Roberts Orthopedic Services v. Allstate Insurance Company ( 2021 )


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  •             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
    ROBERTS ORTHOPEDIC SERVICES,                                        UNPUBLISHED
    February 4, 2021
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    v                                                                   No. 349786
    Wayne Circuit Court
    ALLSTATE INSURANCE COMPANY,                                         LC No. 18-009627-NI
    Defendant-Appellee.
    Before: FORT HOOD, P.J., and CAVANAGH and TUKEL, JJ.
    PER CURIAM.
    Plaintiff appeals as of right the trial court’s order granting summary disposition to
    defendant under MCR 2.116(C)(7). Plaintiff argues that the trial court erred in finding that the
    federal court’s order in Omar v Allstate Ins Co (Omar I), opinion of the United States District
    Court for the Eastern District of Michigan, issued March 14, 2019 (Case No. 17-cv-13400), which
    granted summary disposition to defendant in a case based on the same accident at issue here, barred
    plaintiff’s claim against defendant under the doctrine of res judicata. We affirm the order of
    summary disposition in favor of defendant.
    I. UNDERLYING FACTS
    In September 2016, Danny Omar was a passenger in a vehicle driven by Marletta Boyd
    when the vehicle was hit by another car. Omar consequently suffered bodily injuries from the
    accident. He then sought and received medical treatment for his injuries from plaintiff. Because
    Omar did not have insurance at the time of the accident, he submitted a claim for no-fault benefits
    under Boyd’s insurance policy with defendant. In 2017, Omar sued defendant, alleging that
    defendant failed or unreasonably refused to pay plaintiff no-fault benefits in accordance with
    Boyd’s insurance policy. After removing Omar’s case to federal court, defendant filed a motion
    for summary judgment on April 19, 2018. Omar I, p 1.
    In February 2018, while the federal court action was pending, plaintiff and Omar entered
    into an assignment of rights agreement, in which Omar assigned to plaintiff “all rights and
    privileges to and remedies for payment of health care services, products, or accommodations
    (“services”), provided by Assignee to Assignor to which Assignor is or may be entitled under
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    Chapter 31 of the Insurance Code (MCL 500.3101, et seq), the No-Fault Act.” The assignment
    further stated, in part:
    Assignor hereby certifies its understanding that while Assignee may,
    pursuant to this assignment, pursue payment from a person or entity other than
    Assignor, this agreement may be revoked by Assignee if it determines, or a
    determination is made pursuant to judicial proceedings, that Assignor lacks
    coverage or that the services subject to this assignment are not payable by any such
    person or entity for any reason under Chapter 31 of the Insurance Code (MCL
    500.3101, et seq), any applicable policy of insurance, and/or due to any actions or
    conduct of Assignor.
    Assignor and Assignee agree that in the event any terms or provisions of
    this agreement are declared invalid or unenforceable by any Court or Federal or
    State Government Agency having jurisdiction over the subject matter of this
    agreement, the remaining terms and provisions that are not affected thereby shall
    remain in full force and effect.
    After the assignment was executed, plaintiff sued defendant in Wayne Circuit Court,
    alleging that defendant unreasonably refused to pay plaintiff for the medical services provided to
    Omar in accordance with defendant’s statutory and contractual obligations. Defendant denied
    plaintiff’s claims for no-fault benefits and asserted that any claim by plaintiff was barred, and that
    any subsequent assignment of rights was invalid due to fraudulent statements or misrepresentations
    by Boyd, which voided the underlying insurance policy.
    Meanwhile, the federal court granted defendant’s motion for summary judgment in Omar
    I,1 finding there was no genuine dispute of material fact that Boyd’s policy was obtained through
    material misrepresentation and, as a result, Omar was not entitled to recover no-fault benefits from
    defendant. Omar I, op at 1-2. The federal court further stated:
    Regardless, the equities here weigh in favor of rescission. The Court gave
    all parties the opportunity to brief how [Bazzi v Sentinel Ins Co, 
    502 Mich 390
    ; 919
    NW2d 20 (2018),] applies to the case. In doing so, [Omar and plaintiff-providers]
    failed to provide evidence as to why the equities weigh in favor of forcing
    Defendants to pay Omar’s claim, whereas Defendants provided significant
    evidence of Omar’s dishonesty in conjunction with his claim. Defendants provided
    evidence that Omar stated in his deposition that his last day of work was the day of
    the accident and that he had never been sick before, but that five months before the
    accident, in conjunction with a Social Security claim, he stated that he had stopped
    working in 2012 due to back and knee problems. Given the evidence of Omar’s
    wrongdoing in connection with his claim, and in the absence of wrongdoing by
    1
    “Michigan’s standards for summary disposition mirror the standards for summary judgment in
    federal court.” Estate of Taylor by Taylor v Univ Physician Group, 
    329 Mich App 268
    , 277 n 2;
    941 NW2d 672 (2019).
    -2-
    Defendants, the equities weigh in favor of rescission. [Id. at 2 n 2 (citations
    omitted).]
    Consequently, Omar was not entitled to receive any no-fault benefits from defendant. Id. at 2.
    Omar filed a motion for reconsideration in federal court, arguing there was no evidence
    that he participated in any fraud related to the procurement of Boyd’s policy and, as a result, the
    equities should have balanced in his favor. The federal court denied Omar’s motion, stating that
    Omar’s innocence in the procurement of Boyd’s policy did not tip the equities in Omar’s favor.
    Omar v Allstate Ins Co (Omar II), opinion of the United States District Court for the Eastern
    District of Michigan, issued October 30, 2019 (Case No. 17-cv-13400), p 1. The federal court
    reasoned that because Bazzi does not limit the “[c]ourt’s equity analysis to the parties’ conduct
    during the procurement of the policy[,]” the federal court properly considered Omar’s misconduct
    while pursuing his claim for no-fault benefits and defendant’s lack of wrongdoing in the balance
    of equities. Id. at 2. Plaintiff did not appeal the federal district court’s judgment against it.
    Following the entry of the summary judgment order in federal court, defendant filed a
    motion for summary disposition in this case, noting that the federal court ruled defendant was
    entitled to rescind Boyd’s policy and have it declared void ab initio because Boyd made
    misrepresentations in her application for the policy. Once rescinded, defendant argued, neither
    Omar nor plaintiff was entitled to no-fault benefits from defendant under Boyd’s policy. Plaintiff
    responded, arguing that defendant failed to present any argument that the equities favored
    rescission of Boyd’s policy as to plaintiff’s claims. The trial court in this case, in granting
    summary disposition, stated that it was doing so “because of the federal court order.”
    Plaintiff filed a motion for reconsideration, arguing that insurance policies are not
    automatically void ab initio when an innocent third party is involved and, as a result, the trial court
    committed a palpable error by granting defendant’s motion without properly weighing the equities.
    The trial court denied plaintiff’s motion for reconsideration. This appeal followed.
    II. ANALYSIS
    A. STANDARD OF REVIEW
    A trial court’s summary disposition ruling is reviewed de novo. Walters v Nadell, 
    481 Mich 377
    , 381; 751 NW2d 431 (2008). “MCR 2.116(C)(7) permits summary disposition ‘because
    of release, payment, prior judgment, [or] immunity granted by law.’ ” Clay v Doe, 
    311 Mich App 359
    , 362; 876 NW2d 248 (2015), quoting MCR 2.116(C)(7) (alteration in original).
    A party may support a motion under MCR 2.116(C)(7) by affidavits,
    depositions, admissions, or other documentary evidence. If such material is
    submitted, it must be considered. MCR 2.116(G)(5). Moreover, the substance or
    content of the supporting proofs must be admissible in evidence . . . . Unlike a
    motion under subsection (C)(10), a movant under MCR 2.116(C)(7) is not required
    to file supportive material, and the opposing party need not reply with supportive
    material. The contents of the complaint are accepted as true unless contradicted by
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    documentation submitted by the movant. [Maiden v Rozwood, 
    461 Mich 109
    , 119;
    597 NW2d 817 (1999) (quotation marks and citations omitted).]
    Furthermore,
    [w]e must consider the documentary evidence in a light most favorable to the
    nonmoving party for purposes of MCR 2.116(C)(7). If there is no factual dispute,
    whether a plaintiff’s claim is barred under a principle set forth in MCR 2.116(C)(7)
    is a question of law for the court to decide. But when a relevant factual dispute
    does exist, summary disposition is not appropriate. [Moraccini v City of Sterling
    Hts, 
    296 Mich App 387
    , 391; 822 NW2d 799 (2012) (citations and quotation marks
    omitted).]
    B. ASSIGNMENT
    Before turning to the dispositive issue of res judicata in this case, we must first address the
    issue of assignment and the effect of Omar’s assignment of his claims to plaintiff in this case. It
    is well-settled that a medical provider has no independent statutory cause of action against a no-
    fault insurer for recovery of no-fault benefits. Covenant Med Ctr, Inc v State Farm Mut Auto Ins
    Co, 
    500 Mich 191
    , 218-219; 895 NW2d 490 (2017). Instead, the medical provider’s default
    recourse is to seek payment directly from the injured person. Id. at 217.
    An injured person, however, retains the ability to assign his or her right to past or presently
    due benefits directly to the provider. Id. at 217 n 40. When such an assignment occurs, the
    provider, as assignee, “stands in the position of the assignor, possessing the same rights and being
    subject to the same defenses.” Burkhardt v Bailey, 
    260 Mich App 636
    , 653; 680 NW2d 453
    (2004). As a result, since the provider-assignee “stands in the shoes of the assignor,” the provider-
    assignee only “possesses whatever right [the assignor] would have to collect past due or presently
    due benefits” from the no-fault insurer. Prof Rehab Assoc v State Farm Mut Auto Ins Co (On
    Remand), 
    228 Mich App 167
    , 177; 577 NW2d 909 (1998). Indeed, because a medical provider
    stands in the shoes of the assignor-insured, “if an insured’s claim is substantively barred on the
    merits, any derivative claims necessarily fail as well.” Dawoud v State Farm Mut Auto Ins Co,
    
    317 Mich App 517
    , 524; 895 NW2d 188 (2016). As discussed above, the federal court in Omar I
    concluded that Omar was not entitled to any no-fault benefits from defendant because, in part, the
    equities balanced in favor of rescinding defendant’s insurance contract with Boyd. Consequently,
    Omar’s claim for no-fault benefits, which was premised on the same insurance contract, was
    substantively barred on the merits and any derivative claim plaintiff has must similarly fail. See
    
    id.
    C. RES JUDICATA
    Plaintiff argues that res judicata does not apply in this case because the federal court in
    Omar I ruled on a different claim for no-fault benefits than is at issue in this case. We disagree.
    The federal court in Omar I concluded that rescission of Boyd’s policy was appropriate and,
    therefore, that Omar was not entitled to any no-fault benefits from defendant based on the same
    contract; it never reached the derivative issue of which specific no-fault benefits Omar arguably
    would have been entitled to if there had been a valid contract. Omar I, op at 2. Plaintiff, as
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    assignee, had the identical rights Omar had prior to assignment; as the federal court found, the fact
    that Omar had no right to collect benefits doomed plaintiff’s derivative claim. Res judicata is a
    judicial doctrine constructed to “relieve parties of the cost and vexation of multiple lawsuits,
    conserve judicial resources, and, by preventing inconsistent decisions, encourage reliance on
    adjudication.” Allen v McCurry, 
    449 US 90
    , 94; 
    101 S Ct 411
    ; 66 L Ed2d 308 (1980). The “main
    purpose” of res judicata “is to insure finality in a cause of action.” Rogers v Colonial Fed S & L
    Ass’n of Grosse Pointe Woods, 
    405 Mich 607
    , 617; 275 NW2d 499 (1979), overruled in part on
    other grounds by Al-Shimmari v Detroit Med Ctr, 
    477 Mich 280
    ; 731 NW2d 29 (2007). Michigan
    courts consistently apply the principle broadly in practice. Pierson Sand & Gravel, Inc v Keeler
    Brass Co, 
    460 Mich 372
    , 380; 596 NW2d 153 (1999).
    This broad application encompasses claims previously litigated, as well as “every claim
    arising from the same transaction that the parties, exercising reasonable diligence, could have
    raised but did not.” Dart v Dart, 
    460 Mich 573
    , 586-587; 597 NW2d 82, 88 (1999). Res judicata
    bars a party’s subsequent action if “(1) the prior action was decided on the merits, (2) both actions
    involve the same parties or their privies, and (3) the matter in the second case was, or could have
    been, resolved in the first.” Adair v State, 
    470 Mich 105
    , 121; 680 NW2d 386 (2004). Finally,
    “the burden of proving the applicability of the doctrine of res judicata is on the party asserting it.”
    Baraga Co v State Tax Comm, 
    466 Mich 264
    , 269; 645 NW2d 13 (2002).
    Orders of summary disposition are generally adjudications on the merits. Washington v
    Sinai Hosp of Greater Detroit, 
    478 Mich 412
    , 418-419; 733 NW2d 755 (2007). The federal court’s
    order granting summary judgment to defendant in Omar I, op at 2, had the same effect as an order
    of summary disposition, see Estate of Taylor by Taylor v Univ Physician Group, 
    329 Mich App 268
    , 277 n 2; 941 NW2d 672 (2019). The federal court in Omar I addressed the merits of Omar’s
    claim for no-fault benefits, weighed the equities, and decided that rescission of Boyd’s insurance
    contract was appropriate; the federal court thus granted summary judgement. Omar I, op at 2 n 2.
    Thus, the federal court’s decision in Omar I was a decision on the merits and fulfills the first
    requirement for res judicata to apply here. See Washington, 
    478 Mich at 418-419
    ; Adair, 
    470 Mich at 121
    .
    The second requirement of the doctrine of res judicata is that both actions must involve the
    same parties or their privies. Adair, 
    470 Mich at 121
    . Privies are parties “so identified in interest
    with another party that the first litigant represents the same legal right that the later litigant is trying
    to assert.” 
    Id. at 122
    . “The outer limit of the doctrine traditionally requires both a ‘substantial
    identity of interests’ and a ‘working functional relationship’ in which the interests of the nonparty
    are presented and protected by the party in litigation.” 
    Id.
     (citation omitted).
    In the federal case, Omar, as plaintiff’s assignor of rights, certainly “represent[ed] the same
    legal right that the later litigant is trying to assert.” Adair, 
    470 Mich at 122
    . As assignee, plaintiff
    had “all rights and privileges to and remedies for payment” which Omar had, see Assignment, not
    more and not less. Plaintiff argues that he and Omar are not privies because the legal right at issue
    in Omar I is different from the legal right at issue here because, in Omar I, Omar sought no-fault
    benefits for different services than those for which plaintiff is seeking reimbursement in this case.
    But plaintiff’s argument misses the mark. Plaintiff’s claim rests entirely on the proposition that
    Omar could recover under Boyd’s insurance contract, and could convey that right of recovery to
    plaintiff; the threshold question therefore is whether Omar had any rights under the insurance
    -5-
    contract, because without such rights neither his claim, nor plaintiff’s derivative claim based on
    Omar’s rights, had any force. Thus, the issue in Omar I was whether defendant’s insurance
    contract with Boyd should be rescinded; because it concluded that Boyd’s contract should be
    rescinded, the federal court never reached the derivative issue of whether Omar would have been
    entitled to any specific no-fault benefits if the underlying contract had been valid. Omar I, op at
    2. Indeed, by rescinding Boyd’s insurance contract with defendant, the Omar I court held that
    defendant was not liable to pay any no-fault benefits that arose from the accident in which Omar
    and Boyd were involved because, as a matter of law, the contract of insurance never existed. 
    Id.
    Here, plaintiff seeks to relitigate that same issue and for us to consider whether Boyd’s
    insurance contract with defendant should be rescinded and whether plaintiff, standing in Omar’s
    shoes, is entitled to any no-fault benefits. But before we can address whether defendant is
    responsible for the specific no-fault benefits at issue in this case we would first have to determine
    whether Omar, and by extension plaintiff, was entitled to any no-fault benefits at all. Omar
    litigated that exact issue in Omar I and the federal court ruled against him. Thus, Omar and
    plaintiff are in privity because they had not only a substantial identity of interests in whether
    Boyd’s insurance contract with defendant was rescinded, they had the identical interest—plaintiff
    did not have even a potentially valid claim unless Omar did.
    Plaintiff also argues that its assignment of benefits from Omar protects plaintiff from the
    effect of the federal court’s order because, based on the assignment, Omar could not make a claim
    in Omar I for the no-fault benefits at issue in this case. We need not reach that specific issue
    because, even with the assignment, Omar and plaintiff are in privity. As discussed earlier, an
    assignee cannot obtain any greater right than the assignor had with respect to past due or presently
    due benefits from the no-fault insurer. Prof Rehab Assoc, 228 Mich App at 177. “To rule
    otherwise would be to give such an assignment some strange alchemistic power to transform a
    dross and worthless cause of action into the pure gold from which a judgment might be wrought.”
    Jawad A Shah, MD, PC v State Farm Mut Auto Ins Co, 
    324 Mich App 182
    , 205; 920 NW2d 148
    (2018) (quotation marks and citation omitted). Indeed, plaintiff stands in the shoes of Omar, by
    way of the assignment; and the federal court’s ruling in Omar I that Omar was not entitled to any
    no-fault benefits applies equally to plaintiff, due to the rescission of defendant’s insurance contract
    with Boyd. Simply put, plaintiff and Omar are privies because they each sought a determination,
    in different cases, that Omar was entitled to no-fault benefits, and the federal court ruled against
    their position on the merits.2
    Finally, for the doctrine of res judicata to bar the relitigation of a claim, the matter in
    question must have been decided in the first case, or be one which could have been so decided.
    Adair, 
    470 Mich at 121
    . The test for this element is the “transactional” test. 
    Id. at 124
    . The
    “transactional” test provides that “the assertion of different kinds or theories of relief still
    constitutes a single cause of action if a single group of operative facts give rise to the assertion of
    2
    Plaintiff’s position is that a contract can be rescinded as to some claims, but not as to other claims.
    However, the effect of rescission is that the entirety of the contract, as a legal matter, never existed.
    Bazzi, 502 Mich at 408. As such, any claim grounded on the contract, not just some possible
    claims, necessarily fails.
    -6-
    relief.” Id. (citation omitted). “Whether a factual grouping constitutes a transaction for purposes
    of res judicata is to be determined pragmatically, by considering whether the facts are related in
    time, space, origin or motivation, [and] whether they form a convenient trial unit . . . .” Id. at 125
    (citation and quotation marks omitted; alterations in original). See also Washington, 
    478 Mich at 420
     (quoting Adair’s statement of the transactional test).
    Plaintiff’s claim here and Omar’s claim in Omar I both arise from the same accident and
    the same insurance policy. Indeed, plaintiff’s claim could have been resolved as part of Omar I
    because plaintiff’s claim necessarily depended on showing that Omar was entitled to receive no-
    fault benefits. See Adair, 
    470 Mich at 124-125
    . The underlying issue raised by Omar and plaintiff
    in their respective suits was whether innocent third parties, whom they alleged to be Omar and
    plaintiff, could collect no-fault benefits from defendant despite rescission of Boyd’s policy as void
    ab initio. Omar I, op at 1-2. Because the federal court addressed and answered this issue in Omar
    I, deciding Omar’s claim was “substantively barred on the merits, any derivative claims,” such as
    plaintiff’s claims here, “necessarily fail as well.” Dawoud, 317 Mich App at 524; Omar I, op at
    1-2. Thus, plaintiff’s claim for no-fault benefits was barred by res judicata.
    We also note that plaintiff asserts that the federal court erred in finding that Omar was not
    an innocent-third party. Plaintiff’s recourse, depending on the exact timing of the federal court’s
    entry of judgment and the assignment, was either for Omar to appeal the summary judgment order,
    or for plaintiff, as assignee, to intervene and do so. But Omar did not appeal the federal court
    order, nor did plaintiff try to do so either, instead choosing to essentially use this lawsuit as a
    substitute for a federal appeal. That is precisely the type of litigation the res judicata doctrine is
    intended to bar. Plaintiff’s position is that, because it did not like or agree with the outcome in
    federal court, it could simply pursue the same legal theories in the Michigan courts, with the
    prospect of a more congenial outcome from plaintiff’s perspective. Had plaintiff appealed to a
    federal court of appeals, it may have obtained just such an outcome. Application of res judicata
    principles, however, bars us from awarding any such relief to plaintiff.
    III. CONCLUSION
    For the reasons stated in this opinion, the trial court did not err by granting summary
    disposition to defendants based on the res judicata doctrine. Because plaintiff’s claim was barred
    by res judicata, we need not decide whether a balancing of the equities regarding rescission was
    appropriate here, because the underlying contract was rescinded and thus legally never existed.
    Consequently, we do not address the rescission issue, nor do we balance the equities any further.
    Thus, the trial court’s order granting summary disposition to defendant is affirmed. Defendant, as
    the prevailing party, may tax costs pursuant to MCR 7.219.
    /s/ Karen M. Fort Hood
    /s/ Mark J. Cavanagh
    /s/ Jonathan Tukel
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