Charles Featherly Construction Co. v. Property Development Group, Inc.

253 N.W.2d 643, 400 Mich. 198, 1977 Mich. LEXIS 137
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJune 2, 1977
Docket58119, (Calendar No. 5)
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 253 N.W.2d 643 (Charles Featherly Construction Co. v. Property Development Group, Inc.) 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
Charles Featherly Construction Co. v. Property Development Group, Inc., 253 N.W.2d 643, 400 Mich. 198, 1977 Mich. LEXIS 137 (Mich. 1977).

Opinion

Coleman, J.

Charles Featherly Construction Company (Featherly) built some condominiums for which it claims not to have been fully paid. Defendants own or participated in the financing of the entire condominium development which includes those units built by the plaintiff. The circuit court dismissed the lawsuit against defendants with prejudice primarily because the plaintiff had not complied with the residential builders licensing act. 1 The Court of Appeals affirmed.

The dispositive question 2 is whether plaintiff was a residential builder required to have a residential builders license in order to maintain an action for compensation for construction of the condominiums. 3

We affirm the Court of Appeals.

*202 I

Section 1 of the residential builders licensing act says:

"In order to safeguard and protect home owners and persons undertaking to become home owners, it shall be unlawful * * * for any person to engage in the business of or to act in the capacity of a residential builder * * * without having a license therefor * * * .”

Section 2(b) of the act defines a residential builder as one "engaged in the construction of residential structures or a combination of residential and commercial structures”. 4 Section 2(f) defines a residential structure as "premises used or intended to be used for residence purposes”. 5

The act’s most important sanction is in § 16, which mandates, inter alia:

"No person engaged in the business or acting in the capacity of a residential builder * * * may bring or maintain any action in any court of this state for the collection of compensation for the performance of any act or contract for which a license is required by this act without alleging and proving that he was duly licensed under this act at all time during the performance of such act or contract * * * .” 6

The circuit court relied primarily upon this section of the act as a basis for dismissing the lawsuit.

Featherly’s principal contention is that the licensing act was designed to protect individual homeowners, not owners of whole developments like the defendants. Therefore, it argues that § 16’s *203 prohibition against legal action should not be enforced in this particular case.

This argument reverses the orientation of the act and thus renders the argument suspect. The act does not set up classes of defendants, some of whom are protected and some of whom are not. The act defines a class of plaintiffs — residential builders — and prohibits them from bringing or maintaining "any action in any court of this state” unless they have a residential builders license. The prohibition is not described as a defense that may only be asserted in certain situations. It is a penalty that divests the unlicensed builder of the power to sue. Also, the only stated exceptions to this prohibition are defined in terms of builders who fall outside the class of builders which the act seeks to regulate. 7 The act does not treat the status of the defendant as an important consideration.

Nevertheless, the plaintiff urges us to engraft an exception onto § 16’s prohibition based on the defendants’ status. Featherly argues that the introductory phrase in § 1, "[i]n order to safeguard and protect home owners and persons undertaking to become home owners,” supports such an exception. We are asked to read the term "home owner” as meaning individual homeowner, and then use this new term as the basis for an implied exception to § 16.

Without passing upon the merits of the act, we believe the Legislature did not intend such a result. The Legislature defined the "person” who might undertake to become a homeowner as "an individual, firm, partnership, association, copartnership, corporation, common law trust, or other *204 organization or a combination thereof’. 8 Many of these entities obviously are not individuals building homes for themselves.

The Legislature said builders must be licensed to collect compensation for the construction of combination residential and commercial structures. 9 Such structures obviously are not individual, separate dwellings and their owners are often not individuals.

The Legislature said any "person” is authorized to file a complaint with the building commission against a builder for violations of the act. 10 This power is not limited to individual homeowners.

Most importantly, the Legislature said that an unlicensed builder who builds a residential structure is prohibited from initiating or continuing "any action in any court of this state” for the purpose of collecting compensation for the construction of that structure. 11 This language is all-inclusive.

Today, one cannot seriously argue that the ultimate purchaser of a condominium is not a homeowner. The high and rising cost of separate single family dwellings and the unavailability of reasonable maintenance services for their upkeep have led progressively more people to buy condominiums as their homes. As homeowners, they need the act’s protection as much as or more than the owner of a separate dwelling structure. However, the ultimate purchasers of condominium units have little or no contact with builders like the plaintiff and as a result are not in a position to protect themselves.

Plaintiff would have us rule that only the ulti *205 mate purchaser may avoid legal action pursuant to § 16’s prohibition. The act, however, addresses itself to the protection of various kinds of homeowners, including business entities which are ordinarily the only ones financially able to develop multiunit residential projects and the only ones in a position to insure compliance with the act.

We believe the Legislature intended owners of entire residential developments, like the defendants, to be protected by the act.

II

The cases cited by the plaintiff do not aid its contention that an exception should be read into § 16 to permit this particular lawsuit.

In Tracer v Bushre, 381 Mich 282; 160 NW2d 898 (1968), this Court rejected a constitutional challenge to the validity of the residential builders licensing act. In doing so, the Court said the Legislature could treat builders of residential structures or combination residential and commercial structures differently from builders of purely commercial structures.

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Bluebook (online)
253 N.W.2d 643, 400 Mich. 198, 1977 Mich. LEXIS 137, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/charles-featherly-construction-co-v-property-development-group-inc-mich-1977.