Chad Gregory v. Suzanne Gregory ( 2022 )


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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
    CHAD GREGORY,                                                      UNPUBLISHED
    December 22, 2022
    Plaintiff-Appellee,
    v                                                                  No. 361101
    Lapeer Circuit Court
    SUZANNE GREGORY, individually and as trustee                       LC No. 2021-055205-CH
    of the S & S GREGORY TRUST,
    Defendant-Appellant,
    and
    STEPHEN GREGORY,
    Defendant.
    Before: HOOD, P.J., and SWARTZLE and REDFORD, JJ.
    PER CURIAM.
    Defendant Suzanne Gregory individually and as trustee of S&S Gregory Trust appeals by
    right the trial court’s order granting plaintiff, Chad Gregory, summary disposition and denying
    defendants’ motion to file an amended answer and affirmative defenses. We affirm.
    I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND
    On February 4, 2004, Kevin Cargill conveyed by warranty deed to Suzanne and Stephen
    Gregory,1 her husband, property located at 131 Burnside Road, North Branch, Michigan. On
    February 5, 2004, Suzanne and Stephen obtained a loan in the amount of $104,000 from
    Providence Mortgage Company secured by a mortgage on their property located at 2335 Roods
    Lake Road, Lapeer, Michigan, the property at which Suzanne and Stephen resided. On or around
    January 1, 2010, Suzanne, Stephen, and plaintiff, their son, executed a land contract agreement
    1
    Stephen is not a party to this action having died on August 11, 2017. The trial court dismissed
    the case as to Stephen only, on January 6, 2022.
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    that identified plaintiff as buyer and Suzanne and Stephen as sellers of land commonly known as
    131 Burnside Road, North Branch, Michigan. The land contract provided:
    Chad Gregory “Buyer” and Stephen Gregory/Sue Gregory “Seller” Agree to
    the following:
    1.     Property, This agreement concerns the following Property:
    Property Tax I.D. # 44-006-009-039-00
    Which is commonly known as:
    131 Burnside Rd.
    North Branch MI 48461
    2.     Payment Terms. Buyer shall make payment to Seller as follows:
    a. Monthly Payments Of 443.85 Per Month Due the First day of each month
    until the total sum of $70,042.80 is reached.
    3.     Term of Contract. Payments shall be due beginning January 1st 2010 with
    a final balloon payment due on February 1st 2023, for a contract term of 157
    months.
    Duties and Obligations. The parties shall have the following duties and
    obligations:
    a.     Maintenance of Property. The Buyer is responsible for all
    maintenance and repairs to the property.
    b.     Property Taxes. Property taxes shall be the responsibility of The
    Buyer.
    c.     Deed Transfer: Once final payment is made, Seller will transfer
    the deed into Buyers name.
    The land contract agreement is dated January 1, 2010, and signed by Stephen Gregory as seller,
    Suzanne Gregory as seller, and Chad Gregory as buyer.
    On September 24, 2021, plaintiff sent to Suzanne a letter stating:
    According to my calculations, and the terms set forth in the land contract, dated
    01/01/2010, for Property ID# 44-006-009-039-00, the amount of $70,042.80 has
    been met with this final payment of $640.61 Enclosed.
    At this time I am requesting that the Deed be transferred into my name as agreed
    upon in the land contract terms as the conditions have been met in full.
    On October 13, 2021, Marc Sackin, Suzanne’s attorney, responded to plaintiff’s
    September 24, 2021 letter by asserting that plaintiff misunderstood the legal terms of the land
    contract and that it required plaintiff to “satisfy the outstanding mortgage which is encumbering
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    the premises.” Sackin stated further that “the amount owed on the Note for the mortgage
    encumbering the premises held by Mr. Cooper is in the amount of $57,485.61 with an interest rate
    of 2.875%.” Sackin contended that the land contract could not be interpreted as intending that
    Suzanne would deed the property to plaintiff while she remained personally responsible for paying
    the referenced note. Sackin offered that Suzanne would deed plaintiff the premises when plaintiff
    paid the outstanding note in full but that Suzanne would make no further mortgage payments.
    Sackin suggested that plaintiff refinance or obtain a loan to pay off the note. In closing, Sackin
    stated: “Do not contact Ms. Gregory.”
    Suzanne’s attorney’s letter prompted plaintiff to file a complaint against Suzanne and
    Stephen, and the S&S Gregory Trust for which they were co-trustees, for specific performance of
    the land contract and to quiet title to the 131 Burnside Road property. Suzanne, in pro se, answered
    plaintiff’s complaint with a somewhat free-flowing narrative. She disclosed that plaintiff was her
    son and described some of the family history. She stated that, in 2004, she and her husband
    Stephen borrowed money from a mortgage lender and purchased the Burnside Road property for
    plaintiff who had three children and a girlfriend needing housing. She explained that, in 2010, her
    payment of property taxes on two houses prompted the creation of the land contract. She admitted
    that plaintiff sent her a registered letter during October, but stated that it informed her that “he felt
    that he had fulfilled his obligation with the mortgage and wanted the deed to the property.” 2
    Suzanne asserted that plaintiff did not understand how payment of a mortgage required payment
    of principal and interest, stated that the mortgage balance equaled $56,526.49 with a current
    interest rate of 2.85%, and said that the mortgage was plaintiff’s responsibility. Suzanne stated
    that she would execute a warranty deed to the property once plaintiff “secures a mortgage or makes
    a final balloon payment for balance due to the mortgage company[.]”
    With her answer to plaintiff’s complaint, Suzanne filed Stephen’s death certificate and
    copies of the following: a recorded mortgage on her Roods Lake Road property;3 an Adjustable
    Rate Rider that amended and supplemented the mortgage on her Roods Lake Road property; a
    Truth-In-Lending Disclosure (Real Estate) related to the mortgage loan transaction regarding the
    Roods Lake Road property; the Warranty Deed conveying title to the Burnside Road property to
    Suzanne and Stephen; the subject Land Contract Agreement related to the Burnside Road property;
    and plaintiff’s September 24, 2021 letter. None of these documents indicates any contractual
    obligation of plaintiff to pay the referenced mortgage debt.
    Suzanne also attached as an exhibit to her answer a three-page typed accounting statement
    that listed 112 payments made to Suzanne in various amounts from May 24, 2016 through
    September 24, 2021, and referenced 29 wage garnishment payments in the amount of $433.85, all
    totaling payments in the amount of $70,042.80. The document separately categorized the number
    2
    Suzanne referred to the mortgage generally without any specific identifying information, but she
    attached a mortgage as an exhibit to her answer.
    3
    The mortgage features the notarized signatures of Suzanne and Stephen, who are identified as
    the borrowers and mortgagors, and identifies the Rood Lake Road property as the security for a
    $104,000 loan from Providence Mortgage Company, the lender and mortgagee.
    -3-
    of payments in each amount with a column stating a declining balance to $0. The document has
    no title or indication of authorship.4
    Plaintiff moved for summary disposition under MCR 2.116(C)(9) on the ground that
    Suzanne failed to state a valid defense to the claims made against her. Plaintiff described the terms
    of the land contract and asserted that he paid off the full amount of the land contract and then
    requested that defendant supply the deed, but Suzanne’s attorney denied his request. Plaintiff
    pointed out that the mortgage that defendant attached to her answer applied to different land than
    the real property under land contract. He argued that nothing in the land contract required him to
    make payments on the mortgage and that the property under land contract was not subject to any
    mortgage. Plaintiff asserted that the land contract lacked ambiguity regarding the specified
    obligations and did not obligate him to assume or pay a mortgage on land different from the land
    sold by land contract. He argued that the parties’ agreement was contained within the four corners
    of the land contract and defendant could not rely on matters outside of that contract. Plaintiff
    contended that defendant failed to respond to the claims stated in his complaint. He asserted that
    defendant did not dispute that the land contract existed, that he made payment on the land contract
    until paid in full, requested a deed, or that defendant refused to deed the property to him. Plaintiff
    argued that defendant breached the terms of the land contract which were in writing and clear on
    their face. Plaintiff asserted that defendant failed to state any valid defense and only raised
    irrelevant matters. Suzanne did not respond to plaintiff’s motion.
    Instead, on February 28, 2022, Suzanne filed a motion for leave to amend her answer and
    to file affirmative defenses. She contended that, when read together, the terms of the land
    contract’s ¶ ¶ 2 and 3 made no sense. She asserted that plaintiff had the obligation to pay off her
    mortgage on her home but left such terms out of the land contract. She also contended that ¶ 2
    should have had an interest provision. Suzanne offered her interpretation of the land contract and
    argued that her narrative answer to the complaint described the parties’ agreement by stating “all
    the details left out by Plaintiff.” She argued that she did not seek to contradict the land contract’s
    terms but explain contemporaneous agreements or negotiations.
    Plaintiff opposed Suzanne’s motion. He explained that her interpretation of the land
    contract lacked merit because simple mathematical calculation demonstrated that the monthly
    payments required over 157 months would have left a balance of $358.35 to be paid as the balloon
    payment required under the contract to pay the amount in full. He denied plaintiff’s assertions that
    he had any obligation to pay off Suzanne’s mortgage and stated that nothing in the land contract
    even suggested that her assertions were true. Plaintiff argued that Suzanne’s narrative answer to
    the allegations in the complaint failed to state any defense to the claims against her. He asserted
    that he paid the land contract in full with many payments in excess of the monthly required amount.
    4
    The exhibits also featured copies of the following: Deerfield Township tax receipts;
    Acknowledgment of Cancellation Request for cancellation of insurance on the Burnside Road
    property; correspondence regarding the servicing of the mortgage loan on the Roods Lake Road
    property; documents addressed to Stephen pertaining to an unrelated loan account with ChoiceOne
    Bank; and notices and correspondence regarding a past due loan that were sent to Stephen during
    2018 and 2019 by a representative of Lakestone Bank & Trust.
    -4-
    The trial court heard the parties’ motions on March 14, 2022. After hearing the parties’
    respective arguments, the trial court granted plaintiff’s motion and denied Suzanne’s motion. This
    appeal followed.
    II. STANDARDS OF REVIEW
    We review de novo a trial court’s decision regarding a motion for summary disposition.
    Maiden v Rozwood, 
    461 Mich 109
    , 118; 
    597 NW2d 817
     (1999). The trial court granted summary
    disposition to plaintiff pursuant to MCR 2.116(C)(9). Summary disposition may be granted under
    MCR 2.116(C)(9) when “[t]he opposing party has failed to state a valid defense to the claim
    asserted against him or her.”
    Summary disposition under MCR 2.116(C)(9) is proper if a defendant fails to plead
    a valid defense to a claim. Nicita v Detroit (After Remand), 
    216 Mich App 746
    ,
    750; 
    550 NW2d 269
     (1996). A motion under MCR 2.116(C)(9) tests the
    sufficiency of a defendant’s pleadings by accepting all well-pleaded allegations as
    true. Lepp v Cheboygan Area Schools, 
    190 Mich App 726
    , 730; 
    476 NW2d 506
    (1991). If the defenses are “ ‘so clearly untenable as a matter of law that no factual
    development could possibly deny plaintiff’s right to recovery,’ ” then summary
    disposition under this rule is proper. 
    Id.,
     quoting Domako v Rowe, 
    184 Mich App 137
    , 142; 
    457 NW2d 107
     (1990).
    * * *
    Further, a court may look only to the parties’ pleadings in deciding a motion under
    MCR 2.116(C)(9). MCR 2.116(G)(5). “Pleadings,” as defined in MCR 2.110(A),
    include only a complaint, a cross-claim, a counterclaim, a third-party complaint, an
    answer to any of these, and a reply to an answer. [Village of Dimondale v Grable,
    
    240 Mich App 553
    , 564-565; 
    618 NW2d 23
     (2000).]
    We review de novo whether contract terms are ambiguous. Rossow v Brentwood Farms
    Dev, Inc, 
    251 Mich App 652
    , 658; 
    651 NW2d 458
     (2002). We review a trial court’s decision to
    grant or deny a motion to amend a pleading for an abuse of discretion. Long v Liquor Control
    Comm, 
    322 Mich App 60
    , 67; 
    910 NW2d 674
     (2017). A court abuses its discretion when it selects
    an outcome that falls outside the range of reasonable and principled outcomes. Maldonado v Ford
    Motor Co, 
    476 Mich 372
    , 388; 
    719 NW2d 809
     (2006).
    III. ANALYSIS
    Suzanne argues that the trial court erred by granting plaintiff summary disposition because
    the land contract was not fully integrated and its terms so unusual that ¶ ¶ 2 and 3 make no sense,
    such that, it should have been held ambiguous requiring the trial court to allow defendant to explain
    its meaning with parol evidence. We disagree.
    The essential elements of a valid contract are: (1) parties competent to contract, (2) a proper
    subject matter, (3) legal consideration, (4) mutuality of agreement, and (5) mutuality of obligation.
    Hess v Cannon Twp, 
    265 Mich App 582
    , 592; 
    696 NW2d 742
     (2005). To form a valid contract,
    there must be a meeting of the minds on all the material terms. Stanton v Dachille, 186 Mich App
    -5-
    247, 256; 
    463 NW2d 479
     (1990). “A meeting of the minds is judged by an objective standard,
    looking to the express words of the parties and their visible acts, not their subjective states of
    mind.” 
    Id.
     (quotation marks and citation omitted). “Meeting of the minds” is a figure of speech
    for mutual assent. Goldman v Century Ins Co, 
    354 Mich 528
    , 534; 
    93 NW2d 240
     (1958).
    “The cardinal rule in the interpretation of contracts is to ascertain the intention of the
    parties; to this rule all others are subordinate.” Highfield Beach v Sanderson, 
    331 Mich App 636
    ,
    654; 
    954 NW2d 231
     (2020) (quotation marks, alterations, and citation omitted). “In ascertaining
    the meaning of a contract, we give the words used in the contract their plain and ordinary meaning
    that would be apparent to a reader of the instrument.” 
    Id.
     (quotation marks and citation omitted).
    Courts must “give effect to every word, phrase, and clause in a contract and avoid an interpretation
    that would render any part of the contract surplusage or nugatory.” Klapp v United Ins Group
    Agency, Inc, 
    468 Mich 459
    , 468; 
    663 NW2d 447
     (2003). “[U]nless a contract provision violates
    law or one of the traditional defenses to the enforceability of a contract applies, a court must
    construe and apply unambiguous contract provisions as written.” Rory v Continental Ins Co, 
    473 Mich 457
    , 461; 
    703 NW2d 23
     (2005). The legal principle that “ ‘unambiguous contracts are not
    open to judicial construction and must be enforced as written’ ” is “grounded in the rationale that
    the judiciary ought not interfere with the right of individuals to ‘arrange their affairs via contract.’ ”
    VHS Huron Valley Sinai Hosp v Sentinel Ins Co, 
    322 Mich App 707
    , 716; 
    916 NW2d 218
     (2018),
    quoting Rory, 
    473 Mich at 468
    . A provision is ambiguous only if it irreconcilably conflicts with
    another provision or it is equally susceptible to more than a single meaning. Sau-Tuk Indus, Inc v
    Allegan Co, 
    316 Mich App 122
    , 136; 
    892 NW2d 33
     (2016). This Court will not distort a contract’s
    plain language in such a way “to create an ambiguity where none exists.” UAW-GM v KSL
    Recreation Corp, 
    228 Mich App 486
    , 491; 
    579 NW2d 411
     (1998). Further, unless a contract
    contains an ambiguity, courts must apply the language as written without resort to extrinsic
    evidence of the parties’ intentions. Universal Underwriters Ins Co v Kneeland, 
    464 Mich 491
    ,
    496; 
    628 NW2d 491
     (2001).
    Analysis of the land contract establishes that it lacks any ambiguity. No provision
    irreconcilably conflicts with another provision, nor is any provision equally susceptible to more
    than a single meaning. Sau-Tuk Indus, Inc, 316 Mich App at 136. The land contract plainly states
    that Stephen and Suzanne agreed to sell the Burnside Road property to plaintiff. Under ¶ 2, the
    parties mutually agreed that plaintiff would pay monthly payments of $443.85 on the first day of
    each month until he fully paid the contract price of $70,042.80. Paragraph 3 specified that
    plaintiff’s payment obligation commenced on January 1, 2010, for a contract term of 157 months,
    with a final balloon payment due on February 1, 2023.
    The terms of the land contract do not specify that plaintiff had to pay interest on the
    principal, nor did it provide for an early payoff penalty or restrict plaintiff from paying the contract
    price fully before it ultimately came due. The document also makes no reference to any other
    negotiations, transactions, or agreements between the parties contemporaneous with the formation
    and execution of the parties’ land contract agreement.
    Multiplication of the monthly payment amount times 157 months, the term of the contract,
    equals a total of $69,684.45, leaving an unpaid balance of $358.35. Under ¶ 3, that amount would
    have been the balloon payment due on February 1, 2023, had plaintiff paid his monthly payments
    through the full term of the land contract. The record indicates that plaintiff made a final payment
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    of $640.61 on September 24, 2021, in payment of the then remaining balance on the $70,042.80
    contract price. When he made the final payment, plaintiff requested that Suzanne transfer the
    subject property to him by deed as required under the deed transfer provision in the land contract.
    She refused.
    Plaintiff’s complaint alleged that the parties entered the land contract attached to the
    complaint and he set forth allegations of the terms of the land contract, his fulfillment of the terms,
    plaintiff’s breach of those terms, and his request for relief. Plaintiff stated a claim for specific
    performance of the terms of the land contract, the conveyance of the property by deed as required
    under the land contract, and stated a claim for the quieting of title to the subject property in himself.
    Suzanne filed an answer to plaintiff’s complaint in which she admitted the existence of the
    land contract and did not deny the terms set forth within the document. To her answer, Suzanne
    attached an accounting of the land contract payments made by plaintiff over time which indicated
    plaintiff’s payment of the specified contract price in full. Although Suzanne complained of family
    discord throughout her answer and asserted that plaintiff made sporadic payments, she nowhere
    denied that he paid the full price as set forth in the land contract.
    Plaintiff moved for summary disposition under MCR 2.116(C)(9) on the ground that
    Suzanne failed to state a valid defense. The record reflects that she failed in her answer to state
    any valid defense to plaintiff’s claims. She did not deny the allegations set forth in plaintiff’s
    complaint or state any response to the allegations that could reasonably be interpreted as stating a
    defense. Further, she failed to timely oppose plaintiff’s motion. The record reflects that the trial
    court properly considered and analyzed Suzanne’s answer and based upon the pleading determined
    that she failed to state a valid defense to plaintiff’s claims. The record indicates that the trial court
    accepted as true her well-pleaded factual assertions in her answer and appropriately concluded that
    they failed to state a valid defense. The trial court did not err because her answer was “so clearly
    untenable that as a matter of law no factual development could possibly deny plaintiff’s right to
    recovery.” See Slater v Ann Arbor Pub Sch Bd of Ed, 
    250 Mich App 419
    , 425-426; 
    648 NW2d 205
     (2002).
    The trial court, therefore correctly ruled that Suzanne’s answer failed to state a valid
    defense to plaintiff’s claims. Her arguments to the contrary lack merit.
    Suzanne also argues that the trial court erred by denying her an opportunity to amend her
    answer because she established that she had a defense to plaintiff’s claim for specific performance.
    We disagree.
    Under MCR 2.118(A)(2), a party may amend a pleading upon leave of the trial court; leave
    to amend a pleading “shall be freely given when justice so requires.” Jawad A Shah, MD, PC v
    State Farm Mut Auto Ins Co, 
    324 Mich App 182
    , 209; 
    920 NW2d 148
     (2018). “[A] motion to
    amend should ordinarily be denied only for particularized reasons, including undue delay, bad
    faith or a dilatory motive, repeated failure to cure deficiencies by amendments previously allowed,
    undue prejudice to the opposing party, or futility.” Id. at 208 (quotation marks and citation
    omitted; alteration in original). A motion to amend a pleading is properly denied if the amendment
    would be futile. Weymers v Khera, 
    454 Mich 639
    , 658; 
    563 NW2d 647
     (1997). “An amendment
    is futile if it merely restates the allegations already made or adds allegations that still fail to state
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    a claim.” Lane v KinderCare Learning Centers, Inc, 
    231 Mich App 689
    , 697; 
    588 NW2d 715
    (1998). Amendment of a pleading also is futile if it is legally insufficient on its face. PT Today,
    Inc v Comm’r of Office of Fin and Ins Servs, 
    270 Mich App 110
    , 143; 
    715 NW2d 398
     (2006)
    (citations omitted). If further amendment of a pleading would be futile, summary disposition is
    appropriately granted. Nowacki v State Employees’ Retirement Sys, 
    485 Mich 1037
    ; 
    776 NW2d 911
     (2010).
    In this case, after the trial court determined that Suzanne failed to state a valid defense, it
    next correctly concluded that, because Suzanne failed to oppose plaintiff’s motion brought under
    MCR 2.116(C)(9), MCR 2.116(I)(5) required the trial court to give her an opportunity to amend
    her answer “as provided under MCR 2.118 unless the evidence then before the court showed that
    amendment would not be justified.” MCR 2.116(I)(5). Accordingly, the trial court considered
    Suzanne’s motion to amend her answer and analyzed her proposed amended answer and
    affirmative defenses.
    In her motion to amend, Suzanne argued for amending on the grounds that the terms of the
    land contract’s ¶ ¶ 2 and 3 made no sense and were ambiguous, that ¶ 2 should have had an interest
    provision, and that ¶ 3 somehow meant something different than what it said because it called for
    fixed monthly payments and a balloon payment at the end of the payment term. She argued that
    the parol-evidence rule did not prohibit her from explaining the land contract’s meaning and that
    the lack of an integration clause permitted her to rely on contemporaneous agreements or
    negotiations to explain the contract’s terms including that it required plaintiff to pay off the
    mortgage on her separate property. Suzanne’s arguments for amendment were without merit and
    her proposed amended pleading would present a futile defense.
    The record reflects that the trial court analyzed the land contract and properly determined
    that it lacked ambiguity. The plain language of ¶ ¶ 2 and 3 were harmonious and did not conflict
    or permit the interpretation advocated by Suzanne. No provision irreconcilably conflicted with
    another provision, nor was any provision equally susceptible to more than a single meaning. Sau-
    Tuk Indus, Inc, 316 Mich App at 136. That alone established the futility of her amendment.
    Moreover, the trial court correctly found no merit to Suzanne’s argument that ¶ ¶ 2 and 3
    were meaningless, ambiguous, or confusing requiring explanation. The trial court also correctly
    reviewed the evidence before it, including the documentation submitted by Suzanne herself which
    established that plaintiff paid the full purchase price required under the land contract before the
    payment term expired. The trial court properly concluded that no genuine dispute existed
    regarding the purchase price stated in the contract or the amount plaintiff paid, and that Suzanne’s
    proposed answer failed to state a valid defense that could possibly defeat plaintiff’s prima facie
    claims.
    The record also reflects that the trial court considered Suzanne’s proposed affirmative
    defenses to ascertain whether any provided a valid defense to plaintiff’s claims. Suzanne sought
    to rely on the doctrine of laches or that the limitations period barred plaintiff’s claim, neither of
    which had any applicability to this case. The trial court also considered whether Suzanne stated
    grounds for rescission or reformation of the land contract and correctly discerned that she failed to
    make any allegations that could possibly warrant such equitable relief. Further, the trial court
    correctly determined that Suzanne failed to allege facts to support application of the clean-hands
    -8-
    doctrine. The trial court also correctly decided that Suzanne could not evade her own liability for
    indisputably breaching the unambiguous terms of the land contract. Suzanne premised her motion
    on the contention that the land contract made no sense and harbored ambiguity, but the plain
    language of the land contract lacked ambiguity. Her arguments to the contrary lacked merit. The
    trial court, therefore, did not err by denying Suzanne’s motion to amend her answer because doing
    so would have been futile.
    Affirmed.
    /s/ Noah P. Hood
    /s/ Brock A. Swartzle
    /s/ James Robert Redford
    -9-