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
LILIYA KOMENDAT, FOR PUBLICATION
October 1, 2020
Plaintiff-Appellant, 9:05 a.m.
v No. 346990
Wayne Circuit Court
ANDREW GIFFORD and ROXANNE GIFFORD, LC No. 15-013957-NI
Defendants,
and
HOME-OWNERS INSURANCE COMPANY,
Defendant-Appellee.
Before: BECKERING, P.J., and FORT HOOD and SHAPIRO, JJ.
PER CURIAM.
In this action for uninsured motorist (UM) and personal protection insurance (PIP) benefits,
plaintiff appeals two orders entered by the trial court: (1) a final judgment partially in favor of
plaintiff, and (2) a “combined order” that granted plaintiff a small portion of the no-fault attorney
fees she requested against defendant Home-Owners Insurance Company.1 We affirm in part,
reverse in part, and remand for further proceedings.
I. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
This case arises from injuries plaintiff suffered as a result of a January 22, 2015 motor vehicle
accident. Plaintiff was a passenger in a vehicle struck by a car driven by Andrew Gifford and
owned by Roxanne Gifford. Neither Roxanne nor Andrew had no-fault insurance. For some time,
1
Although Andrew Gifford and Roxanne Gifford were also named defendants in this case, they
were ultimately dismissed from the case. As such, “defendant” as used in this opinion refers only
to Home-Owners Insurance Company.
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defendant insurer paid various medical and transportation bills for plaintiff, totaling about $61,000,
pursuant to her husband’s insurance policy with defendant. On October 13, 2015, defendant
refused to pay further benefits after receiving a physician’s report following an insurance medical
examination. The physician retained by defendant concluded that the injury suffered by plaintiff
should have only required three to six months of treatment.
Plaintiff filed suit against defendant, seeking PIP benefits and UM coverage. Shortly after
filing her complaint, plaintiff filed a request for admission asking defendant to admit that the
Giffords’ vehicle was uninsured at the time of the accident. Defendant denied the sought
admission. Later, after some discovery but before trial, plaintiff moved for a “directed verdict”
with respect to that issue, and as a result of that motion, defendant ultimately stipulated at trial to
the fact that the vehicle was uninsured.
After the close of defendant’s proofs at trial, plaintiff moved for a directed verdict with
respect to defendant’s failure to pay a prescription bill during the period of time that defendant
was voluntarily paying plaintiff PIP benefits. The trial court granted the motion and awarded
plaintiff $107.17 for the prescription bill and $38.57 in penalty interest. With respect to all other
aspects of plaintiff’s claims, the jury returned a verdict in favor of defendant. The jury found that
the accident did not cause plaintiff to suffer from a serious impairment of an important body
function, which negated plaintiff’s UM claim, and found that plaintiff had not incurred any
allowable PIP expenses in excess of what defendant had already paid.
Both parties subsequently filed a series of posttrial motions. Relevant to this appeal are
plaintiff’s motions seeking no-fault attorney fees under MCL 500.3148(1) and sanctions under
MCR 2.313(C) for defendant’s failure to admit prior to trial that the Giffords’ vehicle was
uninsured. Regarding the request for no-fault attorney fees, plaintiff relied on the directed verdict
concerning the prescription bill and sought attorney fees of $235,000 based on the total amount of
time her attorneys spent representing her in the case. Regarding the request for sanctions, plaintiff
sought $25,000 for defendant’s failure to admit that the Giffords’ vehicle lacked insurance prior
to trial.
On May 24, 2018, the trial court entered both a final judgment memorializing the results
of trial—the directed verdict for the prescription bill and the jury verdict for no cause of action
with respect to the other aspects of plaintiff’s claim—and a “combined order” disposing of the
parties’ posttrial motions. The court ruled via the combined order that plaintiff was due no-fault
attorney fees on the basis of the overdue prescription bill and the lack of evidence that defendant’s
failure to pay the bill was reasonable. The court next considered the proper amount of the fee to
be assessed and concluded that $4,688.75 was a reasonable attorney fee. The court then declined
to sanction defendant for failing to admit that the vehicle was uninsured prior to that evidence
becoming available. The court ruled that, although most everyone involved in the case believed
the Giffords’ vehicle was uninsured, that fact was not conclusively known until long after
defendant declined plaintiff’s request to admit.
Plaintiff now appeals both the final judgment and the combined order. Plaintiff argues
with respect to the final judgment that the trial court abused its discretion by admitting deposition
testimony from defendant’s three medical experts at trial and by giving a spoliation instruction to
the jury with respect to a replacement-services calendar that was once in plaintiff’s possession.
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With respect to the combined order, plaintiff contends that the trial court abused its discretion by
awarding plaintiff only a portion of the attorney fees she requested and by failing to sanction
defendant for its failure to admit.
II. JURISDICTION
We begin by considering defendant’s argument that appellate jurisdiction in this case is
limited to plaintiff’s claim for attorney fees. Defendant asserts that, although plaintiff filed her
claim of appeal within 21 days of entry of the trial court’s order denying plaintiff’s timely motion
for reconsideration, the motion for reconsideration related only to the issue of attorney fees in the
combined order, and not the final judgment. Defendant’s argument is premised on the idea that
the combined order is “a postjudgment order awarding or denying attorney fees and costs”
pursuant to MCR 7.202(6)(a)(iv), and is therefore a final order distinct from the final judgment.
We do not agree. While language from the combined order that “this case remains closed by the
final judgment entered May 24, 2018,” could be read to infer that the final judgment was entered
before the combined order, one could also read the register of actions as suggesting that the
combined order was entered first. In any event, for jurisdictional purposes, given that the final
judgment and the combined order together disposed of the remaining issues in the case, and given
that the two orders were undoubtedly entered at or around the same time, we are not convinced by
defendant’s suggestion that we must treat the combined order as a postjudgment order awarding
attorney fees under MCR 7.202(6)(a)(iv). Accordingly, we find that we have jurisdiction and turn
to review of the issues raised in plaintiff’s briefing.
III. EXPERT TESTIMONY
Plaintiff first contends that the trial court erred when it denied her motion to preclude the
admission of the deposition testimony of defendant’s three medical experts because a proper
foundation was not laid in refreshing the witnesses’ recollections at their respective depositions.
We disagree.2
MRE 602 provides that “[a] witness may not testify to a matter unless evidence is
introduced sufficient to support a finding that the witness has personal knowledge of the matter.”
See also Citizens Nat’l Bank of Cheboygan v Mayes, 133 Mich App 808, 812; 350 NW2d 809
(1984). So long as a proper foundation is laid, one manner of establishing a witness’s personal
knowledge is to have the witness’s memory refreshed by a writing or similar document. Genna v
Jackson, 286 Mich App 413, 423; 781 NW2d 124 (2009). “To lay a proper foundation, the
proponent must show that (1) the witness’s present memory is inadequate, (2) the writing could
refresh the witness’s present memory, and (3) reference to the writing actually does refresh the
witness’s present memory.” Id. Plaintiff asserts that the third element was never established with
2
A trial court’s evidentiary rulings are reviewed for an abuse of discretion. Haberkorn v Chrysler
Corp, 210 Mich App 354, 362; 533 NW2d 373 (1995). “An abuse of discretion occurs when the
court’s decision falls outside the range of principled and reasonable outcomes.” Guerrero v Smith,
280 Mich App 647, 660; 761 NW2d 723 (2008).
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the three witnesses at issue, and accordingly, their deposition testimony should not have been
admitted at trial. We reject plaintiff’s argument for two reasons.
First, it is not clear that any error occurred. Defendant presented the witnesses with the
reports that they had authored and asked whether review of the reports “would” refresh their
recollection as to their examinations of plaintiff and their findings. Each witness responded in the
affirmative. When viewed in context, these responses established, at least by implication, that the
witnesses’ memories had been refreshed upon review of their respective reports. For example,
one expert, Dr. Porter-Grenn, testified:
The date of my narrative report is approximately two years prior to today’s date,
so, of course, I would want to review it. And I copied it, downloaded it, and printed
it out, yesterday, went through it, and refreshed all my memory of the case. And
it’s not that difficult to do. You know, once you do have the report, it’s not difficult
to remember the facts.
The other two experts each testified that review of their respective reports would refresh their
recollections.
In addition, plaintiff did not make clear the basis for her objection to the use of the reports
to refresh recollection. A hearsay objection without further explanation was made during the direct
examination. It was only after defense counsel completed his direct examination of each witness
that plaintiff raised a foundational objection on the basis of defendant’s failure to properly refresh
the witnesses’ recollections. And it was not until plaintiff filed a pretrial motion to exclude the
doctor’s testimony that the basis for the objection was made clear, i.e., that defendant failed to
explicitly ask the experts whether the medical evaluations actually did refresh their memories.
MCR 2.308(C)(3)(a) provides:
Objections to the competency of a witness or to the competency, relevancy, or
materiality of testimony are not waived by failure to make them before or during
the taking of a deposition, unless the ground of the objection is one which might
have been obviated or removed if presented at that time.
We have held before that “[a]n objection that counsel . . . has failed to lay a proper foundation for
questions asked falls within the category of formal objections that may be obviated during the
taking of the deposition.” Moore v Lederle Laboratories, 42 Mich App 689, 693; 202 NW2d 481
(1972), aff’d 392 Mich 289 (1974). Had plaintiff raised her objections with specificity while
defendant was examining its witnesses—or better, while defendant was laying the foundation for
its witnesses’ testimony—the omission could have been readily cured.
With all of the above in mind, we conclude that the trial court did not abuse its discretion
in admitting the deposition testimony of defendant’s experts because, on review of the testimony
at issue, it was not outside the range of reasonable and principled outcomes to hold that the
witnesses’ memories had, in fact, been refreshed by their respective evaluations.
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IV. SPOLIATION
Plaintiff also argues that the trial court erred when it provided a spoliation instruction to
the jury with respect to plaintiff’s failure to produce calendars that purportedly documented the
household services her husband performed while plaintiff was unable to do so. We see no error in
the court’s decision to give the instruction.3
At trial, plaintiff testified that she had made some calendars that kept track of the household
and attendant-care services her husband had performed, but that she no longer had them and either
lost them or disposed of them without realizing it. Later, on defendant’s request, the trial court
gave a spoliation instruction to the jury that read as follows:
The Plaintiff in this case has not offered any written calendars as to services her
husband performed. As this evidence was under the control of the Plaintiff and
could’ve been produced by her, you may infer that the evidence could’ve been
adverse to the Plaintiff if you believe that no reasonable excuse for Plaintiff’s
failure to produce the evidence has been shown.
On appeal, plaintiff primarily argues that the instruction was improper because there were
multiple ways in addition to the use of the calendars to prove the fact that her husband had rendered
household and attendant-care services. Plaintiff cites no authority, however, in support of the
proposition that merely because there are other avenues to prove a fact, a spoliation instruction is
not proper. A “litigant is under a duty to preserve evidence that it knows or reasonably should
know is relevant to [an] action,” Brenner v Kolk, 226 Mich App 149, 162; 573 NW2d 65 (1997),
and failure to preserve that evidence can result in a sanction in the form of a spoliation instruction,
Pugno v Blue Harvest Farms LLC, 326 Mich App 1, 24; 930 NW2d 393 (2018).
Moreover, as the use note contained in the model jury instruction indicates, a spoliation
instruction is warranted if the evidence that is the subject of the instruction is (1) material, (2) not
merely cumulative, and (3) not equally available to the opposite party. M Civ JI 6.01. The
calendars at issue here, which purportedly were written contemporaneously with plaintiff’s
husband providing the at-issue services, clearly were material. Also, because they were prepared
in “real time,” they could have shown that some of plaintiff’s testimony was inaccurate or at least
provided more detailed information. Finally, it is undisputed that the calendars were not available
to defendant. Thus, because the only question of fact that existed with regard to the calendars was
3
In general, preserved claims of instructional error are reviewed de novo, and reversal is only
warranted when the failure to do so would be inconsistent with substantial justice. Case v
Consumers Power Co, 463 Mich 1, 6; 615 NW2d 17 (2000). However, an instruction concerning
“spoliation of evidence may be disturbed only upon a finding that there has been a clear abuse of
discretion.” Brenner v Kolk, 226 Mich App 149, 160; 573 NW2d 65 (1997). “An abuse of
discretion occurs when the court’s decision falls outside the range of principled and reasonable
outcomes.” Guerrero, 280 Mich App at 660.
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whether plaintiff had a reasonable excuse for disposing of them, the trial court did not abuse its
discretion by giving the jury instruction.4
V. NO-FAULT ATTORNEY FEES
Plaintiff next argues that the trial court erred when it awarded only a small portion of the
no-fault attorney fees she requested. We agree that the trial court failed to properly determine the
amount of a reasonable fee and that its analysis was not consistent with the process outlined by the
Supreme Court in Pirgu v United Servs Auto Ass’n, 499 Mich 269; 884 NW2d 257 (2016),
Proudfoot v State Farm Mut Ins Co, 469 Mich 476; 673 NW2d 739 (2003), and Moore v Secura
Ins, 482 Mich 507; 759 NW2d 833 (2008). Accordingly, we vacate the fee determination and
remand for further proceedings consistent with the procedure described below.5
MCL 500.3148(1) provides that in a PIP case the plaintiff’s attorney fee may be assessed
against the insurer if the jury finds that benefits are overdue and the court concludes that those
benefits were unreasonably delayed or denied:
An attorney is entitled to a reasonable fee for advising and representing a
claimant in an action for personal or property protection insurance benefits which
are overdue. The attorney’s fee shall be a charge against the insurer in addition to
the benefits recovered, if the court finds that the insurer unreasonably refused to
pay the claim or unreasonably delayed in making proper payment. [MCL
500.3148(1).]
In Pirgu, 499 Mich at 281, the Supreme Court defined a three-step process by which a trial
court is to determine a reasonable attorney fee for purposes of MCL 500.3148(1). First, the trial
court must “begin its analysis by determining the reasonable hourly rate customarily charged in
the locality for similar services.” Id. Second, having determined the proper hourly rate, “[t]he
trial court must then multiply that rate by the reasonable number of hours expended in the case to
arrive at a baseline figure.” Id. Third, “the trial court must consider all of the remaining Wood[6]
4
We also note that plaintiff’s assertion that the instruction gave the impression that she had done
something wrong, and therefore “poisoned” the jury against her, is without merit. The jury
instruction on its face simply states that if the jury finds that plaintiff had no reasonable excuse to
dispose of the calendars, then the jury could make an adverse inference regarding the calendars.
The instruction leaves that determination solely up to the jury without suggesting how the question
should be decided, and the mere fact that the court allowed the jury to consider the question does
not impermissibly taint or poison a jury. Thus, even assuming it was erroneous for the court to
provide the instruction, reversal would not be warranted because plaintiff has failed to show how
the error was inconsistent with substantial justice. See Case, 463 Mich at 6.
5
We review the amount awarded for attorney fees for an abuse of discretion. See Moore, 482
Mich at 516. However, questions of law, including the interpretation and application of a statute,
are reviewed de novo. Id.
6
Wood v Detroit Auto Inter-Ins Exch, 413 Mich 573; 321 NW2d 653 (1982).
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and MRPC 1.5(a) factors to determine whether an up or down adjustment [of the baseline fee] is
appropriate.” Id. The Court summarized those eight factors as follows:
(1) the experience, reputation, and ability of the lawyer or lawyers
performing the services,
(2) the difficulty of the case, i.e., the novelty and difficulty of the questions
involved, and the skill requisite to perform the legal service properly,
(3) the amount in question and the results obtained,
(4) the expenses incurred,
(5) the nature and length of the professional relationship with the client,
(6) the likelihood, if apparent to the client, that acceptance of the particular
employment will preclude other employment by the lawyer,
(7) the time limitations imposed by the client or by the circumstances, and
(8) whether the fee is fixed or contingent. [Id. at 282.]
In this case, the trial court properly began its analysis by determining the reasonable hourly
rate. However, the court then conflated the next two Pirgu steps by considering the eight factors
before determining the baseline number of hours and the baseline fee. In addition, the basis for
the number of hours selected (15.5) does not appear to be related to any demonstrable analysis
based on the record and the events in the case. The court simply stated that 15.5 hours “would
have been reasonably and necessarily expended in advising and representing plaintiff for her
overdue prescription drug benefit.” The court then multiped what it found to be the reasonable
number of hours by the reasonable hourly rate to arrive at an attorney fee award of $4,688.75.7
Plaintiff argues that the baseline fee should be based on 645 hours, which represents the
total number of hours her attorneys expended in the entire case. Such an approach is consistent
with the language of the statute. The statute states that “[a]n attorney is entitled to a reasonable
fee for advising and representing a claimant in an action for personal or property protection
benefits which are overdue.” MCL 500.3148(1) (emphasis added). Typically, a suit involves
multiple denials of benefits; individual suits are not filed as to each particular denial. Moreover,
because the time for payment is 30 days after reasonable proofs, by the time of trial, if the jury
7
Defendant suggests that this is a generous attorney fee award because it is a greater portion of
the sought fee than is the amount of the overdue benefit in relation to the entire claim. No case
has held that an attorney fee should be calculated on the basis of such a comparison. First, a pro
rata approach has nothing to do with the time spent by the attorney, which is the first Pirgu step.
Second, it ignores the intermingling of the claims in the case. Third, such an approach would
provide for different results based solely on the total amount of the initial claim in relation to the
amount overdue.
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finds that plaintiff is owed the benefits, the overwhelming majority of the benefits will be overdue.
See MCL 500.3142(2).
Further, the first sentence of MCL 500.3148(1) does not say that recovery of attorney fees
depends on how successful the action is—it merely states that the action must seek benefits that
are overdue. The second sentence limits recovery as follows: “The attorney’s fee is a charge
against the insurer in addition to the benefits recovered, if the court finds that the insurer
unreasonably refused to pay the claim or unreasonably delayed in making proper payment.” MCL
500.3148(1) (emphasis added). This sentence does not provide a mechanism to reduce the amount
of the attorney fee. It simply states that for attorney fees to be granted, the court must find that the
failure to pay the claim was unreasonable. The use of the word “the” means there is only one
claim, i.e., the entire action. If defendant has failed to pay a part of a claim, it has failed to pay the
claim.
However, although the words “attributable to” does not appear in the statute, the Supreme
Court held in Proudfoot, 469 Mich at 485, that recoverable attorney fees are limited to those
“attributable to” recovery of the overdue benefits. Following Proudfoot, in Moore, 482 Mich at
516, the Court held that the plaintiff was not entitled no-fault attorney fees when “none of the
attorney fees were attributable to the overdue benefit.”8
Considering these two cases along with the later decided Pirgu, we conclude that we must
harmonize the requirement that the fee reflect the number of hours expended “in an action” for
overdue benefits with the requirement that the time be “attributable to” recovery of the overdue
benefits. Doing so is further complicated because, although Proudfoot and Moore used the phrase
“attributable to,” they gave no direction about how to determine what attorney services are
attributable to the overdue benefits. Defendant would have us read these cases to insert the word
“only” into Proudfoot’s holding, i.e., the attorney time must be “attributable only to” the overdue
benefits. Under this approach, time that was spent in service of the case as a whole would not be
counted. We disagree and conclude that attorney services that supported other aspects of the case,
as well as the overdue benefits, should be included as they are attributable to the overdue benefit
claim even if not exclusively so. However, the baseline attorney time should not include time
spent on other aspects of the claim that were not relevant to the unreasonably denied benefits. For
instance, a motion relevant only to benefits that were reasonably denied should not be included,
but a motion that relates to the entire case or, at least some benefit found to be unreasonably denied,
should be.9 In sum, all reasonable attorney time in an action that recovers an overdue benefit
8
In Moore, the plaintiff did not attribute any of the sought attorney fees to recovery of the overdue
benefit, which the defendant paid before trial. Moore, 482 Mich at 523. Moreover, the Court held
that the defendant had a reasonable basis to have denied the only benefit that the jury found to be
overdue, and thus the plaintiff was not entitled to attorney fees. Id. at 523-525. The case provided
no guidance as to how to calculate a reasonable attorney fee or the “baseline figure,” which is at
issue here.
9
Consider, by way of example, a plaintiff who suffers a neck injury and a foot injury in the same
accident and files suit seeking benefits denied for both injuries. If it is found that the claimed
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unreasonably withheld should be included in the baseline number of hours unless those services
were dedicated solely to the recovery of benefits that were found not overdue, in which case that
time was not attributable to recovery of the overdue benefit.
Defendant’s argument fails to account for the reality of litigation in which different benefits
and evidentiary relevance are routinely intermingled and cannot be unmingled. For the most part,
the work of an attorney serves the entire case and is not divisible by particular aspects of the case.
For instance, depositions of lay and expert witnesses will cover many topics, including general
information applicable to all unpaid benefits, and an attorney’s time will be not readily divisible
to specific benefits. The same will be true of discovery and dispositive motions that are relevant
to multiple sought benefits.
We confronted a similar issue in Tinnin v Farmers Ins Exch, 287 Mich App 511, 521; 791
NW2d 747 (2010), in which we explicitly rejected the insurer’s argument that for attorney time to
be compensable under MCL 500.3148(1) it must be “directly attributable to securing” the overdue
benefit. (Emphasis added). In that case, the jury determined that the insurer wrongfully denied
payment for office visits related to physical and medical rehabilitation (PM & R) treatment, but it
awarded no recovery for the sought attendant-care services. Id. at 514. The trial court, however,
awarded the plaintiff the full amount of the requested attorney fee. Id. As we explained, “the trial
court found that all of the attorney’s time for which plaintiff sought compensation was sufficiently
related to securing the overdue benefits compensable under MCL 500.3148(1),” even though some
benefits were properly denied. Id. at 521. We found no support in MCL 500.3148(1) for the
insurer’s argument that apportionment was required. Id. at 522.
Thus, in Tinnin, we rejected the notion that attorney services must be solely directed at
overdue benefits to be compensable. Instead, we concluded that all of the attorney time in that
case was “sufficiently related” to the recovery of the overdue benefit. To be clear, the caselaw
does not require that an attorney’s time be solely or even primarily related to the overdue benefits.
Nor does it require the trial court, as occurred in this case, to speculate as to the number of hours
that would have been spent if the plaintiff had sought payment only for the benefits that were found
to have been unreasonably denied. Such an exercise is clearly speculative and is untethered to
what took place in the actual, rather than hypothetical, litigation.
In sum, in determining the baseline fee in accordance with Pirgu, the court is to include all
attorney time that was relevant to recovery of the overdue benefit, even if that time was also
relevant to other aspects of the case. Attorney time that was related only to other aspects of the
action, and did not bear on the benefits unreasonably withheld, should be excluded from the
baseline. Any further limitation on the baseline number of hours would be difficult to square with
Pirgu, the statute, or with the principle that the no-fault act’s provisions should be liberally
benefits as to the neck injury were not unreasonably denied, but benefits for treatment of the foot
injury were unreasonably denied, work attributable only to litigating the neck injury need not be
included in the baseline fee. However, if the work was in service of obtaining benefits for both
injuries, then that time should be included in the baseline fee.
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construed in favor of the intended beneficiaries. Farmers Ins Exch v AAA of Mich, 256 Mich App
691, 695; 671 NW2d 89 (2003).
Remand is necessary in this case so that the trial court can properly calculate the reasonable
number of hours and the baseline fee consistent with this opinion. After doing so, the trial court
may adjust that figure based on the factors outlined in Pirgu, including the “the amount in question
and the results obtained” in the case as a whole. Pirgu, 499 Mich at 282.
VI. SANCTIONS FOR FAILURE TO ADMIT
Finally, plaintiff contends that the trial court erred when it denied sanctions on the basis of
defendant’s negative response to plaintiff’s request to admit that the Giffords’ vehicle was not
insured. We disagree.10
“Pursuant to MCR 2.312(A), a party in a civil case may request certain admissions from
the other party before trial.” Midwest Bus, 288 Mich App at 350. MCR 2.313(C) provides:11
If a party denies the genuineness of a document, or the truth of a matter as requested
under MCR 2.312, and if the party requesting the admission later proves the
genuineness of the document or the truth of the matter, the requesting party may
move for an order requiring the other party to pay the expenses incurred in making
that proof, including attorney fees. The court shall enter the order unless it finds
that
(1) the request was held objectionable pursuant to MCR 2.312,
(2) the admission sought was of no substantial importance,
(3) the party failing to admit had reasonable ground to believe that he or she
might prevail on the matter, or
(4) there was other good reason for the failure to admit.
Plaintiff filed the instant complaint on October 28, 2015, alleging in part entitlement to
UM benefits pursuant to the insurance policy plaintiff’s husband had with defendant. Not long
after, plaintiff asked defendant to admit, among other things, that “neither Defendant Andrew
Gifford nor the vehicle that he was operating at the time of the complained of motor vehicle
accident [were] properly insured.” On January 6, 2016, defendant responded as follows:
10
We review for an abuse of discretion a trial court’s decision on a request for sanctions under
MCR 2.313(C). Midwest Bus Corp v Dep’t of Treasury, 288 Mich App 334, 349-350; 793 NW2d
246 (2010). “An abuse of discretion occurs when the court’s decision falls outside the range of
principled and reasonable outcomes.” Guerrero, 280 Mich App at 660.
11
MCR 2.313(C) was amended effective January 1, 2020. The quoted version is the version that
was in effect during the trial court proceedings.
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Objection. This Request to Admit is vague and overbroad in the form and
manner stated, and the information known or readily obtainable to Defendant is
insufficient to enable Defendant to admit or deny the Request. Without waiving
said objection, and to the extent that a response is required, Defendant denies the
Request.
Defendant’s objections are without merit as the request was neither vague nor overbroad.
However, we conclude that defendant’s refusal to make an affirmative admission regarding the
Giffords’ insurance status was not improper given its statement that it lacked sufficient information
to either affirm or deny the request.
The record indicates that conclusive evidence regarding the proper owner of the vehicle in
question was not uncovered until November 2017. This evidence only became known following
the deposition testimony of the Giffords and the individual that sold them the vehicle. And, while
defendant was aware of a police report from the date of the accident mentioning that the vehicle
was uninsured, this hearsay information was not of the character to make a contrary conclusion
beyond the realm of reasonable possibility. To require a party to admit to such a fact under those
circumstances is not consistent with the effect of the court rule, which is to make the admitted fact
“conclusively established.” MCR 2.312(D)(1) (emphasis added). Accordingly, we find no error.
VII. CONCLUSION
The trial court failed to correctly calculate a reasonable attorney fee. We reject all other
arguments raised in plaintiff’s appeal.
Affirmed in part, reversed in part, and remanded for further proceedings consistent with
this opinion. We do not retain jurisdiction.
/s/ Jane M. Beckering
/s/ Karen M. Fort Hood
/s/ Douglas B. Shapiro
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