Weber v. Amwins Group Benefits LLC

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Michigan
DecidedJanuary 10, 2024
Docket2:23-cv-10870
StatusUnknown

This text of Weber v. Amwins Group Benefits LLC (Weber v. Amwins Group Benefits LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Michigan primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Weber v. Amwins Group Benefits LLC, (E.D. Mich. 2024).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF MICHIGAN SOUTHERN DIVISION

JESSICA WEBER, 2:23-CV-10870-TGB-APP

Plaintiff, OMNIBUS ORDER OVERRULING OBJECTION

TO REASSIGNMENT ORDER (ECF NO. 41); vs. GRANTING LINA’S MOTION TO INTERVENE (ECF NO.

33/34);

STRIKING WEBER’S MOTION FOR AND NOTICE OF DEPOSITION (ECF NO. 66);

DENYING WEBER’S

OUTSTANDING PRE-TRIAL AMWINS GROUP BENEFITS MOTIONS (ECF NOS. 29, 32, LLC, et al., 42, 64, & 65); DENYING WEBER’S MOTION FOR COSTS (ECF NO. 67); Defendants. AND STRIKING AMENDED COMPLAINT (ECF NO. 68) AS UNAUTHORIZED

This is one of several lawsuits Jessica Weber has filed over the denial of a claim for insurance benefits. Pending before the Court are a Motion to Intervene filed by non-party Life Insurance of North America (ECF No. 33/34) and several objections and motions filed by Jessica Weber (ECF Nos. 29, 32, 41, 42, 64, 65, 66, & 67). For the reasons below,

the Motion to Intervene will be GRANTED, and Weber’s objections will be OVERRULED. Weber’s motion for a deposition will be STRICKEN, her other motions will be DENIED, and her amended complaint will be STRICKEN as unauthorized. I. BACKGROUND Jessica Weber, an individual who represents herself, used to work as a paralegal. In September 2019, she allegedly experienced an exacerbation of long-standing neurological and mental-health and made

a claim for long-term disability benefits under an insurance policy issued by Life Insurance Company of North America (LINA). Her claim was denied. A. Prior Litigation After unsuccessfully appealing the denial of her claim, Weber sued CIGNA, the policy administrator, in federal court. Weber v. CIGNA, No. 20-12593 (E.D. Mich. Sept. 20, 2020). During the litigation, CIGNA was acquired by another company, New York Life Insurance (New York Life), and Weber amended her complaint to add New York Life and LINA as

defendants. In June 2021, the parties notified the Court that they had reached a settlement, and the Court entered a stipulated order dismissing the case with prejudice. The case did not end there. Some months later, in January 2022, Weber began submitting exhibits to the Court and filing motions to reopen the case, asserting that Defendants failed to provide her with tax

documents they had promised. The Court construed her filings as requests to enforce the settlement agreement. After holding a telephone conference, the Court determined that no action was necessary to enforce the settlement agreement and terminated Weber’s motions. But Weber continued submitting requests and filing miscellaneous exhibits and notices. While these requests were pending, she also filed a second case against the same defendants, No. 22-10952 (E.D. Mich. May 4, 2022), and asked for it to be consolidated with her first one.

After consolidating Weber’s two cases, the Court reviewed her filings—including a copy of the settlement agreement—and, in July 2022, entered an order denying her requests to re-open the case. Because the parties agreed that Weber signed the settlement agreement and received the full amount owed under its terms, there was no legally valid reason to re-open her case. As part of the settlement, Weber had agreed not to bring any more claims about her policy against the defendants. To the extent she asserted that she was deceived during negotiations, she lacked evidence of any deception.

Yet Weber continued filing. She also unsuccessfully appealed her case to the Sixth Circuit, No. 22-1639 (6th Cir. Jan. 18, 2023), and petitioned for certiorari, No. 22-6818, 143 S. Ct. 1764 (Mem) (Apr. 17, 2023). The Court cautioned her that the case was closed and that further filings would be stricken, but that warning has gone unheeded. B. Current Litigation

Simultaneously, while her petition was pending before the Supreme Court, Weber filed this case, naming Amwins Group Benefits LLC (Amwins) as a defendant. No. 23-10870 (E.D. Mich. Apr. 14, 2023). She alleged that New York Life had been acquired by Amwins, and that Amwins continued to deny her benefits. The case was originally assigned to the Honorable Judge Kay F. Behm but later was reassigned to the Honorable Judge Bernard A. Friedman. As in her prior cases, Weber soon began filing a stream of requests,

exhibits, and miscellaneous notices. After holding a telephone status conference with the parties and learning that LINA intended to intervene in the case, Judge Friedman entered an order setting deadlines for LINA to file a motion to intervene and a dispositive motion in this case. Text- Only Order of June 20, 2023. LINA filed its Motion to Intervene on July 20, 2023. ECF No. 33/34. In the meantime, Weber continued submitting motions and miscellaneous requests, including a Motion for a Discovery Order (ECF No. 29), a Motion for Summary Judgment (ECF No. 32), and a Motion to

Add New York Life as a party to the case (ECF No. 42). At that point, the case was reassigned to the undersigned under this Court’s companion case rule. Weber objected to the reassignment. ECF No. 41. While these motions were pending, Weber filed a fourth complaint, No. 23-12794 (E.D. Mich. Nov. 1, 2023), this time naming New York Life as a defendant. As the complaint was identical to the complaint in this

case except for the identity of the defendant, the Court entered an order consolidating the two cases and designating this case as the lead case. ECF No. 61. More filings from Weber followed, including a “Motion for Right to Public Access and Motion for Civil Trial” (ECF No. 64), an “Objection to Consolidation and Motion for Right to Public Access and Motion for Civil Trial” (ECF No. 65), a “Motion for Deposition” (ECF No. 66), and a “Motion for Costs” (ECF No. 67). On January 5, Weber additionally filed

an amended complaint (ECF No. 68), styled as a “Cross-Complaint for Indemnification and General Negligence.” The Court will now address all outstanding objections and motions. II. OBJECTION TO REASSIGNMENT (ECF No. 41) As a threshold matter, the Court will address Weber’s objection to the reassignment order. Weber complains that “a Court cannot just reassign a case with no reason stated.” In support of her objection, she attaches a motion for reassignment submitted in an unrelated case filed outside of this District. The order reassigning this case from Judge Friedman to the

undersigned specifies that the case was reassigned under the District’s companion rule. Under the Local Rules of the Eastern District of Michigan, companion cases are cases in which it appears that substantially similar evidence will be offered at trial or the same or related parties are present and the cases arise out of the same

transaction or occurrence. L.R. 83.11(b)(7)(A). Under Local Rule 83.11(b)(7)(D), “[w]hen it becomes apparent to the Judge to whom a case is assigned … that two cases are companion cases, upon consent of the Judge having the earlier case number, the Judge shall sign an order reassigning the case to the Judge having the earlier case number.” Here, the exhibits Weber has attached to her complaint suggest that her claims in this case relate to the same insurance policy she sued over in No. 20-12593, which was assigned to the undersigned. It is

therefore considered to be a companion case to No. 20-12593, and the undersigned consented to the reassignment. Weber’s objection is therefore OVERRULED. III. MOTION TO INTERVENE (ECF Nos. 33/34) The Court begins with LINA’s Motion to Intervene. LINA asserts it is entitled to intervene in this case as a matter of right because it is the entity responsible for paying benefits under the policy upon which Weber’s claim is based. It says that, because Amwins only administers the policy and is not responsible for actually paying the benefits, Amwins

cannot adequately address or defend LINA’s rights.

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