CATASTROPHIC CLAIMS COVERAGE DENIED WHERE INSURER FAILED TO PROVE IT PAID PREMIUMS TO ITS REINSURER FOR THE ALLEGEDLY COVERED VEHICLE

A court granted summary judgment to the Michigan Catastrophic Claims Association, a reinsurer for statutorily mandated no-fault personal injury protection benefits, where the plaintiff, an insurer authorized to write automobile insurance and member of the Association, failed to present evidence that it had paid premiums to the Association. The court therefore declined to address what it considered to be a question of first impression: whether the Association’s obligation to reimburse its member-insurers for no-fault personal injury protection benefits paid in excess of the statutory threshold applied when the insurer’s policy requires its insureds to share financial responsibility for the claim. The Association argued that under Michigan’s no-fault statute, failure to pay a premium to the Association disqualifies the member-insurer from receiving indemnification. Examining the record, the court concluded that the insurer could not establish entitlement to indemnification as it had not provided admissible evidentiary support that it paid the Association a premium on the vehicle involved in the underlying accident. Old Republic Insurance Co. v. Michigan Catastrophic Claims Association, Case No. 08-12522 (USDC E.D. Mich. Sept. 29, 2009).

This post written by Brian Perryman.

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