Keith Bronner v. City of Detroit ( 2021 )


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  •                                                                                    Michigan Supreme Court
    Lansing, Michigan
    Chief Justice:              Justices:
    Syllabus                                                      Bridget M. McCormack       Brian K. Zahra
    David F. Viviano
    Richard H. Bernstein
    Elizabeth T. Clement
    Megan K. Cavanagh
    Elizabeth M. Welch
    This syllabus constitutes no part of the opinion of the Court but has been               Reporter of Decisions:
    prepared by the Reporter of Decisions for the convenience of the reader.                 Kathryn L. Loomis
    BRONNER v DETROIT
    Docket No. 160242. Argued on application for leave to appeal January 7, 2021. Decided
    May 27, 2021.
    Keith Bronner sued the City of Detroit in the Wayne Circuit Court seeking no-fault
    benefits. Bronner was a passenger on a city-operated bus when the bus was involved in an accident
    with a garbage truck operated by GFL Environmental USA Inc. The city self-insured its buses
    under MCL 500.3101(5) of the no-fault act, MCL 500.3101 et seq. Under the city’s contract with
    GFL, GFL agreed to indemnify the city against any liabilities or other expenses incurred by or
    asserted against the city because of a negligent or tortious act or omission attributable to GFL.
    Following the accident, Bronner initially filed a claim with the city for personal protection
    insurance (PIP) benefits under MCL 500.3107. The city paid Bronner about $58,000 in benefits
    before the relationship broke down and Bronner sued the city. Shortly after Bronner sued the city,
    the city filed a third-party complaint against GFL pursuant to the indemnification agreement in
    their contract. GFL moved for summary disposition, arguing that the city was attempting to
    improperly shift its burden under the no-fault act to GFL contrary to public policy. The circuit
    court, Edward Ewell, Jr., J., denied GFL’s motion and granted summary disposition for the city.
    The city later reached a settlement with Bronner, and the trial court ordered GFL to pay the city
    $107,529.29 to cover the PIP benefits the city had paid and certain other expenses. GFL appealed
    as of right, arguing that the indemnification agreement was void because it circumvented the no-
    fault act. The Court of Appeals, MURRAY, C.J., and RIORDAN and CAMERON, JJ., agreed with
    GFL and reversed in an unpublished opinion, citing the comprehensive nature of the no-fault act
    and concluding that the act outlined the only mechanisms by which a no-fault insurer could recover
    the cost of benefits paid to beneficiaries. The city filed an application for leave to appeal in the
    Supreme Court, and the Supreme Court ordered and heard oral argument on whether to grant the
    application for leave to appeal or take other action. 
    505 Mich 1139
     (2020).
    In an opinion by Justice CLEMENT, joined by Chief Justice MCCORMACK and Justices
    ZAHRA, BERNSTEIN, CAVANAGH, and WELCH, the Supreme Court, in lieu of granting leave to
    appeal, held:
    An agreement between an insurer and a vendor that requires the vendor to reimburse the
    insurer for the cost of mandatory benefits the insurer had to pay out as a result of the vendor’s
    negligence is not void as contrary to the no-fault act because such an agreement does not relate to
    the availability of applicable insurance or the payment of benefits.
    1. The general rule of contracts is that when voluntarily and fairly made by competent
    persons they shall be held valid and enforceable in the courts. However, when there are definite
    indications in the law that a contractual provision conflicts with public policy, the contractual
    provision must yield to the public policy. In this case, the Insurance Code, MCL 500.100 et seq.,
    did not expressly prohibit the parties’ indemnification agreement. Nonetheless, the Court of
    Appeals panel construed the indemnification provision as a variation on contractual provisions that
    purport to shift liability for payment of no-fault benefits in a manner that does not comport with
    the no-fault act and that the Supreme Court has struck down in previous cases. For instance, in
    Citizens Ins Co of America v Federated Mut Ins Co, 
    448 Mich 225
     (1995), the Supreme Court held
    that a car dealership could not unilaterally shift liability for no-fault benefits to fully insured
    borrowers of loaner vehicles because doing so violated MCL 500.3101(1), which requires the
    owner of a vehicle to maintain security for residual liability insurance. And in State Farm Mut
    Auto Ins Co v Enterprise Leasing Co, 
    452 Mich 25
     (1996), the Court held that when a vehicle was
    rented, the lessor of the vehicle could not enforce a lease condition that shifted responsibility to
    the lessee’s no-fault insurer to provide mandatory benefits in the event of an accident. In Universal
    Underwriters Ins Co v Kneeland, 
    464 Mich 491
     (2001), on the other hand, the Court upheld a
    contract provision obligating a customer who borrowed a vehicle from a car dealership to assume
    all responsibility for damages sustained by the vehicle while it was in her possession. The Court
    held that the contract in Kneeland sought nonmandatory collision coverage and, therefore, the
    contract provision did not improperly shift damages that were not legally able to be reallocated
    under the Insurance Code. The Court of Appeals panel concluded in this case that under Kneeland,
    the existence in the no-fault act of various reimbursement mechanisms for no-fault insurers
    implicitly precluded the enforceability of the indemnification agreement. However, this analysis
    failed to consider Kneeland in the context of Citizens Ins Co and State Farm. This context was
    demonstrated by the Court’s decision in Cruz v State Farm Mut Auto Ins Co, 
    466 Mich 588
     (2002).
    In Cruz, the insurance policy made payment of no-fault benefits contingent on the injured person
    submitting to an examination under oath, which potentially conflicted with the Insurance Code’s
    requirement that no-fault insurers pay benefits within 30 days of receiving proof of fact and the
    amount of the loss. The Court in Cruz sought to harmonize the contract provision with the
    Insurance Code, holding that examinations under oath were permissible when used to facilitate the
    goals of the no-fault act and when harmonious with the no-fault insurance regime. When Citizens
    Ins Co, State Farm, Kneeland, and Cruz are read together, it is apparent that the comprehensive
    nature of the Insurance Code’s regulation of no-fault insurance serves to ensure that there is
    applicable insurance for accidents and that benefits are paid. The indemnification provision in this
    case did not implicate the same concerns as the provision in Cruz; in order to do so, a contractual
    provision must, at minimum, relate to the insurance of motor vehicles or the payment of benefits
    resulting from motor vehicle accidents. The indemnification agreement did neither and so did not
    jeopardize the availability of applicable insurance or the payment of mandatory benefits. As a
    result, no improper shifting of liability contemplated by Kneeland was implicated in this case.
    2. The Court of Appeals misconstrued provisions of the Insurance Code that permit no-
    fault insurers to seek reimbursement for payment of some benefits as implicitly excluding any
    other reimbursement mechanism, such as the indemnification provision that was at issue in this
    case. In doing so, the Court of Appeals effectively relied on the expressio unius est exclusio
    alterius canon, that in stating some options, other options must not exist. The Court of Appeals
    identified the Michigan Catastrophic Claims Association (MCCA), MCL 500.3104; the Michigan
    Assigned Claims Plan (MACP), MCL 500.3171; and MCL 500.3116, which allows insurers to
    impose a lien on tort damages recovered by some no-fault beneficiaries, as the exclusive
    reimbursement opportunities for no-fault insurers under the act. Rather than representing the
    exclusive means for reimbursements, these statutory provisions respond to specific problems,
    unrelated to the issue that was presented in this case. For instance, the purpose of the MCCA is to
    spread the cost of catastrophic claims across all no-fault insurers in Michigan and to equalize
    competitive imbalances between larger and smaller insurers. Rather than being a substitute for
    reimbursement, it is effectively an entitlement for insurers. The MACP is a benefit to persons
    injured in motor vehicle accidents who otherwise do not have applicable insurance benefits. In
    other words, the MACP is a mechanism created by the Insurance Code through which the
    Legislature carries out a scheme of general welfare by obliging insurers to act as insurers of last
    resort for injured persons with whom the insurer does not have an existing insurance relationship.
    This does not affect an insurer’s ability to freely enter into contracts with vendors that may include
    indemnification provisions. Finally, MCL 500.3116 allows an insurer to recover from its
    beneficiaries by reducing PIP benefits to the extent that the insured has received equivalent
    compensation from tort judgments arising from out-of-state accidents, accidents with uninsured
    motorists, and from intentionally caused harm. MCL 500.3116 does not prevent an insurer from
    contracting with a vendor to reach an indemnity agreement. In Cruz, the Court observed that the
    provision of some discovery tools in the no-fault act did not necessarily preclude the parties from
    contracting for the use of other discovery tools, such as examinations under oath. Similarly, the
    no-fault act’s reimbursement options are not comprehensive and do not preclude parties from
    contracting for other reimbursement methods. In this case, the indemnification agreement did not
    relate to the insurance of motor vehicles or the payment of benefits resulting from accidents
    involving motor vehicles, did not alter the relationship between the insurer and its insured or
    beneficiaries, and did not transform the nature of benefits paid by the insurer to beneficiaries into
    something else. It therefore did not conflict with the Insurance Code.
    Reversed.
    Justice VIVIANO, concurring, agreed with the result reached by the majority for many but
    not all of the reasons stated in that opinion and wrote separately to highlight the issue of the
    appropriate analytical framework for addressing whether the no-fault act precluded enforcement
    of the indemnification agreement and his conclusion that the majority opinion relied too heavily
    on ascertaining the broad purposes of the no-fault act. The core issue was whether the parties’
    contractual indemnification agreement was unenforceable because it violated public policy as
    represented by the no-fault act. Justice VIVIANO noted that caselaw contained various standards
    for determining whether certain provisions of the no-fault act had abrogated the common law;
    some cases held that the intent to abrogate must be clearly stated in the statute, while others
    indicated that the comprehensiveness of the statutory scheme can indicate abrogation (an approach
    that resembles a field-preemption analysis). He stated that the majority adopted the latter
    methodology in this case without expressly examining whether it was appropriate. Under a field-
    preemption analysis, a court would examine whether the no-fault act has impliedly preempted
    parties from contracting for indemnification via a provision like the one in this case. To the extent
    that a field-preemption analysis was applicable in this case, Justice VIVIANO disagreed with the
    manner in which the majority applied the analysis. He noted the ease with which extratextual
    purpose can be impermissibly exalted above statutory text. In addition, choosing the correct field
    is critical because defining the field at a certain level of generality becomes determinative. Justice
    VIVIANO stated that it was therefore important for a court to stick to the text of the statute when
    defining the field, and one way to do this is to recognize that a statute’s occupation of one area of
    the law does not necessarily mean that it occupies adjacent areas as well. The majority
    demonstrated this by examining the no-fault act’s few scattered provisions concerning
    reimbursement, thereby showing that the statute did not occupy this area of the law and that the
    indemnification agreement did not directly conflict with any provision in the act. Justice VIVIANO
    would have allowed this analysis to dispose of the case without considering whether the
    enforceability of the indemnification agreement turned on whether a court considered it to be
    consistent with the broadly characterized goals of the no-fault act, i.e., regulating the insurance of
    motor vehicles and requiring payment of benefits, or whether the agreement “implicated” or
    “related to” these goals. The majority’s use of these statutory purposes further aggrandizes the
    purposes the Court had attributed to the no-fault act in past cases and made it uncertain when a
    contractual provision would be precluded from enforcement due to implicating or relating to the
    statutory purposes.
    Michigan Supreme Court
    Lansing, Michigan
    Chief Justice:                 Justices:
    OPINION                                  Bridget M. McCormack          Brian K. Zahra
    David F. Viviano
    Richard H. Bernstein
    Elizabeth T. Clement
    Megan K. Cavanagh
    Elizabeth M. Welch
    FILED May 27, 2021
    STATE OF MICHIGAN
    SUPREME COURT
    KEITH BRONNER,
    Plaintiff,
    and
    ANGELS WITH WINGS TRANSPORT,
    LLC,
    Intervening Plaintiff,
    v                                                       No. 160242
    CITY OF DETROIT,
    Defendant/Third-Party
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    and
    GFL ENVIRONMENTAL USA INC., f/k/a
    RIZZO ENVIRONMENTAL SERVICES,
    INC.,
    Third-Party Defendant-
    Appellee.
    BEFORE THE ENTIRE BENCH
    CLEMENT, J.
    In this case, we consider whether a no-fault insurer—or, as here, a self-insurer—
    may legally contract with a vendor for indemnification of the no-fault insurer for the cost
    of no-fault benefits that the insurer is obliged by law to pay when the vendor’s negligence
    caused the injury for which the benefits are compensation. We conclude that such an
    agreement is legal and reverse the contrary conclusion of the Court of Appeals.
    I. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
    On September 25, 2014, Keith Bronner was a passenger on a bus operated by the
    City of Detroit. The bus was in an accident with a garbage truck operated by GFL
    Environmental USA Inc. 1 The city self-insures its fleet of buses under MCL 500.3101(5), 2
    and Bronner consequently made a claim with the city for personal protection insurance
    (PIP) benefits under MCL 500.3107. The city initially paid about $58,000 in benefits to
    Bronner; but eventually the relationship broke down, and Bronner sued the city in
    September 2015.
    GFL’s garbage truck was operating under a contract that GFL had signed with the
    city in February 2014. Section 9.01(a) of that agreement provided that GFL
    agree[d] to indemnify, defend, and hold the City harmless against and from
    any and all liabilities, obligations, damages, penalties, claims, costs, charges,
    losses and expenses . . . that may be imposed upon, incurred by, or asserted
    1
    At the time of the accident, GFL was known as Rizzo Environmental Services, Inc.
    2
    At the time of these events, the relevant provision was found at MCL 500.3101(4); it was
    renumbered with the enactment of 
    2019 PA 21
    . Because 
    2019 PA 21
     does not affect this
    dispute, references in this opinion are to the current version of the statute.
    2
    against the City . . . to the extent caused by . . . [a]ny negligent or tortious
    act, error, or omission attributable in whole or in part to [GFL] or any of its
    Associates[.]
    Shortly after Bronner sued the city, the city filed a third-party complaint against GFL,
    invoking this indemnification agreement.           In June 2016, GFL moved for summary
    disposition, arguing that the city was “attempting to circumvent the explicit requirements
    of the No-Fault Act[3] by improperly shifting its burden onto [GFL] through language found
    in an unrelated service contract between Detroit and [GFL], which clearly violates public
    policy and the legislative intent behind the No-Fault Statute.” The trial court denied this
    motion and instead granted summary disposition in favor of the city. In February 2017,
    the city reached a settlement with Bronner, and the trial court then ordered GFL to pay the
    city $107,529.29 to cover the PIP benefits paid by the city, 4 plus certain other expenses.
    In the Court of Appeals, GFL renewed its argument that the indemnification
    agreement circumvented the Insurance Code’s 5 no-fault rules and was therefore void. The
    Court of Appeals agreed and reversed in an unpublished opinion. 6 The Court of Appeals
    panel emphasized the comprehensive nature of the no-fault system, which includes only a
    few explicit mechanisms by which a no-fault insurer may recover the cost of benefits paid
    3
    MCL 500.3101 et seq.
    4
    This sum included both the city’s settlement with Bronner and its settlement with Angels
    with Wings Transport, LLC, which had provided transportation services to Bronner and
    intervened as a plaintiff to make its own recovery.
    5
    MCL 500.100 et seq.
    6
    Bronner v Detroit, unpublished per curiam opinion of the Court of Appeals, issued July 9,
    2019 (Docket No. 340930).
    3
    out. The Court accepted the negative implication that, by stating these options in the no-
    fault act, the Legislature had denied the availability of any other options. The panel
    therefore concluded that the indemnification agreement was unenforceable. The city then
    filed an application for leave to appeal in our Court, and we ordered argument on that
    application. Bronner v Detroit, 
    505 Mich 1139
     (2020).
    II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
    The question before the Court is not the meaning of the indemnification agreement
    between the city and GFL as such. GFL’s argument in this Court does not concern the
    proper interpretation of the parties’ contract, and GFL does not argue that the
    indemnification sought by the city is beyond the scope of that contract. Rather, the question
    is whether the Insurance Code precludes the contract provision at issue. In other words,
    the question is whether the provision “runs afoul of the public policy of the state” in the
    form of “the policies that . . . are reflected in . . . our statutes,” Terrien v Zwit, 
    467 Mich 56
    , 66-67; 648 NW2d 602 (2002), such as the Insurance Code. Whether a contract
    provision is invalid on these grounds is a question of law subject to de novo review. 
    Id. at 61
    . “This Court [also] reviews the grant or denial of summary disposition de novo to
    determine if the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” Maiden v
    Rozwood, 
    461 Mich 109
    , 118; 597 NW2d 817 (1999).
    III. ANALYSIS
    We have held that “ ‘[t]he general rule [of contracts] is that competent persons shall
    have the utmost liberty of contracting and that their agreements voluntarily and fairly made
    shall be held valid and enforced in the courts.’ ” Terrien, 467 Mich at 71, quoting Twin
    4
    City Pipe Line Co v Harding Glass Co, 
    283 US 353
    , 356; 
    51 S Ct 476
    ; 
    75 L Ed 1112
    (1931). Of course, where there are “ ‘definite indications in the law’ ” of some contrary
    public policy, Terrien, 467 Mich at 68, quoting Muschany v United States, 
    324 US 49
    , 66;
    
    65 S Ct 442
    ; 
    89 L Ed 744
     (1945), the contract provision must yield to public policy. As
    the Court of Appeals noted here, however, there is no provision of the Insurance Code
    which expressly prohibits the sort of indemnification agreement at issue. Even so, the
    Court of Appeals drew inferences from the comprehensive nature of the no-fault system
    that we must assess.
    No-fault insurance in Michigan is “a comprehensive scheme of compensation
    designed to provide sure and speedy recovery of certain economic losses resulting from
    motor vehicle accidents.” Belcher v Aetna Cas & Surety Co, 
    409 Mich 231
    , 240; 293
    NW2d 594 (1980). “In general, where comprehensive legislation prescribes in detail a
    course of conduct to pursue and the parties and things affected, and designates specific
    limitations and exceptions, the Legislature will be found to have intended that the statute
    supersede and replace the common law dealing with the subject matter.” Millross v Plum
    Hollow Golf Club, 
    429 Mich 178
    , 183; 413 NW2d 17 (1987). Although Millross was a
    case about the dramshop act, we have applied this same principle in the no-fault context.
    In particular, the Court of Appeals drew upon our line of cases construing the
    comprehensive nature of the no-fault law as prohibiting certain shifts of liability for no-
    fault benefits to invalidate the indemnification agreement at issue.
    The first case in this line is Citizens Ins Co of America v Federated Mut Ins Co, 
    448 Mich 225
    ; 531 NW2d 138 (1995). In that case, a car dealership gave a customer a “loaner”
    5
    automobile while the dealership was working on the customer’s own vehicle. 7 The
    customer was later in a serious accident. On appeal in this Court, the legal question was
    which insurer was responsible under MCL 500.3131 to pay residual personal injury
    benefits: the insurer of the car dealership (as the owner of the vehicle) or the customer (as
    the operator of the vehicle). The insurance policy issued to the car dealership by its insurer
    stated that the insurer would not consider as an “insured” anyone to whom the dealership
    had loaned the vehicle unless that individual was uninsured or underinsured. We held that
    the dealership’s insurer could not, in its policy, unilaterally shift liability for no-fault
    benefits to fully insured borrowers of the dealership’s vehicle because it violated MCL
    500.3101(1), which requires the owner of a vehicle to maintain security for residual
    liability insurance. The policy exclusion was therefore void, and the dealership’s insurer
    had to pay benefits.
    We extended Citizens Ins Co in State Farm Mut Auto Ins Co v Enterprise Leasing
    Co, 
    452 Mich 25
    ; 549 NW2d 345 (1996). There, we held that when an automobile is rented
    out, the lessor of the vehicle may not enforce a lease condition shifting responsibility to the
    lessee’s no-fault insurer to provide mandatory no-fault benefits if an accident occurs—even
    if the lessee agreed to this lease condition. 
    Id. at 27-28, 35
    . We offered various reasons
    for this conclusion, but one, which the Court of Appeals referred to here, was that the intent
    of the no-fault system is to hold the owner rather than the operator of a vehicle primarily
    7
    The facts of Citizens appear in neither this Court’s opinion nor the majority opinion in
    the Court of Appeals, but rather the dissenting opinion in the Court of Appeals. See
    Citizens Ins Co v Federated Mut Ins Co, 
    199 Mich App 345
    , 348; 500 NW2d 773 (1993)
    (NEFF, J., dissenting).
    6
    responsible for paying no-fault benefits, and it would subvert that intent to switch that
    responsibility:
    The driver cannot defeat the provisions of the no-fault act by stating
    that the owner need not pay insurance. Because the driver cannot bind the
    driver’s insurer, a driver who agreed to shift coverage would remain solely
    liable for damages caused by use of the vehicle. The rental car would be left
    uninsured under the terms of the rental agreement stating that the owner
    provides no insurance. This lack of coverage violates the no-fault act. Even
    though an injured party could attempt to obtain compensation from the
    driver, the no-fault act is intended to protect injured parties from having to
    pursue such suits. Even if the driver qualified as self-insured, we would not
    allow the rental car companies to avoid the Legislature’s intent that a vehicle
    owner be primarily responsible for providing coverage. Just as the car rental
    company cannot shift liability to a driver’s insurer, it cannot shift liability to
    a driver personally. Either shift of responsibility away from the owner would
    violate the act because it requires owners to provide primary coverage. [Id.
    at 35-36.]
    On the other hand, we gestured toward a limit to the principle established in Citizens
    Ins Co and State Farm in Universal Underwriters Ins Co v Kneeland, 
    464 Mich 491
    ; 628
    NW2d 491 (2001). In Kneeland, as in Citizens Ins Co, a car dealership loaned an
    automobile to a customer while it was working on her vehicle. 
    Id. at 493
    . The customer
    signed an agreement when she borrowed the vehicle in which she “agree[d] to assume all
    responsibility for damages while [the] vehicle [was] in h[er] possession.” 
    Id.
     (emphasis
    omitted). While she was driving the vehicle, she was in an accident causing more than
    $3,700 in damage to the vehicle. 
    Id.
     The dealership and its insurer paid for appropriate
    repairs but then sued the customer to enforce the agreement she had made when she
    borrowed the vehicle, seeking compensation for the cost of the repairs. 
    Id.
     We expressed
    concern that the term “damages” in the agreement “could refer to any harm caused to a
    third party’s person or property, i.e., it could reach damages for which no-fault insurance
    7
    coverage is mandatory.” 
    Id. at 496
    . Citing State Farm, we acknowledged that “[a] shift
    of liability to that extent might contravene the no-fault act.” 
    Id. at 496-497
    . That said,
    what was sought under the contract in Kneeland was nonmandatory collision coverage,
    which took Kneeland outside the rule from Citizens Ins Co and State Farm, and we
    therefore concluded that “the contract thus does not shift liability for damages that may not
    legally be reallocated.” 
    Id. at 498
    .
    The Court of Appeals panel here construed the indemnification provision at issue as
    a variation on the sort of liability-shifting that these cases have prohibited. In particular, it
    emphasized certain hedging language from our Kneeland opinion. 8 In interpreting the
    word “damages,” which the vehicle borrower agreed to accept responsibility for in the
    Kneeland contract, we observed that it could encompass mandatory no-fault benefits and,
    citing State Farm, we noted that such a shift of liability might violate the Insurance Code.
    
    Id. at 496-498
    . We stated:
    We express no view regarding whether State Farm would control the
    legality of the contract [in Kneeland]. Th[e] agreement and the one
    addressed in State Farm are arguably different in scope and effect. We
    merely observe that an argument is available that the parties’ agreement, if it
    reaches beyond optional collision damages, is illegal. [Id. at 497 n 3.]
    The Court of Appeals panel concluded that this left open whether benefits that the no-fault
    law requires to be paid out could be shifted and that the existence of various reimbursement
    8
    See Bronner, unpub op at 5-6.
    8
    mechanisms for no-fault insurers under the statute implicitly precluded the enforceability
    of an indemnification agreement such as the one at issue. 9
    The Court of Appeals’ analysis of Kneeland is flawed, however, as it does not read
    Kneeland in the context of Citizens Ins Co and State Farm, which came before Kneeland.
    This is best demonstrated by reviewing Cruz v State Farm Mut Auto Ins Co, 
    466 Mich 588
    ;
    648 NW2d 591 (2002). The insurance policy in Cruz made payment of no-fault benefits
    contingent on the injured person submitting to an “examination under oath” (EUO), 
    id. at 590,
     and the question was whether this provision was compatible with the Insurance Code’s
    requirement that no-fault insurers pay benefits “within 30 days after an insurer receives
    reasonable proof of the fact and of the amount of loss sustained,” MCL 500.3142(2). See
    Cruz, 466 Mich at 593-594, 596. Because “the no-fault act contains no reference either
    allowing or prohibiting examinations under oath,” we had to “determine whether, given
    this silence, the inclusion of examination under oath provisions in no-fault automobile
    insurance policies is allowed.” 
    Id. at 594
    . We held that the parties could not “contract out
    of the statutory duty imposed on the insurer to pay benefits within thirty days of receipt of
    the fact and of the amount of the loss sustained by agreeing that no benefits are due until
    an EUO is given by the insured[.]” 
    Id. at 595
    . Drawing on Kneeland, we sought to
    harmonize the EUO requirement in Cruz with the Insurance Code and declined to hold that
    EUOs intrinsically violate it. Instead, we held that EUOs are permissible “when used to
    facilitate the goals of the [no-fault] act and when they are harmonious with the
    Legislature’s no-fault insurance regime,” such as if they are “designed only to ensure that
    9
    Bronner, unpub op at 6.
    9
    the insurer is provided with information relating to proof of the fact and of the amount of
    the loss sustained—i.e., the statutorily required information on the part of the insured.” 
    Id. at 598
    . As the insurer in Cruz conceded that it had been provided with the requisite
    information without the EUO, we held that the contract provision requiring an EUO was
    unenforceable on Cruz’s facts. 
    Id. at 590 n 1, 600-601
    .
    Cruz’s analysis offers critical insight into the nature of what the no-fault law
    comprehensively regulates.      It described the no-fault system as “a comprehensive
    legislative enactment designed to regulate the insurance of motor vehicles in this state and
    the payment of benefits resulting from accidents involving those motor vehicles.” 
    Id. at 595
     (emphasis added). When Citizens Ins Co, State Farm, Kneeland, and Cruz are read
    together, it becomes apparent that the comprehensive nature of the Insurance Code’s
    regulation of no-fault insurance functions to ensure that there is applicable insurance for
    accidents and that benefits get paid. Citizens and State Farm both struck down agreements
    that purported to rearrange which insurer had to pay benefits, while Cruz struck down a
    policy provision that interfered with the payment of benefits. State Farm also noted that
    agreements that purport to rearrange which insurer is supposed to pay benefits also run the
    risk of leaving no insurer available to pay benefits. Meanwhile, Kneeland upheld an
    agreement that did not relate to the payment of mandatory benefits.
    The indemnification agreement at issue does not implicate the Cruz concerns. There
    is no dispute that the bus was “insured” (inasmuch as the city had satisfied the Secretary
    of State it could self-insure under MCL 500.3101(5)), and there is no dispute that the
    benefits required by statute to be paid to Bronner and his caregivers were paid. Cruz clearly
    acknowledges that the Insurance Code’s silence about a particular contractual provision
    10
    may pose interpretive challenges in the right circumstances; but to implicate Cruz’s
    concern, the contractual provision must, at minimum, relate to the insurance of motor
    vehicles or the payment of benefits resulting from motor vehicle accidents. This agreement
    implicates neither, but rather requires a vendor to reimburse the insurer for the cost of
    benefits compensating for an injury caused by the vendor’s negligence. Where, as here,
    the agreement does not jeopardize the availability of applicable insurance or the payment
    of mandatory benefits, it falls outside our anti-shifting rule. As a result, no improper shift
    of liability as contemplated by Kneeland is implicated in this case, 10 because a vendor
    reimbursing the insurer for the cost of mandatory benefits the vendor caused the insurer to
    pay out does not relate to either the availability of insurance or the payment of benefits.
    The Court of Appeals similarly misconstrued the portions of the Insurance Code
    allowing no-fault insurers to seek reimbursement for payment of some benefits as
    implicitly excluding any other reimbursement mechanism (such as the indemnification
    provision at issue). It identified the Michigan Catastrophic Claims Association (the
    MCCA), MCL 500.3104, the Michigan Assigned Claims Plan (the MACP), MCL
    10
    It is not clear in hindsight why we performed the textual analysis of the meaning of
    “damages” in Kneeland to begin with. Even if the word “damages” could have been
    understood to include mandatory no-fault benefits, all that was at issue in Kneeland were
    nonmandatory collision benefits. Even if the Kneeland agreement had expressly stated that
    the borrower of the vehicle was accepting liability for both mandatory no-fault benefits and
    other nonmandatory damages, it is difficult to imagine we would have disallowed recovery
    of the nonmandatory damages simply because the agreement improperly shifted liability
    for mandatory benefits. We would presumably have construed the contract “to harmonize
    [it] with the statute,” Cruz, 466 Mich at 599, and enforced it to the extent that it was
    enforceable, but no further. This counsels further against overreliance on Kneeland.
    11
    500.3171, and the ability for no-fault insurers to impose a lien on tort damages recovered
    by some no-fault beneficiaries, MCL 500.3116, as the stated reimbursement opportunities
    for no-fault insurers under the Insurance Code. In other words, it effectively relied on the
    negative-implication canon, expressio unius est exclusio alterius, 11 that in stating some
    options, other options must not exist. However, this “doctrine properly applies only when
    the unius (or technically, unum, the thing specified) can reasonably be thought to be an
    expression of all that shares in the grant or prohibition involved.” Scalia & Garner,
    Reading Law: The Interpretation of Legal Texts (St. Paul: Thomson/West, 2012), p 107.
    “Common sense often suggests when this is or is not so,” 
    id.,
     and this is such a case: we
    do not believe these options can be construed as “an expression of all that shares in the
    grant” of avenues for reimbursement. Rather, each of them responds to specific problems
    unrelated to the issue presented.
    First, the MCCA “was created by the Legislature in 1978 in response to concerns
    that Michigan’s no-fault law . . . placed too great a burden on insurers, particularly small
    insurers, in the event of ‘catastrophic’ injury claims.” In re Certified Question, 
    433 Mich 710
    , 714; 449 NW2d 660 (1989). “Its primary purpose is to indemnify member insurers
    for losses sustained as a result of the payment of personal protection insurance benefits
    beyond the ‘catastrophic’ level . . . .” 
    Id. at 714-715
    . The MCCA spreads the cost of these
    catastrophic claims across all no-fault insurers in Michigan to equalize competitive
    imbalances between larger and smaller insurers and make the amount of cash on hand
    11
    Expressio unius est exclusio alterius means “[e]xpress mention in a statute of one thing
    implies the exclusion of other similar things.” Detroit v Redford Twp, 
    253 Mich 453
    , 456;
    
    235 NW 217
     (1931).
    12
    needed more predictable for insurers. See 
    id. at 714 n 2
    . Rather than being a substitute for
    reimbursement, it is, in effect, an entitlement for insurers—a cumulative remedy they enjoy
    above and beyond any other opportunities they may have to recoup the cost of benefits
    paid. 12
    Second, the MACP is a benefit to persons injured in motor vehicle accidents who
    otherwise do not have applicable insurance benefits. It imposes, by statute, the obligation
    of providing no-fault benefits to persons injured in motor vehicle accidents if an applicable
    no-fault policy cannot be identified, MCL 500.3172(1), on all no-fault insurers licensed to
    do business in Michigan. In other words, the MACP obliges them to function as insurers
    of last resort even as to some injured persons with whom the insurer does not have an
    existing insurance relationship, making “insurance companies . . . the instruments through
    which the Legislature carries out a scheme of general welfare.” Shavers v Attorney
    General, 
    402 Mich 554
    , 597; 267 NW2d 72 (1978). That the Insurance Code creates a
    mechanism in MCL 500.3385 by which insurers may pass on to their customers the cost
    of benefits the insurers must pay out by statutory fiat does not derogate from the insurers’
    12
    Indeed, if the MCCA is merely “a set security meant to assist against certain
    circumstances,” which is to say, “when the PIP amount contracted by the insurer exceeds
    the statutory threshold,” United States Fidelity Ins & Guaranty Co v Mich Catastrophic
    Claims Ass’n (On Rehearing), 
    484 Mich 1
    , 17-18; 795 NW2d 101 (2009), then the extent
    of the MCCA’s obligation to its members may well be informed by the extent to which
    those members might be able to recoup such costs.                  If the MCCA “shall
    provide . . . indemnification for 100% of the amount of ultimate loss sustained under [PIP]
    coverages in excess of” $580,000, MCL 500.3104(2)(o), then the degree to which insurers
    can be indemnified for their PIP losses before looking to the MCCA may affect the size of
    the “ultimate loss sustained.”
    13
    prerogative at common law to freely enter into contracts with vendors which may include
    indemnification provisions.
    Finally, the limited opportunity under MCL 500.3116 to recover certain benefits
    paid out does not imply the inability of an insurer to reach an indemnity agreement with a
    vendor. The statute allows “personal injury protection no-fault benefits [to] be reduced to
    the extent the insured has received equivalent compensation from tort judgments arising
    from accidents outside of the state, from accidents with uninsured motorists, and from
    intentionally caused harm.” Tebo v Havlik, 
    418 Mich 350
    , 367; 343 NW2d 181 (1984). In
    such cases, the insurer is reducing its liability to (or recovering from) its beneficiaries.
    Section 3116 is, in effect, an exception that proves a rule: by providing a limited avenue
    by which a no-fault insurer can offset its liability to its own beneficiary, it implicitly denies
    other options at recovering from a beneficiary and confirms the no-fault system’s focus on
    the relationship between insurers and their insureds and beneficiaries—not the relationship
    between insurers and their vendors. 13
    When we upheld the theoretical viability of EUOs in no-fault policies, we observed
    that “[t]he discovery tools provided in the [no-fault law] are not comprehensive” and
    13
    Section 3116 may also address GFL’s concerns that a ruling in the city’s favor here could
    validate other cost-recovery agreements that might be offensive to the no-fault system. A
    reimbursement clause that effectively changed an insurer’s relationship with its insureds
    or beneficiaries—such as an agreement that the insurer would pay out benefits but asserted
    a right to subsequent reimbursement from the beneficiary—would presumably fall within
    the comprehensive scope of the statute and not be permitted. Transforming insurance
    benefits into the functional equivalent of a loan would change the character of the payments
    being made. By allowing a limited ability to claw back benefits from a beneficiary, § 3116
    could certainly be read as implicitly precluding other such arrangements.
    14
    rejected the argument that “the provision of some discovery tools by the act—tools that
    address limited aspects of the insurer’s postclaim information needs—precludes the parties
    from contracting for the use of other discovery tools including those such as EUOs that
    enable insurers to directly gather information from the insured.” Cruz, 466 Mich at 598
    n 14. Much the same can be said about the no-fault law’s reimbursement options. They
    are not comprehensive, and the fact that they are offered does not preclude the parties from
    contracting for other reimbursement methods. This is all the more apparent when the
    indemnification agreement at issue does not relate to “the insurance of motor vehicles in
    this state [or] the payment of benefits resulting from accidents involving those motor
    vehicles.” 
    Id. at 595
    . It does not alter the relationship between the insurer and its insured
    or its beneficiaries, and it does not transform the nature of benefits paid by the insurer to
    its beneficiaries into something else. It therefore does not conflict with the Insurance Code.
    IV. CONCLUSION
    GFL argues that the city should not be treated any differently than more traditional
    no-fault insurers. We agree. If an ordinary insurance company reached an agreement with
    the vendor it hired to plow its parking lot in the winter that the plower would reimburse the
    insurer for accidents caused by the plower’s negligence, such an agreement would be
    enforceable under today’s ruling. That the city has far more opportunities to reach such
    agreements—and traditional insurers far fewer—is presumably offset by the fact that
    insurers are in the business of issuing no-fault insurance, while the city is in the business
    of providing a full panoply of municipal services and self-insures incidentally to that role.
    Regardless of the differing opportunities for an insurer to reach an indemnification
    15
    agreement with a vendor, we conclude that such agreements are enforceable, and the
    contrary decision of the Court of Appeals is reversed.
    Elizabeth T. Clement
    Bridget M. McCormack
    Brian K. Zahra
    Richard H. Bernstein
    Megan K. Cavanagh
    Elizabeth M. Welch
    16
    STATE OF MICHIGAN
    SUPREME COURT
    KEITH BRONNER,
    Plaintiff,
    and
    ANGELS WITH WINGS TRANSPORT,
    LLC,
    Intervening Plaintiff,
    v                                                             No. 160242
    CITY OF DETROIT,
    Defendant/Third-Party
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    and
    GFL ENVIRONMENTAL USA INC., f/k/a
    RIZZO ENVIRONMENTAL SERVICES,
    INC.,
    Third-Party Defendant-
    Appellee.
    VIVIANO, J. (concurring).
    I agree with the result reached by the majority for many but not all of the reasons
    given in its opinion. I write separately to again highlight one larger issue that has escaped
    sustained attention in this area of the law: the appropriate analytical framework for
    addressing the vendor’s claim that the no-fault act precludes enforcement of the contractual
    indemnity provision at issue. See Meemic Ins Co v Fortson, 
    506 Mich 287
    , 300-301 n 7;
    954 NW2d 115 (2020) (noting the unsettled state of the interpretive framework in this
    area). Whatever approach we may decide to adopt in a future case, I believe the majority’s
    approach here relies too heavily on ascertaining the statute’s broad purposes.
    The core issue, as the majority states, is whether the parties’ contractual indemnity
    agreement is unenforceable because it violates public policy as represented by the no-fault
    act. In our most recent opinion addressing this general topic, we observed that our caselaw
    contains various standards for determining whether the no-fault act, or various provisions
    of it, has abrogated the common law and thereby precludes the parties from incorporating
    certain common-law defenses in their insurance contracts. 
    Id. at 300-301 n 7
    . Some of
    our cases hold that the intent to abrogate must be clearly stated in the statute, whereas other
    cases indicate that the comprehensiveness of the statutory scheme can indicate abrogation.
    
    Id.
    The majority today opts for the latter standard, which is how the case was argued
    and decided below, although no one—including the majority—has expressly examined
    whether this is the appropriate interpretive methodology for assessing this issue. In
    adopting this approach, the majority’s framework resembles a field-preemption analysis
    by asking whether the no-fault act has impliedly preempted parties from contracting for
    indemnification. See generally Mich Gun Owners, Inc v Ann Arbor Pub Sch, 
    502 Mich 695
    , 702-708; 918 NW2d 756 (2018) (discussing preemption in general and field
    preemption specifically). Some support exists for this approach. For example, we have
    often used the term “preemption” when discussing abrogation. See, e.g., Kyser v Kasson
    Twp, 
    486 Mich 514
    , 539; 786 NW2d 543 (2010). More directly, the Delaware Supreme
    Court has held that because these concepts are so similar, a preemption-like analysis is
    2
    applicable to resolve questions of abrogation. See AW Fin Servs, SA v Empire Resources,
    Inc, 981 A2d 1114, 1122 (Del, 2009) (“Although preemption and superseder [i.e.,
    common-law abrogation] are analytically distinct concepts, they both involve the same
    inquiry: has one body of law replaced another? For that reason, the preemption analytical
    framework is a useful tool to conduct our analysis of whether the Escheat Statute has
    superseded common law claims.”).
    To the extent that a field-preemption analysis applies here—and I would take the
    opportunity in a future case to more closely analyze this question—my only significant
    disagreement with the majority is how it applied that analysis. It is difficult to determine
    when a field has been impliedly preempted by a statute. Scalia & Garner, Reading Law:
    The Interpretation of Legal Texts (St. Paul: Thomson/West, 2012), § 47 (discussing the
    presumption against federal preemption of state law). At bottom, field preemption “is
    really ‘a species of conflict preemption,’ ” in that it is triggered when a legal provision
    trenches upon (i.e., conflicts with) a statute’s occupation of a field. 
    Id., p 290,
     quoting
    English v Gen Electric Co, 
    496 US 72
    , 79 n 5; 
    110 S Ct 2270
    ; 
    110 L Ed 2d 65
     (1990). That
    a conflict lies at the heart of field preemption is important to keep in mind because it is
    very easy for the field-preemption analysis to “exalt extratextual purpose above statutory
    text.” Note, Preemption as Purposivism’s Last Refuge, 126 Harv L Rev 1056, 1057 (2013).
    The reason is that “field preemption essentially impl[ies] additional statutory clauses
    beyond the statute’s text, clauses that mandate preemption.” 
    Id. at 1064
    . In addition,
    “choosing the correct field definition” is difficult and critical because “[d]efining the field
    at a certain level of generality becomes the entire game.” 
    Id. at 1067
    .
    3
    As a result, I believe it is important to stick to the text as much as possible when
    defining the field. One way to do this is by recognizing that a statute’s occupation of one
    area of the law does not necessarily mean that it occupies adjacent areas as well. Cf. AW
    Fin Servs, 981 A2d at 1124 (“With one exception, the Escheat Statute does not impliedly
    supersede other areas of the common law, because there is no ‘fair repugnance’ between
    the statute and common law areas that are not related to escheat.”).
    In this case, by investigating the no-fault act’s few scattered provisions concerning
    reimbursement, the majority thoroughly demonstrates that the act does not occupy this area
    of law. See ante at 11-14. And through the same analysis of these specific statutory
    provisions, the majority ably explains why the indemnity agreement at issue does not
    directly conflict with the operation of any other provision in the no-fault act. 1 This
    analysis, in my view, is generally sufficient to dispose of the case. It shows that the no-
    fault act does not occupy the field of indemnification and that none of the handful of
    relevant provisions conflicts with the indemnification contract at issue.
    I therefore cannot agree that the majority’s assessments of the sweeping scope and
    purpose of the no-fault scheme have much, if any, analytical significance. That is, I cannot
    agree that the enforceability of the indemnification contract at issue turns upon whether a
    court considers it to be consistent with the broadly characterized statutory goals of
    1
    Implied conflict preemption is another type of preemption under which a provision
    directly conflicts with state law, i.e., when the provision permits what the statute prohibits
    or vice versa. DeRuiter v Byron Twp, 
    505 Mich 130
    , 140; 949 NW2d 91 (2020). As with
    the field-preemption inquiry, no one here expressly framed the case in these terms. But
    the mode of analysis used here, in searching for a conflict, is similar, and I would also
    consider, in an appropriate case, whether this framing is helpful.
    4
    regulating the insurance of motor vehicles and requiring payment of benefits. See ante
    at 10. I do not believe that the proper question in cases like the present one is whether a
    contract provision “implicate[s]” or “relate[s] to” either of these broadly defined purposes
    of the no-fault schemes. Ante at 10-11. 2 Rather, the case calls for a closer examination of
    2
    The majority’s use of statutory purpose here is problematic in at least two respects. One
    is that it further aggrandizes the purposes we have attributed (without much assessment of
    the text) to the no-fault act. In Shavers v Attorney General, 
    402 Mich 554
    , 578-579; 267
    NW2d 72 (1978), we articulated a somewhat narrower purpose of the statute as
    “provid[ing] victims of motor vehicle accidents [with] assured, adequate, and prompt
    reparation for certain economic losses” through the means of compulsory insurance. We
    subtly expanded this in Cruz v State Farm Mut Auto Ins Co, 
    466 Mich 588
    , 595; 
    648 NW 591
     (2002), suggesting that both the “insurance of motor vehicles . . . and the payment of
    benefits” were purposes of the act. Today, the majority gives these purposes teeth, holding
    that contract provisions that “relate” to or “implicate” these broad purposes can thereby be
    rendered unenforceable. Cruz did not establish such an aggressive use of these statutory
    purposes. Rather, it stated that contracts that “contravene[] the requirements of the no-
    fault act by imposing some greater obligation upon one or another of the parties [are], to
    that extent, invalid.” 
    Id. at 598
    . That inquiry involves a more careful examination of the
    statutory provisions at issue.
    A second troubling aspect of the majority opinion is the imprecise words it uses to
    describe when the purposes of the no-fault act preclude enforcement of a contract: if the
    provision “implicates” or “relates to” the purposes. It is uncertain how these criteria will
    be met, as it seems likely that many provisions in an insurance contract will “implicate” or
    “relate to” either insuring motor vehicles or paying benefits. The majority appears to give
    these terms a limited scope, implying that a provision implicates or relates to a purpose
    only if it results in denying insurance or benefits owed under the act. But if that is so, why
    does the majority define the purposes so broadly? There are specific statutory sections that
    relate to insuring vehicles and paying benefits. Under Cruz, a court should examine those
    particular sections to determine whether they are contravened by the contractual provision
    at issue. By generalizing the purposes of the no-fault act, the majority today suggests that
    contractual agreements are in jeopardy even if they do not violate a particular provision
    but instead have some connection with a broadly conceived statutory purpose. See
    Preemption as Purposivism’s Last Refuge, 126 Harv L Rev at 1067.
    5
    the statutory text, such as the majority itself provides in addition to its assessments of the
    statute’s broader objectives.
    As I said at the outset, I agree with the conclusion the majority reaches and with
    much of its work in getting there. I agree that the no-fault act is not a comprehensive
    regulation of indemnification agreements and that none of the pertinent statutory provisions
    conflicts with the agreement here. Therefore, I agree that the indemnification contract does
    not violate the no-fault act and should be upheld. I do not believe, however, that to reach
    this conclusion we should rely on the statute’s abstract goals as defined by this Court.
    While the proper interpretive framework remains somewhat unclear—in particular,
    whether preemption principles can illuminate the interpretation of the statute—I cannot
    subscribe to a methodology that relies so heavily on statutory purposes. 3 For these reasons,
    I respectfully concur.
    David F. Viviano
    3
    The majority also extends its holding to insurers, even though the city here is a self-
    insurer. See ante at 14-15. While the majority’s conclusion might very well be correct,
    the majority has not offered any supporting analysis and, in any event, it is unnecessary to
    reach this issue. Consequently, I do not join this portion of the majority opinion.
    6