Marcus Heade v. Liberty Mutual Insurance Company

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 29, 2022
Docket359422
StatusUnpublished

This text of Marcus Heade v. Liberty Mutual Insurance Company (Marcus Heade v. Liberty Mutual 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
Marcus Heade v. Liberty Mutual Insurance Company, (Mich. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

If this opinion indicates that it is “FOR PUBLICATION,” it is subject to revision until final publication in the Michigan Appeals Reports.

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

MARCUS HEADE and TERI JORDAN, as Special UNPUBLISHED Fiduciary of JASMINE REGINIA LIP HEADE, a September 29, 2022 legally incapacitated person, and NATHANIEL HEADE and NAOMI HEADE, Minors,

Plaintiffs-Appellants/Cross-Appellees,

v No. 359422 Wayne Circuit Court LIBERTY MUTUAL INSURANCE COMPANY, LC No. 17-005480-NF doing business as LM GENERAL INSURANCE COMPANY,

Defendant-Appellee/Cross-Appellant,

and

MICHIGAN ASSIGNED CLAIMS PLAN,

Defendant.

Before: GLEICHER, C.J., and MARKEY and PATEL, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

At issue in this first-party no-fault case is the priority of no-fault, health, and disability insurance policies with coordination-of-benefits (COB) provisions. The circuit court determined that the injured parties’ self-funded health insurance plan was first in line to pay medical bills. The court further concluded that any wage-loss claims paid by the no-fault insurer would be set off by amounts paid out by a disability policy, but not through Social Security Disability Insurance (SSDI) as the disability policy payments were already reduced by those amounts. We reverse and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

-1- I. BACKGROUND

The members of the Heade family were injured in a serious motor vehicle accident on September 16, 2016. During the accident, Jasmine Heade was driving a 2009 Pontiac G6, which she insured with Liberty Mutual Insurance Company. Jasmine received a discounted rate by coordinating the no-fault benefits with her health insurance coverage. The policy declarations page indicates that “Coordination of Medical Expenses And Work Loss Applies” to personal injury protection (PIP) benefits. The policy describes:

If there is any other insurance plan providing coverage for expenses or loss covered under [PIP] Coordination of Benefits or primary Benefits shall be coordinated with the coverage available under all such policies and plans so that up to, but no more than, one hundred percent (100%) of any such expenses or loss shall be recoverable under this and all such policies and plans combined.

When Jasmine first secured the Liberty Mutual policy, the Heade family was covered by health insurance through her employer. By the time of the accident, however, the Heade family was covered by a Blue Cross/Blue Shield of Michigan (BCBSM) plan through Marcus Heade’s employer, Fiat Chrysler Automobile (FCA). That plan is self-funded under the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (ERISA), 29 USC 1001 et seq., and states, in relevant part:

Benefits payable under the Plan will be coordinated with and secondary to benefits provided or required by any group or individual automobile, homeowner’s or premises insurance including medical payments, [PIP], or no-fault coverage. Coordination by the Plan shall be contingent upon the enrollee having first right of recovery from any such no-fault coverage available.

In a section entitled “Determining Priority,” the FCA/BCBSM plan states:

The program which, under the rules of this subsection has the first obligation to pay benefits is termed the “primary” program, and the coverages it provides are “primary.” The program (and the coverages it provides) is termed “secondary.”

a. Any other program which provides group or individual automobile, homeowner’s, or premises insurance, including medical payments, [PIP], or no- fault coverage, is primary to the extent that either the enrollee’s out-of-pocket expenses have been firs[t] satisfied or the coverage is unlimited.

b. When the other program does not contain a COB provision, that program is always primary.

c. When the other program contains a COB provision and the order of benefit determination under both programs’ COB provisions establish this Plan as primary, the provisions of this program determine the Plan’s liability, regardless of any payment the other program may have made.

-2- d. When the other program contains a COB provision, the following order of benefit determination will be used.

i. The program covering the enrollee [as] an employee will be primary over the program covering the enrollee as a dependent.

ii. When the enrollee is a dependent child whose parents are not divorced or separated,

 The program covering the enrollee as a dependent of the parent whose birthday occurs earlier in the calendar year will be primary over the program covering the enrollee as a dependent of the parent whose birthday occurs later in the calendar year.

* * *

iv. When rules (i), and (ii), and (iii) above do not establish an order of benefit determination,

 The program which has covered the enrollee for the longer period of time will be primary. . . .

Jasmine’s injuries left her completely disabled and unable to work. Jasmine received SSDI wage-loss payments. She also had a disability policy through her employer with Sun Life Assurance Company of Canada. Jasmine’s wage-loss disability payments from Sun Life were reduced by the amount of SSDI benefits she received.1 And Liberty Mutual set off both the Sun Life and SSDI receipts from its payout.

Following the accident, FCA/BCBSM paid a significant portion of the medical expenses incurred by the Heade family members. The Heade family members also filed a claim for benefits with Liberty Mutual. Equian, BCBSM’s subrogation vendor, then sought reimbursement from Liberty Mutual. Liberty Mutual did not pay out on the Heades’ claims or reimburse BCBSM.

The Heade family filed suit against Liberty Mutual in 2017, seeking first-party no-fault benefits. In its initial answer and affirmative defenses, Liberty Mutual asserted that it was not in the highest order of priority to pay out benefits and that the Heades’ Liberty Mutual policy “has a coordination clause that must be properly billed first before [Liberty Mutual] has any exposure to pay benefits.” The lawsuit took many twists and turns, including a short trip to federal court. Some issues were resolved through negotiation and settlement.

1 Specifically, § IV of the Sun Life Benefit Provisions applicable to Long Term Disability Income Benefits provides that the policy payments will be adjusted to reflect SSDI payments received by the injured party.

-3- In relation to the medical bills incurred by the members of the Heade family, Liberty Mutual sought partial summary disposition in its favor on the priority and COB issues. The Heade family challenged the summary disposition motion and sought to strike the priority and COB defenses, arguing that Liberty Mutual had not cited sufficient facts in its affirmative defenses and thereafter had not presented evidence to support these defenses. The Heade family further asserted that a no-fault policy cannot be coordinated with a self-funded ERISA healthcare plan like the FCA/BCBSM plan.

Although a Zoom hearing was scheduled and the parties’ attorneys were in the virtual waiting room, the circuit court declined to hear oral argument. Thereafter, the circuit court granted Liberty Mutual’s motion for partial summary disposition in a short handwritten order. That order states in full:

Regarding the affirmative defense, paragraph 16 is sufficient to state a [COB] defense. Regarding the conflicting coordination clauses, a[n] ERISA clause does not necessarily preempt a no[-]fault clause. In Citizens [Ins Co of America] v MidMichigan [Health ConnectCare Network Plan], 449 F3[d] 688 [(CA 6, 2006),] the court held unless the ERISA plan expressly disavows coverage for medical its coordination provision does not make the no[-]fault policy primary.

Here we do not have such a disavowal.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Marcus Heade v. Liberty Mutual Insurance Company, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marcus-heade-v-liberty-mutual-insurance-company-michctapp-2022.