STATE OF MICHIGAN
COURT OF APPEALS
CARO TRANS OPPORTUNITIES LLC, UNPUBLISHED
June 14, 2018
Plaintiff-Appellant,
v No. 337074
Tuscola Circuit Court
MOBILE MEDICAL RESPONSE, INC., LC No. 15-029087-CK
Defendant-Appellee.
Before: GLEICHER, P.J., and BOONSTRA and TUKEL, JJ.
GLEICHER, J. (dissenting).
Two parties signed a lease. Each maintains that the other breached a provision of the
lease. Both sought summary disposition, insisting that the other committed the first breach. The
majority holds that one party, plaintiff Caro Trans Opportunities LLC, breached first because its
conduct “obstructed, interfered with, and substantially failed to provide . . . the beneficial use of
the leasehold.” This conclusion incorporates two intrinsically factual determinations: that Caro
Trans committed the initial transgression and that its breach qualified as substantial. Finding
facts is forbidden in summary disposition analysis. Because this case is replete with genuine
issues of material fact, I respectfully dissent.
I
Caro Trans agreed to build out premises for Mobile Medical Response, Inc. (MMR) to
use as an ambulance facility. As consideration for the build-out, Caro Trans agreed to rent the
premises to MMR for five years at a base rate of $2,822.67 per month. “As additional
consideration,” the 2015 lease provides, MMR “is conveying by warranty deed” a separate piece
of property on Caro Road. The conveyance resulted in a rent credit of $1,083.33 per month,
lowering the monthly base rent to $1,739.34. The specific language of this provision states:
5b. MMR Rent Credit. As additional consideration for this lease agreement,
Tenant is conveying by warranty deed, property located at 1162 N. Caro Rd,
Caro, MI (“Conveyed Property”) to Landlord. The parties agree that the
Conveyed Property is deemed to have a fair market value of $65,000 and that
Tenant shall receive a rent credit of $1,083.33 per month during the term of the
lease until the credit has been fully expended after 60 months. In the event of a
default, abandonment or termination of the lease by Tenant, there will be no
cash value rebated to Tenant for any unused portion of the rent credit.
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Closing costs for revenue stamps/transfer taxes and title insurance policy in the
name of Landlord shall be paid by Tenant. [Emphasis added.]
Paragraph 14 of the lease provides, “The Tenant’s execution of this Lease shall constitute an
acknowledgement by Tenant that the Premises are then in acceptable condition.”1
The parties agree that MMR moved in on a date “early in August.” Before moving in,
MMR did not convey the Caro Road property. Nor did it convey the property after embarking
on its tenancy. On August 28, 2015, the Tuscola County building inspector issued a certificate
of occupancy for the premises. He agreed at his deposition that on that date, the premises were
“good to go and it could be occupied.” MMR paid the first month’s rent on September 11, 2015,
and deducted the rent credit for the Caro Road property. But it still did not convey the Caro
Road property.
Before the certificate of occupancy was issued but after MMR had moved in, MMR
began to complain about defects on the premises—a leaky roof, a defective garage door, faulty
breakers, a leaky water heater line, and improper septic system drainage. Ultimately these
complaints and others led the building inspector to revoke the certificate of occupancy on
September 15. By then, MMR had occupied the premises for approximately six weeks.
Caro Trans made repairs to the building and the inspector reissued the certificate of
occupancy two weeks later, on October 1, 2015. MMR did not move back into the building and
did not transfer the Caro Road property. Instead, it unilaterally rescinded the lease.
Caro Trans filed this action asserting breach of contract and equitable claims. Following
discovery, both parties moved for summary disposition, claiming the other had committed the
first breach. The circuit court found that Caro Trans had materially breached the lease and had
“unclean hands,” thereby barring it from enforcing the provision of the lease requiring a transfer
of the Caro Road property.
II
According to the majority, Caro Trans committed the first breach of the lease, which
justified MMR’s rescission and its unilateral termination of its contractual obligations. In
reaching this conclusion, the majority specifically acknowledges—and relies on—two legal
1
This case arises from the 2015 lease, not the 2014 lease. The majority finds significance in the
fact that the 2014 lease contained the same paragraph, but Caro Trans never sued to enforce it.
The parties mutually decided that Caro Trans would build out and rent a different structure. The
majority has not explained why Caro Trans’ decision to forbear legal enforcement of a provision
in a contract that the parties agreeably invalidated has any relevance. I know of no legal
principle equating forbearance from suit under one contract with a waiver of a subsequent breach
under another, and the majority has not proposed one. And in any case, our Supreme Court has
firmly rejected such a notion: “Mere forbearance does not of itself constitute a waiver.” Singer v
Hoffman Cake Co, 281 Mich 371, 374; 275 NW 177 (1937).
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principles: (1) unless a time is stated in the contract, a reasonable time for performance is
implied, and (2) a party’s substantial breach of a contractual obligation may warrant rescission.
Both principles guide an analysis of “who breached first,” the central question in this case. Both
turn on factual determinations that must be made by a jury, and not on summary disposition. 2
The first principle governs our interpretation of the lease paragraph concerning transfer of
the Caro Road property—“As additional consideration for this lease agreement, Tenant is
conveying by warranty deed, property located at 1162 N. Caro Rd, Caro, MI . . . to Landlord.”
The parties dispute whether this language required MMR to transfer the property at the time the
lease was signed, or at some later point. The majority correctly recites that when a contract is
silent as to the time of a term’s performance, the law presumes that the parties intended a
reasonable time. This bedrock principle of contract law is well established in Michigan’s
jurisprudence. Our Supreme Court first acknowledged it in 1863: “And when no time is
specified for the performance of such act or contract in the agreement itself, the law steps in and
requires it to be performed within a reasonable time.” Byram v Gordon, 11 Mich 531, 534-535
(1863). Almost 100 years later, the Supreme Court reaffirmed the principle: “[W]hen a contract
is silent as to time of performance or payment, absent any expression of a contrary intent, the law
will presume a reasonable time.” Duke v Miller, 355 Mich 540, 543; 94 NW2d 819 (1959).
Equally well established is that determining a “reasonable time” inherently involves
finding facts. As a general proposition, the “reasonableness” of a party’s conduct presents a jury
question. That principal governs “reasonable time” judgments in contract cases. Justice
Campbell highlighted the factually intense nature of the inquiry in 1868:
When a contract is to be performed within a reasonable time, the law implies that
the parties contract in view of all the pertinent facts that may be mutually known
to them, and it requires them to exercise such reasonable diligence as under all
then and subsequently existing circumstances might be fairly expected. When a
court or jury is called upon to decide whether they have complied with what
might have been reasonably expected, there must be proof of such facts as will
show what ought to have been done. [Stange v Wilson, 17 Mich 342, 348 (1868).]
Nothing has changed in the interim. “What constitutes a ‘reasonable time’ under the terms and
circumstances of a contract is a question of fact.” Walter Toebe & Co v Dep’t of State
Highways, 144 Mich App 21, 31; 373 NW2d 233 (1985). See also Justice Young’s concurring
opinion in Jackson v Green Estate, 484 Mich 209, 217; 771 NW2d 675 (2009), which involved,
analogously, the time for repayment of a loan under a contract, also governed by a “reasonable
time” standard: “Determining what constitutes a reasonable amount of time to request payment
of a loan is necessarily a factual question properly decided by the jury.” Id. (emphasis added). 3
2
Both parties demanded a jury trial.
3
The majority mentions without further elucidation that both parties requested summary
disposition, and that neither contends that a fact question exists. This means that when
evaluating each motion, we construe the facts and reasonable inferences in the light most
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The majority and I agree that MMR was required to transfer the Caro Road property to
Caro Trans within a reasonable time after signing the lease. But how much time was reasonable?
Should the transfer have occurred on signing? The word “is” in the conveyance sentence would
seem to point in that direction. Or does that sentence mean that the transfer was to occur at the
moment of initial occupancy? Perhaps a reasonable time was when MMR made its first
discounted rent payment. MMR’s deduction of the rent credit supports an argument that the land
transfer should have been made by then, at the latest. The point is that the timing of MMR’s
duty to transfer the property revolves around the concept of reasonableness, and reasonableness
determinations are inherently fact specific. Here, the facts suggest several points in time at
which the property transfer would have been reasonable.
The majority denies that it has engaged in fact-finding, claiming that “plaintiff presented
no evidence that would allow reasonable minds to differ about whether defendant was required
to convey the property before plaintiff’s breach.” But summary disposition is appropriate only
when the evidence is so one-sided that the moving party must prevail as a matter of law. This is
far from such a case. Viewed in the light most favorable to Caro Trans, it conveyed habitable
premises that MMR occupied for six weeks, paying a reduced rental price for property that it
failed to transfer. Sometime during those six weeks, I suggest, it would have been reasonable for
MMR to convey the warranty deed, as it had promised to do in exchange “for the lease
agreement.” The majority ignores this rational view of the evidence. Its decision inherently and
improperly encapsulates findings of fact that (1) Caro materially breached the contract, despite
the certificate of occupancy that had been issued before MMR took possession, (2) the breach
was material, despite that the conditions were rectified in short order, and (3) Caro’s breach
occurred before the “reasonable time” afforded MMR for performance. The majority’s
unwillingness to own up to its fact-finding does not erase the portions of the record the majority
finds inconvenient. Determining a reasonable time for MMR’s performance under the lease is
favorable to the nonmoving party, crediting that party’s evidence without weighing it. This is
not a semantic exercise, but a key component of our role. Had the parties truly agreed that no
fact questions existed, they would have so stipulated. MCR 2.116(A). See also BF Goodrich Co
v US Filter Corp, 245 F3d 587, 593 (CA 6, 2001):
It was not necessary for the district court to resolve the case at summary judgment
solely because the parties filed cross-motions for summary judgment and
presented a Joint Statement of Undisputed Material Facts. When parties file
cross-motions for summary judgment, “the making of such inherently
contradictory claims does not constitute an agreement that if one is rejected the
other is necessarily justified or that the losing party waives judicial consideration
and determination whether genuine issues of material fact exist.” 10A [Wright,
Miller & Kane, Federal Practice & Procedure, § 2720 (3d ed, 1998).] A trial
court may conclude, when reviewing the undisputed material facts agreed upon by
the parties and drawing all inferences, in turn, for the non-moving party, that a
genuine issue exists as to those material facts, in which case the court is not
permitted to resolve the matter, but rather, must allow the case to proceed to trial.
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critical to the rest of the case, because MMR’s defense rests on the argument that Caro Trans
breached first. In other words, MMR excuses its failure to abide by paragraph 5b of the lease on
the ground that Caro Trans’s initial breach excused MMR’s nonperformance.
Sitting as jurors, the majority finds that Caro Trans committed the first breach, positing,
“The evidence presented to the trial court established that upon taking possession of the property,
[MMR] discovered serious defects, including roof leaks, electrical hazards, and a malfunctioning
toilet and septic system.” I respectfully disagree that the evidence “established” this proposition,
or that these defects were substantial as a matter of law. The record facts conflict regarding
when MMR discovered the defects and whether those defects rendered further performance
under the lease impossible. And whether the existence of the defects preceded a “reasonable
time” for transfer of the Caro Road property is a material and disputed fact.
The “first substantial breach” rule provides, “He who commits the first substantial breach
of a contract cannot maintain an action against the other contracting party for a subsequent
failure on his part to perform.” McCarty v Mercury Metalcraft Co, 372 Mich 567, 573; 127
NW2d 340 (1964) (quotation marks and citation omitted). A “substantial breach” is one that
“effect[s] such a change in essential operative elements of the contract that further performance
by the other party is thereby ineffective or impossible, such as the causing of a complete failure
of consideration or the prevention of further performance by the other party.” Id. at 574
(citations omitted). But a partial failure to comply with the terms of a contract is not necessarily
a substantial breach. Rosenthal v Triangle Dev Co, 261 Mich 462, 463; 246 NW 182 (1933).
And whether a substantial breach changes the “essential operative elements of the contract”
thereby making performance impossible is question for a fact-finder. Baith v Knapp-Stiles, Inc,
380 Mich 119, 126-127; 156 NW2d 575 (1968) (quotation marks and citation omitted). The
federal Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit has observed, “Michigan case law indicates that
the determination of which breaches are ‘substantial’ is inextricably tied to the particular facts of
the case.” Chrysler Int’l Corp v Cherokee Export Co, 134 F3d 738, 742 (CA 6, 1998).
Did Caro Trans substantially breach the lease? Answering this question requires fact-
finding. As a starting point, the record conflicts as to whether the defects MMR claimed were
actually substantial. Given that the defects were rapidly repaired and a new certificate of
occupancy issued within two weeks after MMR moved out, it is at least arguable that the defects
were not substantial. Certainly Caro Trans has the right to argue to a jury that the defects
identified by MMR did not render MMR’s performance under the contract “ineffective or
impossible.” McCarty, 372 Mich at 574. Although the majority claims that “upon taking
possession of the premises” MMR discovered significant defects rendering the building
uninhabitable, the record simply does not support his claim. The first certificate of occupancy
was issued on August 28, at least two weeks after MMR moved in. Two weeks after that, MMR
made a rent payment. These facts establish a material question as to when Caro Trans
breached—on delivery of the premises, or later, by failing to timely repair once defects were
brought to its attention. The same facts give rise to an inference (and therefore a material
question) regarding whether the defects were substantial.
And what about the lease provision stating, “The Tenant’s execution of this Lease shall
constitute an acknowledgement by Tenant that the Premises are then in acceptable condition”?
Does the fact that MMR signed the lease mean that when it took possession, the premises were in
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habitable condition? If so, the breach that followed involved a failure to repair. In that
circumstance, the law assumes that the lessor would have a reasonable time to remedy any
defects. See Karpp v Royer, 362 Mich 64, 68; 106 NW2d 244 (1960).
Whether the lease was breached, by whom and when, are subject to reasonable debate in
this case. “[I]f reasonable minds could disagree about the conclusions to be drawn from the
facts, a question for the factfinder exists.” Henderson v State Farm Fire & Cas Co, 460 Mich
348, 353; 596 NW2d 190 (1999). A judge evaluating summary disposition is not “to weigh the
evidence and determine the truth of the matter but to determine whether there is a genuine issue
for trial.” Anderson v Liberty Lobby, Inc, 477 US 242, 249; 106 S Ct 2505; 92 L Ed 2d 202
(1986). In deciding which breaches could have been remedied and which could not, and in
determining whether a breach was substantial, the majority has usurped the fact-finder’s role. I
would reverse and remand for a trial.
/s/ Elizabeth L. Gleicher
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