Tiffany Shantel Robinson v. Janet Elaine Szczotka

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 6, 2023
Docket359646
StatusUnpublished

This text of Tiffany Shantel Robinson v. Janet Elaine Szczotka (Tiffany Shantel Robinson v. Janet Elaine Szczotka) 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
Tiffany Shantel Robinson v. Janet Elaine Szczotka, (Mich. Ct. App. 2023).

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

TIFFANY SHANTEL ROBINSON, UNPUBLISHED April 6, 2023 Plaintiff-Appellee,

v No. 359646 Wayne Circuit Court JANET ELAINE SZCZOTKA, and THE ASU LC No. 20-012733-NI GROUP-ASU RISK MANAGEMENT,

Defendants,

and

SUBURBAN MOBILITY AUTHORITY FOR REGIONAL TRANSPORTATION, also known as SMART.

Defendant-Appellant.

Before: K. F. KELLY, P.J., and MURRAY and SWARTZLE, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

Defendant-appellant, Suburban Mobility Authority for Regional Transportation (SMART), appeals by leave granted1 the November 29, 2021 order granting in part and denying in part SMART’s motion for partial summary disposition. In partially granting the motion, the court held that plaintiff, Tiffany Shantel Robinson, had the right to pursue personal insurance protection (PIP) benefits from SMART even though plaintiff had previously assigned her claims to several medical providers because (1) SMART had no standing to enforce those assignments between plaintiff and her medical providers, and (2) plaintiff and her medical providers executed valid revocations of

1 Robinson v Szczotka, unpublished order of the Court of Appeals, entered April 7, 2022 (Docket No. 359646).

-1- those assignments, thereby returning the right to pursue those PIP benefits to plaintiff. We reverse the trial court’s order and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

I. BACKGROUND

Plaintiff was injured in an automobile accident and subsequently accrued medical bills related to her resulting injuries from Northland Radiology, Quest Physical Therapy, Aligned Chiropractic, Dependable Transportation, Michigan Business Management, and Garden City Hospital. Before plaintiff initiated this litigation, she assigned her rights to recover PIP benefits to several of her medical providers, including Northland Radiology, Quest Physical Therapy, Dependable Transportation, Aligned Chiropractic, and Elite Diagnostics.

Thereafter, on September 28, 2020, plaintiff filed a complaint to collect first-party no-fault PIP benefits, underinsured motorist benefits, and uninsured motorist benefits from both SMART and defendant ASU Risk Management. Two months later, the parties stipulated to the dismissal of ASU Risk Management as well as the claims for underinsured and uninsured motorist benefits, leaving at issue only plaintiff’s claim for PIP benefits against SMART.

SMART eventually moved for partial summary disposition pursuant to MCR 2.116(C)(7), (C)(8), and (C)(10), arguing that plaintiff had no standing to pursue a cause of action to recover claims that she had already assigned to her medical providers. SMART noted that one of plaintiff’s medical providers, the Michigan Institute of Pain and Headache, PC, had already filed its own lawsuit to collect on its bills related to plaintiff’s accident based on its assignment of benefits from plaintiff, and that the other medical providers were also free to do so.

In responding, plaintiff did not contest the factual or legal premises of SMART’s motion but instead asserted that after she filed her complaint, she and a number of her medical providers executed “Mutual Revocation[s] of Assignment(s).” Plaintiff alleged that these contracts “revoked, rescinded, and nullified” the assignments nunc pro tunc, or retroactively, such that plaintiff recovered her rights to PIP benefits dating back to when she assigned them to her medical providers.2 These assignments, plaintiff argued, should be considered to have never existed, and the medical providers waived any independent causes of action. Plaintiff acknowledged that her medical providers had failed to bring their claims to recover medical bills in a timely manner pursuant to the one-year-back rule, see MCL 500.3145(1), and stated that the only fair avenue for recovery of those medical bills was to revoke her assignments retroactively and litigate her own timely filed claims.

SMART reply made several points. First, it argued that it had standing to challenge the effect of the assignments because it had a real interest in claims that the medical providers might

2 Each of the revocations, dated September 20, 2020, contained the following language: The assignments are revoked nunc pro tunc the date the assignment(s) was/were entered into and should be considered as if it/they never existed and that both [parties of this revocation] wish to revoke and rescind any and all Assignment of Rights as if it never existed by the execution of this agreement.

-2- bring against it. Second, while admitting that it was not challenging the validity of the assignments, SMART argued that a valid assignment is one manifesting a present intent to transfer, where the assignor does not retain any power of revocation. Third, SMART asserted that when plaintiff filed her complaint, she had already executed assignments to her medical providers, and thus those claims belonged to those medical providers, who therefore bore responsibility for pursuing their claims in a timely manner pursuant to the one-year-back rule, MCL 500.3145(1). Because those medical providers failed to pursue their claims in a timely manner, their right to sue for PIP benefits was extinguished by operation of the one-year-back rule. To this point, SMART argued that these medical providers’ claims were extinguished before the revocations were executed on September 20, 2020, and so there remained no claims to “give back” to plaintiff through the revocations. Essentially SMART asserted that once plaintiff’s medical providers’ claims had expired, the parties could properly not thereafter work around the one-year-back rule and effectively restore their expired rights by operating as though the assignments had never existed.

As noted, the trial court granted SMART’s motion in part, concluding that plaintiff could not properly claim compensation for the medical bills of Michigan Institute of Pain and Headache (d/b/a Metro Pain Clinic), because that medical provider filed its own suit in district court. Relative to the other providers, the court ultimately held that SMART did not have the authority to enforce plaintiff’s assignments with her providers and that those parties to the assignments could, and did, revoke those contracts:

But in the end, I do believe that the contract is between [plaintiff] and the providers. And if they decide to revoke it, the Plaintiff can always get it.

Now, as I said earlier, the insurance company, or in this case, SMART and/or Allstate, they’re only going to have to pay once, if any. They don’t have to pay twice ‘cause two different entities are going after these bills.

But a lot of times, I mean, I can see today where you’re going to have a Plaintiff going after the bills and a provider. And they’re going to duke it out at trial.

And it could get confusing, I don’t know. It’s never happened before, but I think theoretically, it could happen. They can both go after the bills. But I would instruct the jury you only got to pay once, if you have to pay at all or something like that.

So for those reasons, I think that I respectfully disagree with [defendant’s] position, . . . but it was an interesting argument. And I will respectfully deny summary at this time.

II. ANALYSIS

The dispositive question on appeal is whether the revocation of the assignments allowed plaintiff to maintain her PIP claim that was filed prior to the revocation. This involves determining the meaning and effect of the assignments and revocations of those assignments, as well as the impact of those on plaintiff’s ability to bring this claim.

-3- A. STANDARDS OF REVIEW

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Bluebook (online)
Tiffany Shantel Robinson v. Janet Elaine Szczotka, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tiffany-shantel-robinson-v-janet-elaine-szczotka-michctapp-2023.