
The Michigan Court of Appeals’ recent decision in Mary Free Bed Rehabilitation Hospital v. Esurance Property & Casualty Insurance Company marks a significant development in Michigan no-fault jurisprudence, particularly in the wake of the 2019 no-fault reforms. The case addresses a critical and previously unresolved question: what happens when a higher-priority insurer’s Personal Injury Protection (PIP) benefits are exhausted, but additional coverage exists under a lower-priority policy?
The Court’s answer—permitting recovery from lower-priority insurers once higher-priority limits are exhausted—has far-reaching implications for practitioners, insurers, and medical providers alike.
The case arose from a catastrophic motorcycle accident in Muskegon in November 2020. The injured motorcyclist sustained severe injuries, including a traumatic brain injury, and ultimately received extensive rehabilitative care from the plaintiff, Mary Free Bed Rehabilitation Hospital. The total cost of care exceeded $1.18 million.
The priority dispute centered on two insurance policies:
Esurance paid a portion of the medical bills but ceased payments after asserting that its policy limits had been exhausted. The hospital then sought payment from USAA. USAA denied the claim, arguing that, as a lower-priority insurer under Michigan’s no-fault statute, it bore no liability once the higher-priority insurer had paid.
The trial court agreed with both insurers and granted summary disposition in their favor. The Court of Appeals, however, took a more nuanced view.
The central issue before the Court was one of statutory interpretation under Michigan’s no-fault act, specifically MCL 500.3114(5): does the statutory priority scheme merely determine which insurer is first in line, or does it preclude recovery from lower-priority insurers once a higher-priority policy is exhausted?
This was a question of first impression in Michigan, particularly after the 2019 amendments introduced PIP coverage limits and fundamentally altered the no-fault landscape.
The Court of Appeals issued a split ruling:
In doing so, the Court explicitly rejected the trial court’s conclusion that the no-fault act bars recovery from lower-priority insurers. Instead, it held that the statutory scheme permits a claimant or provider to proceed down the priority list when higher-priority coverage is insufficient.
The Court emphasized that Michigan’s no-fault act is remedial in nature, designed to ensure prompt and adequate compensation for accident victims. Interpreting the statute to bar recovery once a capped policy is exhausted would undermine that purpose.
The Court reasoned that denying access to additional coverage would leave catastrophically injured individuals—and their providers—without adequate reimbursement, particularly in cases involving limited PIP elections.
Notably, the statute does not explicitly address what happens when PIP benefits are exhausted. The Court declined to interpret this silence as a prohibition. Instead, it found that nothing in MCL 500.3114(5) prevents a claimant from proceeding to the next insurer in the priority sequence.
The Court also analyzed the 2019 amendments, which introduced tiered PIP coverage options. It concluded that allowing recovery from lower-priority insurers:
USAA argued that the priority rules designate a single responsible insurer—a “one-and-done” system. The Court rejected this interpretation.
Instead, it held that priority determines the order of liability, not the exclusivity of liability. This distinction is critical, transforming the priority scheme from a rigid hierarchy into a sequential system that adapts to real-world coverage limitations.
This decision is a powerful tool for plaintiff-side practitioners. It opens the door to:
Importantly, the ruling may extend beyond motorcyclist claims to other priority scenarios involving capped coverage.
Healthcare providers—especially those delivering high-cost, long-term care—stand to benefit significantly.
The decision provides:
Insurers must reassess their exposure under Michigan’s no-fault system. Lower-priority insurers can no longer assume they are insulated from liability simply because a higher-priority insurer exists. Instead, they may be required to step in when primary coverage is insufficient.
This will likely lead to:
While significant, the ruling is not without limits:
Nonetheless, the Court’s reasoning suggests broader applicability across the no-fault framework.
The Michigan Court of Appeals’ decision in Mary Free Bed Rehabilitation Hospital v. Esurance represents a pivotal clarification of the state’s no-fault priority scheme in the post-reform era.
By allowing claimants and providers to pursue lower-priority insurers after the exhaustion of higher-priority coverage, the Court has:
For practitioners, the takeaway is clear: priority does not end the inquiry—coverage does.
This decision will undoubtedly shape Michigan no-fault litigation for years to come and may signal a broader judicial willingness to interpret the act in a manner that ensures meaningful compensation for injured parties.