1031 LAPEER LLC V RICKY L RICE
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STATE OF MICHIGAN
COURT OF APPEALS
1031 LAPEER L.L.C. and WILLIAM R.
HUNTER,
UNPUBLISHED
August 5, 2010
APPROVED FOR
PUBLICATION
October 7, 2010
9:00 a.m.
Plaintiffs/CounterDefendants/Appellees,
v
No. 290995
Oakland Circuit Court
LC No. 2007-080079-CB
RICKY L. RICE, d/b/a R. L. PRICE
PROPERTIES,
Defendant/CounterPlaintiff/Appellant.
Before: SHAPIRO, P.J., and SAAD and SERVITTO, JJ.
PER CURIAM.
Defendant appeals as of right a trial court order granting partial summary disposition in
plaintiffs’ favor and denying defendant’s motion for summary disposition. Because the trial
court properly found the lease at issue void, and because defendant was not entitled to summary
disposition in his favor, we affirm.
In May 2006, plaintiffs and defendant entered into a lease agreement whereby plaintiffs
would lease a gas station from defendant for a period of ten years. Apparently, the site of the gas
station had been found to be a site of environmental contamination in 1996—a fact known by
defendant but not disclosed to plaintiffs at the time of the lease. Plaintiffs contacted the
Michigan Department of Environmental Quality (MDEQ) in late 2007 and were advised of the
contamination. They thereafter initiated the instant lawsuit, alleging that defendant violated his
statutory duty to inform them of the property’s status as a site of environmental contamination.
Plaintiffs’ specific causes of action included silent fraud, fraudulent misrepresentation, and
breach of lease. Plaintiffs sought damages as well as rescission of the lease.
Plaintiffs moved for summary disposition pursuant to MCR 2.116(C)(10), contending
that the lease at issue was void and that plaintiffs had established the elements of their claims
against defendant, leaving only the issue of damages for trial. Defendant also moved for
summary disposition in his favor asserting, among other things, that plaintiffs failed to exhaust
their administrative remedies under the Michigan Environmental Response Act; that plaintiffs’
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claims were barred by the statute of frauds; and, that plaintiffs did not reasonably rely on any
alleged written or oral representation.
The trial court granted plaintiffs’ motion for partial summary disposition and denied
defendant’s motion for partial summary disposition, ruling:
The first portion of Plaintiffs’ Motion for Summary Disposition based on
MCL 324.20116(1) on the grounds that subject lease for 1031 Lapeer Road was
prohibited because of Defendant’s failure to disclose to Plaintiffs the fact that the
site was contaminated, is granted and the subject lease is determined to be void.
Consequently, Defendant’s Motion for Partial Summary Disposition seeking a
determination of liability under the subject lease is denied, with prejudice.
The second portion of Plaintiffs’ Motion for Summary Disposition
regarding Plaintiffs’ fraud counts is denied, without prejudice.
Plaintiffs’ fraud claims proceeded to trial, where the jury ultimately found in plaintiffs’ favor. A
judgment was thereafter entered in plaintiffs’ favor and against defendant in the amount of
$83,000.00, plus interest and costs to be determined. This appeal followed.
On appeal, defendant challenges the trial court’s order declaring the lease at issue void,
granting plaintiffs’ motion for partial summary disposition and denying defendant’s motion for
summary disposition. We review motions for summary disposition de novo. Ardt v Titan Ins Co,
233 Mich App 685, 688; 593 NW2d 215 (1999). A motion brought pursuant to MCR
2.116(C)(10) tests a claim's factual support. “In reviewing a motion under ... (C)(10) this Court
considers the pleadings, admissions, affidavits, and other relevant documentary evidence of
record in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party to determine whether any genuine
issue of material fact exists to warrant a trial.” Walsh v Taylor, 263 Mich App 618, 621; 689
NW2d 506 (2004). Summary disposition may be granted under MCR 2.116(C)(10) when there
exists no genuine issue of material fact and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter
of law. Steward v Panek, 251 Mich App 546, 555; 652 NW2d 232 (2002). Additionally, we
review de novo issues of statutory interpretation. Universal Underwriters Insurance Group v
Auto Club Ins Association, 256 Mich App 541, 544; 666 NW2d 294 (2003).
On appeal, defendant first asserts that summary disposition in plaintiffs’ favor was
inappropriate, as a failure to disclose to a tenant that property has been determined to be a site of
environmental contamination, as defined in MCL 324.20101(1)(o), did not void the parties’
commercial lease. We disagree.
Part 201 of the Michigan Natural Resources and Environmental Protection Act (NREPA)
was enacted by 1994 PA 451 as part of a repeal and reenactment of the former Michigan
Environmental Response Act, MCL 299.601 et seq. Cairns v City of East Lansing, 275 Mich
App 102, 108; 738 NW2d 246 (2007). Among the express purposes of part 201 of the NREPA
are:
(c) That it is the purpose of this part to provide for appropriate response activity to
eliminate unacceptable risks to public health, safety, or welfare, or to the
environment from environmental contamination at facilities within the state.
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(d) That there is a need for additional administrative and judicial remedies to
supplement existing statutory and common law remedies.
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(h) That this part is intended to provide remedies for facilities posing any threat to
the public health, safety, or welfare, or to the environment, regardless of whether
the release or threat of release of a hazardous substance occurred before or after
October 13, 1982, the effective date of the former environmental response act,
Act No. 307 of the Public Acts of 1982, and for this purpose this part shall be
given retroactive application. However, criminal and civil penalties provided in
this part shall apply to violations of this part that occur after July 1, 1991.
MCL 324.20102
Consistent with those purposes, part 201 provides for certain penalties for violations of specific
provisions within the Act. For example, MCL 324.20107a states that a person who owns or
operates property that he has knowledge is a facility [containing hazardous substances] shall,
among other things, undertake measures that are necessary to prevent exacerbation of the
existing contamination. MCL 324.20107a(2) provides, “[n]otwithstanding any other provision
of this part, a person who violates subsection (1) is liable for response activity costs and natural
resource damages . . .” There is no specified remedy, however, for a violation of MCL
324.20116(1).
MCL 324.20116(1), a component of part 201 of the NREPA, provides:
A person who has knowledge or information or is on notice through a recorded
instrument that a parcel of his or her real property is a facility shall not transfer an
interest in that real property unless he or she provides written notice to the
purchaser or other person to which the property is transferred that the real
property is a facility and discloses the general nature and extent of the release.
“Facility,” for purposes of the above, is defined as:
any area, place, or property where a hazardous substance in excess of the
concentrations which satisfy the requirements of section 20120a(1)(a) or (17) or
the cleanup criteria for unrestricted residential use under part 213 has been
released, deposited, disposed of, or otherwise comes to be located. Facility does
not include any area, place, or property at which response activities have been
completed which satisfy the cleanup criteria for the residential category provided
for in section 20120a(1)(a) and (17) or at which corrective action has been
completed under part 213 which satisfies the cleanup criteria for unrestricted
residential use. MCL 324.20101(o).
Defendant does not dispute that the gas station he leased to plaintiffs is considered a
“facility” under the above definition, or that he leased the premises to plaintiffs without advising
them of its status as a facility contrary to MCL 324.20116(1). Defendant does dispute, however,
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whether a transfer of interest in property in violation of MCL 324.20116(1) necessarily renders
the transfer (here, the lease contract) void.
As previously indicated, there is no remedy specified for a violation of MCL
324.20116(1). But, “[c]ontracts founded on acts prohibited by a statute or contracts in violation
of public policy, are void.” Michelson v Voison, 254 Mich App 691, 694; 658 NW2d 188
(2003). Again, MCL 324.20116(1) provides that if a person has knowledge that his real property
is a facility he “shall not” transfer an interest in that real property unless he or she provides
written notice to the transferee that the real property is a facility. The word “shall” is generally
used to designate a mandatory provision. American Federation of State, County and Mun
Employees, AFL-CIO Michigan Council 25 v Highland Park Bd of Educ, 214 Mich App 182,
186; 542 NW2d 333 (1995). Conversely, then, the term “shall not” may be reasonably construed
as a prohibition. Because defendant was prohibited from transferring any interest in the property
at issue unless he provided plaintiffs with written notice that the property was a facility, and
defendant admittedly failed to provide plaintiffs with such written notice, the contract was
founded on an act prohibited by statute and was thus void.
Moreover, public policy supports finding the contract void.
324.20107a:
Pursuant to MCL
(1) A person who owns or operates property that he or she has knowledge
is a facility shall do all of the following with respect to hazardous substances at
the facility:
(a) Undertake measures as are necessary to prevent exacerbation of the
existing contamination.
(b) Exercise due care by undertaking response activity necessary to
mitigate unacceptable exposure to hazardous substances . . .
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(2) Notwithstanding any other provision of this part, a person who violates
subsection (1) is liable for response activity costs and natural resource damages
attributable to any exacerbation of existing contamination and any fines or
penalties imposed under this part resulting from the violation of subsection (1) . . .
“Operator” is defined at MCL 324.20101(1)(y) as “a person who is in control of or responsible
for the operation of a facility.” Plaintiffs, having run the gas station and car wash located on the
property found to be a facility, are arguably “operators” of the facility.
Given that one who obtains ownership over or becomes an operator of a facility risks
exposure to potentially significant, unanticipated costs and liability, public policy dictates that
enforcement of a contract made without the disclosure mandate found in MCL 324.20116(1)
would be against public policy. “It is well established that the courts of this state will not
enforce, either in law or in equity, a contract which violates a statute or which is contrary to
public policy.” Shapiro v Steinberg, 176 Mich App 683, 687; 440 NW2d 9 (1989). The trial
court appropriately found the lease contract at issue to be void.
Defendant next contends that summary disposition was appropriate in his favor on any
one of the grounds he presented to the court in his counter-motion for summary disposition. We
disagree.
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Defendant presented four distinct grounds to the trial court on which he claimed
summary disposition was appropriate in his favor: plaintiffs’ lack of legal capacity to sue;
plaintiffs’ failure to exhaust their administrative remedies; application of the statute of frauds to
plaintiffs’ claim and the existence of no genuine issue of material fact; and no reasonable
reliance by plaintiffs on any alleged written or oral misrepresentation. We shall address each
ground in turn.
With respect to a lack of legal capacity to sue, defendant asserts that the lease at issue
was signed on May 30, 2007 by defendant and plaintiff William Hunter, Brian Hunter, and Owen
W. O’Berry, Jr. d/b/a 1031 Lapeer LLC. Defendant points out that the lease is not with 1031
Lapeer LLC, a Michigan corporation and, in fact, 1031 Lapeer LLC was not incorporated until
June 1, 2007—after the lease was signed. We would note, however, that the lease identifies the
above named persons “DBA 1031 Lapeer, LLC” as tenants and the lease was signed by the
named parties “d/b/a 1031 Lapeer, LLC.” Furthermore, even if 1031 Lapeer, LLC lacked the
legal capacity to sue, the complaint was not filed solely in the name of 1031 Lapeer LLC.
Instead, William R. Hunter is also a named plaintiff. That being so, it is unclear what impact
defendant would hope the potential dismissal of 1031 Lapeer, LLC as a plaintiff would have.
In any event, defendant has cited no law whatsoever, or even a basic court rule, to
support his position. An appellant may not, in his brief on appeal, simply announce a position or
assert an error and then leave it to this Court to discover and rationalize the basis for his claims,
unravel and elaborate upon his arguments, and search for authority to support his position.
People v Albert Kelly, 231 Mich App 627, 640-641; 588 NW2d 480 (1998). Defendant has thus
abandoned this claim.
Defendant next asserts that summary disposition was appropriate in his favor due to
plaintiffs’ alleged failure to exhaust their administrative remedies. According to defendant,
MCL 324.20135(3)(a) requires that before one may bring a private action against an owner or
operator for injunctive relief, a written notice of intent to sue must be given to the MDEQ and
that, additionally, a cause of action may not be brought if the state is not diligently pursuing
compliance. Defendant contends that because no notice was provided as required by statue and
the State of Michigan is working with defendant toward compliance, plaintiffs’ action is barred.
We disagree.
According to MCL 324.20135:
(1) Except as otherwise provided in this part, a person, including a local unit of
government on behalf of its citizens, whose health or enjoyment of the
environment is or may be adversely affected by a release from a facility or threat
of release from a facility, other than a permitted release or a release in compliance
with applicable federal, state, and local air pollution control laws, by a violation
of this part or a rule promulgated or order issued under this part, or by the failure
of the directors to perform a nondiscretionary act or duty under this part, may
commence a civil action against any of the following:
(a) An owner or operator who is liable under section 20126 for injunctive
relief necessary to prevent irreparable harm to the public health, safety, or
welfare, or the environment from a release or threatened release in relation to that
facility.
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***
(3) An action shall not be filed under subsection (1)(a) or (b) unless all of the
following conditions exist:
(a) The plaintiff has given at least 60 days' notice in writing of the
plaintiff's intent to sue, the basis for the suit, and the relief to be requested to each
of the following:
(i) The department.
(ii) The attorney general.
(iii) The proposed defendants.
(b) The state has not commenced and is not diligently prosecuting an action under
this part or under other appropriate legal authority to obtain injunctive relief concerning
the facility or to require compliance with this part or a rule or an order under this part.
The above statute, known as part 201's “citizens suit” provision (Cairns, 275 Mich App
at 114) clearly governs only those lawsuits brought by a “person, including a local unit of
government on behalf of its citizens, whose health or enjoyment of the environment is or may be
adversely affected by a release from a facility or threat of release from a facility.” Moreover, the
lawsuits governed by the above statute are specified as those against and owner or operator for
injunctive relief. Plaintiffs have not brought suit in the position of citizens whose health or
enjoyment of the environment may be adversely affected by the contamination at issue. Instead,
their lawsuit finds its genesis in the parties’ contract and is based upon fraud and statutory
violations. Plaintiffs sought rescission of the contract as well as damages—not injunctive relief.1
Clearly, then, MCL 324.20135 is inapplicable in this matter.
Next, defendant contends that summary disposition was appropriate in his favor because
the statute of frauds bars plaintiffs’ claims and there is no genuine issue of material fact. The
entirety of defendant’s “argument” on this issue consists of this single, one sentence bare
assertion, supported by no law or fact. Again, a party may not simply announce a position or
assert an error on appeal and leave it to this Court to discover and rationalize the basis for his
claims. Albert Kelly, 231 Mich App at 640-641.
Finally, defendant claims that summary disposition should have been entered in his favor
on plaintiffs’ fraud claims because plaintiffs did not reasonably rely on any alleged written or
oral misrepresentation. According to defendant, because plaintiff had the means to discover all
of the contamination information, and suffered no damages as the result of any alleged
misrepresentation, their fraud claims necessarily fail. We disagree.
To establish actionable fraud, a plaintiff must show that: (1) the defendant made a
material representation; (2) the representation was false; (3) the defendant knew the
representation was false or recklessly made the representation without knowledge of its truth and
1
While plaintiffs did initially seek injunctive relief, the injunction sought was to enjoin
enforcement of the lease.
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as a positive assertion; (4) the defendant made the representation with the intention that the
plaintiff should act upon it; (5) the plaintiff acted in reliance upon the representation; and, (6) the
plaintiff suffered injury. Johnson v Wausau Ins Co, 283 Mich App 636, 643; 769 NW2d 755
(2009). Additionally, “[s]uppression of facts and truths can constitute silent fraud where the
circumstances are such that there exists a legal or equitable duty to disclose. Cleary Trust v
Edward-Marlah Muzyl Trust, 262 Mich App 485, 500; 686 NW2d 770 (2004). Importantly, to
sustain a claim of fraud, the plaintiff must have reasonably relied on the false representation.
Nieves v Bell Industries, Inc, 204 Mich App 459, 464; 517 NW2d 235 (1994). “There can be no
fraud where a person has the means to determine that a representation is not true.” Id.
Here, defendant directs us to several provisions within the parties’ contract that expressly
mention contamination, asserting that such references essentially placed plaintiffs on notice of
existing contamination. Specifically, defendant cites to paragraph (8) of the contract, which
provides that the tenant will not be liable for any acts or omissions of the landlord for his failure
to comply with laws, orders, regulations, or ordinances, including soil contamination
requirements. The paragraph further provides that:
[i]n the event the Landlord’s obligations as to pre-existing contamination
on the property are expanded as a result of future changes in environmental laws
and/or regulations by any governmental agency, it is agreed that Landlord’s
obligations as to the pre-existing contamination on the property will include
Landlord’s obligation to comply with those new governmental laws and
regulations at Landlord’s sole expense.
Defendant also cites to paragraph (14) of the lease, which provides that if any upgrade work is
required for the underground storage tanks, Landlord shall be solely responsible for making and
paying for those upgrade activities. Defendant further directs us to paragraph (33), which states:
. . . in the event any government agency requires cleanup of environmental
contamination which exists on the property at the time of this Lease Agreement
which is the Landlord’s responsibility and the Landlord fails or refuses to pay for
the required cleanup and the Tenant is obligated to pay for the cleanup which is
the Landlord’s responsibility, Landlord and Landlord’s other property or any
partners shall be subject to levy or execution as a result of tenant’s obligation to
pay for the cleanup that is the obligation of landlord to pay.
Defendant also agreed, in paragraph (35) of the lease, that he would indemnify plaintiffs and
hold them harmless from any liability and expenses for pre-existing contamination. Defendant
contends that no fraud can lie where plaintiffs had notice, through the contractual language cited
above, that the site was contaminated, and where plaintiffs otherwise had the means to discover
whether any representation regarding the contamination was true. Given the numerous
references to pre-existing contamination, the contract could be viewed as putting plaintiffs on
notice of pre-existing contamination. Further, because plaintiffs discovered that the site was
contaminated by contacting the MDEQ mere months after the lease was executed, it could be
reasonably argued that plaintiffs could have discovered this information prior to entering into the
lease.
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However, defendant undisputedly had actual notice of existing contamination and did not
unequivocally advise plaintiffs of this fact in a writing that disclosed the general nature and
extent of the contamination as required by MCL 324.20116(1). As stated in M & D, Inc v
McConkey, 231 Mich App 22, 25; 585 NW2d 33 (1998), “[a] misrepresentation need not
necessarily be words alone, but can be shown where the party, if duty-bound to disclose,
intentionally suppresses material facts to create a false impression to the other party.” Whether
defendant intentionally failed to advise plaintiffs of the known contamination was a question of
fact for the jury, as was whether the contract itself reasonably placed plaintiffs on notice that the
site was contaminated. Because defendant had a statutory duty to disclose to plaintiffs the fact
that the site had been found to be contaminated before transferring any interest in the subject
property to them, and did not do so, and because questions of fact existed as to the fraud claims,
the fraud claims properly withstood summary disposition.
Moreover, the fraud issue was submitted to a jury, which found that defendant had, in
fact engaged in fraud and thus awarded plaintiffs damages on the fraud claims. Defendant not
having appealed the jury verdict itself, any error in denying defendant’s motion for summary
disposition on plaintiffs’ fraud claims would be irrelevant because no matter what this Court’s
ruling on the summary disposition issue, the jury verdict would still stand.
As to defendant’s claim with respect to plaintiffs’ damages, we would note that defendant
asserts that no damages were suffered because plaintiffs did not pay any MDEQ response costs.
Plaintiffs have never claimed that they paid MDEQ cleanup costs. Instead, plaintiffs asserted in
their complaint that the damages they suffered due to defendant’s fraud were the over
$200,000.00 they invested in the property, and the facing of potential liability for environmental
cleanup costs. Defendant’s assertion regarding damages, then, is misplaced.
Affirmed. Plaintiffs, as the prevailing parties, may tax costs.
/s/ Douglas B. Shapiro
/s/ Henry William Saad
/s/ Deborah A. Servitto
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