Underhill v. Safeco Insurance

284 N.W.2d 463, 407 Mich. 175, 1979 Mich. LEXIS 398
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 29, 1979
DocketDocket Nos. 58567, 60967. (Calendar Nos. 8, 9)
StatusPublished
Cited by52 cases

This text of 284 N.W.2d 463 (Underhill v. Safeco Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Underhill v. Safeco Insurance, 284 N.W.2d 463, 407 Mich. 175, 1979 Mich. LEXIS 398 (Mich. 1979).

Opinion

Levin, J.

The issues presented concern the status of motorcyclists under the no-fault motor vehicle liability act:

1) Are motorcyclists, who are not required to purchase no-fault insurance, entitled to "personal protection insurance benefits” (for work loss, allowable expenses and survivors’ loss), commonly referred to as PIP or first-party benefits and hereafter referred to as "no-fault benefits”?

2) Does a legislative scheme exempting motorcyclists from the burden imposed on other motor vehicle owners of maintaining financial security for the payment of no-fault benefits but including them among the persons entitled to recover such benefits when injured in accidents involving motor vehicles violate the equal protection and due process rights of those who must maintain such security and thereby pay for the cost of no-fault benefits paid to motorcyclists?

3) Does the no-fault act contemplate that motorcyclists who own policies on motor vehicles or are domiciled with relatives who own such policies will seek benefits from their insurer, or that such benefits will be paid by the insurer of the motor vehicle involved in the accident?

4) Is a "limits of liability” clause, approved by the Commissioner of Insurance, providing a $5,000 deductible from no-fault benefits payable for injury *182 arising out of the use of an owned motorcycle by the named insured or relative, valid?

We hold:

1) Motorcyclists, like all others suffering bodily injury as the result of an accident involving a motor vehicle, are entitled to no-fault benefits.

2) Because the Legislature, in evaluating the risks to automobile owners posed by motorcyclists and the severe injuries suffered by motorcyclists in automobile-motorcycle accidents, could rationally conclude that motorcyclists are more like bicycle riders than automobile drivers, the statutory scheme which allows them benefits without requiring them to maintain no-fault security does not deny automobile drivers equal protection or due process of law.

3) A motorcyclist injured in a motor vehicle accident must first look to his own insurer if he has one. If he does not, he looks then to the insurer of a relative domiciled in the same household. It is only when there is no policy issued to anyone in his household that the statute permits him to claim benefits from the insurer of the owner or driver of the motor vehicle involved in the accident.

4) The provision of the no-fault act authorizing the commissioner to approve deductibles is not an invalid delegation of authority. Porter is remanded to the Court of Appeals to determine whether the $5,000 deductible provision is otherwise invalid.

I

Randy Craig Underhill was injured when the motorcycle he was operating collided with an automobile insured under a no-fault policy issued by Safeco Insurance Company. He required hospital *183 and other medical care and was temporarily unable to work. Underhill lived alone and did not own an automobile. His motorcycle was insured for liability but not for no-fault benefits. Underhill claimed benefits from Safeco. The circuit judge entered a summary judgment in his favor and the Court of Appeals affirmed. We affirm.

Philip Porter was injured when his motorcycle was struck by an automobile insured by Aetna Life & Casualty Company. Porter lived with his father, who owned an automobile insured by Michigan Mutual Liability Company. The father’s policy included a "limits of liability” clause providing for a $5,000 deductible where the injury arises out of the use of an owned motorcycle by the "named insured or relative”. Porter commenced this action seeking no-fault benefits from Michigan Mutual and argued that the $5,000 deductible was contrary to the act, that the delegation of authority to the commissioner to approve deductibles was without standards and therefore unconstitutional, and that the deductible unconstitutionally divided motorcyclists into two classes. He sought benefits from Aetna in the alternative. Aetna is no longer a party to the action. The circuit judge held that motorcyclists are excluded from the act and entered a partial summary judgment for both insurers. The Court of Appeals reversed and held that motorcyclists can recover under the act, and that Porter was entitled to recover from his father’s insurer. We affirm. It also held that the $5,000 deductible was approved pursuant to an unconstitutional delegation of legislative authority; we vacate that holding and remand to the Court of Appeals to determine the validity of the deductible.

In Underhill, Safeco argues that a statutory *184 scheme which permits motorcyclists to recover no-fault benefits without requiring them to purchase no-fault insurance violates the Equal Protection and Due Process Clauses.

Although Michigan Mutual had taken much the same position in earlier phases of the Porter litigation, in this Court it concedes that motorcyclists are entitled to no-fault benefits when they sustain bodily injury in accidents involving motor vehicles and that motor vehicle no-fault insurance issued to the motorcyclist or a member of his family in the same household is made primary by the act. It asserts that the $5,000 deductible is valid.

Shelby Mutual, as amicus curiae in Porter, argues that the insurance covering the motor vehicle involved in the accident should be primary in all cases where the claimant was not an occupant of a motor vehicle, i.e., when injured as a pedestrian, bicyclist or, by reason of the definition of "motor vehicle”, as a motorcyclist although the injured person or a member of his family in the same household has no-fault insurance.

II

The no-fault act requires that owners of "motor vehicles” maintain security for payment of no-fault benefits. Motorcycles are excluded from the definition by providing that a "motor vehicle” has more than two wheels. 1 It is separately provided, however, by a 1975 amendment to the act, that *185 owners of motorcycles must maintain security for public liability. 2

Motorcyclists thus, although required to maintain security for injuries caused to third parties through their negligence, are not required to purchase insurance providing no-fault benefits.

All parties appear to concede that by its terms the act entitles motorcyclists to no-fault benefits when they are involved in accidents with motor vehicles. Benefits are payable for "accidental bodily injury arising out of the ownership, operation, maintenance or use of a motor vehicle”; 3 a motorcyclist is not among those whom the Legislature has excluded from benefits; 4 he is among those covered by the "while not an occupant” language of the act. 5

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Bluebook (online)
284 N.W.2d 463, 407 Mich. 175, 1979 Mich. LEXIS 398, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/underhill-v-safeco-insurance-mich-1979.