In this insurance coverage dispute, plaintiffs appeal as of right the circuit court’s order granting summary disposition in favor of defendant. We affirm.
On July 8, 2005, Terry Manier’s two children and minor ward sustained injuries in a motor vehicle crash. The children were in a 2001 Oldsmobile Silhouette owned by Manier and Alice Burton, his mother, and driven by Manier’s girlfriend. Several months before the accident, defendant issued Alice and Clarence Burton, Manier’s parents, a no-fault automobile insurance *487 policy that covered the Silhouette and several other vehicles. The insurance policy listed Manier as a driver of the Silhouette.
After the accident, defendant determined that the Burtons’ application for no-fault insurance coverage of the Silhouette had misrepresented that Manier lived with the Burtons in their Westland home, and that the vehicle would be stored in Westland. Manier, his girlfriend, and the children actually lived in Ypsilanti and kept the vehicle there. Despite this misrepresentation, defendant paid all first-party no-fault personal protection insurance benefit (PIP) claims submitted on behalf of Manier’s children and ward. On October 11, 2005, defendant reformed the policy retroactive to March 12, 2005. The reformation corrected Manier’s address, but made no other substantive changes. The reformed policy maintained the insurance coverage limits stated in the original policy, $100,000 a person, with a $300,000 limit for a single accident. Both the original and the reformed policies contained identical household exclusions restricting liability coverage: “Bodily injury to you or a family member. This exclusion applies only to damages in excess of the minimum limits required by the Financial Responsibility Laws of the state of Michigan.” (Emphasis in original.)
On July 5, 2006, Manier sued defendant, seeking payment of first-party no-fault benefits and a declaration that defendant had improperly reformed the insurance policy by reducing the liability coverage. Manier’s complaint asserted that he had made no misrepresentations, and that “[defendant knew, should have known or easily could have known that the Plaintiff, TERRY D. MANIER, resided in Ypsilanti.”
On March 9, 2007, defendant filed a motion seeking summary disposition under MCR 2.116(0(10), alleging *488 that it had paid all first-party no-fault benefit claims arising from the accident and that the reformed policy included the same liability coverage as the original policy. Manier responded that defendant could not reform the policy because the children qualified as “innocent third parties” and that the household exclusion could not apply in Michigan. In support of Manier’s claim regarding the misrepresentation, he submitted the Michigan vehicle registration for the Silhouette, which reflected his Ypsilanti address, and an affidavit stating that “some time in March of 2005, someone from the Defendant called me to confirm information and I told that person that I lived in Ypsilanti.”
At a summary disposition hearing conducted on May 2, 2007, Manier’s counsel conceded that defendant had paid the children’s first-party no-fault benefits, and the circuit court granted defendant summary disposition regarding that claim. Manier’s counsel further admitted that Alice Burton had misrepresented the location of Manier’s residence, but contended that defendant bore an obligation to independently investigate Mani-er’s address. The circuit court found that Burton had misrepresented Manier’s address, and granted summary disposition to defendant with respect to the liability coverage issue. In the final dismissal order entered on July 13, 2007, the circuit court ruled that “$20,000 per person/$40,000 per accident” constituted the maximum liability coverage available under the reformed policy for any claims made by a “family member.”
Plaintiff raises several challenges to the circuit court’s order of dismissal. This Court reviews de novo a circuit court’s summary disposition ruling.
Walsh v Taylor,
Manier first challenges the circuit court’s misrepresentation ruling, contending that regardless of any misstatements by Burton, defendant failed to dispute its awareness that Manier actually resided in Ypsilanti. Alternatively, Manier asserts that defendant easily could have ascertained his address by reviewing public records like his driver’s license and the vehicle’s registration. In support of these arguments, Manier cites
Farmers Ins Exch v Anderson,
In
Hammoud v Metropolitan Prop & Cas Ins Co,
Manier next contends that because the injured minors qualify as “innocent third parties,” defendant cannot reform the policy. According to Manier,
Liberty Mut Ins Co v Michigan Catastrophic Claims Ass’n,
In
Lake States Ins Co v Wilson,
Lastly, Manier asserts that Michigan’s financial responsibility statute, MCL 257.501
et seq.,
forbids defendant’s household-related exclusion. The financial responsibility act requires certain motor vehicle insurance for the owner or operator of a vehicle, including minimum coverage limits of $20,000 per person and $40,000 per occurrence for injury arising out of the ownership, maintenance, or use of the vehicle. MCL 257.520(b)(2). According to Manier,
Gurwin v Alcodray,
But the exclusion at issue in this case does not eliminate coverage for members of the insured’s household; rather, it limits liability coverage to the minimum provided in MCL 257.520(b)(2). If a clause in an insurance policy is clear and does not contravene public policy, it must be enforced as written.
Farm Bureau Mut Ins Co of Michigan v Nikkel,
Affirmed.
