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
PHYSIATRY AND REHAB ASSOCIATES, UNPUBLISHED
doing business as COLUMBIA CLINIC PAIN & October 15, 2019
SPINE INSTITUTE,
Plaintiff-Appellant,
v No. 342627
Oakland Circuit Court
HORACE MANN INSURANCE COMPANY, LC No. 2017-161411-CZ
Defendant-Appellee.
Before: FORT HOOD, P.J., and SAWYER and SHAPIRO, JJ.
PER CURIAM.
In this first-party no-fault action, plaintiff appeals by leave granted1 the circuit court’s
opinion and order denying plaintiff’s motion to amend its complaint, and granting summary
disposition in favor of defendant. We reverse and remand to the circuit court for further
proceedings.
I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND
This case arises out of a motor vehicle accident on October 2, 2015, in which Sara
Aljubory sustained bodily injuries. Plaintiff provided Aljubory approximately $27,042.40 of
healthcare services in relation to the injuries she sustained and sought to collect the money owed
from defendant, Aljubory’s no-fault insurer. After defendant refused to pay, in August 2016,
plaintiff filed a complaint in the district court. While proceedings were still pending, in May
2017, the Michigan Supreme Court issued its opinion in Covenant Med Ctr, Inc v State Farm
Mut Auto Ins Co, 500 Mich 191, 196; 895 NW2d 490 (2017), holding that “healthcare providers
do not possess a statutory cause of action against no-fault insurers for recovery of [PIP] benefits
1
Physiatry and Rehab Assoc v Horace Mann Ins Co, unpublished order of the Court of Appeals,
entered August 9, 2018 (Docket No. 342627).
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under the no-fault act.” Although the case meant that healthcare providers no longer had
statutory standing to bring direct causes of action against no-fault insurers, the Supreme Court
noted that its decision was “not intended to alter an insured’s ability to assign his or her right to
past or presently due benefits to a healthcare provider.” Id. at 217 & n 40. Aljubory executed
such an assignment of rights to plaintiff on June 14, 2017.
Shortly thereafter, in July 2017, plaintiff filed a motion for leave to amend its complaint
under MCR 2.118(A)(2) to include the assignment of rights, and a motion to transfer the case to
the circuit court because the amount in controversy exceeded the district court’s jurisdictional
limit of $25,000. At the same time, defendant filed a motion for summary disposition under
MCR 2.116(C)(8) and (C)(10). The motion to transfer was granted, and the remaining two
motions were left for the circuit court to decide. Notably, the district court file was not mailed to
the circuit court until October 6, 2017, and the circuit did not receive notice of the transfer of
plaintiff’s case until October 11, 2017—more than two months after the district court granted
plaintiff’s motion to transfer. In November 2017, the circuit court issued a scheduling order
requiring the parties to refile their motions and setting a hearing date.
The scheduling order stated that “[i]f [a] non-moving party’s responsive motion and
supporting brief is not timely filed, the Court will assume there is no law to support that party’s
position.” Plaintiff refiled its motion to amend the complaint, defendant refiled its motion for
summary disposition, and neither party filed a direct response to the other party’s motion. With
respect to plaintiff’s motion to amend its complaint, the circuit court held that plaintiff had
caused undue delay by waiting to file the motion to amend until more than a month after
Covenant was issued, and by failing to ensure that the district court heard the motion to amend
before the motion to transfer. The court found that plaintiff’s actions “allowed more than six
months to elapse between the Covenant decision and a decision on its motion to amend the
complaint.” The circuit court denied plaintiff’s motion to amend its complaint, found that
plaintiff therefore lacked standing, and granted defendant’s motion for summary disposition
under MCR 2.118(C)(8).
Plaintiff filed a motion for reconsideration, but the circuit court denied that motion for
failing to demonstrate that the circuit court committed a palpable error, and for merely presenting
the same issues previously ruled on by the circuit court. The circuit court explained that plaintiff
improperly “focuse[d] on the time between filing its motion to amend[,] not its delay with having
the motion heard either in the District Court (never) or the Circuit Court (more than 6 months).”
This Court granted plaintiff’s delayed application for leave to appeal.2 Physiatry and Rehab
Assoc v Horace Mann Ins Co, unpublished order of the Court of Appeals, entered August 9,
2018 (Docket No. 342627). Plaintiff argues that the circuit court abused its discretion in denying
the motion to amend its complaint. We agree.
2
Plaintiff first filed an appeal by right with this Court that was dismissed for failure to file the
appeal within 21 days of the circuit court’s order denying reconsideration. Physiatry and Rehab
Assoc v Horace Mann Ins Co, unpublished order of the Court of Appeals, entered January 24,
2018 (Docket No. 341819).
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II. JURISDICTION
As an initial matter, defendant argues that the circuit court lacked subject-matter
jurisdiction to rule on plaintiff’s motion to amend its complaint because, under the one-year-back
rule and relevant caselaw, plaintiff cannot maintain a cause of action in the circuit court that
meets or exceeds the $25,000 amount-in-controversy requirement. We disagree.
“Whether the trial court had subject-matter jurisdiction is a question of law that this Court
reviews de novo.” Bank v Mich Ed Ass’n-NEA, 315 Mich App 496, 499; 892 NW2d 1 (2016).
“The district court has exclusive jurisdiction in civil actions when the amount in controversy
does not exceed $25,000.” Hodge v State Farm Mut Auto Ins Co, 499 Mich 211, 217; 884
NW2d 238 (2016) (citation omitted). Michigan “cases have long held that courts are to
determine their subject-matter jurisdiction by reference to the pleadings,” not the proofs
presented throughout the litigation. Id. at 216-217. “This well-settled rule would apply . . . even
if the plaintiff presented proof of damages, or the jury returned a verdict, exceeding the court’s
jurisdictional limit.” Id. at 217 (quotation marks and citation omitted).
Under MCL 500.3145(1), a claimant for PIP benefits “may not recover benefits for any
portion of the loss incurred more than 1 year before the date on which the action was
commenced.” The one-year-back rule in MCL 500.3145(1) “is designed to limit the amount of
benefits recoverable under the no-fault act to those losses occurring no more than one year
before an action is brought.” Joseph v Auto Club Ins Ass’n, 491 Mich 200, 203; 815 NW2d 412
(2012). In Jawad A Shah, MD, PC v State Farm Mut Auto Ins Co, 324 Mich App 182, 202-205;
920 NW2d 148 (2018), oral argument gtd on the application 503 Mich 882 (2018), we held that
when a healthcare provider, post-Covenant, seeks recovery for no-fault benefits on the basis of
an assignment-of-rights theory, the healthcare provider may only recover for losses incurred
within one year of the date of the assignment, even if the healthcare provider filed its original
complaint before Covenant.
Plaintiff filed its direct, statutory cause of action against defendant on August 26, 2016,
in the district court for healthcare services it provided to Aljubory, totaling less than $25,000. As
of May 10, 2017, however, the total amount of healthcare services that plaintiff provided to
Aljubory increased to $27,042.40—exceeding the district court’s jurisdictional maximum for the
amount in controversy. On May 25, 2017, our Supreme Court decided Covenant, which
extinguished plaintiff’s ability to bring a statutory cause of action against defendant, but did not
“alter an insured’s ability to assign his or her right to past or presently due benefits to a
healthcare provider.” Covenant, 500 Mich at 196, 217 n 40.3 While plaintiff obtained a valid
assignment of Aljubory’s right to collect PIP benefits from defendant on June 14, 2017, plaintiff
can only collect PIP benefits up to one year from the date it obtained its assignment—i.e.,
3
In W A Foote Mem Hosp v Mich Assigned Claims Plan, 321 Mich App 159, 176, 196; 909
NW2d 38 (2017), oral argument gtd on the application 501 Mich 1079 (2018), this Court held
that Covenant has retroactive effect, meaning that it “applie[d] to all cases still open on direct
review.”
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June 14, 2016. See Shah, 324 Mich App at 205 (stating that the date of the assignment is “the
pertinent point of reference for purposes of the one-year-back rule”).
As defendant points out, plaintiff’s proof of damages demonstrates that the total amount
of healthcare services plaintiff provided to Aljubory from June 14, 2016 (one year from the date
of the assignment), through May 10, 2017 (the last date plaintiff provided healthcare services to
Aljubory) does not exceed $25,000. However, plaintiff’s motion to transfer the case to circuit
court pleaded an amount over the district court’s $25,000 jurisdictional limit. See Hodge, 499
Mich at 222-224 (holding that, absent a finding of bad faith, “a district court determines the
amount in controversy using the prayer for relief set forth in the plaintiff’s pleadings”). Thus,
the circuit court had subject-matter jurisdiction over plaintiff’s case. See id. To the extent that
the amount in controversy does not exceed $25,000, the circuit court may address that matter on
remand. See Shah, 324 Mich App at 210 (holding that, because the defendant insurer’s argument
relating “to the jurisdictional minimum for the amount in controversy” was not addressed by the
circuit court before it dismissed the plaintiff’s claim, that matter and any “additional matters
relating to [the] plaintiffs’ proposed supplemental complaint [should] be addressed in the first
instance by the trial court”).
III. MOTION TO AMEND PLAINTIFF’S COMPLAINT
Plaintiff argues that the circuit court abused its discretion in denying plaintiff’s motion to
amend its complaint on the basis of undue delay. We agree, and find that a remand to the circuit
court is appropriate to allow plaintiff to file a supplemental pleading under MCR 2.118(E)—not
an amended complaint under MCR 2.118(A).
The standard of review on an appeal regarding a motion to amend a pleading is as
follows:
The grant or denial of leave to amend pleadings is within the trial court’s
discretion. A trial court’s decision on whether to permit a party to serve a
supplemental pleading is also discretionary. A motion to amend should ordinarily
be denied only for particularized reasons, including undue delay, bad faith or a
dilatory motive, repeated failure to cure deficiencies by amendments previously
allowed, undue prejudice to the opposing party, or futility. Amendment is
generally a matter of right rather than grace.
This Court will not reverse a trial court’s decision regarding leave to
amend unless it constituted an abuse of that discretion that resulted in injustice.
An abuse of discretion occurs only when the trial court’s decision is outside the
range of reasonable and principled outcomes. A trial court necessarily abuses its
discretion when it makes an error of law. [Shah, 324 Mich App at 207-208
(quotation marks, citations, and brackets omitted).]
MCR 2.118(A), the rule applicable to a party seeking to amend a pleading, states, in
relevant part:
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(1) A party may amend a pleading once as a matter of course within 14
days after being served with a responsive pleading by an adverse party, or within
14 days after serving the pleading if it does not require a responsive pleading.
(2) Except as provided in subrule (A)(1), a party may amend a pleading
only by leave of the court or by written consent of the adverse party. Leave shall
be freely given when justice so requires.
Plaintiff filed a motion to transfer the case to the circuit court on July 6, 2017—almost
two months after the last date it rendered healthcare services to Aljubory (May 10, 2017), more
than one month after Covenant (May 25, 2017), but less than one month after obtaining an
assignment of Aljubory’s right to collect PIP benefits from defendant (June 14, 2017). The
district court granted plaintiff’s motion to transfer the case to the circuit court on August 4, 2017,
but did not rule on plaintiff’s motion to amend its complaint or defendant’s motion for summary
disposition, both of which were also filed on July 6, 2017. Not only did plaintiff lack control
over which motion the district court would rule on first, but it was appropriate for the district
court to rule on plaintiff’s motion to transfer the case—and only that motion—because, given
plaintiff’s pleading that the amount in controversy exceeded $25,000, the district court did not
have jurisdiction to rule on the parties’ substantive motions. See Reed v Yackell, 473 Mich 520,
548; 703 NW2d 1 (2005) (“When a court lacks subject matter jurisdiction to hear and determine
a claim, any action it takes, other than to dismiss the action, is void.”) (citation omitted); MCR
2.227(A) (stating that when a court in which a civil action is pending lacks subject-matter
jurisdiction, the court may transfer the action to another court where jurisdiction and venue is
proper). Accordingly, plaintiff cannot be said to have caused undue delay by the district court’s
decisions to rule on plaintiff’s motion to transfer the case to the circuit court first, and abstain
from ruling on the other pending motions.
The circuit court denied plaintiff’s motion to amend its complaint on the basis of undue
delay, stating that plaintiff “allowed more than six months to elapse between the Covenant
decision and a decision on its motion to amend the complaint.” However, plaintiff could not
proceed with its case against defendant until it had obtained the assignment from Aljubory,
which it obtained within a reasonable time after Covenant. Further, a review of the record
reveals that, after the district court granted plaintiff’s motion to transfer the case to the circuit
court on August 4, 2017, the circuit court did not receive the district court’s file until October 11,
2017. The record also reveals that the circuit court’s own scheduling order delayed the circuit
court’s ruling on plaintiff’s motion to amend its complaint until November 22, 2017. That is, the
delay in the case being transferred from the district court to the circuit court, and the delay in the
circuit court finally ruling on plaintiff’s motion to amend its complaint, cannot be attributed to
plaintiff.
This Court has recognized that “delay, alone, does not warrant denial of a motion to
amend,” and that “a court may deny a motion to amend if the delay was in bad faith or if the
opposing party suffered actual prejudice as a result.” Decker v Rochowiak, 287 Mich App 666,
682; 791 NW2d 507 (2010) (quotation marks, citation, and brackets omitted). “Prejudice exists
if the amendment would prevent the opposing party from receiving a fair trial . . . .” Id.
(quotation marks and citation omitted). There is no evidence that plaintiff acted in bad faith in
filing its motion to amend its complaint (July 6, 2017) approximately three weeks after obtaining
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the assignment of rights from Aljubory (June 14, 2017), nor is there any indication that
defendant was prejudiced by this filing because defendant would still be able to assert the one-
year-back rule as a defense to plaintiff’s recovery of PIP benefits. Therefore, the circuit court
abused its discretion in denying plaintiff’s motion to amend its complaint on the basis of undue
delay.
Defendant argues that even if the circuit court abused its discretion in denying plaintiff’s
motion to amend the complaint, a remand would be futile because the circuit court lacked
subject-matter jurisdiction to grant plaintiff’s motion. However, as noted above, the circuit court
had subject-matter jurisdiction over plaintiff’s cause of action because plaintiff pleaded an
amount that met or exceeded the $25,000 amount-in-controversy requirement. See Hodge, 499
Mich at 222-224 (stating that a court, absent a finding of bad faith, determines whether the
amount in controversy has been satisfied using the plaintiff’s pleadings). In addition, because
plaintiff’s motion is better characterized as a motion to file a supplemental pleading under MCR
2.118(E), a remand to the circuit court would not be futile.
IV. SUPPLEMENTAL PLEADING
While we hold that the circuit court abused its discretion in denying plaintiff’s motion to
amend its complaint on the basis of the erroneous finding of undue delay, we note that plaintiff’s
motion to amend its complaint under MCR 2.118(A) is better characterized as a motion for leave
to file a supplemental pleading under MCR 2.118(E).
MCR 2.118(E), the rule regarding supplemental pleadings, provides, in relevant part:
On motion of a party the court may, on reasonable notice and on just
terms, permit the party to serve a supplemental pleading to state transactions or
events that have happened since the date of the pleading sought to be
supplemented, whether or not the original pleading is defective in its statement of
a claim for relief or a defense. . . .
MCR 2.118(D), the rule regarding amended pleadings and the relation-back doctrine,
provides, in relevant part:
An amendment that adds a claim or a defense relates back to the date of
the original pleading if the claim or defense asserted in the amended pleading
arose out of the conduct, transaction, or occurrence set forth, or attempted to be
set forth, in the original pleading. . . .
“[W]hile an amended pleading may relate back to the date of the original pleading, there is no
provision for relating back as to supplemental pleadings. Shah, 324 Mich App at 203 (quotation
marks and citation omitted). In addition, “the relation-back doctrine does not apply to the
addition of new parties.” Id. (quotation marks and citation omitted).
As this Court recognized in Shah, 324 Mich App at 204, an assignment of an insured
party’s right to collect PIP benefits is “an event that occur[s] after the filing of the original
complaint and provide[s] the only means by which [a healthcare provider can] have standing to
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maintain a direct action against [a] defendant insurer for recovery of no-fault benefits.” Thus, in
accordance with Shah, plaintiff’s motion to amend its complaint should be treated as a request to
file a supplemental pleading to collect PIP benefits under an assignment-of-rights theory. Id.
(holding that the “plaintiffs’ motion for leave to amend actually sought leave to file a
supplemental pleading,” and that courts “are not bound by a party’s choice of labels because this
would effectively elevate form over substance”) (quotation marks and citation omitted). Absent
a valid justification by defendant or the circuit court to deny plaintiff the opportunity to file a
supplemental pleading, we find that a remand to the circuit court is appropriate to allow plaintiff
to file a supplemental pleading under MCR 2.118(E), in accordance with the June 14, 2017
assignment of Aljubory’s right to collect PIP benefits. See id. at 207 (stating that a circuit
court’s decision whether to allow a party to serve a supplemental pleading is discretionary). We
stress, however, that plaintiff can only recover for losses incurred one year from the date of the
assignment, not one year from the date the original complaint was filed. Id. at 202-205.
V. CONCLUSION
Reversed and remanded. We do not retain jurisdiction.
/s/ Karen M. Fort Hood
/s/ David H. Sawyer
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