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CASES (2023)

Pedroso v. Hanover Insurance Company

Luis Pedroso, trustee,1 vs. Hanover Insurance Company & another.2

Notice: Summary decisions issued by the Appeals Court pursuant to M.A.C. Rule 23.0, as appearing in 97 Mass. App. Ct. 1017 (2020) (formerly known as rule 1:28, as amended by 73 Mass. App. Ct. 1001 [2009]), are primarily directed to the parties and, therefore, may not fully address the facts of the case or the panel’s decisional rationale. Moreover, such decisions are not circulated to the entire court and, therefore, represent only the views of the panel that decided the case. A summary decision pursuant to rule 23.0 or rule 1:28 issued after February 25, 2008, may be cited for its persuasive value but, because of the limitations noted above, not as binding precedent. See Chace v. Curran, 71 Mass. App. Ct. 258, 260 n.4, 881 N.E.2d 792 (2008).

PUBLISHED IN TABLE FORMAT IN THE MASSACHUSETTS APPEALS COURT REPORTS.

Disposition: Judgment affirmed.

Core Terms

insured, leased premises, coverage, leases, premises, common area, second paragraph, alley, rear, insurance company, tractor trailer, supervision, ownership, rented, snow, motor vehicle, hiring, loaned

Judges:  [*1] Henry, Shin &Hodgens, JJ.

Opinion


MEMORANDUM AND ORDER PURSUANT TO RULE 23.0

This insurance coverage dispute arises out of a tragic accident in which one man was killed and another was injured trying to free a tractor trailer from snow and ice in the rear alley of commercial rental property owned by the plaintiff, Luis Pedroso, as trustee of the LMP Realty Trust (LMP). LMP was sued in connection with the accident, and it sought a defense and indemnification from the defendants, Hanover Insurance Company (Hanover) and Sentinel Insurance Company, Limited (Sentinel), which insured two of LMP’s tenants. Hanover and Sentinel denied that they had a duty to defend or indemnify LMP, and this lawsuit, in which LMP asserted claims for breach of contract and violation of G. L. c. 93A, followed. In the Superior Court, a judgment on the pleadings entered in LMP’s favor on its breach of contract claims.3 Hanover and Sentinel appeal, and we affirm.

Background. LMP alleged the following facts.4 LMP owned commercial property that contained fourteen rental units. LMP leased one unit to Hanover’s insured, Do Can Brewery, LLC (Do Can), and another unit to Sentinel’s insured, North East Form Engineering, Inc. (North East). On February 6, [*2]  2015, the owner of Do Can, Patrick Slattery, was expecting the delivery of equipment. When the tractor trailer making the delivery arrived, Slattery directed the driver to the rear alley of the building. There, the tractor trailer got stuck in snow and ice. Slattery and an employee of North East, Jeffrey Sperrey, attempted to extricate the tractor trailer using Sperrey’s pickup truck. During the efforts to extricate the tractor trailer, Sperrey backed the pickup truck into Slattery and Gregg Stevens, an employee of another tenant. Slattery was killed and Stevens was injured. Slattery’s estate and Stevens brought claims against LMP, which LMP’s insurer, Liberty Mutual Insurance Company (Liberty Mutual), settled on LMP’s behalf.

LMP further alleged that Hanover and Sentinel also had a duty to defend and indemnify it where LMP was an additional insured on Hanover’s policy with Do Can and Sentinel’s policy with North East.5 In particular, Hanover’s policy with Do Can provided that LMP was an additional insured “only with respect to . . . [p]remises you own, rent, lease or occupy.” Sentinel’s policy with North East provided that LMP was an additional insured “only with respect to liability [*3]  arising out of the ownership, maintenance or use of that part of the land or premises leased to you.”

Discussion. 1. Leased premises. In arguing that they had no duty to defend or indemnify LMP, Hanover and Sentinel rely on the fact that LMP was an additional insured (1) under the Hanover policy, only with respect to Do Can’s leased premises and (2) under the Sentinel policy, only with respect to liability arising out of the ownership, maintenance, or use of North East’s leased premises. Hanover and Sentinel argue that they had no duty to defend or indemnify LMP because the accident occurred in the rear alley, which they assert was a common area that was not part of the premises leased by their respective insureds.6

In determining whether the rear alley was part of the leased premises, we look to how the leases defined the leased premises, applying the usual rules of contract interpretation. “When the words of a contract are clear, they control, and we must construe them according to their plain meaning, in the context of the contract as a whole.” Lieber v. President & Fellows of Harvard College, 488 Mass. 816, 823, 179 N.E.3d 19 (2022). Here, the words of the contract were clear; the leased premises included the rear alley. Using Do Can’s lease as an example, the leases provided [*4]  as follows:

“1. PARTIES . . . LESSEE hereby leases the following described premises:

“2. PREMISES A portion of the premises located at 44 Stedman Street, Lowell, Massachusetts being commonly referred to as Unit 4 . . . together with the right to use in common with others entitled thereto the common areas for ingress and egress and parking.”7

Read together, these paragraphs defined the leased premises as including the right to use the common areas for ingress and egress and parking, meaning the rear alley.8 While the leases could have been drafted to draw a distinction between the leased units and the accompanying right to use the common areas, identifying only the units as the leased premises, that is not what occurred here.9

We are unpersuaded by Hanover and Sentinel’s arguments to the contrary. Hanover and Sentinel argue that the leases distinguished between the premises and the leased premises, with the premises including the common areas and the leased premises not including the common areas. First, Hanover and Sentinel assert that because the second paragraph of each lease, quoted above, had a heading that read “PREMISES,” the language under that heading described the premises, not the [*5]  leased premises. We are unpersuaded where the words immediately preceding the “PREMISES” heading stated that that the “LESSEE hereby leases the following described premises,” thereby clarifying that the premises being described were the leased premises. Second, Hanover and Sentinel assert that other lease provisions referred to the leased premises in ways that logically could not have applied to the common areas, and that the leased premises therefore did not include the common areas. It is true that some references to the leased premises logically could not have applied to the common areas, for example a requirement that the leased premises be maintained at a temperature of at least fifty degrees Fahrenheit and a provision making LMP responsible for the “removal of snow and ice from the parking lots surrounding the leased premises.” However, other references to the leased premises logically could have applied to the common areas,10 and the few instances where that was not true do not overcome the unambiguous definition contained in the second paragraph of each lease.

2. Automobile exclusion. Separately, Sentinel argues that there was no coverage where its policy with North East included [*6]  an automobile exclusion, which excluded the following from coverage:

“‘Bodily injury’ or ‘property damage’ arising out of the ownership, maintenance, use or entrustment to others of any aircraft, ‘auto’ or watercraft owned or operated by or rented or loaned to any insured. Use includes operation and ‘loading or unloading.’

“This exclusion applies even if the claims against any insured allege negligence or other wrongdoing in the supervision, hiring, employment, training or monitoring of others by that insured, if the ‘occurrence’ which caused the ‘bodily injury’ or ‘property damage’ involved the ownership, maintenance, use or entrustment to others of any aircraft, ‘auto’ or watercraft that is owned or operated by or rented or loaned to any insured.”

In addressing Sentinel’s arguments, we are guided by Worcester Mut. Ins. Co. v. Marnell, 398 Mass. 240, 496 N.E.2d 158 (1986), and First Specialty Ins. Corp. v. Pilgrim Ins. Co., 83 Mass. App. Ct. 812, 990 N.E.2d 86 (2013). We conclude that the allegations against LMP do not fall within the automobile exclusion, as that exclusion has been interpreted under the case law.

In Marnell, 398 Mass. at 241-242, two parents sought a defense and indemnification from their insurer for allegations that they negligently supervised a party hosted by their underage son — an unnamed insured on the policy — who left the party in an intoxicated [*7]  state, drove his car under the influence, and struck and killed another person. The insurance company argued that the following exclusion barred coverage: “[liability coverages] do not apply to bodily injury or property damage . . . arising out of the ownership, maintenance, use, loading or unloading of . . . a motor vehicle owned or operated by or rented or loaned to any insured” (emphasis added). Id. at 242. The insurance company argued that because the allegations arose out of use of a motor vehicle owned or operated by any insured, namely the son who was an unnamed insured, the parents were not entitled to liability coverages. See id. at 242-243. The Supreme Judicial Court disagreed, noting that because the policy also contained a severability of insurance clause, “the term ‘insured’ as used in the motor vehicle exclusion refers only to the person claiming coverage under the policy.” Id. at 244. Because the motor vehicle involved in the fatal accident was not owned or operated by or rented or loaned to either of the parents who were claiming coverage, the exclusion did not bar coverage. See id. at 244-245.

In response, some insurance companies added clarifying language to their automobile exclusions — specifically, [*8]  they added the language that appears in the second paragraph of the Sentinel automobile exclusion quoted above — and that language was addressed in First Specialty Ins. Corp., 83 Mass. App. Ct. at 814 n.3, 818. In First Specialty Ins. Corp., this court noted that “the second paragraph clearly envisions that two different insureds are involved.” Id. at 818. Specifically, the second paragraph of the automobile exclusion bars coverage if “(1) claims are brought against ‘any insured’ alleging negligent supervision or hiring of others by ‘that insured,’ and (2) the occurrence underlying those claims involved an automobile owned or operated by ‘any insured.'” Id. This court concluded that in the first clause, the reference to “any insured” meant only the insured claiming coverage but that in the second clause, the reference to “any insured” actually meant any insured. See id. at 819. In sum, where an automobile exclusion contains this additional language, for each insured claiming coverage, “we must determine whether, according to the complaint, that [insured] negligently hired or supervised another insured person who owned or operated the automobile involved in the occurrence underlying the claim. If so, that claim of negligence is unambiguously excluded from [*9]  coverage.” Id.

Here, applying Marnell, the bodily injury did not arise out of the ownership, maintenance, use, or entrustment to others of a motor vehicle owned or operated by or rented or loaned to LMP, and the first paragraph of the automobile exclusion therefore does not bar coverage. Turning to the second paragraph of the automobile exclusion, under First Specialty, we look to whether the claims against LMP alleged negligent supervision or hiring. We conclude that they did not. The allegations against LMP were based on LMP’s failure to properly remove snow and ice from the rear alley. Slattery’s estate alleged that LMP “failed to properly clear the [p]remises of snow and ice,” and that the tractor trailer became “lodged in snow and ice on the [p]remises in the unsafe area created by [LMP’s] negligence.”11 Where the claims against LMP did not allege negligent supervision or hiring, the second paragraph of the automobile exclusion does not apply, and the automobile exclusion does not bar coverage.12

Judgment affirmed.

By the Court (Henry, Shin &Hodgens, JJ.13,

Entered: June 14, 2023.


End of Document


Of the LMP Realty Trust.

Sentinel Insurance Company, Limited.

LMP agreed to a voluntary dismissal, with prejudice, of its c. 93A claims.

For purposes of this appeal, Hanover and Sentinel do not dispute the factual allegations regarding the accident or that they insured two of LMP’s tenants. This appeal instead presents legal questions regarding how to interpret the underlying policies. We review the allowance of the motion for judgment on the pleadings de novo. Ridgeley Mgmt. Corp. v. Planning Bd. of Gosnold, 82 Mass. App. Ct. 793, 797, 978 N.E.2d 799 (2012).

The real plaintiff in interest is Liberty Mutual, which brought this action in LMP’s name pursuant to Mass. R. Civ. P. 17 (a), 461 Mass. 1401 (2011). This was not disclosed to the court prior to oral argument and we caution that, going forward, disclosure would be the better practice.

Separately, Sentinel argues that the accident did not arise out of North East’s ownership, maintenance, or use of the back alley. This argument is unavailing where the accident arose out of a North East employee’s use of the back alley to try to free the tractor trailer. See Commerce Ins. Co. v. Theodore, 65 Mass. App. Ct. 471, 476, 841 N.E.2d 281 (2006) (we give “arising out of” broad meaning).

North East’s lease included the same language but specified that North East was leasing Unit 9.

Hanover and Sentinel do not dispute that the areas for ingress and egress and parking included the rear alley.

Hanover and Sentinel suggest that the leased premises could not have included the common areas because, according to Hanover and Sentinel, Massachusetts case law recognizes a distinction between leased premises and common areas. In part, Hanover and Sentinel rely on cases holding that (1) absent a contractual obligation to keep a leased premises safe, a commercial landlord is not liable for personal injuries arising from defects in leased premises but (2) a commercial landlord is liable for personal injuries arising from defects in common areas. See, e.g., Humphrey v. Byron, 447 Mass. 322, 329, 850 N.E.2d 1044 (2006). However, this case presents a different question: where the parties to a commercial lease define the leased premises as including common areas, are those common areas within the leased premises for purposes of determining the scope of an additional insured provision. Hanover and Sentinel do not provide any reason why the definition in the lease would not control.

10 These references included, for example, a requirement that the leased premises be used for the conduct of the tenant’s business, a prohibition on conducting an unlawful trade or occupation in the leased premises, and a prohibition against subletting the leased premises without consent.

11 Sentinel points us to an allegation that LMP caused tortious injury and death “through [its] ownership, operation, management, maintenance and control of the Premises,” and suggests that this allegation concerned LMP’s obligation to supervise snow removal contractors or anyone trying to free the tractor trailer. However, when read in the context of the other allegations regarding LMP’s failure to properly remove the snow and ice, the allegation on which LMP relies concerned LMP’s obligation to keep the rear alley free of snow and ice.

12 LMP’s request for an award of its appellate attorney’s fees and costs pursuant to Preferred Mut. Ins. Co. v. Gamache, 426 Mass. 93, 686 N.E.2d 989 (1997), is denied. The rule in Gamache does not apply here. As explained in John T. Callahan & Sons, Inc. v. Worcester Ins. Co., 453 Mass. 447, 447, 902 N.E.2d 923 (2009),

“It is well settled that an insured is entitled to recover reasonable attorney’s fees and expenses incurred in successfully establishing the insurer’s duty to defend under the terms of the policy. See [Gamache, [*10]  supra at 98]. What happens when the party incurring attorney’s fees and expenses to establish the insurer’s obligation to defend is not the insured but a different insurer that has defended and provided coverage to the insured? That is the question raised in this case. We answer that the exception to the American Rule in Gamache and its progeny does not extend to allow the prevailing insurer recovery of its attorney’s fees associated with an action brought to establish the defense and coverage responsibility of another insurer.”

13 The panelists are listed in order of seniority.

Frankenmuth Mut. Ins. Co. v. Sentry Cas. Co.

Court of Appeals of Michigan

June 22, 2023, Decided

No. 361259

FRANKENMUTH MUTUAL INSURANCE COMPANY, Plaintiff-Appellee, and GEORGE CIALDELLA, Intervening Plaintiff-Appellee, v SENTRY CASUALTY COMPANY, SENTRY INSURANCE, SENTRY SELECT INSURANCE COMPANY, SENTRY LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY, ACE AMERICAN INSURANCE COMPANY, ACE CAPITAL TITLE REINSURANCE COMPANY, ACE FIRE UNDERWRITERS INSURANCE COMPANY, and ACE LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY, Defendants, and ACE PROPERTY AND CASUALTY INSURANCE COMPANY, Defendant-Appellant.

Notice: THIS OPINION IS UNCORRECTED AND SUBJECT TO REVISION BEFORE FINAL PUBLICATION IN THE MICHIGAN COURT OF APPEALS REPORTS.

Prior History:  [*1] Oakland Circuit Court. LC No. 2020-185275-CK.


Frankenmuth Mut. Ins. Co. v. Sentry Cas. Co, 2022 Mich. App. LEXIS 4230 (Mich. Ct. App., July 20, 2022)

Core Terms

registered, truck, registration, no-fault, coverage, trailer, reciprocal, transporters, benefits, apportioned, insurer, motor vehicle, proportionally, licensing, carrier, driven, registration requirement, calendar year, proportional, nonresident, interstate, provisions, travel, nonresident owner, highway

Case Summary

Overview

HOLDINGS: [1]-In an insurance dispute involving a Michigan truck driver who fell from a truck in Indiana, the Illinois trucking company did not have to carry Michigan no-fault insurance because a truck primarily registered outside of Michigan with an apportioned registration under the International Registration Plan (IRP) that includes Michigan is not thereby compelled to carry Michigan no-fault insurance; [2]-MCL 500.3102(1) did not apply to require Michigan no-fault insurance because the truck involved in the fall was never operated in Michigan.

Outcome

Reversed and remanded.

LexisNexis® Headnotes

Insurance Law > … > No Fault Coverage > Personal Injury Protection > Medical Benefits

HN1  Personal Injury Protection, Medical Benefits

Proportional registration under the International Registration Plan (IRP), standing alone, does not compel the purchase of Michigan no-fault insurance.

Civil Procedure > … > Summary Judgment > Entitlement as Matter of Law > Appropriateness

Governments > Legislation > Interpretation

Civil Procedure > Judgments > Summary Judgment > Entitlement as Matter of Law

Civil Procedure > Appeals > Standards of Review > De Novo Review

Civil Procedure > … > Summary Judgment > Appellate Review > Standards of Review

HN2  Entitlement as Matter of Law, Appropriateness

The court reviews the denial of summary disposition and issues of statutory interpretation de novo, without deference to the trial court. MCR 2.116(C)(10) provides that summary disposition is appropriate when except as to the amount of damages, there is no genuine issue as to any material fact, and the moving party is entitled to judgment or partial judgment as a matter of law.

Insurance Law > … > No Fault Coverage > Personal Injury Protection > Medical Benefits

HN3  Personal Injury Protection, Medical Benefits

Under MCL 500.3114(1), a person seeking no-fault benefits must generally look first to his or her own insurer for PIP coverage, unless one of the exceptions in MCL 500.3114(2), (3), or (5) applies.

Counsel: For FRANKENMUTH MUTUAL INSURANCE COMPANY, Plaintiff – Appellee: CHARLES LOVELL.

For GEORGE CIADELLA, Intervening Plaintiff: STEFFANI CHOCRON.

Judges: Before: GLEICHER, C.J., and HOOD and MALDONADO, JJ.

Opinion by: Elizabeth L. Gleicher

Opinion

Gleicher, C.J.

Trucking plays a critical role in the economy of our state and nation. Maintaining a steady flow of goods and products is essential to economic growth. Launched 50 years ago, the International Registration Plan (IRP) simplified the licensing and registration barriers that once encumbered interstate truck travel. Under the program, which Michigan joined in 1985, a commercial vehicle pays full registration and licensing fees in its home jurisdiction, and apportioned registration fees in other jurisdictions based on the distances the truck or fleet travels on those jurisdictions’ roads. An apportioned plate and cab card are the only credentials a trucker needs to drive through a member jurisdiction.

This case presents a novel question regarding the IRP’s proportional registration system: whether a truck primarily registered outside of Michigan with an apportioned registration including Michigan must carry Michigan no-fault [*2]  insurance. HN1 We hold that proportional registration, standing alone, does not compel the purchase of Michigan no-fault insurance. We reverse the trial court’s contrary decision and remand for further proceedings.

I. BACKGROUND FACTS

This insurance dispute involves events and people in three states: Michigan, Indiana, and Illinois. George Cialdella is a Michigan resident and a named insured on a personal Michigan no-fault automobile insurance policy issued by plaintiff Frankenmuth Mutual Insurance Company. In December 2019, Cialdella worked as a truck driver for CHI Logistics, Inc. The parties dispute whether Cialdella was a CHI employee or an independent contractor, but his employment status does not affect our analysis.

CHI is based in Illinois and operates an interstate trucking business. CHI owned or leased the truck at issue from another Illinois trucking company, KZ, Inc.1 KZ registered the truck in Illinois and proportionally registered the truck in 48 of the United States, including Michigan. No evidence supported that the truck had ever been driven in Michigan.

In December 2019, a supervisor at CHI asked Cialdella to take the truck from Chicago, Illinois, to Indiana for refueling. [*3]  As Cialdella alighted from the truck’s cab in Indiana, a step gave way. Cialdella fell and sustained severe injuries.

Frankenmuth paid Cialdella’s personal protection insurance (PIP) benefits, which totaled over $500,000. It brought this action seeking a declaratory judgment that CHI’s insurance carrier, defendant ACE Property and Casualty Insurance Company, was highest in priority to pay Cialdella’s PIP benefits under MCL 500.3114(2) and (3).2 ACE moved for summary disposition under MCR 2.116(C)(8) and (10), arguing that it was not liable for PIP benefits under Michigan’s no-fault act because the truck was registered in Illinois, the accident occurred in Indiana, and the truck was never operated in Michigan for more than 30 days in a calendar year. ACE argued that the truck was not required to be registered in Michigan under MCL 500.3101(1) or MCL 500.3102(1), and thus Michigan’s no-fault act did not apply.

Frankenmuth asked the court to deny ACE’s motion and to grant judgment in its favor under MCR 2.116(I)(2), contending that because the truck was proportionally registered in Illinois under the IRP, it was fully registered in every jurisdiction where CHI does business, including Michigan. In Frankenmuth’s estimation, the proportional registration combined with Cialdella’s [*4]  status as a CHI employee meant that ACE was a higher priority insurer under MCL 500.3114(3), entitling it to judgment in its favor.

The trial court determined that because there was no factual dispute regarding the ownership of the truck, the sole question presented was whether registration under the IRP was sufficient to deem the truck registered in Michigan for purposes of Michigan’s no-fault act. The court agreed with Frankenmuth that the IRP registration sufficed to regard the truck as registered in Michigan and that ACE was the highest priority insurer under MCL 500.3114(3). ACE now appeals.

II. ANALYSIS

HN2 We review the denial of summary disposition and issues of statutory interpretation de novo, without deference to the trial court. Jesperson v Auto Club Ins Ass’n, 499 Mich 29, 34; 878 NW2d 799 (2016). MCR 2.116(C)(10) provides that summary disposition is appropriate when “[e]xcept as to the amount of damages, there is no genuine issue as to any material fact, and the moving party is entitled to judgment or partial judgment as a matter of law.”

A. THE PROPORTIONALLY REGISTERED TRUCK WAS NOT REQUIRED TO BE REGISTERED IN MICHIGAN

Michigan’s no-fault act, MCL 500.3101 et seq., requires Michigan drivers to maintain no-fault automobile insurance. At the time of Cialdella’s accident, MCL 500.3101(1) provided that “the owner or registrant [*5]  of a motor vehicle required to be registered in this state shall maintain security for payment of benefits under [PIP] and property protection insurance as required under this chapter, and residual liability insurance.” (Emphasis added.) Even nonresident owners or registrants of motor vehicles not registered in Michigan must maintain security for the payment of no-fault benefits if the motor vehicle is “operated in this state for an aggregate of more than 30 days in any calendar year.” MCL 500.3102(1).

The truck involved in Cialdella’s fall was never operated in Michigan, so MCL 500.3102(1) does not apply. If CHI or KZ were obligated to purchase no-fault insurance for the vehicle, that obligation necessarily flowed from MCL 500.3101(1), which mandates no-fault coverage for vehicles that are “required to be registered” in this state.

The Michigan Vehicle Code, MCL 257.1 et seq., states a general rule requiring the Michigan registration of all motor vehicles driven our state’s roads, followed by two relevant exceptions:

Every motor vehicle, recreational vehicle, trailer, semitrailer, and pole trailer, when driven or moved on a street or highway, is subject to the registration and certificate of title provisions of this act except the following:

(a) A vehicle driven or moved [*6]  on a street or highway in conformance with the provisions of this act relating to manufacturers, transporters, dealers, or nonresidents. [MCL 257.216(1) (emphasis added).]

CHI and KZ are “transporters” and “nonresidents.” But that does not end the analysis, because as “transporters,” an additional registration requirement is in play.

We start with “nonresidents.” Usually, a “nonresident” vehicle owner whose car is licensed and registered in another state need not obtain a Michigan registration — think tourists and other visitors. MCL 257.243(1) explains this concept as follows:

A nonresident owner, except as otherwise provided in this section, owning any foreign vehicle of a type otherwise subject to registration under this act may operate or permit the operation of the vehicle within this state without registering the vehicle in, or paying any fees to, this state if the vehicle at all times when operated in this state is duly registered in, and displays upon it a valid registration certificate and registration plate or plates issued for the vehicle in the place of residence of the owner.

“Transporters” pose a different problem. “A nonresident owner of a foreign vehicle operated within this state for the transportation [*7]  of persons or property for compensation” must “register the vehicle and pay the same fees for its registration as is required with reference to like vehicles owned by residents of this state.” MCL 257.243(2). In other words, the statute binds nonresident transporters to the same registration requirements as resident transporters.

Enter the IRP.

MCL 257.243(2), the statute requiring that commercial vehicles traveling through our state obtain Michigan registration, was enacted in 1949. See 1949 PA 300. The IRP was adopted in 1985. The Legislature paved the way for the adoption of the IRP by creating an organization called the Highway Reciprocity Board, and empowering the board to enter into reciprocal registration agreements with other states. MCL 3.161 et seq. Foreshadowing the IRP, MCL 3.166 provided:

A compact, agreement or arrangement entered into under the authority of this act, may contain provisions authorizing the registration or licensing in another jurisdiction of vehicles located in or operated from a domicile in the other jurisdiction, which vehicles otherwise would be required to be registered or licensed in this state; and in such event the exemptions and privileges extended by the compact, agreement or arrangement shall apply to such vehicles. [*8] 3

With the adoption of the IRP, trucking companies operating in Michigan are no longer required to register their trucks here in addition to their home jurisdictions, as long as the trucks are proportionally registered in Michigan.

This Court has described the IRP as “an apportioned registration plan” between 48 states and most Canadian provinces. Behnke, Inc v State, 278 Mich App 114, 116; 748 NW2d 253 (2008). “Because interstate carriers must register in each jurisdiction in which they operate, the IRP permits them to register their trucks annually in one ‘base’ jurisdiction and to obtain credentials to operate in other IRP jurisdictions.” Id. at 117. As we explained in Behnke, an IRP-registered interstate carrier “pays a full annual registration fee to its base jurisdiction, which, in turn, transmits a percentage of that registration fee to the various IRP jurisdictions in which the carrier operates, apportioned according to the mileage driven by the carrier during the preceding year in each jurisdiction.” Id. The plan’s primary benefit is that it allows commercial trucks to obtain licensing and registration in one state or province, and to travel freely in the others without undertaking the financial and bureaucratic efforts for full licensure in reciprocal jurisdictions. [*9] 

A brief review of Behnke‘s facts contributes to a fuller understanding of the IRP. The plaintiffs in Behnke were Michigan-based trucking companies that registered their trucks in Michigan, but registered their trailers in other states, particularly Maine. Id. at 115. The Michigan State Police issued the plaintiffs civil infraction citations for failing to register the trailers in Michigan. The plaintiffs sued, seeking a declaration that they were not required to register their trailers in Michigan because the trailers were proportionally registered in other states under the IRP. Id. at 116. This Court agreed, holding that a section of the IRP specifically authorized interstate carriers to register their trailers in any IRP member jurisdiction under that jurisdiction’s registration laws. Id. at 120. We concluded, “Michigan must grant full and free reciprocity to trailers properly registered in any member jurisdiction under § 404 [of the IRP].” Id. at 121.

CHI and KZ are nonresident owners of proportionally registered vehicles, and like the trailers in Behnke, their tractors may travel freely in Michigan without additional registration. CHI acknowledges that some trucks in its Illinois-based fleet operate in Michigan “for the transportation [*10]  of . . . property for compensation[.]” According to ACE, KZ fulfilled Michigan’s registration requirement for its entire fleet by obtaining proportional registration of its trucks, including the truck that caused Cialdella’s injuries. But by doing so, Frankenmuth retorts, CHI and KZ automatically became subject to our state’s no-fault insurance mandate.

The truck involved in Cialdella’s injury does not fall within MCL 257.243(2)‘s mandatory registration requirement because it was never operated in Michigan. Perhaps recognizing this reality, Frankenmuth makes no effort to argue that either CHI or KZ were “required” to register that truck in Michigan. Instead, Frankenmuth maintains, the truck was registered in Michigan through the IRP. Therefore, Frankenmuth reasons, even though that truck’s tires had never graced a Michigan roadway, its owner was required to purchase Michigan no-fault coverage for the vehicle. We find no support for this argument in logic or the law.

We begin with the law. No Michigan cases specifically mention the IRP other than Behnke. But we find compelling support for our holding in Parks v DAIIE, 426 Mich. 191; 393 N.W.2d 833 (1986). Like this case, Parks was a priority dispute regarding PIP coverage. The injured party, Wayne Parks, worked [*11]  for Roadway Express, a Delaware corporation based in Ohio. He suffered a hernia while lifting a box of brass fittings while inside a Roadway trailer. The trailer was registered in Tennessee and “several states other than Michigan,” while the tractor was registered in Michigan. Id. at 196. The trailer had been operated in Michigan for only three days at the time of the accident. Parks sought to recover no-fault benefits from Roadway, or his personal no-fault insurer (DAIIE), or the assigned claims facility. Id. at 197.

The parties agreed that the trailer in which Parks was injured was a “motor vehicle” under the no-fault act, and that it was appropriate to “look to the registration of the trailer to determine which insurer is liable.” Id. at 198 (emphasis omitted). The Supreme Court first considered MCL 500.3101(1), which provides that the owners or registrants of motor vehicles “required to be registered in this state” must carry PIP insurance. Next, the Court scrutinized MCL 500.3102(1), which requires no-fault coverage of a vehicle operated in Michigan for an aggregate of more than 30 days per calendar year. Parks, 426 Mich at 199. The Supreme Court concluded that the trailer in which Parks was injured did not fall within either statute. Id. The Court’s reasoning [*12]  guides our decision in the case before us.

The Court observed that MCL 500.3101(1) “applies only to owners or registrants of vehicles ‘required to be registered in this state.'” Parks, 426 Mich at 199. That provision did not apply, because the trailer was registered in Tennessee, and “[u]nder a compact entered into by the State of Michigan and the State of Tennessee,” the trailer was not required to be registered in Michigan. Id. at 200. The Court elaborated: “The Legislature created the Highway Reciprocity Board and has authorized it to enter into reciprocal compacts with other states regarding the operation of trailers engaged in interstate commerce. MCL 3.161 et seq. . . .” Parks, 426 Mich at 199-200. In a footnote, the Court specifically acknowledged that MCL 257.216 would require registration in Michigan, but for the reciprocal agreement. Parks, 426 Mich at 200 n 2. But because the trailer was not required to be registered in Michigan, it “was not subject to the mandatory security requirement in § 3101(1).” Parks, 426 Mich at 200.

Like the truck involved in Cialdella’s accident, the trailer in Parks was registered in another state through a “reciprocal agreement” governing registrations. That registration permitted the truck to be driven in Michigan without separately registering here. Although Parks does not specifically mention the IRP (which [*13]  Michigan adopted several years after Parks’ accident), we glean from that case that a reciprocal, proportional registration that includes Michigan does not subject a truck used in Michigan to MCL 500.3102(1), Michigan’s mandatory no-fault coverage statute. Distilled to its essence, the holding in Parks is that the owner of a vehicle that is not required to be registered in Michigan is not required to purchase no-fault coverage.4

This result makes sense. The purpose of reciprocal registration under the IRP is to relieve trucking companies of the burden of complying with 48 different state registration requirements. Section 105 of the IRP stated at the time of Cialdella’s accident and continues to state:

The fundamental principle of the Plan is to promote and encourage the fullest possible use of the highway system by authorizing apportioned registration of Fleets of Apportionable Vehicles and the recognition by each Member Jurisdiction of the registration of Vehicles apportioned by other Member Jurisdictions, thus contributing to the economic and social development and growth of the Member Jurisdictions. [International Registration Plan, Amended January 1, 2019, available at < https://cdn.ymaws.com/www.irponline.org/resource/resmgr/jurisdiction_info_2/the_plan_1_1_19.pdf> [*14]  (accessed May 25, 2023).5]

Freedom of truck movement through the states and Canada enhances economic growth for all of the cooperating jurisdictions. Mandating no-fault insurance coverage for all trucks proportionally registered in Michigan under the IRP — including those that have never actually traveled in Michigan — undermines the purpose of the plan.

A recent opinion of our Supreme Court illustrates the continuing relevance of Parks. Turner by Sakowski v Farmers Ins Exch, 507 Mich 858; 953 NW2d 204 (2021), began as a consolidated appeal in this Court involving two priority disputes. Turner by Sakowski v Farmers Ins Exch, 327 Mich App 481; 934 NW2d 81 (2019). In one of the cases, the involved vehicle was registered in Maryland and owned by a non-Michigan corporation referred to in the opinion as Enterprise. Id. at 486-487. In the other case, the vehicle was registered in Pennsylvania and owned by Enterprise. Id. at 490. Neither vehicle had been operated in Michigan for more than 30 days when the plaintiff passengers were injured. Id. at 487, 490. This Court determined that because Enterprise was the self-insured owner and registrant of the vehicles, it was the highest priority insurer. Id. at 507. We specifically rejected Enterprise’s argument that the priority provisions of the no-fault act did not apply because the vehicle was not “required to be registered in this state,” and [*15]  therefore exempt from the mandatory no-fault rule. Id. at 502-507.

The Supreme Court reversed, explaining that:

Here, as in Parks, it is undisputed that the vehicles at issue owned by the Enterprise appellants which the injured individuals were occupying at the time of the respective accidents were (1) out-of-state vehicles, (2) not required to be registered in this state, and (3) not subject to the security provisions of the no-fault act because they had not been operated in this state for more than 30 days within the calendar year. See MCL 500.3101(1); MCL 500.3102(1). [Turner, 507 Mich at 859.]

Although the no-fault priority statutes do “not expressly condition an insurer’s priority for no-fault benefits upon the vehicle’s being required to be registered in Michigan or otherwise being subject to the security provisions of the no-fault act because it has been operated within the state for more than 30 days within the calendar year,” the Supreme Court declared that “such a condition is implicit . . . when the no-fault act is read as a whole.” Id. The Court summarized that “because the[] self-insured Enterprise appellants . . . were not required under either MCL 500.3101(1) or MCL 500.3102(1) to obtain no-fault insurance the vehicles at issue, the Enterprise appellants could not have [*16]  constituted the ‘insurer of the owner or registrant of the vehicle occupied'” under the relevant priority statute. Turner, 507 Mich at 860.

The truck involved in Cialdella’s accident was not required to have been registered in Michigan, as Frankenmuth implicitly concedes. The “reciprocal registration” discussed in Parks is indistinguishable from the proportional registration involved here. Because neither form of registration constitutes “required” registration under Michigan law, Parks and Turner compel the conclusion that neither KZ nor CHI were not statutorily obligated to purchase no-fault coverage for the truck.

B. THE ACE INSURANCE POLICY DID NOT INCLUDE NO-FAULT INSURANCE

Frankenmuth argues that the ACE policy actually includes first-party no-fault coverage and therefore ACE stands first in priority for Cialdella’s PIP coverage. We rejected a virtually identical argument in Besic v Citizens Ins Co, 290 Mich App 19; 800 NW2d 93 (2010).

The relevant portion of the ACE policy provides:

b. Out-of-state Coverage Extensions

While a covered “auto” is away from the state where it is licensed, we will:

(1) Increase the Limit of Insurance for Covered Autos Liability Coverage to meet the limit specified by a compulsory or financial responsibility law of the jurisdiction where the covered [*17]  “auto” is being used. This extension does not apply to the limit or limits specified by any law governing “motor carriers” of passengers or property.

(2) Provide the minimum amounts and types of other coverages, such as no-fault, required of out-of-state vehicles by the jurisdiction where the covered “auto” is being used.

We will not pay anyone more than once for the same elements of “loss” because of these extensions. [Emphasis added.]

This language echoes the language we construed in Besic, 290 Mich App at 28. In that case we held that the plain language “out-of-state coverage extension” did not provide Michigan no-fault coverage “because at the time of the accident Besic undisputedly was using the covered ‘auto’ in Ohio, a state that does not have a no-fault liability scheme.” Id. at 28-29.

Here, the truck was being used in Indiana at the time of Cialdella’s accident. Indiana does not require no-fault coverage, and as discussed above, neither KZ nor CHI were required to purchase no-fault coverage for the truck.

C. PRIORITY

HN3 Under MCL 500.3114(1), a person seeking no-fault benefits must generally look first to his or her own insurer for PIP coverage, unless one of the exceptions in MCL 500.3114(2), (3), or (5) applies. Farmers Ins Exch v Farm Bureau Gen Ins Co of Mich, 272 Mich App 106, 111; 724 NW2d 485 (2006). The only potentially relevant [*18]  exception here is MCL 500.3114(3), which addresses the priority of coverage for injuries sustained while an occupant of a vehicle owned or registered by an employer. That exception is inapplicable, however, because even if we assume that Cialdella was employed by CHI, the ACE policy does not include Michigan no-fault benefits. The ACE policy does not, therefore, fall within any order of priority. See Titan Ins Co v American Country Ins Co, 312 Mich App 291, 300; 876 NW2d 853 (2015) (“[W]e discern a general rule that when an exception to subsection (1) should apply but insurance is not available, the general rule of subsection (1) applies.”).

D. SUMMARY

A nonresident transporter may primarily register a truck outside of Michigan with an apportioned registration including Michigan under the IRP and avoid separate registration requirements in this state. If that truck is operated in Michigan “for an aggregate of more than 30 days in any calendar year,” the nonresident owner will be required by MCL 500.3102(1) to secure no-fault automobile insurance. If it is not operated in Michigan, or operated for less than 30 days, no-fault insurance is not required. As the truck in this case was registered in Illinois and was not driven in Michigan, neither CHI nor KZ was required to secure no-fault insurance for the vehicle. The trial [*19]  court erred in placing other insurance purchased by CHI and KZ into the order of priority to provide no-fault coverage for Cialdella’s injuries.

We reverse and remand for proceedings consistent with this opinion. We do not retain jurisdiction.

/s/ Elizabeth L. Gleicher

/s/ Noah P. Hood

/s/ Allie Greenleaf Maldonado


End of Document


Whether CHI leased or owned the truck is also irrelevant.

Subsection 3114(2) applies to an “operator or a passenger of a motor vehicle operated in the business of transporting passengers,” and clearly does not apply here. Subsection 3114(3) applies to “[a]n employee . . . who suffers accidental bodily injury while an occupant of a motor vehicle owned or registered by the employer[.]”

Executive Order 2007-15 abolished the Highway Reciprocity Board and transferred its powers to the Department of State, effective July 15, 2007.

That said, we acknowledge that if the vehicle is operated in Michigan “for an aggregate of more than 30 days in any calendar year,” MCL 500.3102(2) would require that the owner purchase no-fault insurance coverage.

5 See also International Registration Plan, Amended January 1, 2021, available at < https://cdn.ymaws.com/www.irponline.org/resource/resmgr/jurisdiction_info_2/Plan_1_1_21.pdf > (accessed May 25, 2023).

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