Order Michigan Supreme Court
Lansing, Michigan
October 5, 2017 Stephen J. Markman,
Chief Justice
152383 Brian K. Zahra
Bridget M. McCormack
David F. Viviano
Richard H. Bernstein
Joan L. Larsen
RUBEN CASTRO and CHRISTY CASTRO, Kurtis T. Wilder,
Plaintiffs-Appellees, Justices
v SC: 152383
COA: 316639
Washtenaw CC: 13-000138-NH
JAMES ALAN GOULET, MD and
JAMES ALAN GOULET, MD, PC,
Defendants-Appellants,
and
STEPHEN R. TOLHURST, MD,
Defendant.
_________________________________________/
On January 10, 2017, the Court heard oral argument on the application for leave to
appeal the August 20, 2015 judgment of the Court of Appeals. On order of the Court, the
application is again considered, and it is DENIED, because we are not persuaded that the
questions presented should be reviewed by this Court.
VIVIANO, J. (concurring).
I concur with the denial order because the Court of Appeals reached the correct
result for the right reasons. Its decision reflects the guarantee in MCL 600.2912d(2) that
a medical malpractice plaintiff complying with that provision’s terms will receive an
additional 28 days to file his or her affidavit of merit (AOM). I write separately,
however, because I believe our Court should, in an appropriate case, reconsider our
opinion in Scarsella v Pollak. 1 That case held that the plaintiff’s failure to file an AOM
with his complaint, as required by MCL 600.2912d(1), meant that the statutory
limitations period continued to run after the complaint was filed. 2 That conclusion, I
believe, may rest on a flawed premise that has roiled our medical malpractice
jurisprudence. 3
A close contextual analysis of the relevant statutes casts doubt on Scarsella’s
conclusion that filing the AOM is necessary to toll the limitations period. This analysis
1
Scarsella v Pollak, 461 Mich 547 (2000).
2
Id. at 549-550.
3
Indeed, the Court of Appeals long ago requested that we “revisit or distinguish
Scarsella so that clearly inadvertent [clerical] errors” would not bar a plaintiff’s claim.
Young v Sellers, 254 Mich App 447, 453 (2002).
2
begins with the generally applicable timing provisions in the Revised Judicature Act of
1961. 4 Under MCL 600.1901 of that act, “[a] civil action is commenced by filing a
complaint with the court.” 5 The commencement must conform to the limitations periods
prescribed by statute; a person cannot “bring or maintain an action . . . unless . . . the
action is commenced within the period of time prescribed by” MCL 600.5805. 6 Because
this provision “pertains only to the filing of the complaint . . . [,] one must then turn to
[MCL 600.]5856 to determine the effect of the statute of limitations once the complaint
has been filed.” 7 MCL 600.5856, in turn, tolls the running of the statutory limitations
period in the following circumstances:
(a) At the time the complaint is filed, if a copy of the summons and
complaint are served on the defendant . . . .
(b) At the time jurisdiction over the defendant is otherwise acquired.
(c) At the time notice is given in compliance with the applicable
notice period under [MCL 600.2912b], if during that period a claim would
be barred by the statute of limitations or repose . . . .
Scarsella concluded that these general timing requirements do not apply in
medical malpractice cases. 8 It reached this result on the basis of § 2912d(1), which states
that “the plaintiff . . . shall file with the complaint an affidavit of merit signed by a health
professional . . . .” In Scarsella, the plaintiff filed his malpractice complaint a few weeks
before the two-year limitations period would have barred his claim. 9 He did not,
however, file an accompanying AOM, and the defendant moved to dismiss for the
plaintiff’s failure to comply with § 2912d(1). 10 Shortly before the trial court ruled on the
motion, but well after the statutory limitations period would have elapsed, plaintiff filed
the AOM.
The Court of Appeals held that the plaintiff’s case was time-barred because he
filed the AOM after the period expired. We adopted its opinion, which purported to
4
MCL 600.101 et seq.
5
See also MCR 2.101(B) (“A civil action is commenced by filing a complaint with a
court.”).
6
MCL 600.5805(1). The limitations period for malpractice claims generally is two years.
MCL 600.5805(6).
7
Gladych v New Family Homes, Inc, 468 Mich 594, 598 (2003).
8
Scarsella, 461 Mich at 549.
9
Id.
10
Id.
3
distinguish the general rules in § 5856 from those applicable to medical malpractice
cases. In particular, it found that the “[u]se of the word ‘shall’ ” in § 2912d(1) “indicates
that an affidavit accompanying the complaint is mandatory and imperative.” 11
Consequently, the opinion “conclude[d] that, for statute of limitations purposes in a
medical malpractice case, the mere tendering of a complaint without the required
affidavit of merit is insufficient to commence the lawsuit.” 12 Accordingly, an AOM must
be filed to commence the suit. 13 We have elsewhere justified this result by observing that
§ 2912d gives specific instruction in medical malpractice cases that must trump the usual
rules detailed in § 1901 and § 5856. 14
It is true that general statutory provisions must give way to more specific
provisions. 15 This interpretative canon typically applies either when the general and
specific provisions conflict, or when applying the general provision would render the
specific one superfluous. 16 But § 5856 and § 2912d do not conflict, and the latter would
not be nullified if the former’s general tolling rules applied to medical malpractice
claims. Section 2912d says absolutely nothing about the limitations period and does not
explicitly condition tolling on a timely filed AOM. All the statute requires is that the
plaintiff file the AOM with the complaint, or later if an exception applies. No one has yet
offered a convincing argument why it would be inconsistent to mandate the AOM filing
in § 2912d(1) while at the same time permitting § 5856(1) to toll the running of the
statutory limitations period. Tolling in these circumstances would not appear to vitiate
the requirements of § 2912d(1): plaintiffs would still have to file the AOM and their
claims might be dismissed when they failed to do so, just not on statute of limitations
grounds. In other words, § 2912d(1) has its own work to do—namely, forcing plaintiffs
11
Id.
12
Id.
13
Id. at 550.
14
See Ligons v Crittenton Hosp, 490 Mich 61, 82-84 (2011); see also Tyra v Organ
Procurement Agency of Mich, 498 Mich 68, 93-94 (2015). Contrary to the dissent’s
suggestion below, Tyra did not involve the AOM requirement, but rather the notice of
intent (NOI) requirement in § 2912b(1); thus any mention of the AOM requirement in
Tyra was clearly dicta.
15
Gebhardt v O’Rourke, 444 Mich 535, 542-543 (1994). However, “[i]n order to
determine which provision is truly more specific and, hence, controlling, we consider
which provision applies to the more narrow realm of circumstances, and which to the
more broad realm.” Miller v Allstate Ins Co, 481 Mich 601, 613 (2008).
16
RadLAX Gateway Hotel, LLC v Amalgamated Bank, 566 US 639, 645 (2012); Detroit
Edison Co v Dep’t of Treasury, 498 Mich 28, 43-44 (2015); Scalia & Garner, Reading
Law: The Interpretation of Legal Texts (St Paul: Thomson/West, 2012), p 183.
4
to provide medical opinion evidence that their claims are not frivolous—and it need not
take on the additional task of tolling the limitations period, especially when it nowhere
mentions that period. 17
A review of the broader statutory context challenges Scarsella’s conclusion that
the Legislature intended § 2912d to affect the limitations period. We have already
rejected the only imaginable interpretation linking § 2912d to the general statute of
limitations. In Ligons v Crittenton Hosp, the plaintiff argued that “for Scarsella to be
consistent with MCL 600.1901 and MCL 600.5856(a), an AOM must be ‘part and parcel’
of the complaint.” 18 We explained to the contrary that “Scarsella . . . did not rule that an
AOM is a complaint or is ‘part and parcel’ of the complaint. Rather, the Court
consistently referred to the complaint and the AOM as distinct documents.” 19 We must
treat them as distinct because § 2912d does so. Accordingly, because § 5856(a) refers to
the complaint but not the AOM, a persuasive argument can be made that the Legislature
did not intend for the AOM to play any role in tolling.
Absent any explicit textual indication that filing the AOM is a condition to tolling,
Scarsella’s contrary conclusion is questionable because we must be cautious “not [to]
read into the statute what is not within the Legislature’s intent as derived from the
language of the statute.” 20 And we certainly may not do so when the Legislature has
already spoken on the subject. The Legislature clearly knows how to start and stop the
running of the limitations period in medical malpractice cases. For example, the
supposedly more “general” tolling provisions in § 5856 explicitly address medical
malpractice cases. Section 5856 tolls the running of the statutory limitations period if the
plaintiff provided the notice of intent to sue (NOI) required in § 2912b. 21 This is
meaningful because “the expression of one thing suggests the exclusion of all others
. . . .” 22 That the Legislature provided for the NOI’s tolling effect, but not the AOM’s,
suggests the AOM may not be needed for tolling to occur. The same implication arises
17
Further, the AOM’s purpose does not to relate to the limitations period or tolling;
rather, “[t]he purpose of the affidavits of merit is to deter frivolous medical malpractice
claims by verifying through the opinion of a qualified health professional that the claims
are valid.” Barnett v Hidalgo, 478 Mich 151, 163-164 (2007).
18
Ligons, 490 Mich at 82 (emphasis omitted).
19
Id. at 82-83.
20
AFSCME v Detroit, 468 Mich 388, 400 (2003). The two cases Scarsella cited were not
on point, given that each dealt with court rules not at issue in Scarsella and neither
addressed statutes of limitations or tolling. See Stephenson v Union Guardian Trust Co,
289 Mich 237 (1939); Hadley v Ramah, 134 Mich App 380 (1984).
21
MCL 600.5856(c).
22
Pittsfield Charter Twp v Washtenaw Co, 468 Mich 702, 712 (2003).
5
from the Legislature’s inclusion of “complaint” as a tolling mechanism, but not the
AOM. In short, the Legislature knows how to tweak the limitations period in the medical
malpractice context, but does not appear to have done so for AOMs. 23
Even more directly, an argument can be made that the Legislature expressly
applied the general tolling provisions in § 5805 and § 5856 to medical malpractice
claims. This argument starts with MCL 600.5838(2), which establishes the framework
for the limitations period:
Except as otherwise provided in [MCL 600.5838a or 600.5838b], an action
involving a claim based on malpractice may be commenced at any time
within the applicable period prescribed in sections 5805 or 5851 to 5856, or
within 6 months after the plaintiff discovers or should have discovered the
existence of the claim, whichever is later.
Unpacking this section suggests that the normal limitations-period rules control in
medical malpractice cases. As an initial matter, § 5805, referred to in the statute quoted
above, establishes the general two-year limitations period for malpractice claims.
Sections 5851 to 5856, also mentioned, provide for accrual dates and tolling in various
specific circumstances. Relevant here, § 5856(a) states that the action is tolled when the
complaint is filed and served. The only specified exceptions to that rule come in § 5838a
and § 5838b. The latter regards legal malpractice claims and is not relevant here. The
former defines a medical malpractice claim and also establishes the limitations
framework for those claims, largely mirroring § 5838(2):
23
It is worth noting that the legislative history is in accord with the above analysis. We
have found bills considered by the Legislature to be useful in elucidating statutory
provisions. See In re Certified Question, 468 Mich 109, 115 n 5 (2003). In 1993 the
Legislature considered a proposed version of § 2912d that would have made the filing of
an AOM a prerequisite to tolling the limitations period. It would have required a plaintiff
to file a certificate with his or her complaint “reflecting that the person has complied with
section 2912f. If the complaint is not accompanied by the certificate required under this
subsection, the complaint does not toll the statute of limitations . . . .” 1993 HB 4067.
Proposed § 2912f, in turn, contained the AOM requirement, although it made the plaintiff
serve the AOM on the defendant with the precomplaint notice of intent to sue rather than
with the complaint. See 1993 HB 4067. Under this proposal, the failure to serve the
AOM would prevent the plaintiff from certifying compliance with § 2912f, and without
that certification the statutory limitations period would continue to run. In other words,
the AOM requirements were keyed to the statute of limitations. Yet the Legislature never
enacted this proposal, which would have been at least one way to make filing the AOM a
condition to tolling if the Legislature so desired.
6
An action involving a claim based on medical malpractice under
circumstances described in subsection (2)(a) or (b) may be commenced at
any time within the applicable period prescribed in section 5805 or sections
5851 to 5856, or within 6 months after the plaintiff discovers or should
have discovered the existence of the claim, whichever is later. . . . A
medical malpractice action that is not commenced within the time
prescribed by this subsection is barred.[24]
Sections 5838 and 5838a thus state that the normal rules in § 5805 and § 5856(1)
“prescribe[]” the commencement of medical malpractice cases. Further, neither § 5838
nor § 5838a includes § 2912d(1) in the list of statutes “prescrib[ing]” when to commence
an action. Thus, none of these provisions suggests that the AOM requirement in
§ 2912d(1) has any bearing on when an action commences. Under this interpretation the
usual tolling regime would apply to medical malpractice cases, i.e., under § 5856(1), the
running of the statutory limitations period would be tolled when the complaint is filed
and served.
Scarsella’s contrary conclusion has given rise to a series of workability problems.
The present case, for example, would not have raised even a colorable question without
Scarsella’s holding. The issue resolved below was whether all the elements of the “good
cause” exception to the AOM filing requirement had to be met before the limitations
period expires. The exception provides that a plaintiff has “an additional 28 days in
which to file the affidavit” if he or she can demonstrate “good cause” for the delay. 25
Defendants contended that the trial court needed to grant the extension before the
expiration of the limitations period. They premised this argument on Court of Appeals
caselaw holding that the trial court’s grant of a plaintiff’s extension motion, and not the
mere filing of that motion, tolls the running of the statutory limitations period. 26 The
Court of Appeals majority in the present case properly read the grant of an “additional 28
days” to mean a full 28 days and not “up to 28 days if the trial court gets around to
deciding the motion before the claim is time-barred.” 27 And because plaintiffs filed their
24
MCL 600.5838a (3).
25
MCL 600.2912d(2).
26
See Barlett v North Ottawa Comm Hosp, 244 Mich App 685, 690-692 (2001).
27
Consider the difficulties that the Court of Appeals’ dissent would create. A plaintiff
could, for example, file his or her complaint, along with a § 2912d(2) extension motion,
with 10 days to spare in the limitations period. The AOM could be filed within 28 days
and the trial court could ultimately grant the extension. But if the trial court’s order came
even a day after the limitations period would have expired, plaintiff’s claim would be
time-barred despite compliance with every requirement in § 2912d(2). In that scenario,
the plaintiff would have had only 10 additional days to file the AOM, not 28. Such a
7
complaint and motion within the limitations period, filed their AOM within 28 days of
their complaint, and the trial court ultimately granted the extension, they complied with
all the requirements of § 2912d(2).
This holding gives effect to the statute’s plain meaning. But the outcome would
be beyond dispute if Scarsella were not on the books. Defendants argued that the “good
cause” exception does not toll the running of the statutory limitations period because it
says nothing about tolling. If Scarsella is incorrect, then the fact that § 2912d(2) is silent
regarding the statute of limitations makes perfect sense: the AOM has no effect on
commencing a lawsuit for purposes of the statute of limitations. As a result, the
Legislature would not need to mention tolling when providing an AOM-filing extension
period. Instead, the general tolling provisions would apply, and a plaintiff’s filing and
service of the complaint would halt the limitations period. 28
Scarsella likewise confuses the rules pertaining to affirmative defenses. As I
explained in my partial dissent in Tyra v Organ Procurement Agency of Mich, the
reasoning of Scarsella undergirds the rule “that if a complaint is ineffective at
commencing the action, the defendant has no obligation to file affirmative defenses, or an
answer for that matter.” 29 This broad proposition arises from our order in Auslander v
Chernick. 30 There, we held that defendants could forgo raising a statute of limitations
defense when the plaintiffs failed to timely file an AOM because the action never
properly commenced. 31
As I posited in Tyra, Auslander engages in “circular reasoning” to reach its
conclusion: “a defendant is relieved of its obligation to allege and establish that a
complaint is legally deficient because the complaint is legally deficient.” 32 This problem
results from Scarsella because the defendant is relieved from its obligation only by virtue
of Scarsella’s holding that the case has not yet commenced. This makes a hash of the
result could deprive an otherwise deserving plaintiff of the statutorily guaranteed
extension simply because the court was busy with other cases. The difficulty is even
more pronounced when considering the § 2912d(3) exception, which permits an
additional 91 days to file the AOM if a defendant fails to allow access to medical records
as required by MCL 600.2912b.
28
See MCL 600.5856(a).
29
Tyra, 498 Mich at 101 (VIVIANO, J., dissenting in part).
30
Auslander v Chernick, 480 Mich 910, 910 (2007).
31
Id., adopting Auslander v Chernick, unpublished per curiam opinion of the Court of
Appeals, issued May 1, 2007 (Docket No. 274079) (JANSEN, J., dissenting).
32
Tyra, 498 Mich at 102 (VIVIANO, J., dissenting in part).
8
normal rule that the statute of limitations defense is waivable. 33 The typical rules, then,
do not apply to medical malpractice cases; and this is for no other reason than Scarsella’s
holding that such lawsuits are not commenced “for statute of limitations purposes”
without tendering an AOM. 34
There may be reasons Scarsella reached the correct result, and even if not, stare
decisis might counsel retaining it. I do not, of course, decide those questions here. But
given its shaky legal foundation and the continuing dislocations in our law it has caused, I
would reconsider that decision in an appropriate future case.
MARKMAN, C.J. (dissenting).
I would not deny leave to appeal, but would reverse the judgment of the Court of
Appeals and reinstate the trial court’s order granting defendants’ motion for summary
disposition. I would do so for the reasons set forth in the Court of Appeals’ dissenting
opinion as well as for the reasons set forth in this statement.
The statutory period of limitations in a medical malpractice action is two years.
MCL 600.5805(6). The statute of limitations is tolled at the time the complaint is filed.
MCL 600.5856(a). In order to commence a medical malpractice action, the plaintiff must
file an affidavit of merit with the complaint. Specifically, MCL 600.2912d(1) provides:
[T]he plaintiff in an action alleging medical malpractice or, if the plaintiff is
represented by an attorney, the plaintiff’s attorney shall file with the
complaint an affidavit of merit signed by a health professional who the
plaintiff’s attorney reasonably believes meets the requirements for an expert
witness under section 2169. [Emphasis added.]
Because an affidavit of merit has to be filed with the complaint in order to commence a
medical malpractice action, MCL 600.2912d(1), a complaint and an affidavit of merit
have to be filed to toll the statute of limitations under MCL 600.5856(a). Scarsella v
Pollak, 461 Mich 547, 550 (2000) (“[B]ecause the complaint without an affidavit [is]
insufficient to commence plaintiff’s malpractice action, it [also does] not toll the period
of limitation.”) (quotation marks and citation omitted); see also Ligons v Crittenton Hosp,
490 Mich 61, 72-73 (2011); Tyra v Organ Procurement Agency of Mich, 498 Mich 68,
79-80 & n 8, 93-94 (2015). 35 The contrary “interpretation would undo the Legislature’s
33
Id. at 104, citing MCR 2.111(F)(3)(a) and Walters v Nadell, 481 Mich 377, 389 (2008).
34
Scarsella, 461 Mich at 549.
35
In Tyra the plaintiff asserted that Scarsella should be overruled because MCL
600.1901 states that “[a] civil action is commenced by filing a complaint with the court.”
The Tyra Court rejected that assertion, explaining:
9
clear statement that an affidavit of merit ‘shall’ be filed with the complaint.” Scarsella,
461 Mich at 552.
“MCL 600.2912d(2) provides a measure of relief when an affidavit of merit
cannot be filed with the plaintiff’s complaint.” Id. at 548 (quotation marks and citations
omitted). “That subsection allows, on motion for good cause shown, an additional
twenty-eight days in which to file the required affidavit.” Id. at 548-549 (quotation
marks and citation omitted). Specifically, MCL 600.2912d(2) provides:
Upon motion of a party for good cause shown, the court in which the
complaint is filed may grant the plaintiff or, if the plaintiff is represented by
an attorney, the plaintiff’s attorney an additional 28 days in which to file
the affidavit required under subsection (1). [Emphasis added.]
Importantly, a plaintiff is not automatically entitled to an additional 28 days in which to
file an affidavit of merit. Instead, the trial court “may” grant the plaintiff’s motion for an
additional 28 days “for good cause shown.” See Barlett v North Ottawa Comm Hosp,
244 Mich App 685, 691-692, lv den 465 Mich 907 (2001) (“[The mere filing of a motion
to extend the time for filing [an affidavit of merit] is [not] sufficient to toll the period of
limitation” because “[t]he plain language of subsection 2912d(2) indicates that the
granting of an additional twenty-eight-day period in which to file an affidavit of merit is
not automatic. Rather, the trial court, by virtue of the permissive (‘may’) and conditional
language (‘good cause’) has discretion to either grant or deny a plaintiff’s motion.”).
In addition, MCL 600.2912d(2) does not say anything about tolling the statute of
limitations. Compare MCL 600.5856(c), which expressly states that the filing of a notice
of intent tolls the statute of limitations. See also Devillers v Auto Club Ins Ass’n, 473
Mich 562, 581-582, 593 (2005), which held that this Court lacks the authority to read into
a statute a tolling rule that is not itself found in the statute. MCL 600.2912d(2) simply
“[M]ore specific statutory provisions control over more general statutory
provisions, and thus the specific requirements of [MCL 600.2912b(1)]
regarding ‘commenc[ing] an action alleging medical malpractice’ prevail
over the general requirements of MCL 600.1901 regarding the commencing
of civil actions.”
Although a civil action is generally commenced by filing a complaint, a
medical malpractice action can only be commenced by filing a timely
[notice of intent to sue] and then filing a complaint and an affidavit of merit
after the applicable notice period has expired, but before the period of
limitations has expired. [Tyra, 498 Mich at 94, quoting Boodt v Borgess
Med Ctr, 482 Mich 1001, 1002 (MARKMAN, J., concurring) (some
alterations in original; citation omitted).]
10
states that the trial court may grant the plaintiff “an additional 28 days in which to file the
affidavit.” In other words, with the trial court’s permission, the plaintiff can file the
complaint without the affidavit of merit and then file the affidavit of merit within 28 days
of the complaint. However, this provision says nothing about tolling the statute of
limitations. Therefore, it appears that the purpose of MCL 600.2912d(2) is not
principally to toll the statute of limitations, but to allow a plaintiff to file an affidavit of
merit within 28 days of the complaint even though MCL 600.2912d(1) ordinarily requires
that the affidavit be filed with the complaint. That is, MCL 600.2912d(2) simply sets
forth an exception to the general requirement of MCL 600.2912d(1) that the affidavit of
merit be filed with the complaint.
Nonetheless, even assuming that MCL 600.2912d(2) does have a tolling effect on
the statute of limitations, as this Court has stated in dicta, see Solowy v Oakwood Hosp
Corp, 454 Mich 214, 229 (1997), 36 this tolling cannot possibly begin until the trial court
has granted the plaintiff’s motion for an extension because MCL 600.2912d(2) expressly
states that the trial court “may” grant the plaintiff an additional 28 days to file the
affidavit of merit “for good cause shown.” If we were to read this provision as allowing
the filing of the motion to toll the running of the period of limitations, we would be
rewriting the provision to state that a plaintiff can always file the affidavit of merit within
28 days of filing the complaint, i.e., the plaintiff effectively never has to file the affidavit
of merit with the complaint, which would be contrary to both MCL
36
Specifically, Solowy, 454 Mich at 229, opined:
MCL 600.2912d(2) . . . allows, upon a showing of good cause, an
additional twenty-eight days to obtain the required affidavit of merit.
During this period, the statute will be tolled and summary disposition
motions on the ground of failure to state a claim should not be granted.
This was dicta because the plaintiff in Solowy did not file a motion for an additional 28
days under MCL 600.2912d(2).
11
600.2912d(1) and (2).
Finally, because the trial court in the instant case did not grant the motion for an
additional 28 days until after the statutory period of limitations expired, the trial court’s
order granting the motion could not have possibly tolled the running of the already-
expired period of limitations, as the trial court itself recognized. There is simply no
authority for the proposition that a belated grant of an extension of time can retroactively
resurrect an expired cause of action. Rather, MCL 600.5805(1) provides, “A person shall
not bring or maintain an action to recover damages for injuries to persons or property
unless, after the claim first accrued to the plaintiff or to someone through whom the
plaintiff claims, the action is commenced within the periods of time prescribed by this
section.” (Emphasis added.) There is no dispute that the action at issue here accrued on
February 9, 2011, and that plaintiff did not file the affidavit of merit until February 26,
2013, which was after the two-year period of limitations expired. Pursuant to MCL
600.5805(1), plaintiff therefore cannot bring or maintain his medical malpractice cause of
action.
WILDER, J., did not participate because he was on the Court of Appeals panel.
I, Larry S. Royster, Clerk of the Michigan Supreme Court, certify that the
foregoing is a true and complete copy of the order entered at the direction of the Court.
October 5, 2017
t0928
Clerk