Court Opinion

ID: 9383790
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-03-31 06:06:15.054955+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:17:47.913890
License: Public Domain

If this opinion indicates that it is “FOR PUBLICATION,” it is subject to
                  revision until final publication in the Michigan Appeals Reports.

                            STATE OF MICHIGAN

                             COURT OF APPEALS

BENJAMIN ROBINSON,                                                      UNPUBLISHED
                                                                        March 30, 2023
                Plaintiff-Appellant,

v                                                                       No. 360092
                                                                        Wayne Circuit Court
WOLVERINE MUTUAL INSURANCE                                              LC No. 21-003188-AV
COMPANY,

                Defendant-Appellee.

Before: PATEL, P.J., and SWARTZLE and HOOD, JJ.

SWARTZLE, J (dissenting).

        Three different bites at the apple, three different statements of “fact” by plaintiff. (1) In
his complaint, plaintiff alleged that defendant, Wolverine Mutual Insurance Company, insured his
vehicle. (2) Then, in answering defendant’s interrogatory, plaintiff asserted that AAA Insurance
Company insured his vehicle. (3) Then, in responding (late) to a motion for summary disposition,
plaintiff asserted that, actually, AAA did not insure his vehicle. (4) The majority is now granting
plaintiff a fourth bite at this lawsuit, an opportunity that I would decline.

         The majority relies on three grounds to distinguish this appeal from our case law that holds
that, generally speaking, a party cannot manufacture an issue of fact by providing contradictory
information during discovery. The first ground cited by the majority is that our case law centers
on deposition testimony and subsequent affidavits, not interrogatory answers. While this is a
distinction, I do not see the difference, at least not a difference that favors plaintiff. A person gives
sworn testimony under oath in a deposition, MCR 2.306(C)(1)(a), and a person gives a sworn
answer under oath to an interrogatory, MCR 2.309(B)(1). In fact, there is less of an excuse to give
an inaccurate answer to an interrogatory than a deposition question, when a party has 28 days to
answer an interrogatory, MCR 2.309(B)(4), but a deponent generally has to answer a deposition
question on the spot.

       On the second ground, the majority is correct that our court rules require a party to
“supplement or correct” a prior interrogatory response “in a timely manner.” MCR
2.302(E)(1)(a)(i). One wonders whether plaintiff’s third, different-and-distinct assertion regarding

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coverage should be considered “timely,” as it was made after the close of discovery and, in district
court, discovery is not permitted “except by leave of the court or on the stipulation of all parties.”
MCR 2.301(A)(2). Setting timeliness aside, our court rules also require that discovery disclosures
and responses be “complete and correct” when made, MCR 2.302(G), and, specifically with
respect to interrogatory answers, “include such information as is available to the party served,”
MCR 2.309(B)(1). Whether plaintiff had no-fault coverage on a vehicle at the time of the collision
was not a question that should have required in-depth investigation, ongoing factual development,
or nuanced explanation. The answer to the question is a key—no, the key—piece of information
on which plaintiff’s entire lawsuit hinges, and plaintiff provides no justification for his third
different-and-distinct statement other than, “After further investigation . . . .” The duty to
supplement or correct an interrogatory response should not be turned into license to excuse what
can only charitably be called inconsistent and sloppy discovery.

        As to the final ground cited by the majority, this seems to me to be the least persuasive. As
the majority correctly describes the case law, “[W]hen a party makes an assertion in a ‘clear,
intelligent, and unequivocal’ manner, it is generally considered binding against the party unless
they can explain a discrepancy or demonstrate a mistake.” In support, the majority cites Bakeman
v Citizens Ins Co of the Midwest, __ Mich App __, __; __ NW2d __ (2022) (Docket No. 357195),
a case on which I sat in majority. In that case, the plaintiff provided arguably conflicting testimony
during a single deposition, and we had to consider whether to apply a bright-line rule of exclusion
or not. We decided not to apply a bright-line rule, concluding that a person who gives conflicting
testimony during a single deposition is not likely “trying to thwart a procedural rule [about creating
a factual question], especially where that individual demonstrated a lack of guile.” Id., slip op at
6.

        Similarly, I do not advocate here for applying a bright-line rule of exclusion to every
instance of inconsistent interrogatory answers. But, it frankly escapes me how “the totality of
[plaintiff’s] statements” in this case supports his position on appeal—plaintiff provided three
different, mutually inconsistent statements of “fact”; the question is a relatively simple,
straightforward one; plaintiff had, or reasonably should have had, the information at-hand; and
there is nothing in this record to suggest that plaintiff’s three wholly inconsistent statements were
the product of “inadvertence or imprecision,” notwithstanding the majority’s assertion to the
contrary.

        In agreement with the circuit court, I see no merit in plaintiff’s appeal and would affirm
the circuit court’s affirmance of the district court’s grant of summary disposition in favor of
defendant. On remand, defendant may be entitled to an award of attorney fees and costs as a
discovery sanction, a matter that I note is not before us on appeal.

       Accordingly, I respectfully dissent.

                                                              /s/ Brock A. Swartzle

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