Michigan Basic Property Insurance v. Ware

230 Mich. App. 44
CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 22, 1998
DocketDocket Nos. 193707, 193712
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 230 Mich. App. 44 (Michigan Basic Property Insurance v. Ware) 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 Basic Property Insurance v. Ware, 230 Mich. App. 44 (Mich. Ct. App. 1998).

Opinion

O’Connell, J.

The sole issue in these interlocutory appeals is whether judgment creditors of a decedent’s estate may collect from continuing installments of prize money issuing from the decedent’s participation in the state lottery. The trial court ruled that the proceeds are to be paid directly to the decedent’s surviv[47]*47ing spouse and children and are not subject to process by the estate’s creditors. We affirm.

In November 1986, James Ware won $2,000,000 in the state Jackpot Super Lotto, the winnings to be paid in installments of $100,000 each year for twenty years.

Ware owned residential property at 19167 Gilchrist in Detroit, but failed to pay the property taxes, and defendants Jerry and Harold Stehlik acquired the property through a tax deed. On September 28, 1994, a notice to quit the premises was served on Ware’s daughter, who was inhabiting the property, directing her to vacate the premises by October 29, 1994. On the latter date, an explosion and fire occurred on this property, resulting in extensive personal injury and property damage. Ware himself was severely injured in the incident, succumbing to the injuries several days afterward. Ware died intestate, survived by his wife and several children.

Several individuals injured in the explosion and fire, and the insurer of several property owners who suffered losses in the incident, commenced actions against Ware’s estate, alleging that Ware had intentionally caused the conflagration. The cases were consolidated for discovery and trial.

The personal representative of Ware’s estate asked the circuit court for a declaratory judgment concerning whether the continuing payments of Ware’s lotteiy winnings would be subject to the claims of plaintiffs in the event that they prevailed in their suits against the estate. After hearing arguments regarding the motion, the court ruled that the remaining lottery payments would pass directly to Ware’s immediate family members and outside the reach of Ware’s judgment [48]*48creditors. After the court denied a motion for reconsideration, plaintiffs filed separate applications to this Court for leave to file interlocutory appeals of the court’s ruling. This Court initially denied leave, but upon reconsideration granted leave and consolidated the appeals.

The question whether judgment creditors of the estate of a lottery prizewinner who died intestate leaving a spouse and children may collect from the continuing lottery payments is a matter of first impression. The legislation governing this controversy read at the time relevant to these appeals as follows:

(1) The right of any person to a prize drawn from the state lottery is not assignable, except that payment of any prize drawn may be paid to the family members or to the estate of a deceased prizewinner as provided in subsection (2), to a person pursuant to an appropriate judicial order, or to the state pursuant to section 32 [if the prizewinner has a liability to the state, or a support arrearage]. The commissioner shall be discharged of all further liability upon payment of a prize pursuant to this section.
(2) If a prizewinner dies before collecting the full amount of his or her prize drawn from the state lottery, the bureau shall continue to make the remaining prize payments to the prizewinner’s surviving spouse and the prizewinner’s living children, in equal proportions, unless otherwise directed by the prizewinner. If there is not a surviving spouse or living children or other designated beneficiaries, the remaining prize payments shall be made to the prizewinner’s estate. [MCL 432.25; MSA 18.969(25).]

We review questions of statutory construction de novo. Haworth, Inc v Wickes Mfg Co, 210 Mich App 222, 227; 532 NW2d 903 (1995). Plaintiffs argue that the statute expressly permits creditors to reach the lottery winnings through an “appropriate judicial [49]*49order,” that the administrative rules from the Bureau of State Lottery reflect a legislative intent to allow creditors to garnish such payments, that the statute should not be read to abrogate provisions of the Revised Probate Code that afford creditors access to a decedent’s estate, and, alternatively, that because the statutory language providing for payments of lottery winnings directly to family members of a deceased prizewinner was added by 1988 PA 243, effective July 11, 1988, it should not be applied retroactively to cover proceeds from Ware’s 1986 lottery jackpot.

Regarding the statutory language itself, plaintiffs emphasize the provision for payment to “a person pursuant to an appropriate judicial order” in subsection 25(1), arguing that this language expressly preserves plaintiffs’ right to seek court orders attaching the continuing lottery payments. However, the trial court concluded that subsection 25(1) establishes three distinct exceptions to its general rule prohibiting assignments of lottery prizes and that where the facts call for exercise of the provision for payments directly to a deceased prizewinner’s family, that provision must control. We agree.

The primary purpose of statutory interpretation is to ascertain and give effect to the intent of the Legislature. Haworth, supra at 227. To the extent possible, each provision of a statute should be given effect, and each should be read to harmonize with all others. Gebhardt v O’Rourke, 444 Mich 535, 542; 510 NW2d 900 (1994). Where a specific statutory provision differs from a related general provision, the specific one controls. Id. at 542-543. In the instant case, the plain wording of subsection 25(2) states that the winnings [50]*50of a deceased prizewinner should be paid to the decedent’s estate only if the decedent has no surviving spouse or children and has designated no other beneficiary. Giving full effect to this specific and unambiguous language suggests that only when the estate stands to receive the winnings as provided by subsection 25(2), for lack of a surviving spouse, children, or other designated beneficiary, are those winnings subject to attachment by a person through a judicial order as provided by subsection 25(1). This construction recognizes the specificity of the provision for distributing a deceased lottery winner’s prize money directly to the decedent’s spouse and children, or named beneficiaries, where such exist, while recognizing also the provision for payment to a person pursuant to a judicial order where the winnings are instead paid directly into the estate.

Further, the conformity of this construction with legislative intent is apparent from the history of the legislation in question. Before the 1988 amendment, MCL 432.25; MSA 18.969(25) announced only two exceptions to the general nonassignability of lottery prizes — that winnings could be paid to a deceased prizewinner’s estate or to a person pursuant to an appropriate judicial order. When the Legislature promulgates new legislation, it is presumed to do so with knowledge of related existing legislation and to have intended to effect a change. Walen v Dep’t of Corrections, 443 Mich 240, 248; 505 NW2d 519 (1993). Thus, the Legislature’s amendment covering distribution of lottery winnings due a prizewinner who has died leaving immediate family or a designated beneficiary should be understood as a manifestation of the specific legislative intent to alter existing law to allow [51]*51such prize money to bypass the decedent’s estate and go directly to the survivors indicated. See

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Bluebook (online)
230 Mich. App. 44, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/michigan-basic-property-insurance-v-ware-michctapp-1998.