Brunsell v. City of Zeeland

651 N.W.2d 388, 467 Mich. 293
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 24, 2002
DocketDocket 120051
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 651 N.W.2d 388 (Brunsell v. City of Zeeland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brunsell v. City of Zeeland, 651 N.W.2d 388, 467 Mich. 293 (Mich. 2002).

Opinion

*294 Per Curiam.

In this case, plaintiff Eleanor Brunsell claims that defendant city of Zeeland is hable to her as an intended third-party beneficiary under a contract between the city and another party. The trial court granted summary disposition in favor of the city. The Court of Appeals affirmed in an unpublished opinion, relying on the lead opinion in Koenig v South Haven, 460 Mich 667; 597 NW2d 99 (1999). We agree with the conclusion of the lower courts that plaintiff was not an intended third-party beneficiary under the circumstances of this case and, accordingly, affirm the Court of Appeals resolution of this issue.

i

Plaintiff alleges that she tripped and feU while walking because of a defect 1 in a sidewalk, resulting in a fractured left wrist. The sidewalk was part of an area leased to the city by the First Michigan Bank & Trust Company. The lease agreement provided that a sidewalk was among the “improvements” that the city, as lessee, was authorized to construct. Pivotal to plaintiffs third-party beneficiary claim, the lease agreement included the following paragraph:

5. Maintenance. The Lessee [the city] shall repair the improvements which it constructs on the premises as may be necessary for the public safety. The Lessor [the bank] shall remove snow, pick-up litter, and perform such other sanitary maintenance as may be required.

Plaintiff brought this action, alleging in pertinent part, that the city was liable to her as a third-party *295 beneficiary for violating its contractual undertaking (in the quoted paragraph of the lease agreement) to “repair the improvements which it constructs on the premises as may be necessary for the public safety.” 2

In granting summary disposition in favor of the city, the trial court, applying the lead opinion in Koenig, concluded that “there was not a sufficiently defined class to allow the filing of a third party beneficiary claim.” In affirming, the Court of Appeals similarly relied on the lead opinion in Koenig in concluding that plaintiff was not an intended third-party beneficiary of the lease agreement with standing to sue for its alleged violation. In particular, that Court concluded that the agreement was primarily intended to benefit the parties to it (the city and the bank) by allocating their respective duties regarding maintenance of the leased area and that “the public generally” was too broad a group to be considered intended third-party beneficiaries of a contract.

n

We review de novo the resolution of a summary disposition motion. Roberts v Mecosta Co Gen Hosp, 466 Mich 57, 62; 642 NW2d 663 (2002).

in

MCL 600.1405, the third-party beneficiary statute, provides in pertinent part:

*296 Any person for whose benefit a promise is made by way of contract, as hereinafter defined, has the same right to enforce said promise that he would have had if the said promise had been made directly to him as the promisee.
(1) A promise shall be construed to have been made for the benefit of a person whenever the promisor of said promise has undertaken to give or to do or refrain from doing something directly to or for said person.
* * *
(2) (b) If such person is not in being or ascertainable at the time the promise becomes legally binding on the promisor then his rights shall become vested the moment he comes into being or becomes ascertainable if the promise has not been discharged by agreement between the promisor and the promisee in the meantime.

Importantly, the plain language of this statute reflects that not every person incidentally benefitted by a contractual promise has a right to sue for breach of that promise, but rather only if the promisor has “undertaken to give or to do or refrain from doing something directly to or for said person.” MCL 600.1405(1) (emphasis added).

In other words, MCL 600.1405 draws a distinction between intended third-party beneficiaries who may sue for a breach of a contractual promise in their favor and incidental third-party beneficiaries who may not. In this regard, we agree with and adopt the following statutory analysis from the lead opinion in Koenig, supra at 676-677, 680:

In describing the conditions under which a contractual promise is to be construed as for the benefit of a third party to the contract in § 1405, the Legislature utilized the modifier “directly.” Simply stated, section 1405 does not empower just any person who benefits from a contract to enforce it. Rather, it states that a person is a third-party *297 beneficiary of a contract only when the promisor undertakes an obligation “directly” to or for the person. This language indicates the Legislature’s intent to assure that contracting parties are clearly aware that the scope of their contractual undertakings encompasses a third party, directly referred to in the contract, before the third party is able to enforce the contract. Subsection 1405(2)(b)’s recognition that a contract may crate a class of third-party beneficiaries that includes a person not yet in being or ascertainable precludes an overly restrictive construction of subsection 1405(1). That is, it precludes a construction that would require precision that is impossible in some circumstances, such as would be the case if there were a requirement in all cases that a third-party beneficiary be referenced by proper name in the contract. This is simply to say that the Legislature, in drafting these two provisions, apparently wanted to strike a balance between an impossible level of specificity and no specificity at all. This means that there must be limits on the use of subsection 1405(2)(b) to broaden the interpretation of subsection 1405(1) because otherwise the result is to remove all meaning from the Legislature’s use of the modifier “directly.”
* * *
[A] third-party beneficiary may be a member of a class, but the class must be sufficiently described. This follows ineluctably from subsection 1405(l)’s requirement that an obligation be undertaken directly for a person to confer third-party beneficiary status. As can be seen then, this of course means that the class must be something less than the entire universe, e.g., “the public”; otherwise, subsection 1405(2)(b) would rob subsection 1405(1) of any narrowing effect. The rationale would appear to be that a contracting party can only be held to have knowingly undertaken an obligation directly for the benefit of a class of persons if the class is reasonably identified. Further, in undertaking this analysis, an objective standard is to be used to determine from the contract itself whether the promisor undertook “to give or to do or to refrain from doing something directly

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
651 N.W.2d 388, 467 Mich. 293, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brunsell-v-city-of-zeeland-mich-2002.