STATE OF MICHIGAN
COURT OF APPEALS
CHARTER TOWNSHIP OF HARING, UNPUBLISHED
March 5, 2015
Plaintiff-Appellee,
v No. 318174 and 318823
Wexford Circuit Court
CITY OF CADILLAC, LC No. 2013-024606-CH
Defendant,
and
DONALD BOERSMA and GLORIA BOERSMA,
Defendants-Appellants.
CHARTER TOWNSHIP OF HARING,
Plaintiff-Appellee,
v No. 318175 and 318821
Wexford Circuit Court
CITY OF CADILLAC, LC No. 2013-024606-CH
Defendant-Appellant,
and
DONALD BOERSMA and GLORIA BOERSMA,
Defendants.
Before: SAAD, P.J., and OWENS and K. F. KELLY, JJ.
PER CURIAM.
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Defendant City of Cadillac1 appeals the trial court’s order that granted summary
disposition to plaintiff Charter Township of Haring2 pursuant to MCR 2.116(I)(2).3 For the
reasons stated below, we affirm.
I. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
This case involves property located in Haring Township. In the early 2000s, it appeared
that population growth near the land would make it more feasible for Cadillac to provide the real
estate with public safety and infrastructure services. Accordingly, Cadillac and Haring
Township signed an agreement on May 5, 2003 pursuant to MCL 124.22,4 which conditionally
transferred jurisdiction over the property from the township to the city, so that the city could
provide the above mentioned services to the land in question. The agreement stated that it would
terminate on January 31, 2053, at which point the property would “for all purposes be within the
jurisdiction of the City.”
However, the contract also included a paragraph on “possible early termination and
reversion” of the contract, which applied only to a specified area of the transferred land (“the
Boersma parcel”).5 In relevant part, the early termination clause states:
5.3 Possible Early Termination and Reversion: The City and Township agree that
special provisions for termination and reversion shall exist on the [Boersma
parcel].
For the [Boersma parcel], City water and/or City sewer services must be provided
no later than 10 years from the effective date of this agreement. In the event that
City water and/or City sewer services are not provided within the 10 year term
provided above, then the real estate described in this paragraph shall be
automatically removed from the terms of this agreement and the jurisdiction for
such real estate shall immediately revert to the Township. [Emphasis in original.]
1
Throughout the opinion, we refer to defendant City of Cadillac as either “Cadillac” or “the
city.”
2
Throughout the opinion, we refer to the plaintiff as either “Haring Township” or “the
township.”
3
Defendants Donald and Gloria Boersma (“the Boersmas”) appeal the same order, and our Court
has consolidated their appeal with Cadillac’s. See Charter Twp of Haring v City of Cadillac,
unpublished order of the Court of Appeals, entered October 1, 2013 (Docket Nos. 318174 and
318175); Charter Twp of Haring v City of Cadillac, unpublished order of the Court of Appeals,
entered November 20, 2013 (Docket Nos. 318174, 318175, 318821 and 318823).
4
MCL 124.22(1) authorizes “two or more local units” of government to “conditionally transfer
property for a period of not more than 50 years for the purpose of an economic development
project” by means of “a written contract agreed to by the affected local units.”
5
The specified area is owned by the Boersmas.
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As such, if Cadillac failed to provide “City water and/or City sewer services” to the
Boersma parcel within ten years of the date of execution of the agreement, the Boersma parcel
would revert to Haring Township.6 The contract does not define “City water and/or City sewer
services” with any specificity. It does, however, note in another section on “municipal services”
that:
1.2 . . . All municipal services, including, without limitations, fire and police
protection; sewer, water and refuse collection services; library, museum and other
cultural facilities and services; snow plowing; road maintenance and repair; and
other municipal facilities and services shall be provided by the City as if the
Transferred Area [which includes the Boersma parcel] were located in the City,
and the Township shall have no obligation to provide such municipal services and
facilities to the Transferred Area or its occupants. [Emphasis added.]
In the years after the parties signed the agreement, Cadillac did not install a sewer
pipeline connecting the Boersma parcel to the city’s wastewater treatment facility. Instead,
Cadillac built sewage pipes and some type of underground, self-contained, sewage-holding
structure on the property.7 The city removes sewage from the holding structure by connecting
the structure to a truck, which collects the sewage and transports it to the city’s wastewater
treatment facility. In its brief on appeal, Cadillac describes this infrastructure and sewage
removal arrangement as “Phase 1 of its wastewater system improvements on the [Boersma
parcel],” and indicates that it intends to install new wastewater pumps on the property in the
future.
Haring Township brought suit against Cadillac on May 6, 2013,8 and alleged, among
other things, that Cadillac breached the contract’s early termination clause when it failed to
install a sewer system on the Boersma parcel that had a direct connection to Cadillac’s
wastewater treatment facility. Cadillac moved for summary disposition, and argued that the
conditions for early termination had not occurred because it provided “sewage services” to the
Boersma parcel. The city noted that the contract only required it to provide “sewage services” to
the Boersma parcel—it did not specify the exact fashion in which those “sewage services” were
to be provided.
6
Though the early termination clause states that the Boersma parcel would “immediately revert”
to Haring Township if Cadillac failed to provide “City water and/or City sewer services” to the
parcel within ten years of the date of execution of the agreement, the township was clearly
justified in initiating this litigation to regain jurisdiction over the Boersma parcel, because the
parties do not agree on whether the events specified in the early termination clause have taken
place.
7
The city describes the installation as a “wet well structure for a submersible pump station,”
while the township describes it as a concrete containment vessel, suitable for future use as a
pump station.
8
Haring Township joined the Boersmas as necessary party defendants. On appeal, the Boersmas
submitted a joint brief with Cadillac.
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In a thorough, written opinion, the trial court rejected Cadillac’s motion, and determined
that the installation on the Boersma parcel was not a “sewer system” as contemplated by the
contract or by any common understanding of that term. The court therefore granted Haring
Township summary disposition pursuant to MCR 2.116(I)(2). On appeal, Cadillac makes the
same arguments as it did at the trial court, and stresses that the trial court did not interpret the
contract according to its plain and unambiguous language. Haring Township also makes the
same arguments as it did before the trial court, and asks us to affirm the court’s holding.
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
A trial court’s ruling on a motion for summary disposition is reviewed de novo, and the
evidence is viewed in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party. Joliet v Pitoniak, 475
Mich 30, 35; 715 NW2d 60 (2006). Issues that involve the proper interpretation of a contract are
questions of law, and are also reviewed de novo. In re Egbert R. Smith Trust, 480 Mich 19, 24;
745 NW2d 754 (2008).
III. ANALYSIS
When a court interprets a contract, its “primary task” is to “give effect to the parties’
intention at the time they entered into the contract.” Miller-Davis Co v Ahrens Construction, Inc,
495 Mich 161, 174; 848 NW2d 95 (2014). “We determine the parties’ intent by examining the
language of the contract according to its plain and ordinary meaning.” Id. “[C]ontractual terms
must be construed in context and in accordance with their commonly used meanings.” Hastings
Mut Ins Co v Safety King, Inc, 286 Mich App 287, 294; 778 NW2d 275 (2009). “Courts may
consult dictionary definitions to ascertain the plain and ordinary meaning of terms undefined in
an agreement.” Holland v Trinity Health Care Corp, 287 Mich App 524, 527–528; 791 NW2d
724 (2010). A contract is to be construed as a whole, and all its parts are to be harmonized so far
as reasonably possible. Comerica Bank v Cohen, 291 Mich App 40, 46; 805 NW2d 544 (2010).
Here, as noted, the early termination clause specified that jurisdiction over the Boersma
parcel would “immediately revert” to Haring Township if Cadillac failed to provide the Boersma
parcel with “City water and/or City sewer services” within ten years of the agreement. Neither
the early termination clause nor the wider contract define “City sewer services.” As such, it is
appropriate to consult a dictionary definition of “sewer services” to ascertain the “plain and
ordinary meaning” of the term as used in the agreement. Holland, 287 Mich App at 527–528.
A “sewer” is defined as “an artificial conduit, usually underground, for carrying off waste
water and refuse, as in a town or city.” Webster’s Random House Unabridged Dictionary
(1998). “Service” is defined as “an act of helpful activity; help; aid,” or, alternatively, as “the
supplying or supplier of utilities or commodities, as water, electricity, or gas, required or
demanded by the public.” Id. The presence of the modifier “City” in “City sewer services”
indicates that the agreement intends for: (1) Cadillac to provide the sewer services; and (2) the
sewer services provided to be similar to those which Cadillac provides to other properties within
its jurisdiction.
Cadillac argues that it provided “sewer services” to the Boersma parcel by building the
containment structure and hauling away the collected sewage via truck for treatment at its
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wastewater treatment facility, and stresses that the agreement does not obligate it to provide
“sewer services” in any particular fashion.9 However, this reading of “City sewer services”
places too much emphasis on “services” and ignores the other two terms in the phrase: “sewer”
and “City.”
The infrastructure Cadillac installed on the Boersma parcel merely collects sewage in a
holding structure, and leaves the sewage on the property. It does not “carry[] off waste water
and refuse” to another location—the dictionary definition of what a “sewer” does. Webster’s
Random House Unabridged Dictionary (1998). And the fact that Cadillac planned to upgrade
the sewage infrastructure on the Boersma parcel militates against finding that the existing
infrastructure satisfies the mandates of the early termination clause, because it indicates that
Cadillac believes the existing infrastructure to be inadequate in some way—and perhaps not the
“sewer” contemplated by the contract.
Moreover, and dispositively, Cadillac’s reading of the agreement ignores the term “City,”
which modifies “sewer services.” Again, paragraph 1.2 of the contract10 reads:
1.2 . . . All municipal services, including, without limitations, fire and police
protection; sewer, water and refuse collection services; library, museum and other
cultural facilities and services; snow plowing; road maintenance and repair; and
other municipal facilities and services shall be provided by the City as if the
Transferred Area [which includes the Boersma parcel] were located in the City,
and the Township shall have no obligation to provide such municipal services and
facilities to the Transferred Area or its occupants. [Emphasis added.]
9
To support its contention that sewage-removal-by-truck is a “sewer service” under the contract,
Cadillac points to a section of the Natural Resources Environmental Protection Act, MCL
324.4101(h), which defines “sewerage system” as:
a system of pipes and structures including pipes, channels, conduits, manholes,
pumping stations, sewage or waste treatment works, diversion and regulatory
devices, outfall structures, and appurtenances, collectively or severally, actually
used or intended for use by the public for the purpose of collecting, conveying,
transporting, treating, or otherwise handling sanitary sewage or other industrial
liquid wastes that are capable of adversely affecting the public health.
Cadillac unconvincingly argues that, under the NREPA, “the key component of a sewerage
system is not the method of transmission, but the underlying objective: ‘collecting, conveying,
transporting, treating, or otherwise handling sanitary sewage.’” As the trial court correctly
noted, in the context of the NREPA, this definition simply lists different components of which a
“sewerage system” can be comprised and is not relevant to the interpretation of the contract at
issue in this case.
10
As noted, a contract is to be construed as a whole, and all its parts are to be harmonized so far
as reasonably possible. Comerica Bank, 291 Mich App at 46.
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The phrase “municipal services . . . shall be provided by the City as if the Transferred
Area were located in the City” belies Cadillac’s argument that the contract (and the early
termination clause) did not require the city to provide a certain kind of “sewer services” to the
Boersma parcel. The agreement required Cadillac to provide the real estate with “City sewer
services”—i.e., the sort of sewer services provided by Cadillac to other properties within its
jurisdiction.
As Haring Township notes, the “sewer services” Cadillac provides the Boersma parcel
are quite different (and of lower quality) than those it provides to most other properties within its
jurisdiction. The Boersma parcel’s sewage is transported off the property by truck—unlike all
other properties in Cadillac serviced by the city, which possess sewer pipes that remove sewage
from the property and that are linked to the wastewater treatment plant.11 As such, Cadillac did
not provide “City sewer services” to the Boersma parcel, in that the parcel did not receive “sewer
services” in the fashion that Cadillac normally provides them, as required by paragraph 1.2 of the
agreement.
Accordingly, Cadillac did not comply with the mandates of the early termination clause,
and the Boersma parcel “immediately revert[ed]” to Haring Township as a result. The trial court
correctly granted Haring Township summary disposition pursuant to MCR 2.116(I)(2).
Affirmed.
/s/ Henry William Saad
/s/ Donald S. Owens
/s/ Kirsten Frank Kelly
11
In its reply brief, Cadillac notes that its wastewater treatment plant accepts “hauled waste from
destinations that originate from within the [C]ity.” However, Cadillac does not state that it
provides septic and/or waste removal via truck to any properties within its jurisdiction—except
the Boersma parcel. Accordingly, as Haring Township notes, the “sewer services” provided to
the Boersma parcel are unlike the “sewer services” provided by Cadillac to any other property
within the city’s jurisdiction. The sewer services provided by the city to all other properties
within its jurisdiction are those stressed by Haring Township (and mentioned by Cadillac): sewer
pipes that remove sewage from a property, and that are linked to Cadillac’s wastewater treatment
plant.
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