Pandemonium Inc v. Northcrest Development LLC ( 2021 )


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  •             If this opinion indicates that it is “FOR PUBLICATION,” it is subject to
    revision until final publication in the Michigan Appeals Reports.
    STATE OF MICHIGAN
    COURT OF APPEALS
    PANDEMONIUM, INC., and ASTRAL SPACE,                                UNPUBLISHED
    LLC,                                                                June 3, 2021
    Plaintiffs-Appellants/Cross-Appellees,
    v                                                                   No. 350526
    Wayne Circuit Court
    NORTHCREST DEVELOPMENT, LLC, and                                    LC No. 18-012741-CB
    CHAD T. MCCORMICK,
    Defendants-Appellees/Cross-
    Appellants,
    and
    KEHRIG STEEL, INC., CHIMNEY CRICKET,
    INC., GREGORY A. SARKISIAN, doing business
    as SARK & ASSOCIATES, FORESTA
    ARCHITECTS, LLC, and BRIAN FORESTA,
    Defendants-Appellees.
    Before: RONAYNE KRAUSE, P.J., and RIORDAN and O’BRIEN, JJ.
    PER CURIAM.
    Plaintiffs, Pandemonium, Inc. and Astral Space, LLC. appeal by right from the trial court’s
    dismissal of their claims under MCR 2.116(C)(7), finding them barred by res judicata. Defendants
    Northcrest Development, LLC. (Northcrest) and Chad T. McCormick1 cross-appeal the trial
    court’s denial of their motion for offer-of-judgment sanctions under MCR 2.405. We affirm.
    1
    McCormick is the owner of Northcrest. For purposes of this appeal, we will refer to Northcrest
    and McCormick jointly as “Northcrest” except where specifically necessary to distinguish them.
    -1-
    I. BACKGROUND
    Plaintiff Astral is the owner, and plaintiff Pandemonium is the operator, of a commercial
    building. In 2014, plaintiffs retained Northcrest as the general contractor for a remodeling project
    of that building. The remaining defendants, Kehrig Steel, Inc. (Kehrig); Chimney Cricket, Inc.
    (Chimney Cricket); Gregory A. Sarkisian doing business as Sark & Associates (Sarkasian); and
    Foresta Architects, which is owned by Brian Foresta (collectively Foresta), were all subcontractors
    hired by Northcrest to work on the project. The project was completed in 2015. That same year,
    Northcrest brought an action against plaintiffs arising out of a dispute over Northcrest’s payment
    and lien. Plaintiffs counterclaimed against Northcrest, alleging various construction and design
    defects in the remodeling work. That action was settled in 2016 pursuant to a stipulation and
    release, and all claims were dismissed with prejudice.
    On February 23, 2018, part of the roof of plaintiffs’ building collapsed. Plaintiffs retained
    forensic engineers, who completed a report (the “Nederveld Report”) on March 30, 2018.
    According to the Nederveld Report, which plaintiffs attached to their complaint,2 the roof collapse
    was due to negligent design and construction during the remodeling. The Nederveld report also
    noted multiple other design deficiencies. The report noted, inter alia, that a considerable number
    of structural problems were revealed when drywall and concrete were cut open. However, it also
    noted that “[b]eginning in December 2017, drywall deformation and tearing of paint was observed
    on soffit framing located at one of the newly added steel support beams.” Furthermore, the
    “original engineer,” apparently Sarkisian, returned to the site and observed several problems,
    including an improperly long beam span, no grouting on masonry pillars, and no footing below a
    masonry pillar, upon “a visual inspection.” The Nederveld Report concluded that one of the four
    “independent[] or collective[]” causes of the collapse was an improperly long beam span, although
    an excess beam span was also cited as an additional deficiency unrelated to the collapse.
    Plaintiff commenced this action on September 27, 2018. Plaintiff alleged that the roof
    collapse was caused by, among other things, construction and design defects related to the 2014-
    2015 remodeling project, including improper architectural design, improper engineering design,
    improper demolition of the prior roof support system, and improper construction of the roof.
    Northcrest moved for summary disposition, arguing that all of plaintiffs’ claims should be
    dismissed on the basis of res judicata because they involved alleged construction and design
    defects that should have been brought in the 2015 case, in which all claims were dismissed with
    prejudice. The trial court agreed and granted Northcrest’s motion for summary disposition under
    MCR 2.116(C)(7). The other defendant-subcontractors also later moved for summary disposition
    2
    Northcrest contends that the Nederveld Report is inadmissible hearsay that should not have been
    considered pursuant to MCR 2.116(G)(6). However, evidence may properly be considered for
    summary disposition purposes if it could be “plausibly admissible” in substance, or if a proper
    foundation were to be laid. 1300 LaFayette East Coop, Inc v Savoy, 
    284 Mich App 522
    , 526; 773
    NW2d 57 (2009). We are unpersuaded that Northcrest’s bald and unsupported assertion that the
    Nederveld Report is hearsay warrants further consideration of the issue. Mitcham v City of Detroit,
    
    355 Mich 182
    , 203; 94 NW2d 388 (1959).
    -2-
    on the basis of res judicata.3 Although the subcontractors were not parties to the 2015 action, the
    trial court agreed that they were in privity with Northcrest, and therefore, they too were entitled to
    summary disposition on the basis of res judicata. Northcrest also filed a motion for sanctions under
    the offer-of-judgment rule, MCR 2.405. Although the trial court agreed that Northcrest was
    eligible for an award of actual costs under the rule, the trial court declined to award an attorney
    fee in the interest of justice, MCR 2.405(D)(3). Plaintiffs now appeal the trial court’s grants of
    summary disposition in favor of the various defendants, and Northcrest cross-appeals the trial
    court’s denial of sanctions.
    II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
    This Court reviews a trial court’s summary disposition decision de novo. Spiek v Dep’t of
    Transp, 
    456 Mich 331
    , 337; 572 NW2d 201 (1998). Under MCR 2.116(C)(7), where the claim is
    allegedly barred, the trial court must accept as true the contents of the complaint, unless they are
    contradicted by documentary evidence submitted by the moving party. Maiden v Rozwood, 
    461 Mich 109
    , 119; 597 NW2d 817 (1999). “The applicability of res judicata is a legal question that
    this Court reviews de novo.” Bergeron v Busch, 
    228 Mich App 618
    , 620; 579 NW2d 124 (1998).
    III. RES JUDICATA AS TO NORTHCREST
    Plaintiffs argue that the trial court erred by ruling that res judicata applies to bar their claims
    in this action. Plaintiffs contend that this action is not barred by res judicata because their claims
    related to the 2018 partial roof collapse could not have been discovered through the exercise of
    reasonable diligence at the time of the 2015 lawsuit, and therefore, the claims are not barred by res
    judicata. We disagree.
    A. PRINCIPLES OF LAW
    The doctrine of res judicata “serves a two-fold purpose: to ensure the finality of judgments
    and to prevent repetitive litigation.” Bergeron, 228 Mich App at 621. The doctrine serves to bar
    a subsequent action if “(1) the first action was decided on the merits, (2) the matter contested in
    the second action was or could have been resolved in the first, and (3) both actions involve the
    same parties or their privies.” Dart v Dart, 
    460 Mich 573
    , 586; 597 NW2d 82 (1999). The doctrine
    is broadly applied, and it therefore bars “not only claims already litigated, but every claim arising
    from the same transaction that the parties, exercising reasonable diligence, could have raised but
    did not.” 
    Id.
     Although it may be relevant to consider whether the two cases depend on proving
    the same evidence, Michigan employs a transactional test, so a differing constellation of evidence
    is not dispositive. See Adair v Michigan, 
    470 Mich 105
    , 123-125; 680 NW2d 386 (2004). “The
    ‘transactional’ test provides that the assertion of different kinds or theories of relief still constitutes
    3
    The professional defendants, Sarkisian and Foresta, also moved for summary disposition on the
    independent ground that the claims against them were barred by the two-year statutory limitations
    period for professional malpractice claims. The trial court entertained the parties’ arguments as to
    that defense, but insofar as we can determine from the hearing transcript, did not clearly rule on
    that defense, presumably because its res judicata ruling rendered the limitations period defense
    moot.
    -3-
    a single cause of action if a single group of operative facts give rise to the assertion of relief.” 
    Id. at 124
     (quotation omitted). The analysis is a pragmatic one, and it considers not only the
    relationships among the facts, but whether they would “form a convenient trial unit.” 
    Id. at 125
    (quotation omitted).
    B. APPLICATION
    In the 2015 action, Northcrest alone initially sued both plaintiffs, along with other parties,
    and plaintiffs filed a counterclaim against both Northcrest and McCormick. The counterclaim,
    which listed both plaintiffs as parties,4 alleged construction and design deficiencies in the same
    remodeling work, as well as efforts by Northcrest to conceal its incomplete or defective work.
    Among more specific allegations, plaintiffs contended that Northcrest failed to complete all of the
    work specified in the parties’ contract, failed to perform work that conformed to the contract’s
    specifications, fraudulently or otherwise misrepresented the completeness of their work,
    affirmatively attempted to conceal defects in the work, and instructed subcontractors to perform
    substandard work. Plaintiffs further alleged that “[a]s a result of Northcrest and McCormick’s
    breach of contract, fraud and misrepresentation, Pandemonium has suffered damages resulting
    from work [that] was not done, not done correctly or completed in a non-conforming or defective
    manner.”
    There can be no serious dispute that the claims in this case and the counterclaim in the
    2015 case arise out of the same transaction. Pragmatically, both cases allege that Northcrest
    improperly, and either incompetently or maliciously or both, rendered an extensive array of
    deficient and defective work in the same role as general contractor on the same remodeling project,
    causing plaintiff to incur substantial costs to repair and remediate. We accept at face value, without
    deciding, that plaintiffs did not actually know in 2015 or 2016 that the roof would later collapse
    as a result of the same defective work. However, the question is whether the defective work that
    caused the 2018 roof collapse could have been raised in the prior counterclaim by “exercising
    reasonable diligence.” Dart, 460 Mich at 586.
    It is both established and logical that if new facts develop after a prior final judgment was
    entered, those new facts could not have been discovered by any exercise of reasonable diligence.
    See In re Bibi Guardianship, 
    315 Mich App 323
    , 333-335; 890 NW2d 387 (2016); In re Pardee,
    
    190 Mich App 243
    , 247-250; 475 NW2d 870 (1991). Conversely, however, res judicata will bar
    a subsequent action if facts already in existence could have been discovered through reasonable
    diligence, which may include conducting a further investigation, irrespective of whether the
    plaintiff had actual knowledge of those facts. Perry & Derrick Co v King, 
    24 Mich App 616
    , 619-
    620; 180 NW2d 483 (1970). In other words, the facts themselves must be new to preclude
    application of res judicata, not merely newly discovered unless their discovery was not reasonably
    possible at the time. See South Macomb Disposal Auth v American Ins Co, 
    243 Mich App 647
    ,
    655-656; 625 NW2d 40 (2000).
    4
    In their reply brief, plaintiffs contend that Astral was not a party to the design defect claims
    brought in the counterclaim. On its face, the counterclaim itself disproves this argument.
    -4-
    Clearly, the roof had not collapsed in 2015 and 2016. Equally clearly, the poor
    workmanship that allegedly caused the roof to collapse had already occurred by 2016. Therefore,
    the pertinent facts did exist at the time of the prior counterclaim. Even if plaintiff was unaware of
    the specific defective workmanship, plaintiff unambiguously was aware that there was defective
    workmanship. What constitutes reasonable diligence must be considered in light of that
    circumstance. Plaintiffs contend that the specific defective workmanship at issue could not have
    been discovered without cutting open drywall and drilling into the concrete floor, both of which
    went beyond a reasonable degree of investigation or inspection, especially considering that the
    building had passed a city official’s inspection. We disagree.
    As noted above, the Nederveld Report seemingly indicated that some of the problems that
    contributed to the 2018 roof collapse were visibly apparent upon a cursory inspection. To the
    extent the report is unclear whether the visibly apparent problems did themselves contribute to the
    roof collapse, the report clearly indicates that the visual inspection induced the more invasive
    inspection work. Considering the sheer extent of the defects in Northcrest’s work already known
    to plaintiffs, and the alleged fact that Northcrest had actively covered up its shoddy workmanship,
    in conjunction with the Nederveld Report, we agree with the trial court that a reasonable exercise
    of diligence by plaintiffs in 2015 and 2016 would have revealed the additional defects that caused
    the roof collapse in 2018.
    The trial court also correctly observed that the time damages are sustained is not necessarily
    dispositive. We agree with plaintiffs that in 2015 and 2016, it may have been speculative whether
    Northcrest’s defective work would have specifically resulted in a partial roof collapse, or indeed
    any particular eventual consequence. However, this misses the point. If plaintiffs had diligently
    conducted an investigation and pursued claims related to the then-existing structural defects, those
    defects could have been remediated at the time, thereby preventing the roof from later collapsing.
    In any event, the fact that repairs post-collapse are probably more expensive than preventative
    remediation would have been pre-collapse does not alter whether the wrongful conduct by
    Northcrest could or should have been discovered previously. There is no evidence that the roof
    collapse was caused by any additional work performed after 2015.
    Accordingly, the trial court did not err by ruling that res judicata barred plaintiffs’ claims
    in this action. Further, because the counterclaim against Northcrest and McCormick in the 2015
    litigation was filed by both plaintiffs, there is no merit to plaintiffs’ argument that the trial court’s
    res judicata ruling should not apply to Astral.
    Plaintiffs also argue that the trial court erred by dismissing their claims in this case because
    the settlement agreement and release that the parties executed in the 2015 action did not explicitly
    state that it applied to future claims. However, the scope of the 2015 release has no bearing on the
    application of res judicata. As explained, res judicata applies to claims that could have been raised
    in a prior action, but were not. This broad application of res judicata does not depend on whether
    the parties to a prior action executed a release of any claims. Although res judicata requires that
    the prior action be decided on the merits, there is no requirement that a release of claims must exist
    in the first action and that it must address any claims that could have been raised but were not.
    Accordingly, it is unnecessary to determine the scope of the release in the 2015 action because that
    release has no impact on the application of res judicata in this case.
    -5-
    IV. RES JUDICATA AS TO SUBCONTRACTORS
    Plaintiffs also argue that even if res judicata applies to bar their claims against Northcrest,
    it should not apply to bar their claims against the subcontractors because they were not parties to
    the 2015 action. We disagree.
    Although it is undisputed that that the subcontractors were not parties to the 2015 action,
    res judicata applies when both of the “actions involve the same parties or their privies.” Dart, 460
    Mich at 586 (emphasis added). “To be in privity is to be so identified in interest with another party
    that the first litigant represents the same legal right that the later litigant is trying to assert.” Adair,
    
    470 Mich at 122
    . “The outer limit of the doctrine traditionally requires both a ‘substantial identity
    of interests’ and a ‘working functional relationship’ in which the interests of the nonparty are
    presented and protected by the party in the litigation.” 
    Id.
     (quotations omitted).
    Because all of the subcontractors were hired by Northcrest and plaintiffs sued Northcrest
    for alleged construction defects in the 2015 action, we agree with the trial court that Northcrest
    and its subcontractors were in privity in that case. The subcontractors, having been hired by
    Northcrest to perform work related to the remodeling project, had a working functional
    relationship with Northcrest. Further, Northcrest was in a position to protect both its interests and
    the subcontractors’ interests in defending against plaintiffs’ counterclaims for construction and
    design defects.
    Plaintiffs contend that privity was lacking because the subcontractors had been paid for
    their work on this project by Northcrest before the 2015 action was filed, which plaintiffs appear
    to claim severed any interests the subcontractors may have with regard to plaintiffs’ claims in the
    2015 case. We disagree. Whether the subcontractors had been paid had no bearing on whether
    their work was done properly or improperly. Furthermore, the payments made to the
    subcontractors had no impact on the alignment of their interests with Northcrest’s interest in
    defending against plaintiffs’ counterclaims alleging construction and design defects. Therefore,
    the trial court did not err by holding that the subcontractors were in privity with Northcrest in the
    2015 action, and accordingly, res judicata applied to also bar plaintiffs’ claims against the
    subcontractors.
    Plaintiffs also complain that defendants did not separately address plaintiffs’ claims for
    gross negligence, wanton misconduct, and ordinary negligence. We disagree. As explained, res
    judicata is broadly applied to include not only claims already litigated, but every claim arising
    from the same transaction that the parties, exercising reasonable diligence, could have raised but
    did not. Dart, 460 Mich at 586. Because plaintiffs’ claims for ordinary negligence, gross
    negligence, and wanton misconduct arose from the same transaction at issue in the 2015 litigation,
    and plaintiffs could have raised those claims in that action, res judicata applies to bar them in this
    action, and defendants were not required to address those claims individually. We affirm the trial
    court’s orders dismissing plaintiffs’ claims against defendants on the basis of res judicata.
    V. STATUTE OF LIMITATIONS AS TO SARKISIAN AND FORESTA
    Plaintiffs argue that the trial court erred by ruling that plaintiffs’ claims against Sarkisian
    and Foresta Architects were subject to a two-year limitations period applicable to professional
    -6-
    malpractice claims, MCL 600.5805(8) and (13), rather than the six-year limitations period in MCL
    600.5839(1)(a); or, alternatively, that the claims were preserved by application of the six-month
    discovery rule under MCL 600.838(2). However, because all claims against Sarkisian and Foresta
    Architects were subject to the trial court’s ruling on res judicata, which we have affirmed, it is not
    necessary to address this issue.
    VI. SANCTIONS UNDER MCR 2.405(D)
    In their cross-appeal, Northcrest argues that the trial court erred by applying the interest-
    of-justice exception to deny its motion for sanctions under the offer-of-judgment rule, MCR
    2.405(D). We disagree.
    A. PRINCIPLES OF LAW
    “Under MCR 2.405, the offer of judgment rule, a party may serve on his or her opponent
    a written offer to stipulate the entry of a judgment.” Marilyn Froling Revocable Living Trust v
    Bloomfield Hills Country Club, 
    283 Mich App 264
    , 297; 769 NW2d 234 (2009). In general, if the
    opposing party rejects or fails to accept the offer, and the offering party receives a verdict or
    judgment more favorable than the average of any offers made, the offering party is entitled to
    recover actual costs from the offeree. 
    Id.
     However, pursuant to MCR 2.405(D)(3), the trial court
    “may, in the interest of justice, refuse to award an attorney fee under this rule.” We review de
    novo the trial court’s interpretation and application of the court rule as a matter of law, and we
    review for an abuse of discretion the trial court’s decision to invoke the interest of justice
    exception. Simcor Constr, Inc v Trupp, 
    322 Mich App 508
    , 514; 912 NW2d 216 (2018). “An
    abuse of discretion occurs when the trial court’s decision is outside the range of reasonable and
    principled outcomes.” Smith v Khouri, 
    481 Mich 519
    , 526; 751 NW2d 472 (2008).
    B. APPLICATION
    In November 2018, Northcrest and McCormick made offers of judgment to plaintiffs.
    McCormick offered $2,000 to Pandemonium and Northcrest offered $7,000 to Pandemonium, and
    McCormick and Northcrest each offered $500 to Astral.5 Plaintiffs did not accept the offers. After
    the trial court granted McCormick and Northcrest’s motion for summary disposition, the two
    defendants filed a motion for sanctions under MCR 2.405(A)(6) and (B)(3), and requested attorney
    fees of $18,664.50. The trial court agreed that defendants were eligible for an award of attorney
    fees under the rule, but after requesting supplemental briefing by the parties, it declined to award
    attorney fees in the interest of justice. On appeal, Northcrest and McCormick expressly decline to
    challenge the trial court’s ruling that a reasonable hourly rate would be less than the rate originally
    requested. Similarly, although plaintiffs maintain that summary disposition should not have been
    granted in defendants’ favor in the first place, they concede that under the present procedural
    posture of this matter, they “rely solely on the ‘interest of justice’ exception in MCR 2.405(D)(3)
    5
    In its combined brief on appeal, Northcrest contends that it offered $7,000 each to Pandemonium
    and Astral, and McCormick offered $500 each to Pandemonium and Astral. This does not match
    the offers we found filed in the lower court record.
    -7-
    to avoid the imposition of attorney fees following their rejection of the offer to stipulate to entry
    of judgment.”
    The purpose of the rule is to encourage parties to settle before trial and to discourage
    protracted litigation. See Sanders v Monical Machinery Co, 
    163 Mich App 689
    , 691-693; 415
    NW2d 276 (1987). Although the trial court has the discretion to deny an award in the “interest of
    justice,” doing so is generally only proper under exceptional circumstances where the purpose of
    the rule has been frustrated. Hamilton v Becker Orthopedic Appliance Co, 
    214 Mich App 593
    ,
    596-597; 543 NW2d 60 (1995). Alternatively, the “interest of justice” exception might properly
    apply where there is some overriding “public interest in having an issue judicially decided rather
    than merely settled by the parties.” See Luidens v 63rd Dist Court, 
    219 Mich App 24
    , 35-36; 555
    NW2d 709 (1996). The “interest of justice” exception does not apply merely because a party’s
    rejection of an offer was reasonable, but may apply if the offer was de minimus or made for a
    purpose other than a good-faith effort to negotiate. Id. at 34-35.
    It is apparent that Northcrest and McCormick realized, before ever filing an answer, that
    regardless of their role in the cause of the roof collapse, they had grounds for dismissal of all of
    plaintiffs’ claims on the basis of res judicata. Northcrest and McCormick filed their motion for
    summary disposition in lieu of filing an answer on November 21, 2018. They made their offers of
    judgment just five days later on November 26, 2018. The trial court granted summary disposition
    for Northcrest and McCormick in March 2019. The trial court’s bench ruling regarding the offer
    of judgment motion is somewhat difficult to follow. The trial court indicated that it did not believe
    Northcrest and McCormick were engaging in “gamesmanship in its purest sense.” However, fair
    reading of the trial court’s commentary as a whole suggests that it was unimpressed by their
    relatively paltry offers in the face of plaintiffs’ enormous losses that were blatantly caused by
    defendants’ misconduct.
    The “interest of justice” exception must be considered pursuant to the public policy
    favoring settlement of claims, rather than more abstract notions of what constitutes a “just”
    outcome. Hamilton, 214 Mich App at 96-597. Likewise, the frivolousness or non-frivolousness
    of a party’s position “are too common to fit within the ‘interest of justice’ exception.” Luidens,
    219 Mich App at 34-35. Therefore, Northcrest’s actual fault for the 2018 roof collapse is not a
    direct justification for invocation of the “interest of justice” exception. This Court has held that it
    is inappropriate for a trial court to consider the substantive merits of a party’s claim when deciding
    whether to refuse offer-of-judgment sanctions in the interest of justice. Nostrant v Chez Ami, Inc,
    
    207 Mich App 334
    , 337, 341; 525 NW2d 470 (1994). However, although the exception may not
    be invoked merely because a party’s rejection of an offer was “reasonable under the
    circumstances,” this Court has implied that an “excessive financial hardship” upon the rejecting
    party may have some small amount of relevance. See Haliw v City of Sterling Heights, 
    256 Mich App 444
    , 450; 702 NW2d 637 (2005). We do not think it was improper for the trial court to
    consider the substance of the matter, without necessarily reaching a conclusion as to its merits, to
    help guide the court’s assessment of whether an offer was sincere or a good-faith effort at
    negotiation.
    On balance, we conclude that the trial court’s invocation of the “interest of justice”
    exception did not fall outside the range of principled outcomes, especially considering the trial
    court’s superior ability to observe the demeanor and conduct of the attorneys. See McGonegal v
    -8-
    McGonegal, 
    46 Mich 66
    , 67; 
    8 NW 724
     (1881). The trial court could have reasonably concluded
    that Northcrest and McCormick’s combined offer of $10,000, when the estimated cost to repair
    the damaged roof exceeded several hundred thousand dollars, was not a sincere effort to settle the
    case. Additionally, given the strength of Northcrest’s position regarding res judicata and the
    timing of the offers of judgment, we do not think it unwarranted to conclude that Northcrest had
    simply “tacked on” a paltry offer of judgment for the sole purpose of eventually recovering
    attorney fees rather than out of a sincere interest in settling the matter. We would not find the
    excessive financial hardship to plaintiffs to be justification for invocation of the “interest of
    justice” exception standing alone. However, we are not persuaded that it was an unreasonable
    supplemental consideration by the trial court to help it assess whether the offers of judgment were
    intended in good faith or to effectively convert a grant of summary disposition into a financial
    recovery.
    Considering all the circumstances of this case and context of the history between the
    parties,6 the trial court did not abuse its discretion by determining that this was an unusual case
    that justified application of the interest-of-justice exception to refuse to award attorney fees under
    MCR 2.405(D). As our dissenting colleague’s thoughtful analysis reflects, the trial court would
    not have abused its discretion by refusing to invoke the “interest of justice” exception. However,
    we think this issue depends in part on the trial court’s ability to assess the credibilities and
    demeanors of the attorneys, which is entitled to deference even where this Court’s standard of
    review would otherwise be de novo. In re Loyd, 
    424 Mich 514
    , 535; 384 NW2d 9 (1986). The
    abuse of discretion standard expects that there may be a “range of reasonable and principled
    outcomes,” Smith, 481 Mich at 526 (emphasis added), necessarily implying that there may not be
    a single correct outcome. We are not persuaded that there is a single correct outcome here. The
    question is whether these offers of judgment were made in good faith, which, under the
    circumstances and on the available record, we conclude is too close a question to find an abuse of
    discretion.
    Affirmed. We direct that plaintiffs, Northcrest, and McCormick shall bear their own costs;
    the remaining defendants may tax costs. MCR 7.219(A).
    /s/ Amy Ronayne Krause
    /s/ Colleen A. O’Brien
    6
    We note that the same trial judge presided over the 2015 action, although Northcrest appears to
    have been represented by different counsel at that time.
    -9-