BROOKS
v.
GOUGH
Docket No. 124860.
Michigan Court of Appeals.
Decided June 3, 1991, at 9:40 A.M.Sumpter & Perry, P.C. (by Thomas E. McDonald), for the plaintiffs.
Morrison, Morrison & Finley (by Gregory W. Finley), for the defendants.
Before: GRIFFIN, P.J., and SAWYER and WEAVER, JJ.
WEAVER, J.
Plaintiff Linda Brooks was injured in an accident involving a rented horse and buggy on Mackinac Island. She and her husband filed this lawsuit against the drivers of the horse and buggy, Reginald and William Gough, doing business as Jack's Livery Stable.
A mediation hearing was held, which resulted in a $150,000 award in favor of plaintiffs. This award was accepted by plaintiffs and rejected by defendants. On May 10, 1989, defendants submitted an offer of judgment to plaintiffs for $25,000. Plaintiffs did not accept the offer. MCR 2.405.
Following a jury trial which commenced on June 8, 1989, plaintiffs were awarded a verdict of $100,000. Because the verdict was more favorable to plaintiffs than the offer made by defendants, plaintiffs filed a motion for actual costs under MCR 2.405(D). The trial judge denied the motion because no counteroffer had been made to defendant's offer. Plaintiffs now appeal from this order, and we affirm.
Plaintiffs contend that they should be awarded *625 actual costs even though they did not qualify under MCR 2.405(D)(2).
Plaintiffs rejected the offer made by defendants, and the adjusted verdict entered after trial was more favorable to plaintiffs than this offer. Plaintiffs argue that under MCR 2.405(D)(2) they are entitled to actual costs incurred. However, this rule specifies that "an offeree who has not made a counteroffer may not recover actual costs." MCR 2.405(D)(2).
Plaintiffs argue that it was impossible for them to make a counteroffer, and therefore this Court should allow them to receive costs. We disagree.
It is true that under MCR 2.405 plaintiffs could not have made a timely counteroffer.[1] However, this fact does not cause us to interpret the court rule so as to leave out a provision.
The purpose of allowing costs under MCR 2.405 is to encourage settlement of cases before trial. Thus, the benefit of receiving costs is available only to one who has made an offer of settlement.
Plaintiffs complain that they were not able to make a counteroffer because of the timing of defendants' offer. However, plaintiffs have demonstrated no reason why they could not have made an offer of their own during the years between the filing of their complaint and the date of trial. Their failure to do so precludes them from receiving the benefit that making an offer to settle would have engendered.
Plaintiffs argue that this last-minute offer was made in bad faith to deprive them of costs under *626 MCR 2.403.[2] We need not discuss whether such a bad-faith tactic would require a different result because plaintiffs would not be entitled to costs under MCR 2.403, since the jury verdict was more favorable to defendants than the mediation evaluation.
We affirm the trial court's order denying plaintiffs' motion. Defendants have asked for costs on appeal, which we deny because the issue raised by plaintiffs was res nova in Michigan.
NOTES
[1] Offers must be made at least twenty-eight days before trial. MCR 2.405(B). A counteroffer is a rejection of one offer and an offer by the rejecting party. MCR 2.405(A)(2). A counteroffer must comply with the rules for offers, including the twenty-eight day rule. Defendants' offer was made twenty-eight days before trial, which prevented a counter-offer from being made by plaintiffs in a timely fashion.
[2] When a party rejects a mediation award, that party must pay the opposing party's actual costs unless the verdict is more favorable to the rejecting party than the mediation evaluation. MCR 2.403(O). At the time of trial, MCR 2.405(E) provided that when both a mediation award under MCR 2.403 and an offer under 2.405 had been rejected, the costs provisions of the later rejection would control.