AGNONE v HOME-OWNERS INSURANCE COMPANY
Docket No. 320196
Court of Appeals of Michigan
Submitted May 12, 2015. Decided May 19, 2015.
310 Mich App 522
The Court of Appeals held:
The trial court erred when it construed
Reversed and remanded for entry of an order granting Home-Owners’ motion for partial summary disposition.
INSURANCE — NO-FAULT — PERSONAL PROTECTION INSURANCE — WORK-LOSS BENEFITS — STATUTORY MONTHLY MAXIMUM.
The statutory limit on the amount of personal protection insurance
Mark Granzotto, PC (by Mark Granzotto), and Thomas, Garvey & Garvey (by Robert F. Garvey and James McKenna) for plaintiff.
Garan Lucow Miller, PC (by Caryn A. Ford and Nathan A. Dodson), for defendant.
Before: WILDER, P.J., and OWENS and M. J. KELLY, JJ.
PER CURIAM. In this dispute over first-party benefits under Michigan‘s no-fault act, defendant, Home-Owners Insurance Company, appeals by leave granted the trial court‘s order denying its motion for partial summary disposition under MCR 2.116(C)(10). On appeal, Home-Owners argues that the trial court erred when it determined that plaintiff, John Agnone, was entitled to work-loss benefits under the no-fault act even though the undisputed evidence showed that his income after the accident exceeded the statutory maximum. We conclude that the trial court erred when it determined that the statutory maximum applied to the difference between Agnone‘s income before the accident and his income after the accident. In
I. BASIC FACTS
Agnone testified at his deposition that he and his wife went out to purchase a Christmas tree in December 2009. On their way home, he stopped before merging onto another road and another driver drove into the rear of Agnone‘s car. Referring to a previous accident that he had in 2005, Agnone said he immediately knew that his neck and back had been hurt again.
Agnone owns and operates his own insurance agency. Before the 2009 accident, Agnone earned between $183,000 and $200,000 a year in gross income, which amounted to an average of more than $196,000 a year in gross income. Agnone admitted that his income increased to more than $222,000 in 2010, but explained that the increase arose from work he had performed before the accident. Although he continued to work after the accident, Agnone said he was no longer able “to put forth the effort to continue to go to the extra appointment.” As a result of the reduced client contact, he was unable to generate as many sales and suffered a wage loss in the following years. His gross income dropped to around $140,000 in 2011, and to around $135,000 in 2012.
In January 2012, Agnone sued Home-Owners for breach of the motor vehicle insurance policy that it had issued to him.1 Agnone alleged that Home-Owners breached the agreement by refusing to pay
In October 2013, Home-Owners moved for partial summary disposition under MCR 2.116(C)(10). Home-Owners presented evidence that Agnone made substantially more than the $4,878 monthly limit provided under
In response, Agnone argued that the limit stated under
The trial court agreed with Agnone‘s interpretation of the limit on work-loss benefits and denied Home-Owners’ motion for partial summary disposition.
After the trial court denied Home-Owners’ motion for reconsideration, it applied for leave to appeal in this Court. This Court granted leave to appeal in March 2014.2
II. SUMMARY DISPOSITION
A. STANDARDS OF REVIEW
This Court reviews de novo a trial court‘s decision on a motion for summary disposition. Barnard Mfg Co, Inc v Gates Performance Engineering, Inc, 285 Mich App 362, 369; 775 NW2d 618 (2009). This Court also reviews de novo the proper interpretation of the no-fault act. In re Carroll (On Remand), 300 Mich App 152, 159; 832 NW2d 276 (2013).
B. WORK-LOSS BENEFIT
Because he was injured in a motor vehicle accident, Agnone was entitled to a variety of personal protection insurance benefits—commonly called PIP benefits—from his no-fault insurer, id., which in this case was Home-Owners. “The statutory PIP benefits include ‘four general categories of expenses and losses: survivor‘s loss, allowable expenses, work loss, and replacement services.‘” Id., quoting Johnson v Recca, 492 Mich 169, 173; 821 NW2d 520 (2012). In its motion for partial summary disposition, Home-Owners challenged Agnone‘s right to recover work-loss benefits.
A no-fault insurer must pay an injured insured for work loss “consisting of loss of income from work [the] injured person would have performed during the first 3 years after the date of the accident if he or she had not been injured.”
The undisputed evidence showed that Agnone earned more income from work after his accident than the statutory maximum applicable to the work-loss benefit. Accordingly, he is not entitled to any work-loss benefit and the trial court should have granted Home-Owners’ motion for partial summary disposition on that basis. Moreover, contrary to Agnone‘s contention on appeal, this construction is consistent with this Court‘s historical application of the statutory limit.
This Court addressed the proper construction of this same statutory limitation in Snellenberger v Celina Mut Ins Co, 167 Mich App 83; 421 NW2d 579 (1988).5 In that case, Lewis Snellenberger‘s employer moved him to a job with lighter duties after he was injured in a motor vehicle accident. Id. at 84. The new job paid significantly less than the job Snellenberger performed before he was injured. When his insurer, Celina Mutual Insurance Company, stopped paying work-loss benefits, Snellenberger sued Celina Mutual. The trial court thereafter entered a judgment in favor of Snellenberger, and Celina Mutual appealed in this Court. Id. at 84-85. Celina Mutual argued on appeal that the trial court erred when it failed to deduct the monthly wages that Snellenberger earned in “his postinjury job and the monthly workers’ compensation benefits he received” from the maximum applicable to the work-loss benefit. Id. at 85.
Then, in order to give effect to the limit that the Legislature provided for work-loss benefits, the Court stated, it had to reduce the applicable maximum by the amount of income from work that Snellenberger performed after his accident:
Section 3107(b) specifies that “[t]he benefits payable for work loss sustained in a single 30-day period and the income earned by an injured person for work during the same period together shall not exceed [$2,252].” (Emphasis added.) Accordingly, the income earned by an injured person for work performed during a thirty-day work-loss
benefits period must be deducted from the statutory maximum before benefits are paid. In the present case, [Snellenberger], since April 6, 1985, worked in a less strenuous and lower-paying position than that of his pre-injury employment, earning $1,157 per month. Thus, the amount of [his] work-loss benefits payable after April 6, 1985, as calculated under [MCL 500.3107(b)], would be $1,095 per month: $2,252 (the monthly statutory maximum) minus $1,157 (the monthly income earned by [Snellenberger]). In making this calculation, we follow statutory dictates by deducting the amount of [Snellenberger‘s] wages from the applicable statutory maximum of $2,252 and not from [his] actual work loss of $3,302.56 per month. [Id. at 86-87 (second and third alterations in original).]
Agnone argued before the trial court, and the trial court agreed, that the decision in Snellenberger supported his claim because the Court in that case awarded Snellenberger a work-loss benefit on the basis of a wage differential. That is, he argues that Snellenberger stands for the proposition that an injured person is entitled to a work-loss benefit equal to all of the injured person‘s lost income, as long as the monthly total does not exceed the statutory maximum. But that is not how the Court in Snellenberger actually applied the law. The difference between Snellenberger‘s unadjusted income before the accident ($3,302.56) and his income after the accident ($1,157) was $2,145.56, which amount was less than the applicable maximum for work-loss benefit ($2,252). See id. Accordingly, had the Court used a true wage differential, it would have awarded Snellenberger the full $2,252, which it did not do. The Court in Snellenberger obviously did not apply the maximum to the differential between the income that Snellenberger would have earned from work, but for the accident, and his actual income. Instead, the Court devised a formula for calculating the work-loss
Using the method applied in Snellenberger to calculate Agnone‘s work-loss benefit, we arrive at the same result. In the years before the 2009 accident, Agnone made substantially more each month than the applicable statutory maximum of $4,878. Therefore, under the formulation from Snellenberger, we would use the statutory maximum as his base potential benefit. Id. at 86. We would then subtract from that base wage-loss benefit the income that he earned in the same 30-day period to derive his compensable work-loss benefit for that period. Id. at 86-87. Because he continues to make more than $4,878 in every 30-day period even after his injury, his work-loss benefit is zero.
Although reasonable people might disagree about the wisdom of providing a work-loss benefit up to a specified income level, as opposed to a work-loss benefit up to a specified amount of lost income, it is for the Legislature to balance the costs and benefits of the available options. And, as Michigan courts have recognized, the Legislature has determined that the bal-
III. CONCLUSION
The trial court erred when it construed
Reversed and remanded for entry of an order granting Home-Owners’ motion for partial summary disposition. We do not retain jurisdiction. As the prevailing party, Home-Owners may tax its costs. MCR 7.219(A).
WILDER, P.J., and OWENS and M. J. KELLY, JJ., concurred.
