Re-Drawing the Line on Certified Questions: The Michigan Supreme Court’s Clarification in In re Certified Question (Beaubien v. Trivedi)

Re-Drawing the Line on Certified Questions:
The Michigan Supreme Court’s Clarification in In re Certified Question (Beaubien v. Trivedi)

Introduction

On 3 July 2025, the Michigan Supreme Court declined to answer a certified question from the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Michigan regarding the constitutionality of Michigan’s statutory cap on noneconomic damages in medical-malpractice cases (MCL 600.1483). Although at first blush a non-answer may appear anticlimactic, Chief Justice Megan K. Cavanagh’s concurring opinion delivers a robust statement on when—and when not—the certified-question mechanism under MCR 7.308(A)(2)(a) may be invoked.

The underlying federal suit, Beaubien v. Trivedi, pits the Estate of Craig A. Beaubien against oncologist Dr. Charu Trivedi and the Toledo Clinic Cancer Centers for alleged malpractice. Plaintiff sought damages exceeding the statutory cap and challenged the cap’s validity under the Michigan Constitution (jury-trial right, equal protection, and separation-of-powers). Finding the constitutional status “unsettled,” the district court certified the question to the state high court. The Michigan Supreme Court’s refusal to entertain the question, grounded in the view that ample controlling precedent already exists, effectively re-sets the procedural boundaries for future certifications.

Summary of the Judgment

  • Disposition: Request to answer certified question denied.
  • Core Holding: Certification is improper where a “controlling precedent” of the Michigan Supreme Court already governs the issue; federal and lower state courts must apply that precedent rather than seek re-examination through certification.
  • Key Authority Relied Upon: Phillips v. Mirac, Inc., 470 Mich 415 (2004), upholding analogous damages caps against identical constitutional attacks.
  • Concurring Opinion (Cavanagh, C.J.): Explains that the certified question is conclusively controlled by Phillips and a line of Court of Appeals cases; the Michigan certification rule is designed to address unsettled issues, not to provide an alternative avenue for overturning precedent.
  • Separate Statement: Justice Bernstein would have granted oral argument and answered the question.

Analysis

1. Precedents Cited

  • Phillips v. Mirac, Inc. (2004) – Michigan Supreme Court upheld a damages cap in motor-vehicle leasing; addressed identical jury-trial and equal-protection arguments. It is deemed “controlling precedent” under the certification rule.
  • Zdrojewski v. Murphy (2002); Wiley v. Henry Ford Cottage Hosp. (2003); Jenkins v. Patel (On Remand) (2004) – Court of Appeals decisions applying Phillips (or its Court of Appeals antecedent) specifically to MCL 600.1483.
  • Andary v. USAA Cas. Ins. Co. (2023) – Re-affirmed Phillips equal-protection methodology.
  • Federal PersuadersSmith v. Botsford Gen. Hosp. (6th Cir. 2005) and In re Nat’l Prescription Opiate Litig. (6th Cir. 2023) illustrating the parallel federal approach to certification and application of state precedent.
  • Historical Michigan AuthoritiesWeil v. Longyear (1933); Leary v. Fisher (1929) et al. These earlier cases stand for jury primacy in assessing damages but were distinguished because they did not involve statutory caps.

2. Legal Reasoning

Chief Justice Cavanagh’s concurrence begins with the text of MCR 7.308(A)(2)(a), which permits certification only when the question “is not controlled by Michigan Supreme Court precedent.” She then constructs a syllogism:

  1. Phillips definitively ruled that damages caps of the sort at issue do not violate the Michigan Constitution.
  2. The certified question in Beaubien is materially indistinguishable from the issue resolved in Phillips.
  3. Therefore, the question is controlled by precedent, and certification fails at the threshold.

The concurrence bolsters the point by citing the Court of Appeals cases faithfully applying Phillips, and by noting federal diversity courts’ duty, under Erie and West v. AT&T, to follow such state precedent. The opinion also emphasizes that certification is not a vehicle to attack existing precedent; any change must proceed through direct appeals in the state system.

3. Impact of the Judgment

  • Procedural Gatekeeping Strengthened. Federal and sister-state courts will face a higher hurdle when attempting to certify questions already answered by Phillips or similarly authoritative decisions.
  • Damages Cap Stability. By refusing to revisit Phillips, the Court preserves the constitutional validity of MCL 600.1483, thus maintaining predictability for insurers, healthcare providers, and claimants.
  • Strategic Litigation Realignment. Plaintiffs seeking to overturn the cap must now pursue state-court litigation aimed at dislodging Phillips directly rather than seeking a federal end-run via certification.
  • Judicial Economy. The decision reinforces efficient allocation of the Court’s docket, limiting advisory opinions to genuinely unsettled questions.
  • Separation of Powers. The opinion implicitly underscores the Legislature’s role in establishing policy judgments (like cost-containment through caps) absent a clear constitutional violation.

Complex Concepts Simplified

  • Certified Question. A formal request from a lower or non-Michigan court asking the Michigan Supreme Court to answer a discrete question of state law that will be determinative of a pending case.
  • MCR 7.308(A)(2)(a). The Michigan Court Rule governing certification; it permits questions only when no controlling Michigan Supreme Court precedent exists.
  • Controlling Precedent. A prior decision from the Michigan Supreme Court that squarely resolves the legal issue; lower courts are bound to follow it unless and until the Supreme Court overrules it.
  • Rational-Basis Review. The most deferential constitutional test; the statute need only be reasonably related to a legitimate governmental interest.
  • Noneconomic Damages Cap. A statutory ceiling on amounts that plaintiffs can recover for intangible injuries such as pain and suffering.

Conclusion

The Michigan Supreme Court’s refusal to answer the certified question in In re Certified Question (Beaubien v. Trivedi) is less a retreat and more a reaffirmation of judicial boundaries. By declaring that the matter is already settled by Phillips v. Mirac and its progeny, the Court clarifies that certification is a tool for resolving uncertainty, not for revisiting settled law. The upshot is twofold: (i) the statutory cap on noneconomic damages in medical-malpractice actions remains constitutionally intact, and (ii) litigants and courts alike are reminded that the path to changing Michigan law runs through the ordinary appellate process—not through an expanded use of certified questions. In the broader landscape, the decision strengthens doctrinal clarity, conserves judicial resources, and signals judicial deference to legislative policy choices unless a crystal-clear constitutional violation is shown.

Case Details

Year: 2025
Court: Supreme Court of Michigan

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