Riverview MacOmb Home and Attendant Care v. State Farm Mutual Auto

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 20, 2016
Docket327030
StatusUnpublished

This text of Riverview MacOmb Home and Attendant Care v. State Farm Mutual Auto (Riverview MacOmb Home and Attendant Care v. State Farm Mutual Auto) 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
Riverview MacOmb Home and Attendant Care v. State Farm Mutual Auto, (Mich. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

RIVERVIEW MACOMB HOME AND UNPUBLISHED ATTENDANT CARE, LLC, d/b/a AVA CARE October 20, 2016 AND CASE MANAGEMENT,

Plaintiff-Appellee,

v No. 327030 Macomb Circuit Court STATE FARM MUTUAL AUTOMOBILE LC No. 2013-002361-NF INSURANCE COMPANY,

Defendant-Appellant/Cross- Appellee,

and

GROUP 1 HOME, INC,

Intervening Plaintiff- Appellee/Cross-Appellant,

MENDELSON ORTHOPEDICS, PC, and SYNERGY SPINE AND ORTHOPEDIC CENTER,

Intervening Plaintiffs-Appellees.

Before: GADOLA, P.J., and BORRELLO and STEPHENS, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

Defendant, State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Company (State Farm), appeals by right a January 27, 2015, trial court judgement entered following a jury verdict awarding intervening plaintiff-cross-appellant, Group 1 Home, Inc (Group 1), no-fault benefits for services provided to Dan Richardson, a pedestrian who suffered severe injuries in an automobile accident. Group 1 Home cross-appeals the trial court’s order precluding it from recovering benefits for services rendered before the appointment of Richardson’s guardian. For the reasons set forth in

-1- this opinion, we vacate the judgment in favor of Group 1 Home, affirm the trial court’s order denying benefits before appointment of the guardian, and remand for entry of an order granting summary disposition in favor of defendant as to Group 1’s claims.

I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND

Richardson, a pedestrian, was struck by an automobile and sustained serious injuries, including a traumatic brain injury. Because Richardson was not covered by any no-fault policy, his claim was assigned to defendant through the Michigan Assigned Claims Facility. Richardson’s physicians prescribed 24-hour daily attendant care services for Richardson. Plaintiff Riverview Macomb Home and Attendant Care, d/b/a Ava Care and Case Management (“Ava”), provided case management services for Richardson. Before the accident, Richardson rented a room in a basement. After the accident, Richardson could not access the basement room because of his injuries and he therefore was homeless. Ava arranged for Richardson to enter Group 1 Home, Inc., a residence facility where Richardson could have access to attendant care services. Defendant denied payment of no-fault personal injury protection (“PIP”) benefits, including attendant care benefits, to Group 1 Home pursuant to MCL 500.3157, on the ground that it was not a licensed adult foster care facility, and thus did not lawfully render treatment. Ava brought this action against defendant for payment of attendant care and other benefits. Group 1 Home was permitted to intervene to pursue its claim for payment of attendant care benefits.

Defendant moved for summary disposition under MCR 2.116(C)(10), arguing that there was no genuine issue of fact that the services Richardson received from Group 1 Home were in the nature of adult foster care, which Group 1 Home was not licensed to provide.

Ava argued in response that Group 1 Home’s services were not adult foster care services because Group 1 Home did not provide protection to Richardson within the meaning of the adult foster care licensing act. Ava argued that it did not manage Richardson’s finances or screen visitors. Richardson was free to leave at any time. Group 1 Home did not provide any protection other than a business’s ordinary duties to customers. Ava stated that Richardson had a guardian to oversee his protection. Ava denied that Group 1 Home’s services met the definition of foster care under MCL 400.704(7). Ava pointed out that it subcontracted with Group 1 Home to provide attendant care. The contract did not refer to foster care.

Group 1 Home asserted in its response that it was not an adult foster care facility within the meaning of the adult foster care facility licensing act. Group 1 Home denied that it was acting as Richardson’s guardian or fiduciary. It denied that it was billing defendant for foster care services. It stated, “Group 1 Home simply provided a place to stay and 24-hours per day of attendant care, as prescribed by his physician.” Group 1 Home denied that it required a foster care license to receive payment for attendant care services under the no-fault act.

Defense counsel argued at the motion hearing that Group 1 Home was rendering adult foster care services within the meaning of the statute. She emphasized that Allen testified in his deposition “that the rate of pay that he was charging included room and board and he monitored Mr. Richardson for his safety.” Counsel for Group 1 Home argued in response that defendant was “welcome to argue to a jury that foster care benefits are not compensable but attendant care

-2- benefits are.” The trial court remarked that this appeared to be a question of law. Counsel replied, “There is naturally overlap and Group 1 Home is not requesting fees for adult foster care, they are requesting fees for attendant care. [Defendant is] trying to use an end run by citing the overlap to get out of paying for the whole thing.” Ava’s counsel stated that Richardson’s case manager, not the Group 1 Home staff, supervised Richardson. Richardson’s guardian was appointed to ensure Richardson’s care, control, and custody. Group 1 Home was not “in charge of whether or not he was humiliated, intimidated, whether or not he was exploited for financial or social or moral purposes. That was the guardian’s obligation.” Ava’s counsel added, “Just because attendant care is being provided and just because some of those same services are under the umbrella of provision of an adult foster care home doesn’t equate that this attendant care and the residence where it’s being provided suddenly becomes an adult foster care home.”

The court ruled that Group 1 Home could be compensated only for the services that did not require licensure. In other words, Group 1 Home could be compensated for services such as hygiene and medication assistance, but it could not be compensated for room and board because that required licensure. The trial court denied defendant’s motion for summary disposition, but ruled that defendant “is not liable for expenses related to room and board.”

The trial court allowed a hearing for reconsideration. Following arguments, the trial court questioned whether Richardson’s placement was appropriate because he was “in need of all of the foster care, security, maintenance, the supervision.” The court stated, “I can’t put him under a bridge and expect [defendant] to give him attendant care.” The trial court also indicated that plaintiff’s case manager and guardian should have placed him in an adult foster care home.1 The trial court then disallowed any reimbursement for services rendered before the guardian was appointed, reasoning that Ava did not have authority to place Richardson in anything other than a licensed adult foster care home.

At trial, Ava called Marcus Murray, who testified that he was one of the owners of Ava Macomb Home. Murray testified that the Detroit Medical Center (DMC) contacted him regarding Richardson. DMC indicated that Murray did not have “actual identification.” He did not have family support. Richardson was “non-ambulatory or having great difficulty with ambulation at that time.” He had hearing deficits and visual deficits. DMC did not know anything about Richardson’s income or funding. Richardson could not return to his basement room in his uncle’s house because he was bedbound and unable to climb stairs.

Murray stated that he looked for “a solution that would not cost, where we could partner with a provider that would provide the simple activities of daily living and assistance and that’s how this all came about.” Murray contacted Kenneth Allen, the owner of Group 1 Home, regarding a placement for Richardson.

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Riverview MacOmb Home and Attendant Care v. State Farm Mutual Auto, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/riverview-macomb-home-and-attendant-care-v-state-farm-mutual-auto-michctapp-2016.