Auburn Area Chamber of Commerce Inc v. Tracy Arthur

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 10, 2025
Docket372134
StatusPublished

This text of Auburn Area Chamber of Commerce Inc v. Tracy Arthur (Auburn Area Chamber of Commerce Inc v. Tracy Arthur) 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
Auburn Area Chamber of Commerce Inc v. Tracy Arthur, (Mich. Ct. App. 2025).

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

AUBURN AREA CHAMBER OF COMMERCE, FOR PUBLICATION INC., December 10, 2025 12:08 PM Plaintiff,

and

MATT TETLOFF, RYAN ROUSSEAU, AMANDA KERNSTOCK, HARRISON GUNDEN, and TIM DRUMMOND,

Appellants,

v No. 372134 Bay Circuit Court TRACY ARTHUR, BRIAN K. MICHAEL, PHILIP LC No. 2024-003049-CZ SCOTT HARTSOUGH, SAMANTHA KUNZ, ANGIE GANSSER, LEE KILBOURN, STEVEN VANTOL, and RUSSELL LEONARD,

Defendants-Appellees.

Before: YATES, P.J., and BOONSTRA and YOUNG, JJ.

YATES, P.J.

On June 5, 2023, something extraordinary happened during a meeting of the Auburn Area Chamber of Commerce (COC). A group of disgruntled COC members attended that meeting, and before that fateful day ended, they purportedly wrested control of the COC from its chosen leaders.

-1- The attempted exercise of power by plaintiffs,1 Matt Tetloff, Ryan Rousseau, Amanda Kernstock,2 Harrison Gunden, and Tim Drummond, did not sit well with defendants, who were all duly selected leaders of the COC. Unsurprisingly, this litigation ensued. Plaintiffs claimed in a complaint filed in January 2024 that they had ousted the COC’s leadership team and thereafter installed themselves as the COC’s leaders, so the actions they took in that capacity after the June 5 meeting were valid. In contrast, defendants contended that they were never dispossessed of their leadership roles in the COC, so plaintiffs’ actions taken on behalf of the COC were null and void. In awarding summary disposition to defendants under MCR 2.116(C)(8), the trial court explained that plaintiffs’ takeover of the COC was improper, so all of their actions were meaningless as a matter of law. Moreover, plaintiffs had no right to amend the complaint because any amendment would be futile. We affirm.

I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND

By all accounts, defendants were the members of the board of the COC until June 5, 2023, and plaintiffs are a group of COC members who insist that they became the board members of the COC because of the events that took place at the COC meeting on June 5, 2023.

The parties largely agree about what happened at the meeting on June 5, 2023, but disagree about the legal consequences of those events. As soon as COC President Brian Michael began the meeting, Harrison Gunden “asked to be recognized,” but he was refused by both President Michael and Vice President Philip Scott Hartsough. Next, Gunden attempted to make a motion to remove President Michael from presiding over the meeting and to replace Michael with Ryan Rousseau as president pro tem, but his motion was not recognized. Gunden then tried to make a motion to hold a popular vote “by division of the house.” According to plaintiffs, it then “was evident” that more people than not supported Gunden’s motion. At that point, President Michael attempted to adjourn the meeting, but the parties disagree about whether he properly adjourned the meeting. The parties agree that COC Chair Tracy Arthur, who owned the building where the meeting was taking place, then asked that everyone leave the building.

According to plaintiffs, Gunden and others who had supported his motion left the building and went to a nearby park “to continue the meeting.” The group purportedly continued the meeting outside, where motions to remove Michael as president and to remove Hartsough as vice president were approved by popular vote of the participants. After “formal adoption of Robert’s Rules of Order and the scheduling of another meeting on June 20,”3 the meeting was adjourned. Later that

1 This case was filed in the name of the COC, acting under the direction of the people who claimed to be the new leaders of the COC. But because the trial court determined that the people identified as appellants were not the true members of the COC board, those people filed this appeal in their own names because they lacked authority to continue to pursue the claims on behalf of the COC. Thus, we will refer to the people who claimed to be the new leaders as plaintiffs. 2 Amanda Kernstock is no longer involved in this case because she was dismissed from this appeal for want of prosecution. Auburn Area Chamber of Commerce v Arthur, unpublished order of the Court of Appeals, entered February 28, 2025 (Docket No. 372134). 3 See Robert’s Rules of Order, Newly Revised (12th ed).

-2- day, Rousseau, who purported to be acting as president pro tem of the COC, executed a quitclaim deed conveying a piece of property owned by the COC to a group called the Auburn Jaycees.

According to plaintiffs, on June 20, 2023, their group conducted a meeting and appointed Rousseau as chair pro tem. Their group also adopted a revised constitution and bylaws, and elected a governing board for the COC (the new board). The members of the old board—including Arthur, Michael, Hartsough, Sam Kunz, Angie Gansser, Steve VanTol, and Lee Kilbourn—were removed from their positions on the board and censured.

In addition, the new board voted to undertake actions to remove access to the COC’s bank account from the old board and provide that access to the new board. Members of the new board tried to access that account, but the old board refused to relinquish control of that account, which prompted the financial institution to freeze the bank account pending a determination of the proper members of the COC’s board. Also, plaintiffs alleged that an event called the 2023 Cornfest was cancelled “in large part” because of “interference” from the old board. Plaintiffs contended that the cancellation caused the COC to lose revenue and suffer damage to its reputation.

On January 25, 2024, plaintiffs filed suit, asserting claims of fraudulent misrepresentation, civil conspiracy, violation of common law trademark, and breach of fiduciary duties. Additionally, plaintiffs requested a declaratory judgment, injunctive relief, and monetary damages.

On June 20, 2024, all defendants moved for summary disposition under MCR 2.116(C)(8), asserting that, as a matter of law, the complaint did not establish that plaintiffs had adhered to the procedures necessary to bring a motion to the floor at the June 5, 2023 meeting, as outlined in the COC’s constitution and bylaws. Defendants further contended that plaintiffs did not adhere to the procedures necessary to remove officers of the COC or to appoint new officers. Defendants stated that resolution of that issue required a review of the COC’s constitution and bylaws, and also noted that the COC is governed by the Nonprofit Corporation Act, MCL 450.2101 et seq.

Defendants insisted that President Michael was authorized under the bylaws to preside over regular meetings as well as meetings of the board of directors, so he had the authority to determine the order of business. Defendants contended that Gunden’s motion had no effect because President Michael never recognized Gunden, a decision that was within President Michael’s authority. They also argued that even if Gunden’s motion was properly before the COC, Gunden lacked the power to call for a vote on his own motion under the Nonprofit Corporation Act, MCL 450.2406(2). And as a result, according to defendants, President Michael acted within his authority when he refused to acknowledge Gunden’s call for a vote.

Defendants further claimed that President Michael had the right to unilaterally adjourn the meeting under MCL 450.2406(2). Defendants asserted that even if Gunden’s motion was properly carried, Rousseau could not have become the presiding officer of the meeting because the COC’s vice-president was at the meeting, so he would have been the presiding officer.

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Bluebook (online)
Auburn Area Chamber of Commerce Inc v. Tracy Arthur, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/auburn-area-chamber-of-commerce-inc-v-tracy-arthur-michctapp-2025.