Porscha Shantel Sharp v. Samantha Marie Tracht

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedAugust 19, 2025
Docket369607
StatusUnpublished

This text of Porscha Shantel Sharp v. Samantha Marie Tracht (Porscha Shantel Sharp v. Samantha Marie Tracht) 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
Porscha Shantel Sharp v. Samantha Marie Tracht, (Mich. Ct. App. 2025).

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

PORSCHA SHANTEL SHARP, UNPUBLISHED August 19, 2025 Plaintiff-Appellant, 11:16 AM and

ISPINE PLLC,

Intervening Plaintiff,

v No. 369607 Wayne Circuit Court SAMANTHA MARIE TRACHT and RONALD R. LC No. 19-015431-NI HRIBAL,

Defendants, and

PROGRESSIVE MARATHON INSURANCE COMPANY,

Defendant-Appellee.

Before: BORRELLO, P.J., and, M. J. KELLY and TREBILCOCK, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

In this automobile negligence case, plaintiff appeals by right the stipulated order of dismissal entered by the trial court, but plaintiff specifically challenges an earlier adverse summary disposition ruling. For the reasons set forth in this opinion, we vacate the trial court’s summary disposition ruling challenged by plaintiff on appeal and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

I. BACKGROUND

-1- This action arises out of a September 1, 2019 automobile accident. Plaintiff alleged that she was driving through an intersection with the right-of-way when a vehicle driven by defendant Samantha Tracht1 and owned by defendant Ronald Hribal ran a red light and collided with plaintiff’s vehicle, causing her injuries. Plaintiff filed this action on November 18, 2019. As relevant to this appeal, plaintiff alleged that she was covered under an insurance policy with defendant Progressive Marathon Insurance Company and that Progressive had unreasonably refused to pay no-fault benefits to which plaintiff was entitled. Plaintiff sought recovery of the benefits she alleged she was owed.2

On March 23, 2021, Progressive moved for partial summary disposition with respect to the bills of (1) Capital Surgery Center and (2) Spine and Health, alleging that plaintiff lacked standing regarding these bills because of assignments plaintiff had executed. Progressive alleged that plaintiff had recently produced a new bill from Capital Surgery Center for $248,750, which represented 75% of the alleged outstanding no-fault benefits. Furthermore, Progressive alleged that plaintiff had executed assignments of rights to both Capital Surgery Center and Spine and Health, that those entities had in turn sold those account receivables to medical funding company National Health Finance, and that plaintiff thus had no legal right to claim recovery for those bills in the present action. Progressive argued that plaintiff was not the real party in interest relative to those bills and that those claims must therefore be dismissed for lack of standing. Progressive filed another similar motion for summary disposition on March 26, 2021, alleging that plaintiff’s claims also included bills from other medical providers to which plaintiff had executed assignments. Progressive argued that these claims must also be dismissed for lack of standing.

The trial court granted Progressive’s motion for partial summary disposition with respect to the Capital Surgery Center and Spine and Health bills. The court concluded that plaintiff lacked standing to assert these claims because she had assigned her rights to the medical providers. The trial court acknowledged that the actual assignments were not in the record but relied instead on the evidence Progressive had produced that the accounts were sold to National Health Finance. In a separate order, the trial court also granted Progressive’s additional motion for partial summary disposition based on the other assignments because plaintiff failed to respond to that motion.

In an order, this Court subsequently reversed the trial court’s order granting summary disposition regarding the Capital Surgery Center and Spine and Health bills, stating as follows:

Pursuant to MCR 7.205(E)(2), in lieu of granting the application, the trial court’s September 8, 2021 order is REVERSED, and the matter REMANDED for entry of an order denying the motion for summary disposition. The underlying factual basis of the summary disposition motion filed by defendant Progressive Marathon Insurance Company (Progressive) was that plaintiff assigned her rights

1 Samantha Tracht is also referred to in the record as Samantha Hribal. Although orginally named as defendants in this action, both Samantha and Ronald were dismissed from the action by stipulation of the parties. 2 After Ispine, PLLC, intervened, its claims against Progressive were dismissed by stipulated order pursuant to a settlement agreement.

-2- to certain no-fault benefits to others. However, no actual assignments were produced. Nor would it be appropriate to shift the burden to plaintiff to prove that she did not assign her rights to another. Unless Progressive can prove otherwise, plaintiffs standing to pursue the benefits at issue is established by the fact that she was billed for the underlying medical services. See, e.g., MCL 500.3112 (“Personal protection insurance benefits are payable to . . . an injured person . . . “). Progressive failed to meet its initial burden of either providing affirmative evidence negating an essential element of the claim, or demonstrating that plaintiff could not establish an essential element of her claim. Lowrey v LMPS & LMPJ, Inc, 500 Mich 1, 7; 890 NW2d 344 (2016). [Sharp v Tracht, unpublished order of the Court of Appeals, entered February 17, 2022 (Docket No. 359157) (ellipses in original).]

On remand, Progressive filed a renewed motion for partial summary disposition under MCR 2.116(C)(10) with respect to plaintiff’s claim premised on medical services provided by Capital Surgery Center. Progressive argued that plaintiff had executed an assignment of her rights to pursue no-fault benefits to Capital Surgery Center on November 8, 2019, and that plaintiff therefore did not have standing to pursue recovery of the amount billed by Capital Surgery Center. Progressive further argued that plaintiff could not save her claim by obtaining a “revocation” from Capital Surgery Center because the November 8 assignment indicated that it was irrevocable, plaintiff had already executed the assignment before she filed the instant action, and Capital Surgery Center did not have any interest that it could assign back to plaintiff because it had already sold the account receivable to National Health Finance. Furthermore, Progressive argued that even if the assignment were revocable, recovery was now barred by the one-year-back rule. Progressive attached to the motion a “Notice of Sale and Assignment” evidencing the December 12, 2019 sale of a $248,750 account from provider “Capital Healthcare” to “National Health” that was based on services provided to plaintiff on November 6, 2019. Progressive also apparently attached the assignment that plaintiff executed in favor of Capital Surgery Center, but this particular document in the lower court record is almost entirely black and impossible to read.

In response, plaintiff argued that Capital Surgery Center and National Health Finance had mutually rescinded the respective assignments, rendering them void ab initio. Plaintiff advanced the same argument regarding the assignments involving Spine and Health. Plaintiff contended that she therefore had standing to pursue her claims. Plaintiff attached documents purportedly evidencing these rescissions to her response. However, none of the documents were fully executed by all parties to the purported rescissions.3 Plaintiff subsequently submitted supplemental exhibits that were fully executed versions of the relevant mutual rescissions, each of which included dates of execution on various days in late April or early May 2023.

The trial court held a hearing on the motion, heard oral argument consistent with the parties’ written filings, and took the matter under advisement.

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Porscha Shantel Sharp v. Samantha Marie Tracht, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/porscha-shantel-sharp-v-samantha-marie-tracht-michctapp-2025.