            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



WESTFIELD INSURANCE COMPANY,                                        UNPUBLISHED
                                                                    February 7, 2019
               Plaintiff-Appellee,

v                                                                   Nos. 340622 & 341541
                                                                    Saginaw Circuit Court
SECURA INSURANCE and SECURA                                         LC No. 15-027942-NF
SUPREME INSURANCE COMPANY,

               Defendants-Appellants.


Before: CAMERON, P.J., and BECKERING and RONAYNE KRAUSE, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

        This consolidated appeal1 involves a dispute between no-fault insurers regarding their
respective liability to pay personal protection insurance benefits (PIP) for injuries suffered by
Todd Loree and Christine Loree (“the Lorees”) in a July 19, 2015 traffic accident involving their
motorcycle and a motor vehicle. In Docket No. 340622, defendants, Secura Insurance and
Secura Supreme Insurance Company, appeal by right from an order of judgment entered
subsequent to a jury trial declaring them equal in priority to plaintiff, Westfield Insurance
Company, with respect to the payment of no-fault benefits and ordering them to pay a 50/50 pro
rata share of the Lorees’ PIP benefits. On appeal, defendants challenge previous orders of the
trial court denying their motion for summary disposition and their emergency motion to amend
their answer. In Docket No. 341541, defendants appeal as of right from a November 28, 2017
stipulated order requiring them to pay plaintiff $39,539.23 in case evaluation sanctions pursuant
to MCR 2.403(O).2 We affirm.


1
 Westfield Ins Co v Secura Ins, unpublished order of the Court of Appeals, entered January 2,
2018 (Docket Nos. 340622, 341541).
2
  MCR 2.403(O)(1) provides that “[i]f a party rejects an evaluation and the action proceeds to
verdict, that party must pay the opposing party’s actual costs unless the verdict is more favorable
to the rejecting party than the case evaluation.”
               I. STATEMENT OF RELEVANT FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

        This case arises from a July 19, 2015 traffic accident at the intersection of Dixie Highway
and Junction Road in Bridgeport, Michigan. According to plaintiff’s version of events, their
insured, Lana Kalmbach, approached the red light at the intersection in her Chevy Sonic and,
failing to stop in time, rear-ended the Lorees, who were riding their Harley Davidson
motorcycle. The impact pushed them into the vehicle stopped at the red light in front of them, a
Dodge Caravan operated by defendants’ insured, Melvin Braeutigam. The Lorees filed claims
for first-party no-fault benefits with plaintiff, which plaintiff paid. Plaintiff then sought
reimbursement on a pro rata basis from defendants on the ground that the Dodge Caravan (“the
van”) was involved in the accident. However, defendants informed plaintiff in a letter dated
August 26, 2015, “Secura Insurance does not believe that our insured vehicle was actively
involved in the accident in which your insured rear-ended the motorcyclists pushing them into
our insured vehicle.” Accordingly, defendants declined to consider a pro-rata split of PIP
benefits. Subsequently, plaintiff filed an action in circuit court seeking, among other things, a
declaration that defendants were equal in priority with plaintiff for the payment of PIP benefits
and reimbursement from defendants of a pro rata share of the PIP benefits they had already paid.

         Plaintiff deposed the witnesses to the accident in the spring and summer of 2016. No one
testified to actually seeing the motorcycle hit the van or the motorcyclists hit the van prior to
separating from their motorcycle. Todd Loree testified that he and his wife, Christine Loree,
were riding Todd’s 2008 Harley Davidson in the right-hand lane of southbound Dixie Highway
when they came to a stop behind a van at a traffic light. The next thing he knew, he was picking
himself up off the ground. He realized something had hit them, but he did not know what or
from where, how many impacts there were, or where he had landed. He remembered getting up
off the ground, walking to his wife, who was nearer the motorcycle than he was, and asking if
she was all right. Everyone was yelling at him to stay down, so he lay himself back down beside
his wife. When he did so, he was “next to the bike.” Christine remembered being on the
motorcycle and stopping behind a van at the intersection’s traffic light. All she remembered
beyond that was looking up at the sky from the cement, her husband coming to her, yelling for
someone to call 9-1-1, a woman bringing her purse to her, and talking to an emergency medical
technician inside the ambulance. She did not remember being hit, what hit them, where it came
from, where she landed, or any damage done to the van or the motorcycle.

        Melvin Braeutigam, operator of the van, testified that he was braking to stop at the red
light at the intersection of Dixie Highway and Junction Road, when he looked in his rearview
mirror and saw a maroon-colored motorcycle with two people on it slowing down behind him.
As he came to a complete stop at the light, he was in the right-hand lane, and there were no
vehicles in the lane to his left. He came to a full stop and waited at the light for approximately
15 seconds before something collided into the back of his van, causing him to feel a jolt. He
opened the door and saw that the motorcycle was “just a little to the left of the vehicle.” The
man he assumed to be driving the motorcycle got up for a period before lying back down on the
road, but the woman remained on the ground with her eyes closed, moaning. He described the
position of the motorcycle as to the left of the driver’s side, “a couple of feet ahead of [the rear
end of the van, and] a little bit in the [left] lane.” Melvin testified that the impact “caved in the


                                                -2-
[van’s] hatchback” and “did a number on the driver’s side rear fender.” He also saw a couple of
scratches and a little maroon paint on the driver’s side of the van.

        Melvin’s wife, Lucinda Braeutigam, was a passenger in the van at the time of the
accident and testified consistently with her husband. She said they were in the right-hand lane
next to the curb and first in line at the traffic light when “there was a big kaboom.” After a
moment, she exited the van, went around the front of it, and saw two people and their motorcycle
on the ground next to the driver’s side of the van. She said the two people were lying more
toward the back of the van than the front of it, and their motorcycle was laying close to them, but
not on top of them. Asked whether she knew if the motorcycle and the two individuals who
were on it had run into some part of the van, Lucinda replied, “As far as I could tell, they came
up the side, the driver’s side. There was red paint on the driver’s side and the motorcycle had
red.” She also observed a blue car with front-end damage; it was behind the van in the same
lane, but “back further.” Lucinda said that she did not witness the actual collision.

        Kalmbach, operator of the Chevy that began the chain of events, testified that as she
approached the intersection, she saw another vehicle stopped at the red light. She also saw the
motorcycle, which she located ahead and two lanes to the left of her, in the intersection’s left-
turn lane. Kalmbach believed she applied her car’s brakes as she approached the intersection,
but did not stop in time and rear-ended the van, which then hit the motorcycle. Although this is
what she thought happened, she admitted that she did not see what actually happened because
her airbag deployed and obstructed her view. She disagreed with the diagram on the police
report that showed the motorcycle sandwiched between her Chevy and the van, and insisted that
she did not hit the motorcycle.

         On October 31, 2016, defendants filed a motion for summary disposition pursuant to
MCR 2.116(C)(10) (no genuine issue of material fact, movant entitled to judgment as a matter of
law) on the issue of whether the van was involved in the accident. They attached to their motion
transcripts of the depositions of the witnesses to the accident showing that none of the witnesses
testified to seeing the motorcycle hit the van. Defendants argued in their supporting brief that
even if the motorcycle had hit the van, they were entitled to summary disposition nevertheless
because there was no direct evidence that the Lorees were on the motorcycle when it hit the van.
Plaintiff responded that the witnesses’ deposition testimony and photographs of the damage to
the van provided sufficient circumstantial evidence from which a jury reasonably could infer that
the Lorees were on the motorcycle when it hit the van. Five days after filing its response to
defendants’ motion for summary disposition, plaintiff made essentially the same argument in its
own motion for summary disposition pursuant to MCR 2.116(C)(10). Subsequent to hearing oral
argument, the trial court denied both motions on the ground that neither party had “demonstrated
the absence of a genuine issue of fact as to whether the injured motorcyclists made physical
contact with the van.”




                                                -3-
        Approximately a week before trial, plaintiff deposed Marie Efting,3 the PIP claims
adjustor for Secura Insurance who had informed plaintiff by an August 26, 2015 letter that
defendants would not pay a pro-rata share of the Lorees’ PIP benefits. During her deposition,
Efting revealed that the final decision to decline to pay a pro rata share of the PIP benefits was
based on a legal opinion obtained by her supervisor, Robert Gessler, and based on factual
information about the accident that Gessler had submitted to the attorney. Consequently,
plaintiff issued a subpoena for Gessler to appear at trial and for production or permission to
inspect “[t]he complete unredacted PIP claims file regarding Todd and Christine Loree.”

        Defendants filed an emergency motion to quash the subpoena for Gessler and for the
requested records. Plaintiff argued during the July 31, 2017 hearing on the motion that it was
entitled to hear from Gessler the facts upon which defendants had based their denial of its request
for a partial reimbursement of PIP benefits, especially if defendants’ factual account of the
accident differed from plaintiff’s account. Defendants implied that the relevant facts were in the
claims file, the non-privileged portions of which plaintiff had obtained during discovery. The
trial court then observed, “Don’t they [defendants] admit the factual allegations in their answer –
that you have asserted in paragraphs eight and nine?”4 The responses by the attorneys for both
parties strongly suggest that this is the first time either had fully considered the implications of
defendants’ answer to the complaint. Plaintiff’s attorney indicated that he thought defendants’
admissions to the allegations in ¶¶ 8 and 9 of the complaint constituted judicial admissions and
supported a finding that the Lorees were on the motorcycle when it made contact with the back
of the van. He further stated his intent to ask the court to take judicial notice of the allegations
and of defendants’ admissions. Subsequent to the hearing, the trial court granted defendants’
motion to quash.

        At 8:49 a.m. the following morning, 11 minutes before the scheduled start of trial, 5
defendants e-mailed the court and plaintiff copies of an emergency motion for leave to amend
their answer to ¶ 9 of plaintiff’s complaint. Defendants stated that when they filed their answer,
they thought it was true that the Chevy had hit the motorcycle and pushed it into the van, but
through the course of discovery, they obtained information showing that there was no proof that
the Lorees or their motorcycle had hit the van. For this reason, defendants sought to change their


3
    Efting was unavailable for the trial, and the deposition was videotaped.
4
  Plaintiff alleged in ¶ 8 of its complaint that Kalmbach “was operating a 2013 Chevy Sonic
when she struck Todd and Christine Loree, who were operating a 2008 Harley Davidson
motorcycle.” In ¶ 9, plaintiff alleges that the impact between the Sonic and the motorcycle
“pushed Todd Loree and Christine Loree into a 2009 Dodge Caravan that was being operated by
Melvin Braeutigam and was insured with [defendants].” In their answer, defendants admit
without qualification the allegations set forth in both paragraphs.
5
 Due to an administrative error, the prospective jurors who were supposed to be in court for voir
dire that morning were not going to be there until the afternoon. Because neither party’s attorney
was available in the afternoon, the trial court rescheduled the start of trial for the following
morning.


                                                  -4-
admission in ¶ 9 to a denial.      The trial court denied defendants’ motion as untimely and
prejudicial.

        The next morning, when the court had convened for the re-scheduled start of the trial,
defendants moved the court to reconsider its denial of their emergency motion to amend.
Defendants argued that whether the motorcycle and the Lorees had made contact with the van
was the issue argued in the cross motions for summary disposition. The trial court had ruled that
there was a genuine issue of material fact regarding whether the Lorees made contact with the
van, defendants had relied on that ruling and, consequently, had seen no need or reason to amend
their answer. Now that the court appeared to abandon that ruling, defendants needed to amend
their answer. The trial court denied defendants’ motion for reconsideration, again citing the
extreme untimeliness of the motion. The trial proceeded, ending with the jury finding that the
van was “involved in” the traffic accident with respect to both Todd and Christine Loree. On
plaintiff’s motion and without objections from defendants, the trial court entered an order on the
judgment.

                                          II. ANALYSIS

                                 A. SUMMARY DISPOSITION

        Defendants first contend that the trial court erred by denying their motion for summary
disposition because the van was not “involved in” the accident for purposes of the no-fault act.
Defendants stress that none of the witnesses to the traffic accident testified that he or she saw the
motorcycle or the motorcyclists hit the van, and even if the motorcycle had hit the van, there was
no evidence that the Lorees were still on the motorcycle when it hit. We disagree.

       We review de novo a trial court’s decision on a motion for summary disposition. Auto
Club Ins Ass’n v State Auto Mut Ins Co, 258 Mich App 328, 331; 671 NW2d 132 (2003). Our
review is limited to the evidence that had been presented to the trial court at the time the motion
was decided. Innovative Adult Foster Care, Inc v Ragin, 285 Mich App 466, 476; 776 NW2d
398 (2009). We review the record in the same manner as the trial court to determine whether the
movant was entitled to judgment as a matter of law. See Morales v Auto-Owners Ins, 458 Mich
288, 294; 582 NW2d 776 (1998).

        Defendants moved for summary disposition pursuant to MCR 2.116(C)(10). A motion
for summary disposition under MCR 2.116(C)(10) tests the factual sufficiency of the complaint.
Joseph v Auto Club Ins Ass’n, 491 Mich 200, 206; 815 NW2d 412 (2012). The moving party
must specifically identify the matters that have no disputed factual issues, and has the initial
burden of supporting its position by affidavits, depositions, admissions, or other documentary
evidence. Bronson Methodist Hosp v Auto-Owners Ins Co, 295 Mich App 431, 440; 814 NW2d
670 (2012). A court must consider the evidence submitted in the light most favorable to the
nonmoving party. Joseph, 491 Mich at 206. A genuine issue of material fact exists when the
record, giving the benefit of reasonable doubt to the opposing party, leaves open an issue upon
which reasonable minds could differ. Debano-Griffin v Lake Co, 493 Mich 167, 175; 828 NW2d
634 (2013).



                                                -5-
       For a motorcyclist to be entitled to no-fault PIP benefits, the accident must involve a
motor vehicle. Auto Club Ins Ass’n, 258 Mich App at 331 n 1. Pursuant to MCL 500.3114(5)
and (6), which establish the order of priority for accidents involving motorcycles and motor
vehicles,

       (5) A person suffering accidental bodily injury arising from a motor vehicle
       accident that shows evidence of the involvement of a motor vehicle while an
       operator or passenger of a motorcycle shall claim personal protection insurance
       benefits from insurers in the following order of priority:

       (a) The insurer of the owner or registrant of the motor vehicle involved in the
       accident.

       (b) The insurer of the operator of the motor vehicle involved in the accident.

       (c) The motor vehicle insurer of the operator of the motorcycle involved in the
       accident.

       (d) The motor vehicle insurer of the owner or registrant of the motorcycle
       involved in the accident.

       (6) If 2 or more insurers are in the same order of priority to provide personal
       protection insurance benefits under subsection (5), an insurer paying benefits due
       is entitled to partial recoupment from the other insurers in the same order of
       priority, together with a reasonable amount of partial recoupment of the expense
       of processing the claim, in order to accomplish equitable distribution of the loss
       among all of the insurers.

         Defendants contend that the van was not “involved in” the accident for purposes of MCL
500.3114(5). Generally, if there is physical contact between the injured party and a vehicle,
courts will consider that vehicle “involved in” the accident. See Auto Club Ins Ass’n, 258 Mich
App 328 (2003) (holding that a motor vehicle is involved in an accident for purposes of MCL
500.3114(4) if a motorcyclist hits the vehicle before separating from the motorcycle).
Defendants argue that, unlike the scenario in Auto Club Ins Ass’n, no one in the present case
testified to actually seeing the motorcycle hit the van or to seeing the Lorees hit the van before
separating from their motorcycle. Defendants err by overestimating the probative value of non-
observance of an event and underestimating the probative value of circumstantial evidence with
respect to the event in presenting a question of fact.

       “The mere fact of non-[observance], standing alone, ordinarily has no probative value
whatever as to the occurrence, or non-occurence [sic], of the event.” Dalton’s Estate v Grand
Trunk W R Co, 350 Mich 479, 485; 87 NW2d 145 (1957). Thus, the party relying on negative
testimony has the burden to

       show the circumstances pertaining to the non-observance, the witness’ activities
       at the time, the focus of his attention, his acuity or sensitivity to the occurrence
       involved, his geographical location, the condition of his faculties, in short, all

                                               -6-
       those physical and mental attributes bearing upon his alertness or attentiveness at
       the time. [Id. at 485-486.]

         Considering defendants’ evidence in the light most favorable to plaintiff, Joseph, 491
Mich at 206, the negative testimony of the various witnesses had no probative value as to
whether the Lorees hit the van. There is no evidence that the witnesses focused their attention on
the accident at the time. Kalmbach assumed that the van hit the motorcycle, but she did not see
the impact because her airbag deployed and obstructed her vision. Melvin Braeutigam saw the
motorcycle pulling up behind him at the traffic light but did not recall seeing any other vehicle
behind him. Viewed in the light most favorable to plaintiff, Melvin’s testimony suggests that he
was not looking behind him when the Chevy pulled up and rear-ended either him or the
motorcycle. Nothing in Lucinda Braeutigam’s testimony indicates that she was in a position to
see whether the motorcycle hit the van, and the Lorees do not recall the details of the accident
that left them with serious injuries. On this record, it cannot be said that defendants’ negative
evidence established that the Lorees did not hit the van while they were on their motorcycle.

        Even if we assume for the sake of argument that defendants met their initial burden to
establish the probative value of their negative evidence, the burden then shifted to plaintiff to
show that a genuine issue of disputed fact did exist. See Smith v Globe Life Ins Co, 460 Mich
446, 455; 597 NW2d 28 (1999). Circumstantial evidence can present a genuine factual issue.
Bergen v Baker, 264 Mich App 376, 387; 691 NW2d 770 (2004). In the present case, plaintiff
relied on the deposition testimony of Melvin Braeutigam regarding seeing in his rear view mirror
a maroon-colored motorcycle with two people on it slowing down behind him before the
collision, feeling the collision jolt his van, observing subsequent damage to the back and left side
of his van as well as the presence on the side of the van of maroon paint the same color as the
motorcycle, and the post-impact location of the motorcycle near the back end of the van and
close to the Lorees. Lucinda gave similar testimony to the post-collision location of the
motorcycle and its riders, as well as to seeing paint on the van the same color as the motorcycle.
In addition, Lucinda testified to her belief that the motorcycle and the Lorees “came up the side,
the driver’s side” of the van. The Lorees both testified to having come to a stop at the traffic
light behind the van before the collision. Plaintiff also included in its brief scanned pictures of
the damaged van. A jury could reasonably infer from this evidence that the motorcycle hit the
van before the motorcyclists separated from it. Thus, plaintiff met its burden to show that a
genuine issue of material fact existed that precluded summary disposition. Accordingly, the trial
court did not err by denying defendants’ motion for summary disposition.

                     B. EMERGENCY MOTION TO AMEND ANSWERS

        Defendants next argue that the trial court erred by denying its emergency motion to
amend its answer to change their admission to paragraph nine of plaintiff’s complaint to a denial.
They contend that the requested amendment would not have prejudiced plaintiff because neither
plaintiff nor the trial court relied on their admission during the course of this proceeding. They
further contend that, even if their emergency motion to amend was unduly delayed, the remedy
was not to deny the motion, but to order defendants to pay the expenses plaintiff incurred
because of the undue delay. Again, we disagree.



                                                -7-
        A party may amend a pleading once as a matter of course if done within the limited
period set forth in MCR 2.118(A)(1), which had long since passed in this instance. Otherwise,
“a party may amend a pleading only by leave of the court or by written consent of the adverse
party.” MCR 2.118(A)(2). “Leave shall be freely given when justice so requires.” Id.

       A motion to amend ordinarily should be granted, and should be denied only for
       the following particularized reasons:

               “[1] undue delay, [2] bad faith or dilatory motive on the part of the
               movant, [3] repeated failure to cure deficiencies by amendments
               previously allowed, [4] undue prejudice to the opposing party by virtue of
               allowance of the amendment, [and 5] futility . . . .” [Weymers v Khera,
               454 Mich 639, 658; 563 NW2d 647 (1997), quoting Ben P Fyke & Sons,
               Inc v Gunter Co, 390 Mich 649, 656; 213 NW2d 134 (1973).]

“Delay, alone, does not warrant denial of a motion to amend. However, a court may deny a
motion to amend if the delay was in bad faith or if the opposing party suffered actual prejudice as
a result.” Weymers, 454 Mich at 659, citing Fyke, 390 Mich at 656-657. “ ‘[P]rejudice’ exists if
the amendment would prevent the opposing party from receiving a fair trial, if for example, the
opposing party would not be able to properly contest the matter raised in the amendment because
important witnesses have died or necessary evidence has been destroyed or lost.” Weymers, 454
Mich at 659.

        The trial court found the motion extremely untimely and found that granting it would
prejudice plaintiff. The court appeared to base its finding of prejudice primarily on the fact of
the motion’s untimeliness. In explaining to the trial court how granting the motion would
prejudice plaintiff, plaintiff’s attorney argued that defendants had acknowledged from the start
“that the Lorees were pushed into” the van, that “[being] pushed into something means to make
physical contact[,]”and that physical contact “is what this case is about.”

        A fair reading of the record leads to the conclusion that neither party appreciated the
significance of defendants’ admission until the trial court brought it up in the July 31, 2017
hearing on defendants’ motion to quash the subpoena for Gessler. Defendants knew, or should
have known, after all the witnesses had been deposed by the end of summer 2016 that there was
no direct, eye-witness evidence that the motorcyclists hit the van, and thus, they should have
moved to amend their answer much earlier than the day of the trial. To the extent that their
failure to realize this and to act accordingly was due to carelessness, the trial court did not abuse
its discretion by denying their motion for leave to amend. Weyers, 454 Mich at 660 (quoting
with approval the observation of Judge John L. Coffey of the United States Court of Appeals for
the Seventh Circuit that the latitude afforded parties in amending their pleadings “ ‘ is not a
license of carelessness or gamesmanship’ ”).6 At the same time, plaintiff’s insinuation that it


6
  Judge Coffey was referring to FR Civ P 15(a), but our Supreme Court has been guided by
federal precedent in the interpretation of analogous rules of civil procedure. See Weymers, 454
Mich at 660 n 27.


                                                -8-
was prejudiced because it somehow had relied on defendants’ admission from the start of the
litigation is unsupported by the record. For at least eight months before defendants filed their
emergency motion to amend, the parties had vigorously disputed whether the Lorees had made
contact with the van without plaintiff having once referred to defendants’ admission to ¶ 9 of its
complaint, alleging “that the Lorees were pushed into” the van. Thus, neither party was attentive
to the import of their pleadings.

        But, in addition to being untimely, defendants’ motion also was not properly noticed and,
arguably, made in bad faith. Whereas plaintiff indicated that it intended to ask the trial court to
take judicial notice of the relevant paragraphs in the complaint and answer, defendants gave no
indication at the July 31, 2017 hearing that they intended to seek leave to amend their answer.
Defendants gave approximately 10 minutes’ notice to plaintiff that they were seeking to amend
their answer. Defendants said they based their motion for leave to amend on information
obtained through discovery. However, what they discovered was the absence of information;
specifically, the absence of an eyewitness to the motorcyclists hitting the van. As discussed
above, negative testimony can have probative value where the witness’s non-observance results
from the witness’s focused attention on the event. As already indicated, such was not the case
here; defendants based their denial on the testimony of people who were not, or were not able to,
pay attention to the collision in order to see exactly what happened. Because defendants based
their proposed amendment on negative evidence without probative value, their proposed denial
would arguably be a bad-faith denial. 7 Given the untimeliness of defendants’ motion and the
lack of probative evidence upon which to base a reversal of their previous admission to the
allegation that the Chevy pushed the Lorees into the van, we cannot say that the trial court
abused its discretion by denying defendants’ motion for leave to amend.

        Even if the trial court did abuse its discretion by denying defendants’ motion for leave to
amend, this Court will not reverse unless the trial court’s decision constituted “an abuse of
discretion that resulted in injustice.” PT Today, Inc, v Comm’r of Office of Fin & Ins Servs, 270
Mich App 110, 142; 715 NW2d 398 (2006). Defendants have not argued that the trial court’s
decision resulted in an injustice. Defendants’ theory was that plaintiff’s evidence was
insufficient to prove its claim that defendants’ insured was involved in the accident. At trial,
defendants’ attorney cross-examined plaintiff’s witnesses vigorously, established the lack of
direct evidence that the motorcyclists hit the van, and urged the jury to consider ¶ 118 of the
answer, which conveyed defendants’ position that their insured was not involved in the
accident.9 Defendants challenged plaintiff’s evidence, but the jury chose to infer from the


7
    A bad-faith denial is a denial without grounds. Black’s Law dictionary (10th ed), p 527.
8
  In ¶ 11 of its complaint, plaintiff alleges that defendants refused to partially reimburse it for no-
fault PIP benefits paid to the Lorees “as a result of injuries sustained in the July 19, 2015,
multiple vehicle accident . . . .” Defendants admit their refusal, but “deny that there were
multiple motor vehicles involved in this accident. Further state that the insured of the defendant
was not involved in the accident as defined under Michigan law.”
9
    The trial court took judicial notice of the entire complaint and answer, not just ¶¶ 8 & 9.


                                                   -9-
evidence presented that the van was involved in the accident with regard to both Lorees. The
record as a whole does not support a finding that the trial court’s decision regarding defendants’
motion for leave to amend should be reversed based on an injustice to defendants.

        Because defendants have not prevailed on either issue in Docket No. 340622, which thus
leaves the jury verdict intact, they are not entitled to reversal of the trial court’s order imposing
case evaluation sanctions, their contingent issue raised in Docket No. 341541.

       Affirmed.



                                                              /s/ Thomas C. Cameron
                                                              /s/ Jane M. Beckering
                                                              /s/ Amy Ronayne Krause




                                                -10-
