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
WILLIAM AHEE, UNPUBLISHED
March 19, 2019
Plaintiff-Appellee,
v No. 341072
Oakland Circuit Court
CITY OF NOVI, NOVI SENIOR LC No. 2016-152483-NI
TRANSPORTATION, and TERRY EASTIN,
Defendants,
and
AUTO-OWNERS INSURANCE COMPANY,
Defendant/Cross-Plaintiff-Appellee,
and
US SPECIALTY INSURANCE COMPANY,
Defendant/Cross-Defendant-
Appellant.
Before: GLEICHER, P.J., and K. F. KELLY and LETICA, JJ.
GLEICHER J. (concurring).
I concur with the result reached by the majority, but write separately to suggest an
alternate analysis. Guided by the primary purpose/incidental benefit test described in Farmers
Ins Exch v AAA of Mich, 256 Mich App 691; 671 NW2d 89 (2003), the majority holds that
William Ahee’s insurer is first in priority for payment of Ahee’s personal protection insurance
(PIP) benefits. The test was developed because the statutory test is not a model of clarity.
Despite the statute’s lexical challenges, the test is unnecessary. A contextual reading leads to the
same conclusion.
I
This insurance priority dispute pits the insurer for the injured party, William Ahee (Auto-
Owners) against the insurer for the city of Novi (US Specialty). Ahee was injured while a
passenger in a van operated by the city’s Older Adult Services Transportation Program
(OASTP). Under the no-fault act, MCL 500.3101 et seq., an injured person usually looks first to
his own insurer for coverage, and Ahee did so. Auto-Owners resisted coverage, asserting that
MCL 500.3114(2) compelled the city’s insurer to cover Ahee’s claim. This subsection
establishes an exception to the general rule that a claimant’s own insurer stands first in line for
payment of PIP benefits. When an injury occurs to an operator or passenger “of a motor vehicle
operated in the business of transporting passengers,” priority for payment shifts to the insurer of
that vehicle. Section 3114(2) reflects a legislative policy choice that entities “in the businesses
of transporting passengers” should bear the primary responsibility for providing no-fault benefits
to passengers under their control.
The city countered Auto Owners’ “business transportation” argument with yet another
statutory exception. Six subsections of MCL 500.3114(2) boomerang priority for payment back
to the claimant’s insurer by relieving certain entities “in the business of transporting passengers”
from first-order priority. Claimants injured in vehicles designated for this special treatment must
look first to their own insurer for coverage, despite that the vehicle in which the injury occurred
was “in the business of transporting passengers.” Pertinent here, the insurer of “[a] bus operating
under a government sponsored transportation program” is second in priority to a claimant’s own
coverage. MCL 500.3114(2)(c). The statute and its subsections provide as follows:
(2) A person suffering accidental bodily injury while an operator or a passenger
of a motor vehicle operated in the business of transporting passengers shall
receive the [PIP] benefits to which the person is entitled from the insurer of the
motor vehicle. This subsection does not apply to a passenger in any of the
following, unless the passenger is not entitled to [PIP] benefits under any other
policy:
(a) A school bus, as defined by the department of education, providing
transportation not prohibited by law.
(b) A bus operated by a common carrier of passengers certified by the department
of transportation.
(c) A bus operating under a government sponsored transportation program.
(d) A bus operated by or providing service to a nonprofit organization.
(e) A taxicab insured as prescribed in [MCL 500.3101 or MCL 500.3102.]
(f) A bus operated by a canoe or other watercraft, bicycle, or horse livery used
only to transport passengers to or from a destination point.
(g) A transportation network company vehicle. [MCL 500.3114.]
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My approach to this statute is grounded in its object, which is to establish priority rules
that generally place insurers for motor vehicles “in the business of transporting passengers” in
the first tier, while recognizing that exceptions should exist for motor vehicles that may be said
to be in the transportation “business,” but merit relief from top-priority status.
II
Because the city of Novi was not “in the business of transporting passengers,” the
majority holds, MCL 500.3114(2) does not shift priority to the city; it remains with the injured
party’s insurer. The majority reaches this conclusion by applying a two-factor, judge-made test.
The factors go well beyond the statute’s text, posing two questions that, if answered
affirmatively, mean that a motor vehicle was “in the business of transporting passengers:” (1)
whether the transportation of passengers is the primary purpose for which the vehicle is used,
and (2) whether the transportation of passengers is a primary rather than an incidental component
of the overall business or activity of the operator.
Although MCL 500.3114(2) is not elegantly drafted, the statute’s structure, language, and
purpose, taken together, clarify the manner in which the Legislature intended it to operate,
making the test superfluous. In my estimation, the city is “in the business of transporting
passengers,” but nevertheless second in priority due to the exceptions shifting priority back to a
claimant’s own insurer.
III
This Court adopted the “primary purpose/incidental benefit” test because it found that the
phrase “in the business of transporting passengers” lacked a “clear and unambiguous meaning.”
Farmers Ins Exch, 256 Mich App at 697. Older case law posited that the phrase related only to
“commercial” situations. Id. at 698. But this Court had also observed that the “commercial”
rubric did not adequately account for some common situations, such as the one considered in
Thomas v Tomczyk, 142 Mich App 237; 369 NW2d 219 (1985). There, college students paid a
friend for transportation to and from school. Id. at 239. Although in a sense a “commercial”
arrangement, making money on transportation was not the “primary function” of the car’s owner.
Id. at 240 n 2. Without much analysis, the Farmers Ins panel declared that the Legislature could
not have intended subsection 3114(2) to include the college students’ deal. Farmers Ins Exch,
256 Mich App at 701. In Farmers Ins, the Court confronted facts also not suggestive of an
archetypal commercial transport relationship: children who were injured while riding in a car
driven by their daycare provider. Id. at 693. In that case, the Court explained, the driving was
undertaken only “incidentally to the vehicle’s primary use as a personal vehicle.” Id. at 701.
And so, the “primary purpose/incidental benefit” test was born.
I suggest that the Legislature understood that the phrase “in the business of transporting
passengers” was susceptible to two common interpretations. The first is the obvious one: a
commercial, for-profit endeavor. But “in the business of” has a second meaning akin to “a
regular occupation,” undertaking, or activity. The New Hampshire Supreme Court has
recognized this second meaning: “It may mean any regular activity that occupies one’s time and
attention, with or without direct profit motive, it can mean an activity with a direct profit
objective.” American Legion Post No 49 v Jefferson Ins Co of New York, 125 NH 758, 759; 485
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A2d 293 (1984). See also Mustard v Owners Ins Co, 2014 Ohio 865; 6 NE3d 1235, 1241 (Ohio
Ct App, 2014) (“Rather, here the obvious purpose of the phrase ‘in the business of,’ is to
describe the nature of the activity engaged in and has nothing to do with the corporate status of
the insured.”). I believe that because the phrase “in the business of transporting passengers”
reasonably could be interpreted to apply to nonprofit and governmental enterprises offering
transportation regularly but not for profit, the Legislature added the exceptions.
At the time of his accident, Ahee was being transported in a van engaged in a regular
activity—picking up passengers at various sites in the city, and driving them to certain city-
designated locations. The van’s operation is sponsored by the city. An exhibit filed in the circuit
court includes a link to a flyer distributed by the city, advertising that its OASTP “provides
specialized transportation for the residents of Novi age 55+ or those under 55 with a limiting
disability.” This service was approved by the Novi City Council and is funded by public and
nonprofit sources. When the phrase “in the business of” is interpreted as a systematic action,
regularly undertaken, it would follow that in offering this service to residents, the city engages
“in the business of transporting passengers.”
The majority dodges this conclusion by focusing on the fact that the OASTP, a division
of the city’s Parks, Recreation and Cultural Services Department, actually operates the van.
Therefore, the majority reasons, the city is not “in the business of transporting passengers.” This
strikes me as a distinction without a difference, as the OASTP is a city-funded, city-controlled
entity. The city owns the van, promotes the transportation service, operates the van through its
parks and recreation department, and provides most of the money used to run it. Part of the
city’s business, it appears, includes delivering this important transportation service to needy
residents.
My respectful disagreement with the majority regarding the interpretation of “in the
business of transporting passengers” underscores why tests requiring the application of factors
created by judges can be perilous. The majority concedes that had it focused on the city rather
than the OASTP when applying the test, it may have reached a different result. In other words,
the test is not really objective and does not yield predictable results. Here, it seems obvious that
the city is “in the business of transporting passengers” through the OASTP, and unless this
activity is bumped from first-priority status, the city should be responsible for payment of Ahee’s
no-fault benefits.
IV
One interpretive obstacle remains: does the city fall within any of the exceptions that
direct coverage back to the injured party’s own insurer? I would hold that it does. My analysis
hinges on my conclusion that the term “bus” as it is used in the statute is ambiguous.
Subsections (2)(b), (c), and (d) place the insurers of certain “bus[es]” second in priority
rather than first. These legislatively favored insurers underwrite buses operated by “common
carrier[s] . . . certified by the department of transportation,” buses “operated under a government
sponsored transportation program,” and buses “operated by or providing services to a nonprofit
organization.” Auto-Owners insists that the van in which Ahee was injured is not a “bus,” and
that the priority-shifting exceptions do not apply.
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The word “bus” is not defined in the no-fault act. “Bus” has a variety of meanings,
depending on which dictionary (and which specific definition) is selected for guidance.
Dictionaries aside, the word can be reasonably understood to refer to a range of different
vehicles. Some buses are small (“minibuses”), some are extremely large (articulated buses that
“fold” around corners); some travel a certain route every day, others are chartered, and still
others make stops at a passenger’s request. A statutory provision is ambiguous if “it is equally
susceptible to more than a single meaning.” Mayor of Lansing v Public Serv Comm, 470 Mich
154, 166; 680 NW2d 840 (2004). I believe that as used in the statute, the word “bus” is
ambiguous. The most natural meaning of the term, particularly in 1976 when the “bus”
exceptions were added to the statute, is “a large vehicle that carries people around.” Reasonably
interpreted, “a bus operating under a government sponsored transportation program,”
encompasses the OASTP vehicle for the purpose of the statute.
When originally enacted in 1972, MCL 500.3114(2) did not include any exceptions. It
stated only:
A person suffering accidental bodily injury while an operator or a
passenger of a motor vehicle operated in the business of transporting passengers
shall receive the [PIP] benefits to which he is entitled from the insurer of the
motor vehicle.
In 1976, the Legislature qualified this language with five exceptions, subsections (a) through (e),
which are maintained in the current version of the statute.1 In USAA Ins Co v Houston Gen Ins
Co, 220 Mich App 386, 391-392; 559 NW2d 98 (1996), this Court explained that the exceptions
were intended to “eas[e] the financial burden on the operators of vehicles used in government-
sponsored transportation programs or providing service to nonprofit organizations.” The
Houston majority supported this inference by quoting a legislative analysis reciting that public
and government-sponsored bus companies “ ‘are all under a severe financial strain’ ” due to the
high cost of insurance, and that “ ‘[n]on-profit organizations of all kinds are traditionally short of
funds and would benefit greatly from being relieved of the cost of large insurance premiums.’ ”
Id. at 392, quoting House Legislative Analysis, HB 6448, September 27, 1976.
I acknowledge that our Supreme Court frowns on the use of legislative history as an
interpretive tool. Legislative history aside, the exceptions engrafted on MCL 500.3114(2)
obviously reflect the Legislature’s desire to decrease insurance costs for certain selected
transportation “businesses.” The Legislature accomplished this goal by shifting the priority for
payment back to the injured person’s own insurer, despite that the entities selected for special
treatment were “in the business of transporting passengers.”
1
Recently the Legislature added MCL 500.3114(2)(g), excepting “[a] transportation network
company vehicle,” which the Legislature defined as “a personal vehicle while the driver is
logged on to the transportation network company digital network or while the driver is engaged
in a prearranged ride.” MCL 500.3114(7)(b).
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Against that backdrop, what did the Legislature mean when it used the term “bus”? A
different panel of this Court has already considered the same question, and I draw on that panel’s
research into the dictionary definition of the term:
The dictionary defines “bus” as “a large motor vehicle designed to carry
passengers, usu[ally] along a fixed route according to a schedule,” Merriam-
Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary (11th ed), or more simply as a “long motor
vehicle for carrying passengers,” Webster’s New College Dictionary (3d ed).
[MIC Gen Ins Corp v Mich Muni Risk Mgt Auth, unpublished per curiam opinion
of the Court of Appeals, issued October 18, 2018 (Docket No. 341766), unpub op
at 7, lv pending.]
The van involved here certainly qualifies as “a large motor vehicle designed to carry
passengers.” Although the first dictionary definition cited adds that a bus “usually” carries
passengers along a fixed route, the panel in MIC Gen Ins Corp observed that the word “usually”
renders the balance of the definition “inessential.” Id. at 8. The panel added:
Moreover, to interpret the term as encompassing only those vehicles that operate
according to a fixed route or schedule would exclude vehicles that are
undisputedly buses but operate on a charter basis. Accordingly, the plain and
ordinary sense of the term “bus” does not necessarily require operation on a fixed
route or schedule. [Id. at 10.]
So far, so good; it appears that the van involved in Ahee’s accident also falls within the
definition of a “bus.” But the panel in MIC Gen Ins Corp resisted this conclusion, holding
instead that the similar van involved in that case was a “van,” not a “bus.” Id. That panel also
noted the existence of other definitions of “bus” in Michigan law. For example, the Michigan
Vehicle Code, MCL 257.1 et seq., defines a bus as “a motor vehicle designed for carrying 16 or
more passengers, including the driver,” excepting a school bus. MCL 257.4b. Under that
definition, the vehicle in which Ahee was injured is too small to qualify as a bus. The Motor Bus
Transportation Act, MCL 474.101 et seq., defines a bus as: “a motor vehicle with a seating
capacity of 9 or more passengers, including the driver, that is used in the transportation of
passengers and their baggage for hire upon any public highway of this state.” MCL 474.103(e).
The van transporting Ahee was configured for up to six passengers.2
2
Federal law regarding the definition of “bus” presents similar challenges. See Alex’s Transp,
Inc v Colorado Pub Utilities Comm, 88 F Supp 2d 1147, 1149 n 3 (D Colo, 2000) (“[T]he term
bus is defined in contradictory manners throughout the federal code and regulations. See i.e., 49
USC 14301 (applying only to a motor bus with a seating capacity of at least 10 individuals); 49
USC 30127 (defining bus as a motor vehicle designed to carry more than 10 people); and 49
CFR 390.5 (“Bus means any motor vehicle designed, constructed, and/or used for the
transportation of passengers, including taxicabs”).).
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Absent a definition of the word “bus” in the no-fault act, judges are left to guess at what
the Legislature had in mind. What if a passenger in a government-sponsored transportation
program is injured in a 12-passenger, “large motor vehicle designed to carry passengers”? Is that
a bus? Given that there is no definition of the term available to us, why should it matter that a
vehicle used for precisely the same purpose (perhaps by a small city) seats six instead of 12? It
seems obvious that a vehicle designated as a “van” by its manufacturer can look and act exactly
like a “bus.”
The meaning of “bus” as the word is used in MCL 500.3114(2)(b), (c), (d) and (f) is
simply not susceptible to a single meaning. Therefore, we must examine the context in which
the Legislature used it. “Where the language of a statute is of doubtful meaning, a court must
look to the object of the statute in light of the harm it is designed to remedy, and strive to apply a
reasonable construction that will best accomplish the Legislature’s purpose.” Marquis v
Hartford Accident & Indemnity, 444 Mich 638, 644, 513 NW2d 799 (1994). “[W]hen necessary
to interpret an ambiguous statute, the appellate courts must determine the reasonable
construction that best effects the Legislature’s intent.” Mich Basic Prop Ins Ass’n v Office of Fin
& Ins Regulation, 288 Mich App 552, 560; 808 NW2d 456 (2010). This is particularly true in
the no-fault insurance context. Terms contained in the no-fault act are read “in the light of its
legislative history and in the context of the no-fault act as a whole.” Gobler v Auto-Owners Ins
Co, 428 Mich 51, 61; 404 NW2d 199 (1987).
A rational appraisal of the statute taken as a whole supplies an interpretation of the term
“bus” vindicating the Legislature’s intent. MCL 500.3114(2) is a priority-shifting provision
positioning transportation businesses first in line for payment of PIP benefits. Foremost among
the exceptions to the “businesses first” rule are “buses” that may be in “the business” of
transportation, but should not be primarily responsible for coverage due to the public interests
they serve. School buses, buses operated by government-certified common carriers, buses
operating under a government-sponsored transportation program, and buses operated by or
providing services to a nonprofit organization represent most of the legislative exceptions.
Interpreting the vehicle in which Ahee was transported as a “bus” harmonizes with the statute’s
purpose, which is to reduce insurance costs for public-interest carriers.
In enacting the exceptions, the Legislature judged that certain activities merit special
protection when it comes to the availability and cost of insurance. Construing conveyances
owned and operated by cities on behalf of needy citizens fulfils that judgment. On that basis, I
concur with the majority and would reverse the circuit court.
/s/ Elizabeth L. Gleicher
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