This case requires us to reconsider the issue whether a building contractor can be liable under § 3 of the Michigan Consumer Protection Act.1 Although the Legislature apparently intended liability under the act to extend to individuals for their “conduct,” a building contractor’s construction or renovation of a house is regulated by the Occupational Code,2 so the remedy provisions in the MCPA3 should not apply. Smith v Globe Life Ins Co.4 Nevertheless, our decision in Forton v Laszar5 has already applied Smith to building contractors and found that the act of building a house does not fit within the MCPA’s exemption provision. As a result, and in accordance with MCR 7.215(J)(2), we disagree with our earlier decision in Forton and follow it only because we are required to do so by MCR 7.215(J)(1). We declare a conflict with Forton, and, if we were not bound by this precedent, we would hold that the MCPA does not apply to the performance of residential construction, renovation, or repair by licensed residential builders. MCR 7.215(J)(2).
I
Third-party plaintiffs Steven and Janine Dailey entered into an agreement with Hartman & Eichhorn Building Company, Inc. (HEBC), to renovate their house located in West Bloomfield. The contract provided for a total amount to be paid of $166,041, with an *548initial down payment and various draws as construction proceeded. Defendant Hartman signed the contract on behalf of HEBC.
The Daileys became dissatisfied with the quality of the work performed by HEBC and withheld a portion of the money due under the contract, demanding that various deficiencies be corrected. Plaintiffs allege that HEBC refused to complete the project after plaintiffs refused payment.
HEBC filed a complaint against the Daileys alleging breach of contract and unjust enrichment, and seeking foreclosure on a construction lien. The Daileys filed a counter-complaint for breach of contract, negligence, and slander of title against HEBC, and also claims of fraudulent misrepresentation, violation of the MCPA, and violation of the builders’ trust fund act6 against both HEBC and defendant Hartman in his individual capacity. Thereafter, the trial court granted summary disposition on the claims against Hartman individually on the basis that there was no genuine issue of material fact that Hartman could not bear any individual liability. Specifically, the trial court held as follows:
Hartman argues he was not a party to the Agreement. Hartman claims that the Daileys were dealing with him exclusively in his capacity as an officer and agent of HEBC. Therefore, there is no basis for imposing liability upon him individually.
This Court agrees. The Court finds there is no genuine issue of material fact that Hartman cannot bear any individual liability.
This Court thereafter granted the Daileys’ application for leave to appeal. The only issue before this Court is the dismissal of the claims against Hartman in his individual capacity. We reverse.
*549II
The Daileys first argue that the trial court erred by dismissing the fraud claim against Hartman. Although the trial court stated that there is no genuine issue of material fact, it appears to this Court that the trial court was concluding that there was no genuine issue of material fact that Hartman was acting only in his capacity as an officer and agent of the corporation. Further, it appears that the trial court accepted, without indicating any authority for its conclusion, the argument that an agent cannot be liable for his tortious conduct if that conduct was done in the capacity as an agent of the corporation. But as this Court observed in Warren Tool Co v Stephenson,7 an agent may be held liable for those torts in which the agent participated.
It is a familiar principle that the agents and officers of a corporation are liable for torts which they personally commit, even though in doing so they act for the corporation, and even though the corporation is also liable for the tort. Zaino v. North Woodward, Construction Company [355 Mich 425, 429; 95 NW2d 33 (1959)] (fraudulent representations); Allen v. Morris Building Company [360 Mich 214, 218; 103 NW2d 491 (1960)] (willful change in natural flowage of water); Wines v. Crosby & Co. [169 Mich 210, 214; 135 NW 96 (1912)] (active promotion and sale of a compound known to be dangerous); Bush v. Hayes [286 Mich 546, 549; 282 NW 239 (1938)] (conversion); Hempfling v. Burr [59 Mich 294, 295; 26 NW 496 (1886)] (fraud). [Id.]
See also People v Brown,8 and Joy Management Co v Detroit.9
*550In sum, it does not appear from the trial court’s opinion that the court was basing its conclusion upon a determination that there was insufficient factual support of the Daileys’ fraud claim. Rather, it appears that the trial court’s decision was based solely on the incorrect legal conclusion that Hartman could not be held individually liable for tortious acts committed in the course of his employment by the corporation. Accordingly, we reverse the grant of summary disposition in favor of Hartman on the fraud claim.
III
Next, the Daileys argue that the trial court erred in granting summary disposition on their claim under the MCPA. Again, the only basis for the trial court’s grant of summary disposition was that there would be no individual liability by Hartman. We agree with the Daileys that the Legislature intended to hold individuals, and not just their businesses, liable for conduct that violates the MCPA. On appeal, Hartman also raises the issue whether the MCPA even applies to building contractors. We are bound by precedent to hold that it does, so we reverse the trial court’s grant of summary disposition for Hartman on plaintiffs’ MCPA claim.
The MCPA enables victims to sue those who violate the act, but the enabling provision does not expressly limit a victim’s choice of violating defendants to a certain class or type.10 Nothing in the act expressly states whether an individual who violates the act in his or her capacity as an employee or corporate officer is personally liable in a civil suit. Nevertheless, we note that most of the violations listed in MCL 445.903 have the common root of fraudulent or deceptive practice, *551and, as noted above, torts are generally applicable first to the actual tortfeasor and then vicariously to his or her employer in certain circumstances. In the realm of torts, holding a company liable first and determining the liability of employees and executives second is the equivalent of drifting a raft upstream.
Also, the MCPA makes unlawful “[u]nfair, unconscionable, or deceptive methods, acts, or practices in the conduct of trade or commerce . . . ,”11 Therefore, the act redresses actual conduct, not board resolutions, and it goes without saying that no corporation or other business entity can do anything, including violate the MCPA, without human action. This case makes the point perfectly. While the Daileys claim that HEBC violated the act through various representations and omissions, they attribute those same representations and omissions to Hartman and claim that the acts sustain their MCPA claim against him individually. Because the Legislature constructed the MCPA so that actions, rather than affiliations, yield liability, individuals are necessarily the act’s primary violators. It stands to reason that, absent express language to the contrary, the Legislature intended that those who actually violate the act would be the ones from whom victims could recover damages, regardless of the violators’ affiliation with any business entity.
Finally, the plain language of MCL 445.911(7) indicates that the act generally envisions individual liability. The subsection states that “when a person commences an action against another person, the defendant may assert... any claim under this act... .”12 In the absence of a caveat excluding individuals acting as owners, employees, board members, or executives, this *552language declares what should be intuitive-those who may sue for violations of the act may sue those who violate the act. Therefore, Hartman was personally liable for any MCPA violations that resulted from his conduct, and the trial court erred when it held to the contrary.
This leaves us with Hartman’s appellate argument that the MCPA does not apply to actions taken by him or HEBC because the act of a building contractor repairing a house is regulated by the Occupational Code. We agree, but we are bound by precedent to hold otherwise. According to MCL 445.904(1), the MCPA “does not apply to.. .(a) [a] transaction or conduct specifically authorized under laws administered by a regulatory board or officer acting under statutory authority of this state ....” In Smith, supra at 465, our Supreme Court liberally interpreted the phrase “transaction or conduct specifically authorized” to include any activity or arrangement permitted by statute. The Court did not limit the scope of the inquiry to the specific misconduct alleged. Id. Therefore, if a statute authorizes the performance of some service by a licensed professional, then the MCPA does not apply to the professional’s performance of the service. Smith, supra at 465-466 n 12.
Applying Smith to this case, we would find that the statutes allow only licensed residential builders or alteration contractors to perform the reconstruction work at issue here, MCL 339.601(1), 339.2401, 339.2404, and Hartman held the license for HEBC in accordance with MCL 339.2405. Therefore, Hartman and HEBC were generally allowed by statute to make the repairs and renovations to the Daileys’ home, and the MCPA should not apply.13 However, in Forton, supra *553at 715, we expressly held that residential builders are subject to the MCPA. While we question the wisdom of either Smith or Forton, we are bound by MCR 7.215(J)(1) to apply Forton and hold Hartman accountable under the MCPA. As with the fraud claims, the trial court did not address the merits of the Daileys’ MCPA claims, so we reverse the court’s grant of summary disposition and remand for further proceedings.
Reversed and remanded. We do not retain jurisdiction.
SCHUETTE, PJ., concurred.MCL 445.903.
MCL 339.101 et seq.; see MCL 339.2401 et seq. regarding residential builders and contractors.
MCL 445.901 ei seq.
460 Mich 446, 462-467; 597 NW2d 28 (1999).
239 Mich App 711, 715; 609 NW2d 850 (2000).
MCL 570.151 et seq.
11 Mich App 274, 300; 161 NW2d 133 (1968).
239 Mich App 735, 739-740; 610 NW2d 234 (2000).
183 Mich App 334, 340; 455 NW2d 55 (1990).
MCL 445.911(2).
Id. (emphasis added).
MCL 445.911(7) (emphasis added).
The identical conclusion was reached in Justice Corrigan’s concurring opinion to our Supreme Court’s denial of leave to appeal in Forton. *553The concurrence, reported at 463 Mich 969 (2001), explained that the regulation of residential builders justified their exemption from the act, but the builder in that case failed to assert the issue in a timely manner.