Relative Time Films LLC v. Covenant House Michigan ( 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
    RELATIVE TIME FILMS, LLC and JEAN-                                   FOR PUBLICATION
    CLAUDE LEWIS,                                                        November 10, 2022
    9:20 a.m.
    Plaintiffs-Appellants,
    v                                                                    No. 359645
    Wayne Circuit Court
    COVENANT HOUSE MICHIGAN, COVENANT                                    LC No. 19-012909-CB
    HOUSE ACADEMY DETROIT, and YOUTH
    VISION SOLUTIONS,
    Defendants-Appellees.
    Before: RIORDAN, P.J., and BOONSTRA and GADOLA, JJ.
    RIORDAN, P.J.
    Plaintiffs Jean-Claude Lewis and his film-production company, Relative Time Films, LLC,
    appeal as of right the trial court’s order granting summary disposition of their two-count complaint
    in favor of defendants Covenant House Michigan, Covenant House Academy Detroit, and Youth
    Vision Solutions, implicitly pursuant to MCR 2.116(C)(10). On appeal, plaintiffs argue that the
    trial court erred in its reasoning and that the other grounds for summary disposition raised by
    defendants in the trial court, but not addressed below, are meritless. We disagree and affirm the
    trial court.
    I. FACTS
    Plaintiff Jean-Claude Lewis is the sole shareholder of plaintiff Relative Time Films, LLC,
    a film-production company. At the time relevant to this case, plaintiff Lewis was a member of the
    board of directors of defendant Covenant House Academy Detroit, a public-school charter
    academy. Defendants Covenant House Michigan and Youth Vision Solutions are related nonprofit
    organizations that provide shelter, aid, and education to students in need.1 In about July 2015,
    1
    Defendants’ brief on appeal explains that
    -1-
    plaintiff Lewis learned that a student at Covenant House, Gena Turner, apparently had significant
    artistic talent.2 In August 2015, plaintiff Lewis met with Turner, which resulted in her signing two
    contracts during the meeting. The first contract provided that Turner would convey to plaintiffs
    the exclusive licensing rights to a film production about her life story. 3 The second contract
    provided that Motorwood Entertainment, LLC, would manage her affairs with regard to the film
    Covenant House Michigan (“Covenant”) is a part of Covenant House, the
    largest, mostly privately-funded consolidated agency in the Americas providing
    housing, food, immediate crisis care, and an array of supportive services to children
    and youth facing homelessness. . . . Covenant began its operations with community
    service centers, outreach programs, and vocational programs, and within a few
    years opened two homeless shelters in the Detroit area . . . that together can house
    up to 75 at-risk youth.
    Covenant’s mission has always been to give at-risk children and youth hope
    by providing them housing, support services and education so that they can become
    stable, confident and independent adults. As part of its mission, Covenant opened
    Covenant House Academy Detroit (“CHAD”) in 2005. CHAD has three charter
    schools in east and southwest Detroit for youth and young adults ages 15-22. The
    students who attend CHAD are facing homelessness and do not have high school
    diplomas. . . .
    Youth Vision Solutions (“YVS”), which provides the education
    management services for CHAD’s charter schools in Detroit, is a nonprofit
    corporation that provides education management services to public school
    academies in Michigan. YVS was created for the purpose of contributing to the
    advancement of education by developing educational programs and initiatives that
    are more effective than traditional curricula at preparing children, especially at-risk
    children residing in urban centers, to succeed educationally, emotionally,
    economically, and physically. . . .
    2
    Documents attached to plaintiffs’ February 28, 2020 initial disclosures indicate that Turner
    became involved with defendants due to “many experiential stressors including chronic financial
    problems, multiple changes in residences/schools and a paucity of familial support in affiliation
    with their own personal struggles.” She originally had difficulty in school, but her grades
    improved with additional educational services.
    3
    We note that although the first contract nominally referred only to plaintiff Lewis, it is undisputed
    that it essentially applied to plaintiff Relative Time Films, LLC, as well. The “Option Purchase
    Format” provided that Turner conveyed “the exclusive and irrevocable right to purchase the
    motion picture, television and all allied, ancillary and subsidiary rights” to plaintiffs for $1.00. It
    further provided that plaintiffs would pay Turner a 2.5% share of the purchase price of “a
    development deal with a television network or a major studio.”
    -2-
    production. When entering the contractual arrangements, Turner, then age 19, did not have counsel
    or any other type of representation during plaintiff Lewis’s meeting with her.
    Within days, plaintiff Lewis’s conduct became the subject of controversy within the board
    of directors of defendant Covenant House Academy Detroit, among others. Gerald Piro, executive
    director of defendant Covenant House Michigan, and Michael Krystyniak, superintendent of
    defendant Covenant House Academy Detroit, discussed the matter with plaintiff Lewis. They
    urged plaintiff Lewis to either rescind the contracts or at least allow Turner the opportunity to
    consult with an attorney to reconsider the contracts. In addition, they questioned whether plaintiff
    Lewis inappropriately used his position and attendant influence over Turner to exploit her for his
    personal gain.4 Ultimately, one or more of the defendants provided Turner with an attorney, which
    eventually resulted in her successfully suing to void the management contract with Motorwood
    Entertainment, LLC, in 2017.
    The anticipated film about Turner’s life journey never was produced. Instead, in
    September 2019, plaintiffs commenced the instant action against defendants, claiming that
    defendants tortiously interfered with their production contract with Turner. Plaintiffs alleged that
    “defendants were not happy that they were not going to be able to profit from the venture
    themselves, and therefore engaged in a lengthy battle with plaintiffs that ultimately resulted in
    [Turner] refusing to honor the contract that she had with plaintiffs.” They alleged that defendants
    provided Turner with an attorney to “encourage[] her to sue to get out of the contract[s] she entered
    into,” and “by the time defendants finally allowed the litigation to be dropped, the damage had
    been done and [Turner] refused to co-operate in the making of a film about her life, causing a
    breach of the contract that she had entered into with plaintiffs.” Accordingly, plaintiffs sought
    damages exceeding $25,000 for the lost profits of the anticipated film.5
    4
    The parties’ briefs on appeal do not discuss whether plaintiff Lewis violated any written conflict-
    of-interest agreement by having Turner sign the contracts at issue. Statements made by plaintiff
    Lewis at the 2015 meeting with Piro and Krystyniak imply that board members of defendant
    Covenant House Academy Detroit, including plaintiff Lewis, were required to disclose any
    potential conflict of interest to the board. According to plaintiff Lewis, “I need to put yes or no
    here whether I am receiving monies from the Covenant House, which I’m not, but it’s through her,
    but I asked that question [of counsel] specifically just so I’ll know which one to check so it’s
    accurate, but it doesn’t matter which one I check, it’s disclosure.” Thus, it appears that plaintiff
    Lewis did not technically violate a written conflict-of-interest agreement with defendants, if one
    existed. However, the general appearance of impropriety—plaintiff Lewis using his position for
    personal financial benefit—is readily and starkly apparent. Further, we note that plaintiff Lewis,
    as a member of the board of directors of defendant Covenant House Academy Detroit, a public-
    school charter academy, presumably owed that institution a fiduciary duty under MCL 450.2541
    of the Nonprofit Corporation Act, MCL 450.2101 et seq., or MCL 380.634 and MCL 380.1203 of
    the Revised School Code, MCL 380.1 et seq., to avoid conflicts of interest.
    5
    Plaintiffs also maintained an abuse-of-process claim against defendants, but the trial court
    dismissed that claim and plaintiffs do not pursue it on appeal.
    -3-
    Defendants moved for summary disposition under MCR 2.116(C)(4) (lack of subject-
    matter jurisdiction), (C)(8) (failure to state a claim), and (C)(10) (no genuine issue of material
    fact). The trial court granted summary disposition in favor of defendants, reasoning that “it is
    beyond factual dispute that Lewis’ rights under the . . . [production contract] have been terminated
    in prior proceedings. Thus, Defendants could not be said to have interfered with Lewis’ rights
    under that contract, which precludes liability on the theories pled in the complaint.”
    This appeal followed.
    II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
    “We review a trial court’s decision on a motion for summary disposition under MCR
    2.116(C)(10) de novo.”6 Candler v Farm Bureau Mut Ins Co of Mich, 
    321 Mich App 772
    , 777;
    
    910 NW2d 666
     (2017). “A motion under this court rule tests the factual sufficiency of the
    complaint.” 
    Id.
     (quotation marks and citation omitted). “In evaluating a motion for summary
    disposition brought under this subsection, a trial court considers affidavits, pleadings, depositions,
    admissions, and other evidence submitted by the parties in the light most favorable to the party
    opposing the motion.” 
    Id.
     (quotation marks and citation omitted). “Where the proffered evidence
    fails to establish a genuine issue regarding any material fact, the moving party is entitled to
    judgment as a matter of law.” Maiden v Rozwood, 
    461 Mich 109
    , 120; 
    597 NW2d 817
     (1999).
    III. DISCUSSION
    “In Michigan, tortious interference with a contract or contractual relations is a cause of
    action distinct from tortious interference with a business relationship or expectancy.” Health Call
    of Detroit v Atrium Home & Health Care Servs, Inc, 
    268 Mich App 83
    , 89; 
    706 NW2d 843
     (2005).
    “The elements of tortious interference with a contract are (1) the existence of a contract, (2) a
    breach of the contract, and (3) an unjustified instigation of the breach by the defendant.” 
    Id.
     at 89-
    90. Damages is an element as well. Id. at 90.
    With regard to the third element, “[o]ne who alleges tortious interference with a contractual
    or business relationship must allege the intentional doing of a per se wrongful act or the doing of
    a lawful act with malice and unjustified in law for the purpose of invading the contractual rights
    or business relationship of another.” Derderian v Genesys Health Care Sys, 
    263 Mich App 364
    ,
    382; 
    689 NW2d 145
     (2004) (quotation marks and citation omitted). “A wrongful act per se is an
    act that is inherently wrongful or an act that can never be justified under any circumstances.”
    Knight Enterprises v RPF Oil Co, 
    299 Mich App 275
    , 280; 
    829 NW2d 345
     (2013) (quotation
    marks and citation omitted). “If the defendant’s conduct was not wrongful per se, the plaintiff
    must demonstrate specific, affirmative acts that corroborate the unlawful purpose of the
    interference.” 
    Id.
     (quotation marks and citation omitted). “No categorical answer can be made to
    6
    Although the trial court did not specify whether it granted defendants’ motion under MCR
    2.116(C)(8) or (C)(10), because it considered matters outside the pleadings, we interpret the order
    as granting the motion under subrule (C)(10). See Cuddington v United Health Servs, Inc, 
    298 Mich App 264
    , 270; 
    826 NW2d 519
     (2012).
    -4-
    the question of what will constitute justification, and it is usually held that this question is one for
    the jury.” Wilkinson v Powe, 
    300 Mich 275
    , 283; 
    1 NW2d 539
     (1942). “Justification exists where
    the defendant acted on an equal or superior right.” Greenwald v Greenwald, 
    480 Mich 1158
    , 1158
    (2008) (quotation marks and citations omitted).
    We agree with plaintiffs that there is a genuine issue of material fact concerning the first
    and second elements of the claim.7 However, with regard to the third element, an unjustified
    instigation of the breach by the defendant, while there is a genuine issue of material fact as to
    whether defendants instigated the breach, there is no genuine issue as to whether the instigation
    was unjustified, as we find defendants’ actions to be privileged.8
    Section 770 of the Second Restatement of Torts, which is titled Actor Responsible for
    Welfare of Another, provides as follows:
    One who, charged with responsibility for the welfare of a third person,
    intentionally causes that person not to perform a contract or enter into a prospective
    contractual relation with another, does not interfere improperly with the other’s
    relation if the actor
    (a) does not employ wrongful means and
    (b) acts to protect the welfare of the third person.
    Comment b. to that section further explains:
    Relation between actor and person induced. The rule stated in this Section
    deals with cases in which, by ordinary standards of decent conduct, one is charged
    with some responsibility for the protection of the welfare of another. It does not
    apply to an officious assumption of responsibility. The welfare that is the subject
    of the actor’s responsibility may be physical, moral or economic welfare. The
    responsibility may exist in such relationships as those of parent, or person standing
    in loco parentis, and child, of minister and member of his congregation, attorney
    and client, teacher and pupil or of employer and employee. The rule stated is
    frequently applicable to those who stand in a fiduciary relation toward another, as
    7
    We also agree with plaintiffs that the trial court had jurisdiction because the amount in
    controversy exceeded $25,000, see Hodge v State Farm Mut Auto Ins Co, 
    499 Mich 211
    , 223-224;
    
    884 NW2d 238
     (2016), and that the trial court erred in reasoning that the production contract had
    been voided in prior litigation. The record showed that the management contract, not the
    production contract, had been voided in prior litigation.
    8
    Although the trial court did not grant summary disposition in favor of defendants on this basis,
    we will not reverse the trial court when it reaches the right result for the wrong reasons. See Elia
    Companies, LLC v Univ of Mich Regents, 
    335 Mich App 439
    , 446; 
    966 NW2d 755
     (2021).
    -5-
    in the case of agents acting for the protection of their principals, trustees for their
    beneficiaries or corporate officers acting for the benefit of the corporation.
    In addition, comment e. explains:
    Actor’s purpose. The rule stated in this Section applies to protect the
    welfare of the person induced. If the actor’s conduct is not directed to this end, he
    is not protected by this rule. His conduct is not so directed if he does not believe
    that danger to that welfare is threatened by the relation that he seeks to sever or
    prevent.
    The facts of this case fit within § 770.9 Defendants, as the nonprofit entities responsible
    for housing and educating Turner, a person who entered the Covenant House programs because of
    her unfortunate family circumstances, impoverishment, homelessness, chronic school
    absenteeism, and intellectual challenges, were “charged with responsibility for the welfare of a
    third person.” Indeed, plaintiff Lewis himself acknowledged during the 2015 meeting that
    defendants’ responsibility is “to take care of the kids here.” Although plaintiffs correctly argue on
    appeal that defendants did not have a “fiduciary” duty to Turner, plaintiffs do not dispute that
    defendants had a responsibility for Turner akin to a “teacher-pupil” relationship due to Turner’s
    enrollment in the Covenant House programs and the fact she was living in Covenant House’s
    residential program.
    Further, the record shows that defendants did not “employ wrongful means,” such as fraud
    or violence, to interfere with the production contract between plaintiffs and Turner. See Second
    Restatement of Torts, § 767, comment c. (explaining that “fraud and physical violence” are
    “improper” conduct), and plaintiffs do not suggest otherwise.
    Finally, and most importantly, the undisputed evidence shows that defendants acted “to
    protect the welfare of the third person.” Turner was not represented or aided by an attorney or
    other representative when she signed the production contract with plaintiffs, and the 2015 meeting
    is rife with instances of Piro explaining that defendants would prefer to provide Turner with an
    attorney to help aid her understanding in this regard. For instance, Piro informed plaintiff Lewis
    that
    it’s a legal document and it does outline payment and proceeds and releasing
    all rights to her name, to you and to your company. So it’s pretty professional. So
    going to the -- on a professional level, um, she has had no one to advise her about
    9
    Although § 770 of the Second Restatement of Torts apparently has not yet been cited by a
    Michigan court, this Court has cited and adopted related sections of the Second Restatement of
    Torts that also address tortious interference with a contract. For example, in Winiemko v Valenti,
    
    203 Mich App 411
    , 416; 
    513 NW2d 181
     (1994), P.J. GRIFFIN, on behalf of this Court, discussed
    and applied §§ 766B and 767 of the Second Restatement of Torts. See also Woody v Tamer, 
    158 Mich App 764
    , 775-776; 
    405 NW2d 213
     (1987) (citing § 766 of the Second Restatement of Torts).
    Following the reasoning in this line of cases, we adopt § 770 today.
    -6-
    this. So probably at the very least, she should’ve had counsel from an entertainment
    attorney about what this all means.
    So of course, Cynthia asked her, so what -- what did you think you signed?
    She couldn’t repeat one piece of it. She couldn’t explain to her what -- she -- she
    kept stuttering and stuttering. So my concern is the emotional impact and I know
    it’s yours too, the emotional impact that this had on this young lady who is --
    Later, Piro added:
    [W]hen I read the part about the film, uh, I guess this whole thing has taken
    me aback a little bit, because, you know, we’re so used to trying to manage the
    affairs of these young people here. They have no credit rating, they have no social
    security number . . . . And so now to have this very official, legal binding contract
    put in front of this young lady, it makes us nervous that did she fully understand
    what she was signing . . . .
    Piro reiterated that “what I think would be fair would that she have legal representation
    that we would provide to guide her. She has no idea about how much she should be getting or
    should -- should she hit it big or she has no concept.”
    In light of these statements, as well as the fact that defendants are nonprofit entities charged
    with housing and educating students in need of assistance such as Turner, it is clear that defendants
    acted “to protect the welfare of the third person,” i.e., Turner, by providing her with an attorney to
    assess her contracts with plaintiffs. Therefore, in concert with § 770 of the Second Restatement
    of Torts, there was no unjustified instigation of the breach by defendants because they were
    privileged to do so.10
    Plaintiffs’ only response to the above reasoning is to point out that Piro briefly stated during
    the 2015 meeting that “you stand to profit from it, we don’t,” and Krystyniak briefly stated that
    10
    Plaintiffs contended at oral argument that defendants did not submit sufficient documentary
    evidence to support their motion for summary disposition. Therefore, plaintiffs argue, defendants
    necessarily failed to satisfy their burden as the moving parties. See Quinto v Cross & Peters Co,
    
    451 Mich 358
    , 362; 
    547 NW2d 314
     (1996). However, it never has been disputed during these
    proceedings that defendants were responsible for Turner’s education and care. Plaintiffs
    acknowledge in their complaint that Turner was a student at defendant Covenant House Academy
    Detroit, and various documents submitted to the trial court provide additional detail about the
    relationship between Turner and defendants. Moreover, plaintiffs have not disputed that the record
    of the 2015 meeting with Piro and Krystyniak accurately reflects defendants’ stated motivations
    for providing Turner with an attorney and otherwise becoming involved in the matter. The trial
    court was permitted to consider this evidence when deciding the motion for summary disposition,
    see MCR 2.116(G)(5), and we may now consider it on appeal. Despite some of the more nuanced
    factual issues being less than clear from the record before us, the only factual issues with which
    we are concerned today are undisputed by the parties.
    -7-
    “[t]he things that are on my mind are -- and I’m looking at it as if someone were looking from
    outside . . . I think they’d be looking for like if anybody’s going to personally profit from this and,
    you know, was it our position . . . that put us in the position to profit from it.” Plaintiffs argue that
    these statements at least create a question of fact as to whether defendants sought to interfere with
    the production contract because they were motivated by their own self-interest of avoiding a public
    appearance of impropriety, and not motivated by Turner’s interests.11 This argument misses the
    mark because this Court has stated, in the context of ordinary business competition, that “[i]t
    generally does not constitute improper interference with a contract if a defendant simply takes the
    initiative to gain an advantage over the competition.” Knight Enterprises, 299 Mich App at 282
    (quotation marks and citation omitted). In other words, a defendant may, in some circumstances,
    “interfere” with a contract for its own financial benefit without that motive being deemed
    “unjustified.” It follows here that defendants were justified in “interfering” with a contract, i.e.,
    the production contract, to protect their public reputation from accusations of self-dealing and
    conflict of interest.12 This is particularly true where defendants are not profit-seeking corporate
    entities, but nonprofit entities charged with the well-being, housing, and education of individuals
    such as Turner.13
    For these reasons, as articulated by § 770 of the Second Restatement of Torts, we conclude
    that defendants were privileged to interfere with the production contract between plaintiffs and
    11
    Plaintiffs also argue that these statements suggest that defendants were motivated to obtain the
    anticipated film’s profits for themselves. This, however, completely fails to consider the
    statements in context. When the statements are read and understood in context, defendants were
    concerned with the appearance of self-dealing and conflict of interest, not about directing the
    profits to themselves.
    12
    The Alaska Supreme Court has explained that § 770 of the Second Restatement of Torts does
    not apply when the defendant’s actions “were predominately motivated . . . by spite, malice, or
    some other improper objective.” Geolar, Inc v Gilbert/Commonwealth Inc of Mich, 
    874 P2d 937
    ,
    941 (Ak, 1994). Defendants’ motivations in this case cannot be remotely characterized as “spite,
    malice, or some other improper objective.”
    13
    We acknowledge that Turner was 19 years old when she signed the contracts, so defendants
    were not in loco parentis to her at the time. In addition, there was no written fiduciary relationship
    between any one of the defendants and Turner. However, defendants undoubtedly had a
    supervisory relationship to Turner, perhaps even more so than that with a student residing at a
    preparatory school or in a college dormitory. As noted, Turner experienced homelessness and
    other personal issues before defendants provided her with shelter and educational opportunities,
    which her family was unable to provide. Thus, while defendants were not in loco parentis to
    Turner in the technical, legal sense when she signed the contracts because she was an adult at the
    time, defendants had similar responsibilities for Turner. Indeed, the lower-court record clearly
    shows that several of defendants’ teachers and other agents assumed a personal interest in her
    stability and success. Moreover, although § 770 of the Second Restatement of Torts is “frequently
    applicable” to fiduciary relationships, the existence of such a relationship is not a prerequisite to
    invoking that section.
    -8-
    Turner. Accordingly, we find there is no genuine issue of material fact as to the third element of
    plaintiffs’ tortious interference with a contract claim, and defendants were entitled to summary
    disposition on this basis.14
    IV. CONCLUSION
    There is no genuine issue of material fact as to the third element of plaintiffs’ tortious
    interference with a contract claim. As we adopt the reasoning of § 770 of the Second Restatement
    of Torts, there was no unjustified instigation of the breach by defendants. Therefore, we affirm
    the trial court on this alternate basis.
    /s/ Michael J. Riordan
    /s/ Mark T. Boonstra
    /s/ Michael F. Gadola
    14
    We note that in their brief on appeal, plaintiffs cite multiple cases in which this Court or our
    Supreme Court held that there was a genuine issue of material fact with respect to the third element
    of the claim at issue. Each of those cases, however, involve ordinary competing economic interests
    with no unusual relationship between the defendant and the third party. See, e.g., Patillo v
    Equitable Life Assur Soc of US, 
    199 Mich App 450
    , 457-458; 
    502 NW2d 696
     (1992) (involving
    an at-will employment contract); Winiemko v Valenti, 
    203 Mich App 411
    , 413-414; 
    513 NW2d 181
     (1994) (involving a partnership agreement). This case, in contrast, involves nonprofit entities
    that are specifically charged with the well-being, housing, and education of students of
    extraordinary circumstances and need.
    -9-