurance Company v. Hyten
491 Mich. 547 (Michigan Supreme Court, 2012)
State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance v. Kurylowicz
242 N.W.2d 530 (Michigan Court of Appeals, 1976)
OHIO FARMERS INSURANCE COMPANY v. Michigan Mutual Insurance Company
445 N.W.2d 228 (Michigan Court of Appeals, 1989)

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Bluebook (online)
Kenya Alisha Frost v. Progressive Michigan Insurance Company, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kenya-alisha-frost-v-progressive-michigan-insurance-company-michctapp-2016.