LICHON v AMERICAN UNIVERSAL INSURANCE COMPANY
Docket No. 104078
173 MICH APP 178
Submitted June 9, 1988, at Lansing. Decided November 21, 1988.
173 Mich. App. 178
Leave to appeal applied for.
The Court of Appeals held:
1.
2. Michigan follows the majority position which differentiates between allowing the collateral use of the plea of nolo contendere as an admission of misconduct and allowing the collateral use of the fact of conviction and finds a conviction imposed after a plea of nolo contendere as conclusive as a conviction entered after a plea of guilty or entered after a plea of not guilty and a trial.
Affirmed.
SAWYER, J., dissented. He would not allow the use of evidence of plaintiff‘s nolo contendere plea to support the grant of defendant‘s motion for summary disposition. He would require defendant to establish the fact of arson at trial.
REFERENCES
Am Jur 2d, Evidence §§ 701, 702.
Plea of nolo contendere or non vult contendere. 89 ALR2d 540.
See the Index to Annotations under Nolo Contendere.
EVIDENCE — NOLO CONTENDERE PLEAS. Evidence of a nolo contendere plea made in criminal proceedings may not be admitted in civil proceedings thereafter brought against the person who made the plea; such evidence may be admitted in civil proceedings brought by the person who made the plea (
MRE 410 ).- EVIDENCE — NOLO CONTENDERE PLEAS.
The Michigan Supreme Court has adopted the majority position which differentiates between allowing the collateral use of a plea of nolo contendere as an admission of misconduct and allowing the collateral use of the fact of conviction and finds a conviction imposed after a plea of nolo contendere as conclusive as a conviction entered after a plea of guilty or after a plea of not guilty and a trial.
Joseph J. Trogan, for plaintiff.
Braun, Kendrick, Finkbeiner, Schafer & Murphy (by Gregory E. Meter and Scott C. Strattard), for defendant.
Before: DANHOF, C.J., and SAWYER and D. R. FREEMAN,* JJ.
DANHOF, C.J. Plaintiff appeals as of right from a Saginaw Circuit Court opinion and judgment which granted defendant‘s motion for summary disposition.
Defendant issued an insurance policy which covered plaintiff‘s party store. The policy contained a clause which excluded coverage for losses occurring “while the hazard is increased by any means within the control or knowledge of the insured.” Two fires damaged plaintiff‘s party store. Plaintiff filed a claim for his losses. Plaintiff sued defendant when defendant refused to pay the claim.
Criminal charges arising from the fires were brought against plaintiff. Plaintiff pled nolo contendere to attempted burning of real property,
* Circuit judge, sitting on the Court of Appeals by assignment.
A motion for summary disposition under
Plaintiff relies, in part, on
The lower court granted defendant‘s
An insurance company can deny coverage based on the insured‘s criminal conduct. Sprague, supra; State Farm Fire & Casualty Co v Groshek, 161 Mich App 703; 411 NW2d 480 (1987); Transamerica Ins Co v Anderson, 159 Mich App 441; 407 NW2d 27 (1987); Yother v McCrimmon, 147 Mich App 130; 383 NW2d 126 (1985); State Farm Fire & Casualty Co v Jenkins, 147 Mich App 462; 382 NW2d 796 (1985).
Affirmed.
D. R. FREEMAN, J., concurred.
SAWYER, J. (dissenting). I respectfully dissent. While I can agree with the majority‘s observation that it would be “contrary to public policy and a mockery of justice to allow a convicted felon to profit from his crime,” I cannot agree with the majority‘s conclusion that it is permissible to summarily dispose of plaintiff‘s claim based upon his nolo contendere plea. Nor, for that matter, am I convinced that a reversal of the summary disposition would necessarily result in the plaintiff ultimately prevailing.
In the instant case, the contract of fire insurance between the parties contained a clause excluding coverage of losses occurring “while the hazard is increased by any means within the control or knowledge of the insured.” This language complies with the language of the Michigan standard policy.
Except as otherwise provided in this rule, evidence of a plea of guilty, later withdrawn, or a plea of nolo contendere, or of an offer to plead guilty or nolo contendere to the crime charged or any other crime, or of statements made in connection with any of the foregoing pleas or offers, is not admissible in any civil or criminal proceeding against the person who made the plea or offer.
One of the principle reasons for the use of the plea of nolo contendere is to let a defendant minimize other repercussions of his plea, such as civil litigation. In re Guilty Plea Cases, 395 Mich 96, 134; 235 NW2d 132 (1975). To allow a trial judge to use a plea of nolo contendere in deciding a motion for summary disposition would, in fact, make the use of a nolo contendere plea in a criminal case meaningless.
I take specific exception to the majority‘s observation that disallowing the use of the nolo contendere plea in the case at bar would go “too far by allowing the use of a nolo contendere plea not only as a shield, but as a sword.” The fact that plaintiff‘s nolo contendere plea may not be used to establish the fact that he burned the property in question would not, as the majority seems to imply, mandate plaintiff‘s recovery. Disallowing the use of the nolo plea would not serve as a sword for plaintiff to enforce the insurance contract. Rather, it is the majority‘s interpretation which would turn the nolo contendere plea into a sword—a sword for defendant to use to run through plaintiff. Such a use by defendant is precisely what the nolo contendere plea is designed to avoid.1
A defendant who wishes to resolve his criminal
No one suggests that plaintiff should be able to recover against defendant if he did, in fact, burn the property which was insured. However, what the majority fails to acknowledge is that nothing precludes defendant from establishing the fact of arson at trial.3 The position that plaintiff‘s status as an arsonist cannot be established by his nolo contendere plea does not mean that the arson cannot be established by other, legitimate means.
Turning to the cases cited by the majority, I find none of them persuasive, or even relevant, to the issue at hand. The insurance cases cited by the majority,4 without exception, involve a conviction either following trial or by a plea of guilty; none involve a nolo contendere plea. The majority fails to cite any case in which a nolo contendere plea has been used as a basis for denying coverage under an insurance contract, nor am I aware of
The other two cases cited by the majority are distinguishable. State Bar Grievance Administrator v Lewis, 389 Mich 668; 209 NW2d 203 (1973), has little to do with the case at bar. In Lewis, the defendant attorney was indicted by a federal grand jury on two criminal counts under the federal tax code. The attorney resolved the matter by pleading nolo contendere to one count of failure to file an income tax return.5 Based upon the attorney‘s federal conviction, his license to practice law in Michigan was suspended. The attorney appealed, claiming that his nolo contendere plea could not be used as the basis for his suspension. The Court disagreed, concluding that suspension was permissible under the provisions of State Bar Rule 16.17, which was then in effect. Under that rule, an attorney‘s license to practice law could be suspended upon conviction of a felony, for any crime punishable by imprisonment for more than one year, or for a crime involving moral turpitude, or after being sentenced for such a crime upon a plea of nolo contendere. Id. at 675. In affirming the use of a nolo contendere plea in attorney discipline cases, the Court specifically noted that discipline against an attorney could be based upon the fact of conviction alone and independent proof of misconduct was unnecessary. Id. at 681.
The exclusion in the insurance policy is not applied because the insured is convicted of a crime, but because the losses occurred “while the hazard is increased by any means within the control or knowledge of the insured.” Thus, unlike in Lewis, it is necessary in the instant case to establish plaintiff‘s “misconduct.”
The Andino Court did go on to discuss Lewis, supra. While the Andino Court did conclude that the Lewis rule should be followed in parental rights termination cases on public policy considerations, it also noted that there was independent proof of the parent‘s misconduct in that case, permitting the evidentiary use of the nolo contendere plea. Andino, supra at 773. While I question the conclusion in Andino that the Lewis rule can be applied to termination of parental rights cases because of the nature of those cases and the need to protect children, I do agree with the conclusion that evidence of nolo contendere pleas is admissible in dispositional hearings because of the peculiar rules of evidence applicable in such proceedings.
What the majority in the case at bar fails to acknowledge is that this case does not involve the termination of parental rights nor the disciplining of an attorney. Rather, it involves the claim of an insured against his insurance company. While it
I would reverse.
