STATE OF MICHIGAN
COURT OF APPEALS
JAWAD A. SHAH, M.D., PC, INTEGRATED FOR PUBLICATION
HOSPITAL SPECIALISTS, PC, INSIGHT May 8, 2018
ANESTHESIA, PLLC, and STERLING
ANESTHESIA, PLLC,
Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v No. 340370
Genesee Circuit Court
STATE FARM MUTUAL AUTOMOBILE LC No. 17-108637-NF
INSURANCE COMPANY,
Defendant-Appellee.
Before: BORRELLO, P.J., and SHAPIRO and TUKEL, JJ.
SHAPIRO, J. (concurring in part and dissenting in part).
I concur with the majority’s conclusion that the anti-assignment clause in defendant’s
policy is unenforceable because it conflicts with long-standing principles of contract law and the
Michigan no-fault act. I dissent from the majority’s conclusion that the one-year-back provision
runs from the date of the assignment rather than from the date set forth in the no-fault act, i.e. the
date “the action was commenced.” Lastly, I conclude that W A Foote Mem Hosp v Mich
Assigned Claims Plan, 321 Mich App 159; 909 NW2d 38 (2017), lv pending, was wrongly
decided, and that Covenant Medical Ctr, Inc v State Farm Auto Mut Ins Co, 500 Mich 191; 895
NW2d 490 (2017), should be given only prospective application.
I. ANTI-ASSIGNMENT CLAUSE
For over 100 years, Michigan law has provided that all contracts, other than those that
involve personal performance, are assignable. In Northwestern Cooperage & Lumber Co v
Byers, 133 Mich 534; 95 NW 529 (1903), the Michigan Supreme Court held that:
[W]here an executory contract is not necessarily personal in its character, and can,
consistent with the rights and interests of the adverse party, be fairly and
sufficiently executed as well by an assignee as by the original contractor, and
when the latter has not disqualified himself for a performance of the contract, it is
assignable.
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Accord Voigt v Murphy Heating Co, 164 Mich 539; 129 NW 701 (1911); Detroit, T. & I.R. Co v
W.U. Tel Co, 200 Mich 2, 5; 166 NW 494 (1918).
This basic principle of contract law has never changed. It was recently articulated In re
Jackson, 311 BR 195, 200-201 (Bankr WD Mich, 2004), where, applying Michigan law, the
court stated:
As a general rule, contract rights and duties are assignable.
Notwithstanding this general rule, Michigan law recognizes certain classes
of contracts as inherently nonassignable in their character, such as promises to
marry, or engagements for personal services, requiring skill, science, or peculiar
qualifications. [Citations omitted.]
In this case, it is undisputed that the contract in question is not one for personal services, and so
falls within the general rule that contract rights may be assigned.
Defendant argues that despite this general rule, the insured may not assign his right to
overdue benefits because its insurance policy contains an anti-assignment clause. The majority
properly relies on Roger Williams Ins Co v Carrington, 43 Mich 252; 5 NW 303 (1880), for the
principle that once the assigning party has performed, her right to assign past benefits cannot be
contractually limited. Significantly, Roger Williams does not stand alone and multiple legal
authorities support its analysis.
The case of In re Jackson, cited above, is directly on point. The contract in that case was
a settlement agreement that provided for Jackson to receive annuity payments. In re Jackson,
311 B R at 197. The settlement contract contained an anti-assignment clause, and the question
before the court was whether the annuity payments could nevertheless be assigned. The court
answered affirmatively, noting that while a party may not assign benefits while its own
performance is incomplete, it cannot be barred from assigning its rights as to the other party’s
performance once it has itself performed:
An executory contract is “a contract that remains wholly unperformed or
for which there remains something still to be done on both sides.” With respect to
the [Jackson’s] contractual obligations, the Settlement Agreement is not
executory. Immediately upon executing the Settlement Agreement, [Jackson]
released her claims against the state court defendants and dismissed her lawsuit
with prejudice. As of the date of the [Jackson's] agreement with Settlement
Capital, Jackson had fully performed the duties required of her.
Therefore, Jackson, having held up her end of the bargain with
Transamerica Insurance, had every right to partially assign her interest in the
annuity to Settlement Capital, irrespective of the anti-assignment clause. The
modern trend with respect to contractual prohibitions on assignments is to
interpret them narrowly, as barring only the delegation of duties, and not
necessarily as precluding the assignment of rights from assignor to assignee.
Unless the circumstances indicate the contrary, a contract term prohibiting
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assignment of ‘the contract’ bars only the delegation to an assignee of the
performance by the assignor of a duty or condition.
* * *
[It is argued] that the anti-assignment clause in the Settlement Agreement
renders inapplicable the general rule that contract rights and duties are assignable.
We find however, that Michigan law mandates application of the general rule.
This finding is based on the theory that once a party to a contract performs its
obligations to the point that the contract is no longer executory, its right to
enforce the other party's liability under the contract may be assigned without the
other party's consent, even if the contract contains a non-assignment clause. [In
re Jackson, 311 BR at 201 (quotation marks and citations omitted) (emphasis
added).]
This principle is broadly recognized. As described in Couch on Insurance:
[T]he great majority of courts adhere to the rule that general stipulations in
policies prohibiting assignments of the policy, except with the consent of the
insurer, apply only to assignments before loss, and do not prevent an assignment
after loss,2 for the obvious reason that the clause by its own terms ordinarily
prohibits merely the assignment of the policy, as distinguished from a claim
arising under the policy, and the assignment before loss involves a transfer of a
contractual relationship while the assignment after loss is the transfer of a right to
a money claim.3 The purpose of a no assignment clause is to protect the insurer
from increased liability, and after events giving rise to the insurer's liability have
occurred, the insurer's risk cannot be increased by a change in the insured's
identity. [ 3 Couch on Insurance, § 35:8 (emphasis added)].
Another learned treatise states:
Anti-assignment clauses in insurance policies are strictly enforced against
attempted transfers of the policy itself before a loss has occurred, because this
type of assignment involves a transfer of the contractual relationship and, in most
cases, would materially increase the risk to the insurer. Policy provisions that
require the company’s consent for an assignment of rights are generally
enforceable only before a loss occurs, however, as a general principle, a clause
restricting assignment does not in any way limit the policyholder’s power to make
an assignment of the rights under the policy – consisting of the right to receive the
proceeds of the policy – after a loss has occurred. The reasoning here is that once
a loss occurs, an assignment of the policyholder’s rights regarding that loss in no
way materially increases the risk to the insurer. After a loss occurs, the indemnity
policy is no longer an executory contract of insurance. It is now a vested claim
against the insurer and can be freely assigned or sold like any other chose in
action or piece of property. [17 Richard A. Lord, A Treatises on the Law of
Contract by Samuel Williston, § 49:119 (4th ed, 2015) (emphasis added).]
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The Restatement of Contracts 2d, § 322(1), articulates the same rule, stating, “Unless the
circumstances indicate the contrary, a contract term prohibiting assignment of ‘the contract bars
only the delegation to an assignee of the performance by the assignor of a duty or condition.”
This principle is more clearly expressed in The Restatement of Contracts 2d, § 322(2), which
provides that “[a] contract term prohibiting assignment of rights under the contract . . . does not
forbid assignment of a right to damages for breach of the whole contract or a right arising out of
the assignor’s due performance of his entire obligation.”
Defendant State Farm makes a public policy argument, asserting that permitting
assignments will significantly complicate the claims process. This argument is both factually
and legally inapposite. It is factually inapposite for two reasons. First, because defendant
already has a claim process that has been operational for decades that allow for assignments and
payment to providers. Second, because defendant’s claims of increased administrative costs is
not supported by any evidence. It should come as no surprise that a court may not base its
decision on factual assertions unsupported by any evidence; such factual assertions amount to
nothing more than speculation until such evidence is proffered. State Farm’s public policy
argument is legally inapposite for two reasons. First, because it is inconsistent with over 100
years of law. Second, because its position is intrinsically contrary to the purpose of the no-fault
system, which is designed to provide “assured, adequate, and prompt reparation for certain
economic losses.” Shavers v Kelley, 402 Mich 554, 579; 267 NW2d 72 (1978) (emphasis
added). Defendant takes the position that it has an unrestricted right to employ mechanisms to
decrease its administrative costs even where those administrative mechanisms will result in a
denial of benefits to injured persons who have paid their premiums and obtained reasonable and
necessary medical treatment following a covered accident.
This view is contrary to Michigan law generally, and to the no-fault act in particular. As
the court explained in Wonsey v Life Ins Co of North America, 32 F Supp 2d 939, 943 (ED Mich,
1998):
[D]efendants strenuously argue that when a beneficiary of a structured settlement
agreement decides to sell all or a number of his future payments, “it requires a
complicated review process” and that “defendants [would be required] to review
substantial paper work, and [to] determine if the assignment appears to be legal . .
. and/or whether any guarantees or releases provided by the assignor . . . are
satisfactory to fully and completely protect [defendants]. . . .” The Court is not
persuaded. The reasons asserted by defendants in objecting to the proposed
assignment do not appear to amount to substantial harm or actual prejudice to
defendants' interests, but merely center upon the necessary administrative tasks
associated with the assignment's implementation. As such, defendants have not
submitted sufficient reasons to . . . [enforce] contractual anti-assignment clauses.
(Emphasis added).
The no-fault act itself speaks to the issue of assignment. It provides, “An agreement for
assignment of a right to benefits payable in the future is void.” MCL 500.3143 (emphasis
added). Notably, the Legislature elected not to void assignment of past due benefits. By not
including past due benefits in this statutory prohibition, the Legislature, under the doctrine of
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expressio unius est exclusion alterius, made clear its intent to adhere to the fundamental principle
that assignments of past due benefits are effective and proper.
Defendant argues that its “right of contract” must supersede these long-standing
principles. However, it cites nothing in the no-fault act providing that insurers may add policy
language ostensibly in order to limit administrative costs that have the effect of denying benefits
to individuals who are entitled to them under the statutory language. Defendant cites to Rory v
Continental Ins Co, 473 Mich 457; 703 NW2d 23 (2005), for the principle that an insurance
contract may include provisions as to which the no-fault act does not speak. However, defendant
reads Rory too generously. Rory involved uninsured motorist coverage, an insurance product
whose mechanism is not governed by the no-fault act.1
Defendant’s theory seems to be that it may include any provision to its policies so long as
the provision is not explicitly barred in the no-fault act. It contends therefore, that it has the right
to add policy provisions not provided for in the Act whose result, if not purpose, is to deny
benefits to people who qualify under the statute. This position cannot be squared with the
fundamental goal of the no-fault act to provide “assured, adequate, and prompt reparation for
certain economic losses.” Kelley, 402 Mich at 579.
Defendant’s conceptual error lies in its view that the no-fault act is defined by what it
does not say, i.e. because the Act does not explicitly prohibit an anti-assignment provision, an
insurer is free to insert such a provision into the policy regardless of its effect on the functioning
of the no-fault system and an insured’s ability to obtain covered medical treatment. However,
the no-fault act must be defined by what it does say. It defines a comprehensive statewide
system designed to provide “assured, prompt and adequate” coverage for medical services
following an auto accident. The fact that the Act does not contain an omnibus list of actions
inconsistent with that comprehensive system does not mean that it intended that such actions
1
I respectfully suggest that the Michigan Supreme Court should revisit Rory’s conclusion that
there is no such thing as a “contract of adhesion.” Anyone (except perhaps some lawyers and
judges) who has ever purchased an auto insurance policy—which under law all car owners must
do—knows exactly what a contract of adhesion is. One party, typically an individual, is
presented with a pre-printed policy and told to “take it or leave it.” On the other side is typically
an insurance entity with billions of dollars in assets and multiple employees dedicated to drafting
contract language that will favor the entity in every way possible under the law or in what the
entity hopes it can reshape the law to be. If the individual, assuming he or she is able to
understand the policy language, declines to accept every word as written, they will not be
permitted to purchase a policy. No revisions are even entertained. Moreover, if this individual
then seeks coverage from a competitor insurer, they are all but certain to face the same or similar
situation. In sum, the only “freedom of contract” that an individual purchaser has is to buy or not
buy. And that freedom is illusory since by law, every vehicle owner must obtain insurance.
Accordingly, I respectfully suggest that the “freedom of contract” discussed in Rory is less a
reality in this context than it is a phrase used to permit the judicial branch to ignore the words
and the will of the Legislature as defined in the no-fault act.
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should be permitted. There is nothing in the Act that indicates that the Legislature intended to
allow insurers to unilaterally add limitations on benefits. Ultimately, if insurers are free to add
whatever administrative conditions or hurdles their policy drafters can define, then the
Legislature’s comprehensive system will be sliced and diced by artfully drafted policy
provisions, and deprive insureds the benefits they paid for, and which the no-fault act mandates.
Defendant’s position is a slippery slope by which the no-fault system dies the death of a
thousand cuts.
II. ONE-YEAR-BACK RULE
I dissent from the majority’s conclusion that the one-year-back date should be measured
from the date of the assignment and not the day that suit was filed. The statute provides that
benefits may not be recovered “for any portion of the loss incurred more than 1 year before the
date on which the action was commenced.” MCL 500.3145(1) (emphasis added). In this case,
the action was commenced on February 24, 2017, by these plaintiffs against this defendant.
Nothing has changed in the nature of the action. I respectfully suggest that the majority is
mistaken in its view that the addition of an allegation to establish standing when the issue is
raised “commences” a new “action.”
The majority cites scant authority for this position. It cites Burkhardt v Bailey, 260 Mich
App 636, 653; 680 NW2d 453 (2004), for the general principle that an assignee stands in the
position of the assignor, possessing the same rights and being subject to the same defenses.”2
From this, the majority concludes that “plaintiffs could not obtain any greater rights from
Hensley on the date of the assignments—July 11, 2017—than Hensley possessed on that date.”
However, the triggering of the one-year-back statute does not depend on whether there was a
“right” to file suit, but only on the date suit was filed. Of course, if a party lacks the “right” to
2
Burkhardt was not a no-fault case and the question was whether a party could assign rights it
did not possess at the time of the assignment. In the instant case, by contrast, there is no dispute
about the insured’s possession of the right to benefits when he assigned them to the plaintiff
health care provider. Specifically, Burkhardt involved multiple parties involved in a tax
foreclosure and subsequent assignments. The party foreclosed upon, Bailey, did not redeem and
the plaintiff purchased the property at tax auction. 260 Mich App at 639-640. The plaintiff,
however, failed to give notice to the mortgagor, Bond. Id. at 640. The case came before this
Court twice. In its first decision, the Court refused to quiet title and held that Bailey had lost all
rights of redemption, but that Burkhardt still had time to provide notice to the mortgagee who
could thereupon, object and assert its rights, which it later did. Id. at 641. While the case was
pending on appeal, the intervening defendant, Hamilton, provided funds to Bailey to pay off his
mortgage and Bond recorded a discharge of the mortgage. Id. at 641-642. After the discharge of
the mortgage, Bond assigned any rights of redemption it had to Hamilton who sought to redeem.
The Court determined that once the mortgage was discharged, Bond’s rights as mortgagor were
extinguished, and so Bond had no right of redemption to assign to Hamilton. Id. at 645-646.
Accordingly, the Court found that Bond’s assignment to Hamilton was void and granted
Burkhardt a quiet title judgment. Id. at 660-661.
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sue, then the court in which it was filed will dismiss it and in those cases, the application of the
one-year-back rule will not be at issue. However, here, plaintiffs sought to amend his complaint
to cure the standing problem before the court ordered that it be dismissed, and as already noted,
neither the parties nor the cause of action changed in any way.
The majority also relies on Grist v Upjohn Company, 1 Mich App 72; 134 NW2d 358
(1965), but the question in that case was fundamentally different than the one before us today. In
Grist, the plaintiff sued for defamation. Id. at 74. Later, she sought to add an additional count of
other acts of defamation that had occurred since the filing of her complaint. Id. at 76-77.
However, the statute of limitations had run as to these new claims, so she asserted that she could
add them to her original complaint by the doctrine of relation back. Grist, 1 Mich at 83-84. The
Court rejected the argument stating that the plaintiff may not add new claims as to which the
statute had run by adding them to a previously filed action. Id. at 84-85. In the instant case,
plaintiffs do not seek to add any claim and certainly does not seek to add a claim as to which the
statute of limitations has run. Indeed, every claim at issue in this case was defined and set forth
in the initial complaint. Plaintiffs seek exactly what it sought at the outset of the case, payment
of past due benefits.
Accordingly, I would hold that the one-year-back period runs from the date the suit was
filed.
III. RETROACTIVITY OF COVENANT
In Covenant, 500 Mich at 195, the Michigan Supreme Court held that healthcare
providers do not have an independent cause of action against a no-fault carrier for failure to pay
benefits. In W A Foote Mem Hosp, 321 Mich App at 196, this Court concluded that the rule
articulated in Covenant should be applied retroactively. I agree with much of the Court’s
analysis in that case. The opinion accurately reviews the United States Supreme Court’s
decision in Harper v Virginia, 509 U S 86; 113 S Ct 2510; 125 L Ed 2d 74 (1993), which holds
that retroactive application must be applied in federal cases, but notes that the individual states
are not bound to follow that rule. I am less convinced by the Foote Court’s reliance on Spectrum
Health Hosps v Farm Bureau Mut Ins Co of Mich, 492 Mich 503, 536; 821 NW2d 117 (2012),
which continued to recognize that an exception to the principle of retroactivity, stating:
When a statute law has received a given construction by the courts of last resort
and contracts have been made and rights acquired under and in accordance with
such construction, such contracts may not be invalidated, nor vested rights
acquired under them impaired, by a change of construction made by a subsequent
decision.
The Court went on to note that in the case before it, the “decision today does not at all affect the
parties' contractual rights” and should be retrospectively applied. Id. at 536-537.
There is no question that plaintiffs: (1) properly and reasonably relied on what appeared
to be settled law when it filed suit, (2) that it provided services to defendant’s insured based upon
that law, and (3) that it has not been paid. A prospective application would merely allow health
care providers that provided services based on the law as it was universally understood, to be
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paid for those already-provided services. A retroactive application, by contrast, creates a
distorted result inconsistent with the no-fault act. The hospital, which provided a valuable
service, will remain unpaid, while the insurer, which has already been paid (the insured’s
premiums), will not have to provide the service it was paid to perform.
With these concerns in mind, I respectfully suggest that the better course would be to
follow the common-sense principles described in Tebo v Havlik, 418 Mich 350; 343 NW2d 181
(1984), which arose prior to the Supreme Court’s decision in Putney v Haskins, 414 Mich 181;
324 NW2d 729 (1982), that required that dramshop plaintiffs “name and retain” the intoxicated
driver as a defendant when suing the bar or other liquor license. MCL 436.22. Thus, the statute
was adopted while the case was pending. The question therefore, was whether the “name and
retain” requirement should be applied retroactively, which would result in the dismissal of many
dramshop cases filed before the change:
It is evident that there is no single rule of thumb which can be used to
accomplish the maximum of justice in each varying set of circumstances. The
involvement of vested property rights, the magnitude of the impact of decision on
public bodies taken without warning or a showing of substantial reliance on the
old rule may influence the result.
The benefit of flexibility in opinion application is evident. If a court were
absolutely bound by the traditional rule of retroactive application, it would be
severely hampered in its ability to make needed changes in the law because of the
chaos that could result in regard to prior enforcement under that law. Placek v.
City of Sterling Heights, 405 Mich. 638, 665, 275 N.W.2d 511 (1979).
Appreciation of the effect a change in settled law can have has led this
Court to favor only limited retroactivity when overruling prior law. Thus, when
the doctrine of imputed negligence was overruled in Bricker v. Green, 313 Mich
218; 21 NW2d 105 (1946), the decision was applied only to the case before the
Court and to pending and future cases. When the doctrine of charitable immunity
was overruled in Parker v. Port Huron Hospital, 361 Mich 1; 105 NW2d 1
(1960), the retroactive effect of the decision was limited to the parties before the
Court. Even where statutory construction has been involved, this Court has
limited the retroactivity of a decision when justice so required.
The question before us is whether our interpretation of a statute should be
applied retroactively to the statute's effective date. In Putney, we found the clear
import of the statute to be to require the plaintiff to name and retain the allegedly
intoxicated person at risk. Were Putney a case of first impression in the Michigan
courts, we would hold that the statutory language gave plaintiffs no reason to
believe that the settlements entered into would comply with the “retain” portion of
the statute. Putney, however, was not a case of first impression in the Michigan
courts.
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* * *
In light of the unquestioned status of Buxton at the time Putney was decided by
this Court, it would be unjust to apply Putney retroactively to persons other than
those before the Court in that case.
In contrast to the harsh effect which the full retroactivity of Putney would
have on injured plaintiffs, prospective application will have little effect on
dramshop defendants in those pending cases where settlement agreements have
been made, even though the defense of Putney will be unavailable. For them, the
law will simply remain as it was from 1976 to 1982. We hold that Putney v
Haskins is applicable to all cases where settlement agreements are entered into
with the allegedly intoxicated person after the date of decision in Putney. [Tebo,
418 Mich at 360-361, 363-364 (quotation marks and citation omitted.)]
For these reasons, I conclude that Foote was wrongly decided and that Covenant should
only be applied prospectively.
III. CONCLUSION
I join the majority in holding that the anti-assignment clause in the policy is
unenforceable. I dissent from the majority’s conclusion as to the one-year-back rule, which I
conclude should be calculated from the date plaintiffs filed suit.
/s/ Douglas B. Shapiro
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