Relevar Home Care v. Meemic Insurance Company

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 16, 2025
Docket368880
StatusUnpublished

This text of Relevar Home Care v. Meemic Insurance Company (Relevar Home Care v. Meemic 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
Relevar Home Care v. Meemic Insurance Company, (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

RELEVAR HOME CARE, UNPUBLISHED September 16, 2025 Plaintiff-Appellee, 1:40 PM

v No. 368880 Macomb Circuit Court MEEMIC INSURANCE COMPANY, LC No. 2022-002385-NF

Defendant-Appellant.

RELEVAR HOME CARE,

Plaintiff-Appellant,

v No. 370897 Macomb Circuit Court MEEMIC INSURANCE COMPANY, LC No. 2022-002385-NF

Defendant-Appellee.

Before: GADOLA, C.J., and MARIANI and TREBILCOCK, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

These consolidated appeals arise from injuries sustained in a motor vehicle accident and resulting claims for personal protection insurance (PIP) benefits under the no-fault act, MCL 500.3101 et seq. A jury concluded defendant insurance company wrongfully reduced its payment to plaintiff, a home healthcare service company, by almost half the fees charged for the services rendered to defendant’s insured driver and thus awarded plaintiff the unpaid claims and interest. Defendant mainly raises evidentiary challenges arising from the trial, and plaintiff separately appeals the trial court’s denial of its motion for attorney fees under MCL 500.3148(1). For the reasons set forth in this opinion, we affirm in all respects.

-1- I. BACKGROUND

Defendant’s insured, Stephen Luczak, suffered a stroke while driving, crashed his vehicle into a house, and sustained serious injuries. Plaintiff is a home healthcare service company that provided attendant care and nursing services to Luczak. After defendant only paid plaintiff about 50 percent of the actual amounts billed, plaintiff commenced this lawsuit alleging breach of contract for failing to pay for reasonably necessary medical services provided to Luczak in his home under defendant’s no-fault policy with Luczak. Plaintiff sought its unpaid claims, interest, and attorney fees.

Following a two-day jury trial, the jury returned a verdict in favor of plaintiff. The jury determined that the expenses that plaintiff charged were allowable expenses under the no-fault act, and it awarded plaintiff the full amount of its outstanding claims, $113,683.05, plus interest in the amount of $15,915.62. Plaintiff then moved for attorney fees under MCL 500.3148(1), which the trial court denied after concluding that defendant had undertaken the “statutorily required review of . . . [plaintiff’s] charges to determine their reasonableness and it paid what it ultimately believed to be a reasonable amount.” Plaintiff unsuccessfully moved for reconsideration of the trial court’s order denying its motion for attorney fees. These consolidated appeals followed. Relevar Home Care v Meemic Ins Co, unpublished order of the Court of Appeals, entered January 29, 2025 (Docket Nos. 368880 and 370897).

II. JURISDICTION

As a threshold issue, defendant raises a jurisdictional challenge regarding the timeliness of plaintiff’s claim of appeal. Defendant contends that the trial court’s order denying plaintiff’s motion for reconsideration of its order denying plaintiff’s motion for attorney fees was entered on April 8, 2024, and that plaintiff did not file its claim of appeal within 21 days, which would have been on or before April 29, 2024. In contrast, plaintiff asserts that its claim of appeal was timely filed on May 13, 2024, because the order denying reconsideration was not filed and served electronically on the parties through the court’s electronic filing system until April 22, 2024.

MCR 7.204(A)(1)(d) required that plaintiff file its appeal as of right within 21 days of the trial court’s “entry” of the order denying plaintiff’s motion for reconsideration. Under MCR 7.204(A), “ ‘entry’ means the date a judgment or order is signed or the date that data entry of the judgment or order is accomplished in the issuing tribunal’s register of actions.” However, the register of actions in this case did not indicate “the date that data entry of the judgment or order [was] accomplished” as required by the court rule. We, therefore, construe April 22, 2024—the date on which the trial court’s order denying the motion for reconsideration was marked as filed— as the date that data entry of the judgment or order was accomplished. MCR 7.204(A). Accordingly, the 21-day period ran from April 22, 2024, and plaintiff’s claim of appeal was timely under MCR 7.204(A)(1)(d). Defendant’s jurisdictional challenge in Docket No. 370897 is, therefore, without merit.

III. PLAINTIFF’S DIRECT CAUSE OF ACTION UNDER MCL 500.3112

In Docket No. 368880, defendant argues that plaintiff did not have standing to pursue a direct cause of action against defendant to recover unpaid charges for attendant care and nursing

-2- services provided to Luczak following the effective date of 2019 PA 21. The gravamen of defendant’s argument is that, under this Court’s decision in Centria Home Rehab, LLC v Allstate Ins Co, ___ Mich App ___, ___; ___ NW3d ___ (2023) (Docket No. 363699); slip op at 2 (Centria I), plaintiff did not have standing to pursue a direct cause of action to recover its unpaid claims for benefits for attendant care and nursing services provided to Luczak from July 1, 2021 to May 7, 2022, because the underlying accident occurred before the effective date of 2019 PA 21.

But our Supreme Court specifically rejected defendant’s argument shortly after briefing completed in this case. In lieu of granting appeal, our Supreme Court reversed Centria I and held that “[t]he 2019 amendment to MCL 500.3112 applied ‘to products, services, or accommodations provided after the effective date of this amendatory act.’ ” Centria Home Rehab, LLC v Allstate Ins Co, ___ Mich ___, ___; 12 NW3d 387 (2024) (Docket No. 166608) (Centria II), slip order at 1, quoting 2019 PA 21, enacting § 1.1 Accordingly, to the extent that plaintiff sought to recover unpaid charges from defendant for nursing services and attendant care it provided to Luczak, it had standing to do so in a direct cause of action under the version of MCL 500.3112 in effect following the 2019 amendments. Defendant’s appeal on this basis is, therefore, without merit.

IV. EVIDENTIARY CHALLENGES

Defendant next argues that the trial court erred in admitting several of plaintiff’s exhibits as inadmissible hearsay and in violation of MRE 408 and MRE 409.2 We disagree.

Defendant’s evidentiary challenges concern Exhibits 1, 3, and 4. Although defendant objected to each of these exhibits below, its argument on appeal relative to Exhibits 1 and 4 presents a different basis for the alleged inadmissibility than was presented to the trial court. Consequently, only defendant’s argument regarding Exhibit 3 is preserved for appellate review. See Klapp v United Ins Group Agency (On Remand), 259 Mich App 467, 475; 674 NW2d 736 (2003). We, therefore, review defendant’s objection to Exhibit 3 for abuse of discretion, Danhoff v Fahim, 513 Mich 427, 441; 15 NW3d 262 (2024), and its remaining challenges for plain error, MRE 103(d); see also Wischmeyer v Schanz, 449 Mich 469, 483; 536 NW2d 760 (1995).3

First, we address under the plain-error standard plaintiff’s Exhibits 1 and 4. Exhibit 1 is plaintiff’s balance sheet reflecting unpaid charges from July 6, 2021 until April 26, 2022, and

1 For reasons unknown to us, defendant neither provided this Court with notice of this controlling supplemental authority, nor conceded the point in response to plaintiff’s notice of controlling supplemental authority expressly raising Centria II. 2 The Michigan Rules of Evidence were substantially amended effective January 1, 2024. See ADM File No. 2021-10, 512 Mich lxiii (2023). We rely on the versions of the rules of evidence in effect at the time of this trial.

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Relevar Home Care v. Meemic Insurance Company, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/relevar-home-care-v-meemic-insurance-company-michctapp-2025.