Hutton v. Roberts

451 N.W.2d 536, 182 Mich. App. 153
CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 26, 1989
DocketDocket 96674, 96704
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 451 N.W.2d 536 (Hutton v. Roberts) 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
Hutton v. Roberts, 451 N.W.2d 536, 182 Mich. App. 153 (Mich. Ct. App. 1989).

Opinion

Per Curiam.

These appeals are taken by defendants from a judgment for money damages entered after a jury trial and from a denial of a post-trial motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict. Joint and several liability was premised against defendants Thomas and Ann Richardson on the tort of interference with contractual relations and defendant Ronald Roberts on breach of a contract *155 to sell a home. We affirm in part and reverse in part.

Defendants Thomas and Ann Richardson argue that the trial court erred by denying a directed verdict and judgment notwithstanding the verdict on the claim of tortious interference with contractual relations because the evidence was insufficient to show that they acted with an illegal, unethical, or improper purpose to induce Roberts’ breach of his purchase agreement with plaintiffs. Roberts and plaintiffs had already signed their purchase agreement when Roberts and the Richardsons negotiated the Richardsons’ purchase of the same home and memorialized those negotiations in another purchase agreement. It is the Richardsons’ contention that their role in the series of events culminating in the closing of their purchase of the home was that of persons passively accepting Roberts’ offer to sell their home; their lack of concerted action to bring about a breach of Roberts’ preexisting contractual obligations to plaintiffs should insulate them from tort liability.

In reviewing the ruling of the trial court on a motion for a directed verdict or judgment notwithstanding the verdict, this Court must view the evidence and all legitimate inferences drawn from it in a light most favorable to the nonmoving party and determine whether sufficient evidence has been presented to establish a prima facie case. If reasonable jurors could honestly reach different conclusions, then the motion should have been denied, and the controverted matter should have been decided by jury verdict. Bonelli v Volkswagen of America, Inc, 166 Mich App 483, 495-496, 514; 421 NW2d 213 (1988), lv den 430 Mich 896 (1988).

In the factually similar case of Meyering v Russell, 53 Mich App 695; 220 NW2d 121 (1974), the plaintiff signed a purchase agreement with the *156 owner of a piece of commercial real estate. Subsequently, the defendant commenced a series of contacts and negotiations with the owner, culminating in the execution of a competing purchase agreement for the same property. The defendant’s ultimately successful efforts to close the deal continued up to and including the completion of the sale transaction. Prior to the closing, plaintiff, seeing that he was about to lose the benefit of his own agreement, commenced litigation and recorded a lis pendens. After trial, the court entered judgment setting aside the conveyance from the owner to the defendant, and a panel of this Court, with one member in dissent, affirmed on the ground that the defendant’s title was taken subject to the lis pendens. The Supreme Court’s summary reversal, 393 Mich 770 (1974), cited the reasoning of the dissent, to which we look for precedential guidance. Reversal was thusly premised on the plaintiff’s failure to establish the requisite interference with contractual rights. Even though the defendant knew of the existence of the previous purchase agreement and persisted in his own efforts to close a deal inconsistent with the first agreement, the dissenter found "no evidence sufficient to establish any question of fact as to what it is Deitz [the defendant buyer] is supposed to have done to induce the breach of the purchase agreement [with the plaintiff].” 53 Mich App 711. Rather, "nothing appears of record which would indicate that Deitz resorted to any unlawful methods of competition or used illegal means to obtain the property from Russell [the owner] at Meyering’s [the plaintiff’s] expense”; there was "nothing illegal or even unethical about anything anyone did.” Id, pp 709-710, 712.

It was apparent in Meyering that the defendant, in seeking to acquire the property, acted for his *157 own pecuniary advantage, knowing that an inevitable consequence of his conduct was to disrupt the plaintiffs own expectations grounded in a valid, contractually binding purchase agreement. The salient teaching from Meyering is that conduct tending to cause interference in the exercise of someone else’s contractual rights is not actionable in tort without a showing of some type of overriding improper purpose.

The nature of the illegal, unethical, or improper purpose requisite to tortious interference with a contract was set forth definitively and, in our view, correctly in Feldman v Green, 138 Mich App 360; 360 NW2d 881 (1984), lv den 422 Mich 961 (1985):

We hold, consistently with prior rulings by the Supreme Court of this state, that one who alleges tortious interference with a contractual or business relationship must allege the intentional doing of a per se wrongful act or the intentional doing of a lawful act with malice and unjustified in law for the purpose of invading plaintiffs contractual rights or business relationship. Under the latter instance, plaintiff necessarily must demonstrate, with specificity, affirmative acts by the interferor which corroborate the unlawful purpose of the interference. [Id., pp 369-370.]

The plaintiff in Feldman was aggrieved by the defendant’s purchase of certain nursing homes in contravention of the plaintiffs preexisting option to acquire the same properties. In affirming summary judgment for the defendants, this Court, relying on Meyering, supra, observed that mere competition between parties for the right to acquire the same property from the same owner was not a basis for liability.

The conclusions reached in Feldman were based in part on Wilkinson v Powe, 300 Mich 275; 1 *158 NW2d 539 (1942), where the plaintiff was engaged in the business of taking milk from the farmers producing it and delivering it to a creamery. To that end, the plaintiff entered into written agreements with the producing farmers located on the plaintiff’s milk routes. After the creamery decided to assume the delivery function itself, its representatives sent letters directly to the farmers apprising them of the discontinuance of the business relationship between the creamery and the plaintiff. The creamery was successful in forcing the plaintiff out of business. In its affirmance of a verdict for the plaintiff, the Supreme Court reiterated that the theory of tort relied upon by the plaintiff required, in addition to mere persuasion of a person to break a contract, a showing that the interference sprung from the purpose of injuring the plaintiff or benefiting the defendant at the expense of the plaintiff. Id., p 282. This improper purpose, which was described in terms of "malice” or "the intentional doing of a wrongful act without legal or social justification,” is to be inferred from some act done intentionally and without just cause or excuse. Id., p 283. The improper or malicious purpose must be corroborated by an objective manifestation:

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Bluebook (online)
451 N.W.2d 536, 182 Mich. App. 153, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hutton-v-roberts-michctapp-1989.