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
HARIS ALESEVIC, UNPUBLISHED
June 30, 2022
Plaintiff,
v No. 358507
Wayne Circuit Court
RUSSELL GORDON, CITY OF DETROIT, and LC No. 19-011275-NI
WAYNE COUNTY,
Defendants,
and
PROGRESSIVE MICHIGAN INSURANCE
COMPANY,
Defendant-Appellant,
and
ACCEPTANCE INDEMNITY INSURANCE
COMPANY,
Defendant-Appellee.
Before: MARKEY, P.J., and SHAPIRO and PATEL, JJ.
PER CURIAM.
Defendant, Progressive Michigan Insurance Company (Progressive), appeals by right a
stipulated order dismissing claims by plaintiff against Progressive. Progressive is challenging the
trial court’s earlier order that granted summary disposition in favor of defendant, Acceptance
Indemnity Insurance Company (Acceptance). We affirm.
Plaintiff was a passenger in a car being driven by defendant, Russell Gordon. The vehicle
either hit a dip in the road, or Gordon attempted to avoid a dip in the road, which caused the car to
swerve and ultimately crash through a fence and strike a parking-lot pole. Plaintiff suffered a
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variety of injuries. At the time of the accident, plaintiff and Gordon had automobile insurance
policies through Progressive, and plaintiff owned a 2007 Volvo tractor that could be used to haul
semitrailers hitched to the tractor. Plaintiff had a non-trucking insurance policy with Acceptance
that covered the tractor. Such non-trucking insurance policies are generally known as “bobtail”
policies, insuring the tractor and driver of the rig when the tractor is operated absent a semitrailer
or cargo. See Besic v Citizens Ins Co of the Midwest, 290 Mich App 19, 22 n 1; 800 NW2d 93
(2010). We discuss in our analysis below the pertinent language in the Acceptance insurance
policy.
Plaintiff commenced suit against Progressive and Acceptance for underinsured motorist
benefits, uninsured motorist benefits, and personal protection insurance (PIP) benefits related to
injuries plaintiff sustained in the motor vehicle accident. Plaintiff also filed various claims against
the remaining defendants, none of whom are parties to this appeal. The appeal solely entails
Progressive and Acceptance and the payment of PIP benefits. The other claims were ultimately
resolved or dismissed. Acceptance moved for summary disposition under MCR 2.116(C)(10),
arguing that plaintiff’s insurance policy was a bobtail policy that only applied to accidents
involving the Volvo tractor. Acceptance further contended that the PIP endorsement associated
with the Acceptance policy was not applicable to plaintiff because there was an exclusion to the
endorsement that was implicated because plaintiff is a “named insured” on his Progressive policy.
The trial court granted Acceptance’s motion for summary disposition and subsequently denied
Progressive’s motion for reconsideration.1 Eventually, plaintiff and Progressive stipulated to the
dismissal of plaintiff’s claims against Progressive, and this appeal followed.
This Court reviews de novo a trial court’s ruling on a motion for summary disposition.
Hoffner v Lanctoe, 492 Mich 450, 459; 821 NW2d 88 (2012). Additionally, we review de novo
issues concerning the proper interpretation of a contract and the legal effect or application of a
contract. Rory v Continental Ins Co, 473 Mich 457, 464; 703 NW2d 23 (2005).
In ascertaining the meaning of a contract such as an insurance policy, this Court gives the
words used in the contract their plain and ordinary meaning, as would be apparent to a reader of
the instrument. Id. A fundamental tenet of Michigan jurisprudence is that an unambiguous
contract is not open to judicial construction and must be enforced as written, thereby respecting
the freedom of individuals to arrange their affairs by contract. Id. at 468. In Hunt v Drielick, 496
Mich 366, 372-373; 852 NW2d 562 (2014), our Supreme Court observed:
An insurance policy is similar to any other contractual agreement, and, thus,
the court’s role is to determine what the agreement was and effectuate the intent of
the parties. We employ a two-part analysis to determine the parties’ intent. First, it
must be determined whether the policy provides coverage to the insured, and,
second, the court must ascertain whether that coverage is negated by an exclusion.
While it is the insured’s burden to establish that his claim falls within the terms of
1
We note that the trial court provided no analysis, reasoning, or explanation whatsoever in either
granting the motion for summary disposition and in denying the motion for reconsideration; the
court simply granted and denied the motions without saying anything more.
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the policy, the insurer should bear the burden of proving an absence of coverage.
Additionally, exclusionary clauses in insurance policies are strictly construed in
favor of the insured. . . . However, it is impossible to hold an insurance company
liable for a risk it did not assume, and, thus, clear and specific exclusions must be
enforced. [Quotation marks, citations, and brackets omitted.]
On appeal, Progressive argues that plaintiff, as an individual, was the named insured under
the insurance policy issued by Acceptance. Further, Progressive contends that the PIP
endorsement to the Acceptance policy indicated that it would provide PIP benefits to plaintiff
consistent with the no-fault act, MCL 500.3101 et seq., if he sustained an injury in an accident that
resulted from the use of “an auto” as “an auto,” which language would encompass Gordon’s
vehicle. Thus, according to Progressive, Acceptance and Progressive are in the same order of
priority under MCL 500.3114(1), thereby mandating a pro rata split or equitable division under
former MCL 500.3115(2) in regard to the payment of PIP benefits.2 Acceptance counters that its
policy did not provide coverage under the circumstances presented because the accident did not
involve the 2007 Volvo tractor. Acceptance additionally argues that a policy exclusion barred PIP
coverage because plaintiff was a “named insured” and could collect PIP benefits under his
Progressive policy. Accordingly, because there was no coverage, and because, assuming coverage,
an exclusion applied, Progressive alone was responsible for the payment of PIP benefits, and the
purported issue of priority, equal or otherwise, was irrelevant.
The certificate of insurance for plaintiff’s policy with Acceptance provided that it was part
of the insurance agreement and that PIP coverage, among other coverages, would “apply only to
the Specified ‘Auto’ or ‘Autos’ below.” (Emphasis added.) And the only auto listed in the
certificate of insurance was the “2007 Volvo Tractor.” This language plainly and unambiguously
precluded liability by Acceptance to pay PIP benefits in relation to an accident that did not involve
the Volvo tractor even though plaintiff may have suffered injuries in the accident. The Acceptance
insurance policy, however, also contained a Michigan PIP endorsement, which Progressive
contends overrode the certificate of insurance or broadened the PIP coverage. More specifically,
the PIP endorsement provided, in part:
We will pay personal injury protection benefits to or for an “insured” who
sustains “bodily injury” caused by an “accident” and resulting from the ownership,
maintenance or use of an “auto” as an “auto.” These benefits are subject to the
provisions of Chapter 31 of the Michigan Insurance Code. . . . [Emphasis added.]
Progressive, relying on this provision, maintains that plaintiff was the “insured” under the
Acceptance policy and that the plain language of the endorsement did not limit its application to
any particular vehicle.
2
MCL 500.3114 and MCL 500.3115 were amended pursuant to 2019 PA 21 after the events in
this case. The amendment does not affect our analysis, and current MCL 500.3114(8), comparable
to former MCL 500.3115(2), now provides for the equal division of PIP-payment obligations with
respect to insurers of equal priority.
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Acceptance challenges Progressive’s argument regarding the PIP endorsement, asserting,
in part, that the endorsement modified the insurance policy but only with respect to a covered
automobile, which, again, was solely the 2007 Volvo tractor. Progressive argues that Acceptance
essentially cherry-picks from the language in the PIP endorsement and does not read the
endorsement’s introductory language in its entirety. The PIP endorsement to the Acceptance
insurance policy provided, in part:
For a covered “auto” licensed or principally garaged in, or “garage
operations” conducted in, Michigan, this endorsement modifies insurance provided
under the following:
BUSINESS AUTO COVERAGE FORM
GARAGE COVERAGE FORM
MOTOR CARRIER COVERAGE FORM
TRUCKERS COVERAGE FORM.
With respect to coverage provided by this endorsement, the provisions of
the Coverage Form apply unless modified by the endorsement. [Emphasis added.]
Progressive maintains that the coverage form at issue in this case was the “NON-TRUCKING
AUTOMOBILE COVERAGE FORM,” and not any of the coverage forms listed in the PIP
endorsement. Therefore, according to Progressive, the emphasized language in the above-quoted
passage was implicated, and it effectively expanded PIP coverage to encompass injuries incurred
by plaintiff in any auto accident.
We do not agree with Progressive’s construction of the introductory language found in the
PIP endorsement. The covered “auto” was the Volvo tractor, so the PIP endorsement modified
insurance in connection with the Volvo tractor, but then only in regard to coverage forms that were
not applicable in this case. We note that if one of the coverage forms listed in the PIP endorsement
had in fact been applicable, there would perhaps be tension between the “covered auto” language
and the “an auto” language in the PIP endorsement. Progressive relies on the sentence in the PIP
endorsement that we quoted and emphasized above: “With respect to coverage provided by this
endorsement, the provisions of the Coverage Form apply unless modified by the endorsement.”
But this language was simply referring to the listed coverage forms, inapplicable here, indicating
that their provisions continued to govern unless the endorsement modified them. In sum, there
was nothing in the PIP endorsement that negated or broadened the language in the certificate of
insurance that plainly and unambiguously limited PIP coverage to injuries arising out of accidents
involving the Volvo tractor.
Furthermore, assuming that the PIP endorsement was applicable, the endorsement provided
for the following exclusion in section C of the endorsement:
We will not pay personal injury protection benefits for “bodily injury”
***
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6. To anyone entitled to Michigan no-fault benefits as a Named Insured
under another policy. This exclusion does not apply to you or anyone “occupying”
a motorcycle.
Plaintiff was a named insured in his Progressive policy. Accordingly, the exclusion identified in
the PIP endorsement was implicated and needed to be honored assuming general application of
the endorsement in the first place.
Progressive argues that the exclusion was unenforceable because the no-fault act statutorily
mandates PIP-benefit coverage in automobile insurance policies. Progressive also claims that
there was an exclusion within the exclusion as to “you,” which was a reference to plaintiff,
maintaining that “you” did not modify “occupying a motorcycle.” Both of these arguments are
unavailing.
In Johnson v USA Underwriters, 328 Mich App 223; 936 NW2d 834 (2019), this Court
stated:
The no-fault act . . . does not address, let alone bar, an insurer’s ability to
sell optional insurance coverages only. In this case, the USA policy did not provide
the mandatory no-fault coverages to Vandeinse. Indeed, USA does not offer
mandatory coverages to any customers; it only sells collision and comprehensive
policies, which, according to Vandeinse’s insurance agent, are sometimes bundled
with other insurance policies for a reduced cost. Because the no-fault act does not
bar this practice, it does not violate Michigan law, and we cannot read into the
statute something that is not there.
***
The dissent concludes that the no-fault act “implicitly” requires that every
insurer provide policies that include the mandatory coverages, and then—and only
then—can an insurer “delete” coverages after verification that the insured will not
operate the vehicle on a roadway. However, the no-fault act does not state that every
insurer must provide mandatory coverages. Instead, MCL 500.3101(1) requires that
any insured who intends to drive on a highway must have the mandatory coverages.
The no-fault act also allows insurers to delete coverages from policies that have
already been issued. The dissent has not identified any statutory provision that
requires insurers to provide mandatory coverages when issuing policies to insureds.
If that was the Legislature’s intent, it would have included such a provision in the
no-fault act.
Accordingly, Acceptance’s non-trucking insurance policy—a bobtail policy3—was not
required to provide PIP benefits to plaintiff. And plaintiff had existing PIP coverage through
3
This Court approved of such policies in Integral Ins Co v Maersk Container Serv Co, Inc, 206
Mich App 325, 330-332; 520 NW2d 656 (1994).
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Progressive, so he was not without such coverage. Therefore, the exclusion in the PIP endorsement
was enforceable.
Finally, we reject Progressive’s interpretation of the exclusion within the exclusion, which
provides: “This exclusion does not apply to you or anyone ‘occupying’ a motorcycle.” This
language plainly and unambiguously provided an exclusion to the exclusion for a motorcycle
occupant, whether it be “you” or “anyone” riding on the motorcycle. “[Y]ou” and “anyone” both
modify “ ‘occupying’ a motorcycle.’ ” If the language were construed to exclude “you” in general,
it would effectively swallow up the exclusion regarding persons entitled to PIP benefits as a named
insured under a different insurance policy.
In sum, we conclude that there is no genuine issue of material fact that Progressive was the
only party obligated to provide PIP benefits in relation to plaintiff’s injuries; there was no true
priority issue. Therefore, we hold that the trial court did not err by granting Acceptance’s motion
for summary disposition.
We affirm. Having fully prevailed on appeal, Acceptance may tax costs under MCR 7.219.
/s/ Jane E. Markey
/s/ Douglas B. Shapiro
/s/ Sima G. Patel
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