Rudolph T Stonisch III v. David M Clapper ( 2020 )


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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
    RUDOLPH T. STONISCH, III,                                            UNPUBLISHED
    March 12, 2020
    Plaintiff-Appellee,
    v                                                                    No. 347724
    Oakland Circuit Court
    DAVID M. CLAPPER,                                                    LC No. 2017-157223-CZ
    Defendant-Appellant.
    Before: STEPHENS, P.J., and CAVANAGH and SERVITTO, JJ.
    PER CURIAM.
    Following this Court’s opinion in Stonisch v Forthright IV, LLC, unpublished per curiam
    opinion of the Court of Appeals, issued November 15, 2018 (Docket Nos. 335635, 335821,
    339558, 340787 and 343741), the trial court granted defendant’s motion to dismiss plaintiff’s case
    against defendant for personal liability relative to a previous judgment and sanctions against
    defendant’s company, Forthright IV, LLC (Forthright), but denied defendant’s motion to return
    his appeal bond. Defendant appeals as of right, challenging the court’s decision to not return the
    appeal bond. We affirm.
    Before the appeal, the trial court had entered a judgment and orders in a different case
    requiring that Forthright pay a total of $51,052 to plaintiff. It then granted summary disposition
    to plaintiff on his claim against defendant for personal liability. This Court affirmed the judgment
    and orders as to Forthright but reversed with respect to defendant, concluding that plaintiff’s
    complaint should have been dismissed as premature because it was not demonstrated that
    Forthright could not pay the money it owed plaintiff.
    This Court reviews a trial court’s decision on whether to return a bond for an abuse of
    discretion. In re Forfeiture of Surety Bond, 
    208 Mich. App. 369
    , 375; 529 NW2d 312 (1995). The
    trial court abuses its discretion when it chooses an outcome outside the range of reasonable and
    principled outcomes. Maldonado v Ford Motor Co, 
    476 Mich. 372
    , 388; 719 NW2d 809 (2006).
    An appeal of a trial court order or judgment “does not stay” its “effect or enforceability,”
    with specific exceptions provided in MCR 2.614 or MCL 600.867, unless this Court orders a stay
    or the trial court orders a stay pending appeal. MCR 7.209(A)(1). “Within the time for taking the
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    appeal, the appellant shall file in the court or the tribunal from which the appeal is taken . . . any
    bond required by law as a condition for taking the appeal[.]” MCR 7.204(E)(3). “Unless
    determined by law, or as otherwise provided by this rule, the dollar amount of a stay or appeal
    bond in a civil action or probate proceeding must be set by the trial court in an amount adequate
    to protect the opposite party.” MCR 7.209(B)(1). Under MCR 7.209, an appeal bond stays
    execution of the judgment or order during proceedings before this Court until jurisdiction is again
    vested with the trial court. See MCR 7.305(I) (stating that, when a stay bond has been filed in the
    Court of Appeals, “it operates to stay proceedings pending disposition of the appeal in the Supreme
    Court unless otherwise ordered by the Supreme Court or the Court of Appeals”).
    The contents of an appeal bond are dictated in MCR 7.209(F)(1), which provides in
    relevant part:
    (1) Civil Actions and Probate Proceedings. In a bond filed for stay pending
    appeal in a civil action or probate proceeding, the appellant shall promise in writing:
    (a) to prosecute the appeal to decision;
    (b) to perform or satisfy a judgment or order of the Court of Appeals or the
    Supreme Court;
    (c) to perform or satisfy the judgment or order appealed from, if the appeal
    is dismissed;
    ***
    (e) to do any other act which is expressly required in the statute authorizing
    appeal.
    In this case, the parties stipulated that an appeal bond would be executed. The stipulation
    provided the reasoning for defendant obtaining an appeal bond, stating:
    The Court granted Summary Disposition in Plaintiffs favor against Defendant
    David Clapper. The Court’s Order on Motions for Summary Disposition and Entry
    of Judgment, entered by the Court on March 27, 2018, ordered that Defendant is
    liable to Plaintiff on all judgments entered to date in Case No. 2015-150628-CH
    against Forthright IV, LLC, and in favor of Rudolph T. Stonisch, III, totaling, with
    interest, approximately $54,215. Defendant filed an appeal of the Court’s March
    27, 2018 Order and the Court’s Order denying Defendant’s Motion for
    Reconsideration, dated April 19, 2018, before the Michigan Court of Appeals on
    May 10, 2018. Defendant desires to stay enforcement of the judgments in Stonisch
    v. Forthright IV, LLC, Case No. 2015-150628-CH, and this case during the
    pendency of the appeals, and Plaintiff desires a bond.
    The stipulation concluded:
    Pursuant to MCR 7.209(E)(2)(a), an appeal bond in the form of cash in the sum of
    $59,637 will be deposited by Defendant with the Clerk of the Oakland County
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    Circuit Court on or before May 25, 2018. Therefore, the parties, upon such deposit
    being made, and acting through their respective counsel, stipulate that enforcement
    of the judgments are stayed on the terms set forth in the Order Regarding Bond on
    Appeal.
    The trial court’s subsequent order stated that defendant was agreeing to
    a. Diligently prosecute the appeal of the Order on Motions for Summary
    Disposition and Entry of Judgment, entered by the Court on March 27, 2018, and
    the Order denying Defendant’s Motion for Reconsideration, entered by the Court
    on April 19, 2018, to decision and perform and satisfy the judgment or order
    entered by the Court of Appeals or Supreme Court;
    b. perform or satisfy the orders appealed if they are not set aside or reversed,
    including costs and interest, if applicable; and
    c. Perform any other acts required by law.
    The trial court concluded:
    IT IS HEREBY ORDERED that enforcement of the Judgment entered by this Court
    on March 27, 2018, and the judgments entered in Stonisch v. Forthright IV, LLC,
    Case No. 2015-150628-CH, are stayed during the pendency of the appeals in this
    matter and the appeals in Case No. 2015-150-628-CH, upon a cash deposit of
    $59,637 by Defendant with the Clerk of this Court on or before May 25, 2018. The
    deposit shall remain with the Clerk until further order of this Court.
    Defendant signed a form indicating that he had paid a $59,637 bond (on a judgment of $51,052);
    the form included the language required by MCR 7.209(F)(1), specifically that defendant would
    “[d]iligently prosecute this appeal to decision,” and “perform or satisfy the judgment or order
    appealed including costs and interest.”
    A stipulation by parties to a court case is a contract that is “governed by the legal principles
    applicable to the construction and interpretation of contracts.” Bd of Co Rd Comm’rs for Co of
    Eaton v Schultz, 
    205 Mich. App. 371
    , 379; 521 NW2d 847 (1994). The goal of contract
    interpretation “is to determine and enforce the parties’ intent on the basis of the plain language of
    the contract itself.” AFSCME v Detroit, 
    267 Mich. App. 255
    , 262; 704 NW2d 712 (2005). This
    Court’s “primary goal in interpreting any contract is to give effect to the parties’ intentions at the
    time they entered into the contract.” Bank of America, NA v First American Title Ins Co, 
    499 Mich. 74
    , 85; 878 NW2d 816 (2016). In this case, the language of the stipulation and the trial court order
    regarding bond demonstrate that the parties intended for the bond to apply to the judgment in the
    2015 Forthright case as well as the instant case.
    The stipulation states that defendant had appealed the trial court’s order in the instant case
    that “[d]efendant is liable to Plaintiff on all judgments” from the 2015 Forthright case (totaling
    $54,215, including interest). Critically, the stipulation stated that defendant wanted to stay the
    judgments of the instant case and the 2015 Forthright case “during the pendency of the appeals,”
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    and concluded that defendant’s deposit of a $59,637 appeal bond would result in a “stipulate[ion]
    that enforcement of the judgments are stayed.” Thus, the term “appeals” in the stipulation refers
    to a stay in the two appeals mentioned, and the stay was intended to apply to judgments that had
    been mentioned—the instant case and the 2015 Forthright case. The language of the filed
    agreement of the parties states an intention that the bond that defendant paid was to stay the
    judgment in the 2015 Forthright case, as well as the instant case.
    In the stipulation, the parties agreed to abide by the “terms set forth in the Order Regarding
    Bond on Appeal.” The trial court’s order regarding bond ordered that, pursuant to defendant’s
    deposit of the bond, the judgments of both the instant case and the 2015 Forthright case were
    stayed “during the pendency of the appeals” in both matters. Thus, the trial court’s order embodied
    the parties’ agreement that defendant would pay a bond in order to stay the judgments in this and
    the 2015 Forthright case while defendant was appealing the orders and judgments in those cases.
    The trial court’s order regarding bond states that defendant agreed to “prosecute the appeal”
    of the trial court’s orders granting summary disposition, entering judgment, and denying
    reconsideration in the instant case, and perform and satisfy orders pertaining to this case, without
    similar language about the 2015 Forthright case. However, defendant had already been pursuing
    appeals in the 2015 Forthright case for 18 months at the time of the order and the trial court ordered
    that the bond was to stay the judgments in both cases during the pendency of both appeals, rather
    than just the appeal in the instant case. Thus, the trial court’s order regarding bond does require
    defendant to pursue his appeal of the 2015 Forthright case, and he was obligated to comply with
    related orders as one of the conditions of the bond.
    Defendant argues that the bond form governs the case and that the bond form only required
    that defendant prosecute the appeal of the instant case. In this case, the bond form was filed in and
    marked with the case number of the instant case, but did not specify which appeals defendant
    would or would not pursue pursuant to the parties’ agreement. The trial judge did not sign the
    bond on appeal, but did sign the order entered pursuant to the stipulation regarding bond, which
    was submitted with the stipulation. “[A] court speaks through its written orders[.]” In re Contempt
    of Henry, 
    282 Mich. App. 656
    , 678; 765 NW2d 44 (2009). Moreover, the parties’ agreement was
    reflected in the stipulation and order, not the bond form, which would have been unilaterally
    negotiated by defendant.
    Defendant also argues that there was not a “meeting of the minds” sufficient to form an
    agreement if the parties disagreed about whether the bond would serve to guarantee the judgment
    in the 2015 Forthright case. However, defendant memorialized his agreement regarding the bond
    with plaintiff and specified that he “desire[d] to stay enforcement of the judgments in Stonisch v.
    Forthright IV, LLC, Case No. 2015-150628-CH, and this case during the pendency of the appeals,”
    and that he would deposit $59,637 with the “stipulate[ion] that enforcement of the judgments are
    stayed on the terms set forth in the Order Regarding Bond on Appeal.” Defendant argues that the
    2015 Forthright case is only mentioned to clarify which judgment was stayed and would be
    appealed. However, the parties’ words and the language of the trial court are unambiguous and
    their meaning is apparent.
    The purpose of a stay is “to preserve the status quo during the period an aggrieved party
    has to file posttrial motions or an appeal.” In re Contempt of Calcutt, 
    184 Mich. App. 749
    , 755;
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    458 NW2d 919 (1990). In this case, the documents evidence the parties’ intent for the bond to
    secure a stay of the judgments in this case and the 2015 Forthright case. Defendant does not
    explain why plaintiff would agree to stay the judgments during his appeals in both the current and
    2015 Forthright cases, but only require one bond. Defendant stated that his desire was to have the
    judgments in both cases stayed, and defendant asked for a stay of the judgments in both cases at
    the conclusion of the hearing on motions for disposition. Additionally, the amount of the appeal
    bond was similar to the amount of the judgment in the 2015 Forthright case. A bond includes a
    promise by the appellant “to perform or satisfy the judgment or order appealed from.” MCR
    7.209(F)(1)(c). Both the stipulation and the order regarding bond state that both the judgment in
    the instant case and in the 2015 Forthright case would be stayed by the payment of the bond.
    Defendant received the benefit, and the purpose and intent of the bond was fulfilled because
    enforcement of the judgments in the instant case and 2015 Forthright case was stayed pending
    appeal. The stated original basis for filing the appeal bond, to stay enforcement of the judgments
    and allow defendant to prosecute the appeals in this case and the 2015 Forthright case, continued
    to exist beyond the dismissal of the current case. Because the evidence strongly supports the
    conclusion that defendant paid the bond in order to achieve a stay on enforcement in the 2015
    Forthright case and the instant case, the trial court did not abuse its discretion by denying
    defendant’s motion for the return of the bond.
    Affirmed.
    /s/ Cynthia Diane Stephens
    /s/ Mark J. Cavanagh
    /s/ Deborah A. Servitto
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Document Info

Docket Number: 347724

Filed Date: 3/12/2020

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 3/13/2020