Plaintiff appeals as of right from an order granting summary disposition to defendant. We affirm.
In his appeal, plaintiff asks this Court to revisit an issue conclusively addressed by our Supreme Court in
Auto-Owners Ins Co v Churchman,
i
A
This case involves a series of startling admissions by plaintiff that he intended to commit suicide. Plain *223 tiff incurred serious injuries when he drove his truck into a tree at seventy miles an hour. Just before the collision, plaintiff had been cleaning stalls at a stable to pay the boarding expenses for his horses. On the date he was injured, plaintiff argued with the stable owner’s son and in an attempt to calm down, drove off in his truck. Yet, while driving, plaintiff became increasingly agitated and stopped to write a note to his wife stating:
Honey, I Love You. I Can’t Take It. I Love You But I can’t Take I [sic] it Any More [sic]. Love Dale.
Plaintiff returned to the stable and threw the note to his wife, and left again in his truck. After leaving the stable, plaintiff drove into the tree.
Frank Vargo, a Kent County Sheriff’s Deputy, was dispatched to the scene of the accident. After ascertaining plaintiff’s identity, Deputy Vargo asked plaintiff what happened. Plaintiff informed Deputy Vargo that he had closed his eyes and tried to kill himself. Deputy Vargo reported that plaintiff appeared alert and in stable condition. Plaintiff’s wife arrived at the scene shortly thereafter and informed Deputy Vargo that plaintiff was “coming off” antidepressant drugs. She also provided Deputy Vargo with the note written to her by plaintiff. When Deputy Vargo interviewed plaintiff at the hospital later that evening, plaintiff stated that the reason he was not wearing a seat belt was because he was attempting to kill himself.
In his deposition, plaintiff testified that he remembered very little of the incident, but he could recall seeing the tree and the speedometer in front of him. He testified that he had done “something stupid *224 and attempted suicide.” Plaintiff also acknowledged telling the police officer that he tried to kill himself.
B
Notwithstanding plaintiffs admissions that he had attempted to kill himself, plaintiff later filed a claim for his injuries with defendant, his no-fault carrier. Defendant denied plaintiffs claim. Plaintiff then instituted this action to recover for his injuries, claiming that he was entitled to the insurance benefits because his injuries resulted from an automobile-related accident. In response, defendant argued recovery was precluded in accordance with MCL 500.3105(4); MSA 24.13105(4). The no-fault statute precludes recovery when injuries result from intentional acts. The statute provides:
(1) Under personal protection insurance an insurer is liable to pay benefits for accidental bodily injury arising out of the ownership, operation, maintenance or use of a motor vehicle as a motor vehicle, subject to the provisions of this chapter.
(4) Bodily injury is accidental as to a person claiming personal protection insurance benefits unless suffered intentionally by the injured person or caused intentionally by the claimant. Even though a person knows that bodily injury is substantially certain to be caused by his act or omission, he does not cause or suffer injury intentionally if he acts or refrains from acting for the purpose of averting injury to property or to any person including himself. [MCL 500.3105(1), (4); MSA 24.13105(1), (4) (emphasis added).]
In moving for summary disposition pursuant to MCR 2.116(C)(10), defendant argued that there was no factual dispute that plaintiff attempted suicide or *225 that his injuries resulted from this attempt, and thus it was entitled to judgment as a matter of law because attempted suicide is an intentional act. In response, plaintiff filed a cross motion for summary disposition with an affidavit from his treating social worker, attesting to the fact that plaintiff had undergone treatment for severe depression and lacked the mental capacity to form the intent to commit suicide.
The trial court granted defendant’s motion, finding that plaintiff intended to commit suicide. The court reasoned that plaintiff’s mental capacity was not relevant in determining, pursuant to Auto-Owners Ins Co v Churchman, supra, whether he intended the act and the injury.
n
On appeal, plaintiff makes the following arguments: (1) the trial court erred in finding that there was no genuine issue of fact concerning whether plaintiff could form the intent to commit suicide and (2) plaintiff was entitled to summary disposition because defendant failed to establish a genuine issue of material fact with affidavits or other documentary evidence that disputed the affidavit of plaintiff’s treating social worker. Essentially, plaintiff asks this Court to conclude that his mental illness created a genuine issue of fact concerning whether he intended to commit suicide. Under these facts, we decline to do so.
m
Michigan’s no-fault insurance system aims to provide victims of automobile-related accidents with assured, adequate, and prompt payment for economic losses.
Shavers v Attorney General,
A
In
Churchman,
the insured, Henry G. Frost, Jr., became enraged and killed Gary Churchman, and then turned the gun on himself.
Id.
563-564. When Churchman’s mother and girlfriend brought actions against Frost’s estate, Auto-Owners Insurance Company, Frost’s homeowner’s insurer, instituted a declaratory action.
Id.,
564-565. Auto-Owners insisted that Churchman’s injuries resulted from the intentional acts of Frost, and that Frost’s policy excluded recov
*227
ery for bodily injury “expected or intended” by the insured. The trial court denied Auto-Owners’ claim on the basis of evidence that Frost was a paranoid schizophrenic.
Id.,
565. Looking to the law in other jurisdictions, the trial court reasoned that Frost could not form the intent because of his mental illness.
Id.
This Court affirmed the trial court’s decision.
*228 B
Before Churchman, two panels of this Court reached opposite results in determining whether evidence of mental illness affects a finding that an insured intended his or her actions.
Allstate Ins Co v Miller (Miller I),
In Miller I, the insured randomly shot inside a restaurant, took a hostage and shot her in the head at close range. The insured was shot and killed by the police at the scene. Miller I, supra, 516-517. The insured’s policy excluded coverage for injuries resulting from the criminal or intentional actions of the insured that the insured “intended” or “reasonably expected” to result from his actions. Id., 520, 521. Evidence was presented to the lower court that the insured was not aware of what he was doing or was unable to control his actions when he engaged in this killing spree. Id., 522.
The Miller I panel noted that in the criminal context insanity mitigates a defendant’s ability to form intent for criminal liability and observed that other jurisdictions considering the question have extended this principle to hold that insanity precludes a finding that an insured acted intentionally. Id., 521 (citing anno: Liability insurance: intoxication or other mental incapacity avoiding the application of clause *229 in liability policy specifically exempting coverage of injury or damage caused intentionally by or at direction of insured, 33 ALR4th 983, 988 and cases cited therein). The Miller I panel agreed with the state courts in other jurisdictions that held that “when a person cannot form an intent to act because of insanity, he has not acted ‘intentionally’ as that term is used in insurance policies, unless the policy explicitly states otherwise.” Id., 521-522. The Miller I panel concluded that the evidence of the insured’s mental incapacity raised a genuine issue of material fact regarding whether the insured acted “intentionally.” Id., 522.
However, the Boughton panel took the opposite approach, following a different line of state court cases holding that “an injury inflicted by a person who is mentally ill or insane may be intentional within the meaning of the exclusion.” See Boughton, supra, 259, and cases cited therein. In Boughton, the insured shot and killed his estranged wife, and his criminal prosecution resulted in a directed verdict of not guilty by reason of insanity. Id., 255. The panel declined to find the verdict determinative of whether the insured intended his actions. Id., 260. The panel explained:
A conviction represents a positive finding of criminal intent beyond a reasonable doubt. An acquittal by reason of insanity on the other hand is not an adjudication of lack of intent, but is a determination that the prosecution failed to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that a defendant was capable of forming the intent necessary to be convicted of a crime. Compare Aetna Casualty & Surety v Dichtl, [78 Ill App 3d 970; 34 Ill Dec 759;398 NE2d 582 (1979)]. Failure to prove sanity beyond a reasonable doubt and ability to prove by a preponderance of the evidence that the insane *230 intended and expected injury are not necessarily contradictory positions. We recognize that there will be cases where insanity manifests itself such that the insured cannot intend or expect to cause an injury; an actor may believe that he is peeling a banana rather than pointing a pistol. See Johnson [v Ins Co of North America, 232 Va 340, 347;350 SE2d 616 (1986)]. However, a broad holding that a criminal adjudication of insanity of the insured as a matter of law prevents application of the policy exclusions, such as the one in the instant case, is inappropriate. [Id., 259-260 (emphasis in original).]
The panel consequently held that on the basis of the insured’s actions, the trial court properly found that he intended and expected to kill his wife when he shot her. Id., 260.
The
Churchman
Court adopted the reasoning of the
Boughton
panel but made no mention of the decision in
Miller I.
See
Churchman, supra,
c
After Churchman and the Supreme Court’s actions in Miller I, II, and III, the law in Michigan is clear: Evidence that an insured suffers from mental illness, standing alone, does not create a genuine issue of material fact regarding whether the insured intended his actions or the consequences of his actions.
Plaintiff attempts to evade the holding of
Churchman
by citing
Mattson v Farmers Ins Exchange,
In Mattson, the plaintiff was diagnosed by his psychiatrist and observed by another psychiatrist just before he was injured. Id., 421. Both doctors recommended that the plaintiff be committed at once. Id. The second doctor testified that the plaintiff could not remember his own name without looking at his drivers’ license. Id. The plaintiff’s family transported him to an emergency room for commitment and, while waiting for admission, the plaintiff wandered away from the emergency room and was struck by an automobile when he ran into the street. Id. At trial, the plaintiff introduced expert testimony that his mental condition and organic brain syndrome disabled him from forming an intent to commit suicide. Id., 425-427. Yet, there was testimony that the plaintiff stated to medical personnel nine months after the accident that this act was a suicide attempt. Id., 427.
This Court held that in light of these facts, a genuine issue of fact existed regarding whether the plaintiff intended his injuries, referring to Miller I’s holding that when insanity disables an individual from forming an intent, the individual has not acted “intention *233 ally” as that term is used in insurance policies. Id., 428. Unlike the Miller I panel, the Mattson panel declined to summarily hold that this evidence would preclude a finding that the insured acted intentionally, reasoning that such evidence was not dispositive. Id. The panel stated:
Although mental illness, more particularly psychosis in any of its myriad manifestations, is relevant in establishing intent, it is not dispositive. Those who are insane may “intend” to write, to sleep, to die. The issue for the purposes of the no-fault statute, is not the source or motive for the intent, but merely its existence. [Id. (emphases added).]
This portion of Mattson’s reasoning is consistent with the rationale in Churchman, supra, and Boughton, supra. Consequently, the outcome in Mattson can arguably be justified under its extraordinary facts. In contrast, there are no extraordinary facts in this case, and the principles of Churchman guide our review of this case.
IV
This Court reviews a trial court’s grant of summary disposition de novo to determine whether the moving party was entitled to judgment as a matter of law.
Stehlik v Johnson (On Rehearing),
When ruling on the motion, the trial court considered plaintiff’s deposition testimony, plaintiff’s note to his wife, and the deposition testimony and reports of Deputy Vargo attesting to plaintiff’s statements after the crash. The court declined to consider defendant’s argument that plaintiff’s treating social worker, holding only a master’s degree in social work, was not competent to attest to plaintiff’s mental capacity. Instead, in reliance on Churchman, the court concluded that the affidavit was irrelevant. We agree.
The evidence considered by the trial court leads to the inescapable conclusion that plaintiff purposefully attempted suicide. Although there has been debate in the field of psychology regarding the volitional nature of suicide attempts committed by those suffering mental illness, there is no such debate in the field of law. See
Mirza v Maccabees Life & Annuity Co,
Accordingly, we hold that summary disposition was properly granted in defendant’s favor. In so holding, we find it unnecessary to address plaintiff’s claim that he was entitled to summary disposition because defendant failed to submit documentary evidence in opposition to plaintiff’s countermotion for summary disposition. Generally, when challenging a motion for summary disposition under MCR 2.116(C)(10), the nonmoving party has the burden of submitting documentary evidence to establish a genuine issue of
*235
material fact. MCR 2.116(G)(4). In this case, by defendant’s own motion, it agreed with plaintiff that no genuine issue of material fact existed. Hence, plaintiff is not entitled to summary disposition simply by defendant’s failure to support a position contrary to its own motion. Compare
Kivela v Dep’t of Treasury,
Affirmed.
Notes
Plaintiff urges that Churchman’s holding is inapposite to determine whether an actor acted intentionally within the meaning of the no-fault act. Plaintiff argues that Churchman is distinguishable because the Churchman Court construed language in a policy exclusion that precluded recovery for injuries “expected or intended” by the insured whereas we have been asked to construe language in the no-fault act that precludes recovery when an actor has acted “intentionally.” We disagree with plaintiff’s argument.
A determination of intent under the no-fault act requires application of a subjective standard.
Schultz, supra,
201. This subjective standard is also applied to determine intent when construing policy language that excludes coverage for injuries “intended or expected” by the insured. Compare
Churchman, supra,
The
Freeman
Court construed a policy clause that excluded coverage for injury that could “reasonably be expected” from an intentional or criminal act.
Freeman, supra,
685. The Court held that this language required an objective, rather than subjective, analysis of whether the iryury is a “natural, foreseeable, expected and anticipated result of the insured’s intentional acts.”
Id.,
687 (Riley, J.); see also
id.,
701 (Boyle, J.);
id.,
721 (Archer, J.). The
Miller II
panel concluded such an analysis was
*231
irrelevant when an insured did not intend the act in the first instance.
Allstate Ins Co v Miller (On Remand) (Miller II),
To the extent that the
Mattson
panel relied on
Miller I,
its holding has no precedential value because that decision was ultimately vacated by the Supreme Court. See
