Michigan Ambulatory Surgical Center v. Progressive Marathon Ins Co

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 18, 2026
Docket373314
StatusUnpublished

This text of Michigan Ambulatory Surgical Center v. Progressive Marathon Ins Co (Michigan Ambulatory Surgical Center v. Progressive Marathon Ins Co) 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
Michigan Ambulatory Surgical Center v. Progressive Marathon Ins Co, (Mich. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinions

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

MICHIGAN AMBULATORY SURGICAL UNPUBLISHED CENTER and PHASE ONE REHAB, Assignees of May 18, 2026 JAMERESHA CAMPBELL, 1:44 PM

Plaintiffs-Appellants,

v No. 373314 Macomb Circuit Court PROGRESSIVE MARATHON INSURANCE LC No. 2023-001854-NF COMPANY,

Defendant-Appellee.

Before: WALLACE, P.J., and GARRETT and ACKERMAN, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

This action to recover personal protection insurance (PIP) benefits was brought by plaintiffs Michigan Ambulatory Surgical Center and Phase One Rehab, alleging that they provided treatment to a patient, Jameresha Campbell,1 arising out of a July 2021 motor vehicle accident and that defendant Progressive Marathon Insurance Company (Progressive) was the no-fault insurance carrier responsible for payment of those expenses. Defendant moved the trial court for summary disposition because Campbell was not a named insured on the subject policy of insurance, a fact not disputed by plaintiffs, and because Campbell was also not a resident relative under the policy because the named insured, Cindy Wells2 testified that she was not living with Campbell at the time of the accident, i.e., she was not domiciled at the Redford address at that time. Plaintiffs

1 We note that, during an examination under oath (EUO) conducted by defendant, plaintiffs’ patient testified that her last name is spelled Camp-Bell; however, because her name is spelled Campbell throughout the lower court record, and because she is not a party in this case, we will refer to her as Campbell in order to avoid confusion. 2 The parties indicate that Wells’s last name at the inception of the policy was Campbell, but that she subsequently changed her name. In this opinion, again to avoid confusion, we will refer to her as Wells.

-1- argued that a question of fact remained on the issue of domicile because Campbell testified under oath that Wells lived with her at the time of the accident, at an address in Redford, and because the declaration page of Wells’s policy (the policy) likewise listed the Redford address. The trial court granted summary disposition to defendant. On appeal, plaintiffs argue that Campbell’s deposition testimony, the insurance policy, and Wells’s deposition testimony all create a genuine issue of material fact on the issue of domicile in this matter, and that the trial court therefore erred in its ruling. We agree. We reverse the order granting summary disposition and remand to the trial court.

I. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

Plaintiffs filed a complaint in June 2023 in Macomb County Circuit Court alleging in relevant part, that: they provided medical treatment to Campbell arising out of the ownership, operation, maintenance or use of a motor vehicle as a motor vehicle; defendant was the no-fault insurance carrier that was first in order of priority for payment of those expenses pursuant to the no-fault act; they had standing to pursue claims for these expenses under MCL 500.3112; and defendant failed to issue payment in contradiction of the subject insurance contract and the Michigan no-fault act. MCL 500.3101 et seq.

Defendant answered the complaint and filed various affirmative defenses, including that Campbell was not a named insured or resident relative under the subject policy of insurance and that she failed to prove that she was entitled to claim benefits under the no-fault act’s order of priority statutes, including MCL 500.3114 and MCL 500.3115.3

Campbell also filed a lawsuit against defendant and other parties, arising out of the same accident, which was litigated in the Wayne County Circuit Court (the Wayne County case).

During Wells’s October 2023 deposition in the Wayne County case, she testified that she lived in Livonia with her now-husband, George, starting in 2018, but then testified that she would go back and forth between the Redford address and the Livonia address, staying two nights at one place and then the following two nights at the other, until she got married on April 2, 2021, after which time she lived exclusively with George, first in Livonia, and then at a Birmingham address starting in May 2021. She then clarified that she still stays and gets mail at the Redford address, where her mother and three of her children live, but that she no longer has a bedroom there and sleeps in her mother’s bedroom. When asked what she keeps at the Redford address, she said “[e]verything from toothbrush to multiple shoes, purses, clothing, pajamas, everything.” Still, she said about half of her possessions are at the Redford address and half at the other address. Wells said she still sometimes pays the rent at the Redford address, “if help is needed,” but that she is

3 At the time of the accident, Campbell was operating a vehicle owned by her mother’s husband, George, that was insured by another no-fault carrier. However, while defendant referenced that fact in its motion for summary disposition, none of the parties argue that Campbell was covered under that policy, meaning it is irrelevant to this matter. We note that, if Campell was not entitled to receive benefits from defendant, MCL 500.3114(4) indicates that she could have claimed personal protection insurance benefits under the assigned claims plan, MCL 500.3171 through MCL 500.3175.

-2- not responsible for paying the rent. However, when asked when her name was last listed as a tenant on the lease for the Redford house, she said 2021, i.e., the year of the subject motor vehicle accident. Wells testified that she was living at both the Redford and Livonia addresses when she purchased car insurance from defendant in 2020, but that she would definitely be with her now- husband during his “off days,” which were Sunday and Monday. She was then asked who lived with her at the time she purchased the policy of insurance in 2020 and she responded Campbell, as well as three of her children. But then, contradictorily, when asked again who lived with her at that time, Wells responded, “[i]n Livonia? . . . Me and George.” When asked why she listed the Redford address when she applied for the insurance policy with defendant in 2020, she said “[b]ecause I was living in both places, so I did what was on my license since I was living both places.” Later in the deposition, when asked essentially the same question again, she also indicated that “all my mail” was at the Redford address and that she and George were “in the beginning stage still.” She then presented her driver’s license from the year of the accident, which was issued on April 19, 2021, i.e., 17 days after her marriage to George, and which listed the address in Redford. Wells testified that, prior to the accident, Campbell would assist her with activities that she could not do, such as lifting. When asked if Campbell would come to Birmingham when she needed Campbell’s assistance, Wells responded “[o]r I would already be in Redford.” She was asked why her application for insurance listed only two people as living at the Redford address, she responded that her three children there did not drive, seemingly indicating that she intended to reference herself and Campbell as the two residents of the Redford house. At one point in her deposition, Wells testified that her memory was “terrible” as a result of a medical episode.4

Neither party moved for summary disposition within the time allotted by the scheduling order in this matter, which required such motions to be heard by January 31, 2024.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Michigan Ambulatory Surgical Center v. Progressive Marathon Ins Co, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/michigan-ambulatory-surgical-center-v-progressive-marathon-ins-co-michctapp-2026.