Aes Management Inc v. Keckes Silver & Gadd Pc

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 6, 2020
Docket346160
StatusUnpublished

This text of Aes Management Inc v. Keckes Silver & Gadd Pc (Aes Management Inc v. Keckes Silver & Gadd Pc) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Aes Management Inc v. Keckes Silver & Gadd Pc, (Mich. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

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

AES MANAGEMENT, INC., UNPUBLISHED February 6, 2020 Plaintiff-Appellant,

v No. 346160 Macomb Circuit Court KECKES SILVER & GADD, PC., and LC No. 2018-001589-NM LAWRENCE S. GADD,

Defendants-Appellees.

Before: BECKERING, P.J., and CAVANAGH and STEPHENS, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

In this legal malpractice case, plaintiff, AES Management, Inc., appeals as of right the order granting summary disposition to defendants Keckes Silver & Gadd, P.C., and Lawrence S. Gadd, pursuant to MCR 2.116(C)(8) (failure to state a claim). Because plaintiff’s complaint is legally sufficient, summary disposition pursuant to MCR 2.116(C)(8) was improper. Therefore, we reverse the trial court’s order and remand the matter for further proceedings.

I. RELEVANT FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

The alleged malpractice arises from defendants’ handling of plaintiff’s opportunity to appeal in this Court. Plaintiff is a “professional employer organization,” an entity that contracts with a client-entity to take over all or substantially all the client-entity’s human resources tasks. Plaintiff manages approximately seventeen affiliates that perform functions like those performed by plaintiff. In August 2005, the Michigan Unemployment Insurance Agency (“UIA”) determined that plaintiff owed approximately $1.8 million in unpaid unemployment taxes from 2002 to 2005. The UIA determined that plaintiff and its affiliates, referred to collectively as the AES entities, had intentionally avoided paying approximately $1.8 million in unemployment taxes from 2002 to 2005 by creating the affiliates in order to take advantage of the lower unemployment tax rates enjoyed by newer entities before the entity’s unemployment benefit history is factored into and affects the tax rate; a practice referred to as “payrolling.” The UIA further determined that the AES entities had made material misrepresentations to the UIA. In consequence thereof, the UIA determined that plaintiff was subject to statutory damages pursuant to the Michigan Employment

-1- Security Act [MESA], MCL 421.1 et seq., amounting to four times the amount of unpaid unemployment taxes. According to the UIA, plaintiff owed a total of approximately $10 million.

Plaintiff protested the UIA’s determination. Subsequently, the UIA issued a redetermination that affirmed its August 2005 determination and identified the original liable employer as Administrative Employment Services, Inc., plaintiff’s predecessor corporation. When plaintiff protested the redetermination, the UIA referred the matter to the Michigan Administrative Hearings System for a hearing before an administrative law judge (“ALJ”). In 2009, the ALJ issued a decision reversing the UIA’s determination in its entirety, finding that UIA had not established that plaintiff had acted fraudulently or engaged in payrolling. The UIA appealed the ALJ’s decision to the Michigan Compensation Appellate Commission (MCAC).

In or around May 2014, plaintiff retained defendants to represent it in the unemployment taxes matter. In September 2014, the MCAC issued a decision modifying the ALJ decision. The MCAC agreed with the ALJ that plaintiff had not committed fraud and, consequently, was not subject to damages provided for by the MESA. However, the MCAC concluded that plaintiff had engaged in payrolling and found that the AES entities should be consolidated for purposes of unemployment tax contributions because they were being operated by plaintiff as one business. The MCAC further found that the UIA was not statutorily barred from consolidating the entities for unemployment tax purposes. The MCAC’s decision reinstated plaintiff’s nearly $1.8 million unemployment tax liability. In October 2014, defendants acted on behalf of plaintiff to appeal the MCAC decision in the Macomb County Circuit Court. On April 17, 2015, the circuit court issued an opinion and order affirming the MCAC’s decision.

It is undisputed that defendants did not inform plaintiff of the circuit court’s opinion and order until sending it to plaintiff on January 15, 2016, nine months after its issuance. There followed a relative flurry of activity directed toward obtaining appellate review of the circuit court’s order. In February 2016, plaintiff hired different counsel to file an emergency motion for leave to file a delayed motion for reconsideration in the circuit court. The court granted the motion, but ultimately affirmed its April 2015 order. In June 2016, defendants filed on plaintiff’s behalf a delayed application for leave to appeal in this Court, which this Court denied for lack of jurisdiction.1 This Court subsequently denied plaintiff’s motion for reconsideration.2 Plaintiff then filed two petitions for leave to appeal this Court’s orders in Michigan’s Supreme Court, both of which the Supreme Court denied.3

1 AES Mgt Inc v Consumer & Indus Servs, unpublished order of the Court of Appeals, entered August 2, 2016 (Docket No. 333597). Consumer & Industry Services is a department of the UIA. 2 AES Mgt Inc v Consumer & Indus Servs, unpublished order of the Court of Appeals, entered September 7, 2016 (Docket No. 333597). 3 AES Mgt Inc v Dep’t of Consumer & Indus Servs, Unemployment Ins Agency, 500 Mich 960 (No. 154585; Court of Appeals No. 333597); AES Mgt Inc v Dep’t of Consumer & Indus Servs, Unemployment Ins Agency, 500 Mich 960 (No. 154587; Court of Appeals No. 334382).

-2- On September 26, 2017, plaintiff filed the complaint initiating the legal malpractice action at issue in this appeal. In order to avoid repetition, we address the details of plaintiff’s complaint in the discussion section below. In May 2018, defendants filed a motion for summary disposition pursuant to MCR 2.116(C)(8), claiming that plaintiff did not plead in its complaint that the issues it would have raised on appeal in the underlying action were of sufficient public importance, or that the circuit court’s errors were so readily apparent and significant, that this Court would have granted leave. Defendants further argued that plaintiff could not meet this standard because the issues involved in the unemployment taxes matter pertained to plaintiff’s unique business structure and operation, and that the Michigan Supreme Court’s denial of its applications for leave to appeal this Court’s orders showed that the errors alleged were neither readily apparent nor significant. Without establishing that this Court would have granted a timely filed application for leave, argued defendants, plaintiff could not prevail in its legal malpractice claim because it could not prove causation. For these reasons, defendants maintained, the circuit court should grant their motion for summary disposition.4

Rejecting the legal standard championed by defendants, plaintiff argued that because it can demonstrate that the circuit court in the underlying action clearly erred by affirming the MCAC decision, this Court would have granted a timely filed application for leave to appeal and would have reversed the circuit court’s order.

In July 2018, the circuit court in the instant case ordered additional briefing on (1) the proper standard for the circuit court to use in determining whether this Court would have granted a timely filed application for leave to appeal, and (2) whether this Court would have decided the underlying tax issues in plaintiff’s favor.

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