Court Opinion

ID: 9675493
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-08-24 04:55:37.647371+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T18:16:34.936063
License: Public Domain

D. E. Holbrook, J.
Here again we are presented with a dispute over the amount of benefits due the dependents of a decedent covered under the no-fault automobile insurance act. The fact of coverage is not at issue, merely the amount of liability. The plaintiff and her minor children were in*178jured January 10, 1976, in an automobile accident in which their husband and father was killed. Prior to his death, the family lived soley upon the decedent’s earnings of approximately $190 per week. On April 21, 1976, plaintiffs met with the defendant-appellant’s adjustor to calculate the family’s survivors’ economic loss benefits. The adjustor first reduced the decedent’s gross annual wage by a "personal consumption factor” of 22 percent which reflected State Farm’s estimate of the household expenses saved due to the decedent’s death. The adjustor stated further that because the $614 per month which the plaintiff and her children received from social security exceeded the decedent’s "net income” as thusly calculated, State Farm refused to make any payments to the decedent’s survivors.
Plaintiff then brought this action on behalf of her children and herself, claiming benefits in the amount of the decedent’s gross wages as survivors under the no-fault act. She immediately entered a motion for partial summary judgment, claiming that amount of the deceased’s wages in excess of defendant’s estimated "personal consumption factor”. A hearing on this motion was held June 28, 1977, at which time the circuit judge announced that under the holding in O’Donnell v State Farm Mutual Automobile Ins Co, 70 Mich App 487; 245 NW2d 801 (1976), lv gtd 397 Mich 848 (1976), the defendant was not entitled to credit for the amount of social security payments received by the survivors.
On July 14, 1977, the court entered judgment in this matter, awarding the plaintiffs $806 per month, the decedent’s gross pay, together with interest and attorney’s fees. No taxes were subtracted, nor was the defendant’s "personal con*179sumption factor” taken into account. The defendant appeals of right, alleging two major errors in the trial court’s decision. First, the defendant alleges that the trial court erred in following the O’Donnell holding that MCL 500.3109(1); MSA 24.13109(1) is unconstitutional; the defendant asserts that this section of the no-fault act properly authorizes it to reduce the plaintiffs’ survivors’ benefits by the amount of social security benefits received. Next, the defendant claims that § 500.3108 of the same act allows it to reduce the benefits paid to plaintiffs by an amount representing the sum of taxes paid by the decedent plus that amount of the decedent’s wages which would have been consumed by him personally.
We may deal with the defendant’s first contention summarily. Section 3109(1) provides that: "Benefits provided or required to be provided under the laws of any state or the federal government shall be subtracted from the personal protection insurance benefits otherwise payable for the injury.” This section of the no-fault act has been considered by several panels of the Court of Appeals. The majority of these decisions have held the section to be unconstitutional. Other panels of this Court have upheld § 3109(1), however, finding that it is reasonably related to the no-fault act’s expressed purpose of reducing the cost of insurance. For the reasons expressed by this writer in dissent in LeBlanc v State Farm Mutual Automobile Ins Co, 87 Mich App 555; 274 NW2d 69 (1978), we affirm the circuit court’s holding that § 3109(1), as applied in this case, is unconstitutional.
Determining whether the lower court erred in not allowing State Farm to reduce the plaintiffs’ benefits in accordance with the defendant’s interpretation of § 3108 is a more difficult question. Section 3108 reads as follows:
*180"Personal protection insurance benefits are payable for a survivors’ loss which consists of a loss, after the date on which the deceased died, of contributions of tangible things of economic value, not including services, that dependents of the deceased at the time of his death would have received for support during their dependency from the deceased if he had not suffered the accidental bodily injury causing death and expenses, not exceeding $20.00 per day, reasonably incurred by these dependents during their dependency and after the date on which the deceased died in obtaining ordinary and necessary services in lieu of those that the deceased would have performed for their benefit if he had not suffered the injury causing death. The benefits payable for survivors’ loss in connection with the death of a person in a single 30-day period shall not exceed $1,000.00 and is not payable beyond the first 3 years after the date of the accident.”
The defendant contends that since the above statute directs that "a survivors’ loss * * * consists of * * * contributions * * * that dependents of the deceased * * * would have received for support” (emphasis supplied), it is properly read to require that the plaintiffs be awarded only the amount of the decedent’s gross wage which would have been available to support the plaintiffs prior to the decedent’s death. While a literal reading of the statute provides some support for the defendant’s construction of § 3108, a brief analysis of 1972 PA 294, of which § 3108 was a part, indicates the fallacy in defendant’s argument with respect to the deduction of taxes. Section 3107(b) of the no-fault act, also a part of 1972 PA 294, explicitly provides that 15 percent may be deducted from personal protection insurance benefits in certain situations where such benefits "are not taxable income”. Given the fact that both sections were contained in the same piece of legislation, it is reasonable to assume that had the Legislature *181intended, in § 3108, to limit benefits to after-tax income, it would have adopted language similar to that used in § 3107. Another panel of this Court reached the same conclusion in Goldsworthy v Royal Globe Ins Co, (Docket No. 77-3556, decided August 10, 1978 [unreported]), and traditional notions of statutory construction suggest that the courts not "read in” to one section of a statute that which the Legislature expressly provided in another section of the same statute. See 2A Sutherland, Statutory Construction (4th ed), § 46.05, p 56. We hold, then, that the Legislature did not intend that benefits received under § 3108 be reduced by the amount the decedent would have paid in taxes.
The legislative history of § 3108 does indicate, however, that its drafters contemplated the reduction of benefits by an amount equal to those sums which would have been diverted to the decedent’s personal consumption. An earlier draft of this section defined economic loss as the decedent’s contributions, "less expense of the survivors avoided by reason of decedent’s death”. 5 Michigan House Journal, p 4118 (1972). This clause was eventually deleted and the language upon which the defendant bases its argument was apparently substituted for it.
The contention that § 3108, as finally adopted, contemplated the reduction of benefits by the amount of expenses saved by reason of the decedent’s death is buttressed by yet another comparison with § 3107. Section 3107(b) provides that an injured person is entitled to personal protection insurance benefits for "loss of income”. That the drafters did not employ similar language in § 3108 reinforces the argument that "contributions * * * that dependents of the deceased * * * would have *182received for support” may have intended to denote an amount less than the decedent’s entire gross income.
We hold that the trial court’s only error was in failing to reduce the plaintiffs’ benefits by the amount of expenses avoided by reason of the decedent’s death. We note that the plaintiffs stipulated to the 22 percent figure proposed by the defendant only for the purpose of their motion for partial summary judgment. We therefore remand this matter to the circuit court for determination of the proper amount, if any, to be deducted from the benefits to be received by the plaintiffs.1 We take this opportunity to remind the lower court that the plaintiffs will receive survivors’ benefits for no longer than three years, and to suggest that the parties consider the potential applicability of the "possible expense” portion of § 3108 to the instant circumstances.
Affirmed, except as to that part remanded in accordance with this opinion.* No costs, a public question being involved.
Beasley, P.J., concurred.

 Goldsworthy v Royal Globe Ins Co, supra.

See amendatory order following opinion of G. R. Cook, J.—reporter.