Ellis v. Kaye-Kibbey

581 F. Supp. 2d 861, 2008 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 80617, 2008 WL 4531795
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Michigan
DecidedOctober 10, 2008
Docket1:07-cv-00910
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 581 F. Supp. 2d 861 (Ellis v. Kaye-Kibbey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Michigan primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ellis v. Kaye-Kibbey, 581 F. Supp. 2d 861, 2008 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 80617, 2008 WL 4531795 (W.D. Mich. 2008).

Opinion

Opinion and Order

PAUL MALONEY, Chief Judge.

Granting in Part and Denying in Part the Defendant’s Motion for Summary Judgment:

Permitting Plaintiff to Proceed as to Defendant’s October 2003 — April 13, 2004 Communications; Permitting Plaintiff to Proceed as to Defendant’s April 7, 2004 Affidavit

Dismissing Claim as to Documents Produced by Defendant in Response to Enslen 2004 Subpoena; Dismissing Claim as to Testimony by Defendant at April 2007 NASD Hearing;

Plaintiff Rodney D. Ellis (“Ellis”) claims that defendant Marilyn A. Kaye-Kibbey *864 (“Kaye”) violated a written release agreement (“the agreement”) by making disparaging statements about Ellis and his corporation. It is undisputed that Kaye did the following after the execution of that agreement: filed an affidavit and testified on behalf of Ellis’s adversary in a National Association of Securities Dealers (“NASD”) arbitration proceeding. Kaye moves to dismiss the second amended complaint on two independent grounds. First, Kaye contends that the original non-disparagement agreement was no longer in effect when she made any of her arguably disparaging communications about Ellis. Kaye alleges that later on the same day that the parties executed the agreement, she exercised her explicit contractual right to revoke that agreement. She further alleges that the next day, the parties signed a new release agreement (a one-page handwritten document) that expressly revoked and superseded all previous release agreements. Second, Kaye contends that even if the original release agreement was not revoked, as a matter of law she “cannot be liable for breach of a non-disparagement agreement relating to statements she made as a third-party witness in another lawsuit.”

For the reasons that follow, the court will grant in part and deny in part the defendant’s motion to dismiss the second amended complaint or for summary judgment.

First, Ellis has shown a genuine dispute as to two material facts: (1) whether Kaye actually gave her purported August 27, 2003 revocation letter to Ellis or his attorney, see Kaye Aff. Ex. A, or whether that letter was a “back-dated fabrication” as Ellis alleges; and (2) whether the parties actually executed the August 28, 2003 agreement that purported to supersede the original release agreement they had executed the previous day, or whether that document was a fake containing Ellis’s forged signature.

On the current record, a reasonable jury could find that Kaye never exercised her contractual right to revoke the August 27 agreement — i.e., that she did not hand-deliver the revocation letter to Ellis or fax it to Ellis’s attorney — and that the parties never entered into the purported August 28 superseding agreement. If the jury made those two findings, it could then find that the original agreement’s non-disparagement provision was still in effect when Kaye communicated orally to Lincoln pre-litigation, produced documents to Lincoln pursuant to a federal-court subpoena during litigation, signed an affidavit critical of Ellis that Lincoln filed in federal court, and testified adversely to Ellis before an NASD arbitration panel. A reasonable jury could certainly find that Kaye’s communications were “negative”, “critical”, or “disparaging]” remarks of the type prohibited by the August 27 release.

Second, as a matter of law, the court holds that if Kaye was subject to, and violated, the non-disparagement provision in the August 27, 2003 agreement, the Michigan common law accords absolute quasi-judicial immunity to some — but not all' — of her communications.

The court breaks Kaye’s arguably-disparaging communications into four categories:

1. Not Privileged. Communications that Kaye made before Lincoln and Ellis were in litigation or arbitration, from October 2003 into April 2004. Such communications could not have been made to comply with any subpoena, as neither federal nor state court had yet issued any subpoenas, so quasi-judicial immunity does not protect Kaye.
2. Covered by Privilege. Documents that Kaye produced that were cov *865 ered by U.S. District Judge Enslen’s April 2004 subpoena in Lincoln’s federal lawsuit against Ellis. The court holds that, as a matter of law, this second set of communications may not lead to the imposition of breach-of-contract liability on Kaye, because of Michigan’s paramount and well-established public policy favoring obedience to valid subpoenas and freedom to participate with absolute immunity in judicial proceedings without fear of retaliation or adverse consequence.
3. Not Privileged. The affidavit that Kaye signed on April 7, 2004 at Lincoln’s behest. Such communications could not have been made to comply with any subpoena or order, as neither federal nor state court had yet issued any subpoenas or orders, so quasi-judicial immunity does not protect Kaye.
4. Privileged. Kaye’s live testimony at the April 2007 hearing before the panel in the Lineoln-Ellis NASD arbitration proceeding, which she was commanded to give by a Michigan state court’s November 2006 subpoena ad testificandum. Ellis contends that the subpoena itself was not directly enforceable in Florida, where Kaye then resided, but the parties agree that Kaye could have been compelled to give the same testimony by deposition in Florida.

BACKGROUND

Beginning in 1975, Kaye worked for Ellis at Ellis’s insurance agency. Kaye’s Motion to Dismiss the Second Amended Complaint (“MTD”), Ex. 1, Affidavit of Marilyn A. Kaye-Kibbey dated December 5, 2007 (“Kaye Aff.”) ¶ 2. For most of that time, Ellis’s company was an agent of Lincoln. See MTD at 1-2 (citing no source). In 2001, Ellis, while still a Lincoln agent, formed a brokerage/insurance agency called Summit Managed Investments, LLC (“Summit”), asked Kaye to manage the company, gave Kaye the funds needed to operate the company, and made Kaye the nominal owner even though Ellis allegedly “retained control” of Summit. See Kaye Aff. ¶¶ 3-4.

By August 2003, Kaye had come to believe that Ellis, while still working for his company and serving as a Lincoln agent, was using Summit to transfer business from Lincoln to Raymond James Financial Services (“Raymond James”), which Kaye believed was a violation of his duties to Lincoln. Kaye’s MTD at 2 (citing no source). Kaye further alleges that Ellis asked her several times to act in an inappropriate manner, and that their relationship therefore deteriorated. Id. According to Kaye, the parties “went back and forth on the terms of their separation, issuing and revoking multiple agreements.” Kaye’s MTD at 2 (citing Kaye Aff. ¶ 6). Under Kaye’s version of events,

On August 27, 2003, Mr. Ellis and I executed the Release Agreement which is attached to Mr. Ellis’s complaint.
On August 27, 2003, after I executed the Release Agreement, I hand delivered an original and a copy of a letter to Mr. Ellis revoking the Release Agreement I had executed earlier. * * * I also faxed a copy of the letter to Mr. Ellis’s attorney 1 ...

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
581 F. Supp. 2d 861, 2008 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 80617, 2008 WL 4531795, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ellis-v-kaye-kibbey-miwd-2008.