In Re Paris Academy

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 23, 2024
Docket367275
StatusUnpublished

This text of In Re Paris Academy (In Re Paris Academy) 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
In Re Paris Academy, (Mich. Ct. App. 2024).

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

In re PARIS ACADEMY.

PARIS ACADEMIES OF COMPELLING UNPUBLISHED EDUCATION, INC., September 23, 2024 10:40 AM Appellant,

V No. 367275 Saginaw Circuit Court THOMAS WOODS, Receiver of the PARIS LC No. 18-036807-PR ACADEMY,

Appellee.

Before: RICK, P.J., and MURRAY and MALDONADO, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

Appellant, Paris Academies of Compelling Education, Inc. (PACE), appeals as of right the trial court’s order terminating a receivership over Paris Academy, and discharging its receiver, appellee Thomas Woods. PACE challenges the trial court’s earlier order denying its motion for leave to commence suit against Woods for his alleged gross negligence in failing to timely file an administrative appeal with the Michigan Department of Education (MDE) to recover state aid to which Paris Academy was allegedly entitled. We affirm.

I. UNDERLYING FACTS

Paris Academy was a public school academy located in Saginaw, which began operating in 2016 pursuant to a charter contract with the Genesee School Board. On June 30, 2018, Paris Academy permanently closed. PACE, who provided education and management services to the school, was a creditor of the Academy.

In July 2018, pursuant to a joint motion filed by Paris Academy and PACE, the trial court entered a stipulated order appointing Woods as receiver to liquidate the Academy’s assets, wind

-1- up its affairs, and dissolve the institution.1 The receivership order vested Woods with certain powers and duties, including “[t]o maintain, secure, and preserve the Receivership Property,” “[t]o assume control over the Receivership Property and to collect and receive . . . all claims for State/Federal Aid and Grants . . . .” Pertinent here, the order further provided as follows:

9.A No person or entity shall file suit against the Receiver, or take other action against the Receiver, without an order of this Court permitting the suit or action provided, however, that no prior court order is required to file a motion in this action to enforce the provision of this Order or any other order of this Court in this action.

* * *

9.C The [R]eceiver and its employees, agents and attorneys shall have no personal liability, and they shall have no claim asserted against them relating to the Receiver’s duties under this Order, expect [sic, except] for claims due to their gross negligence, gross or willful conduct, malicious acts and/or the failure to comply with this Court’s orders. In no event shall the Receiver have any liability for any act, conduct or event relating to the Petitioner, to the education of any current or former student, or to the School, that occurred prior to the Receiver’s appointment.

During the receivership, Woods attempted to recover state aid allegedly owed to Paris Academy that MDE improperly withheld after the Superintendent of Public Instruction (SPI) made invalid reductions to the school’s student count pursuant to audit determinations involving the 2016-2017 and 2017-2018 school years. Woods eventually asked the trial court to compel MDE/ SPI to pay the receiver more than $1.7 million in state aid to which Paris Academy was allegedly entitled. Woods further claimed that MDE/SPI failed to timely provide the audit results to Paris Academy, which deprived the Academy of its due-process rights to review the student-count reductions and to appeal the findings. The SPI denied that the Academy was entitled to any state aid, and asserted that neither the Academy nor Woods had availed themselves of the administrative process for appealing an audit determination within the required timeframe.

Over one year later, the dispute over the state aid remained unresolved. Woods and the SPI eventually agreed to permit Woods to submit an administrative appeal of the audit reports, pursuant to a stipulated order, which the trial court entered on March 22, 2022, providing as follows:

IT IS HEREBY ORDERED that The Paris Academy, through the Receiver, may submit an administrative appeal of the Genesee Intermediate School District’s 2016-2017 and 2017-2018 audit reports (Audit Reports) relating to The Paris Academy with the Michigan Department of Education’s Office of Financial Man- agement, in accordance with the Pupil Accounting Administrative Code Rules, the

1 See MCL 600.2926; MCR 2.622.

-2- State School Aid Act, the Michigan Department of Education (MDE) Pupil Auditing Manual, and other pertinent statutes, within 20 days after entry of this Order. Failure to timely submit the appeal request in accordance with applicable statutes, rules, and manuals shall constitute a knowing and intentional waiver by The Paris Academy and the Receiver of all rights to challenge the Audit Reports.

MDE, in turn, agreed to produce nonexempt records responsive to Woods’s previous requests under the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA), MCL 15.231 et seq., from December 18, 2018, and July 3, 2020, at no cost within 10 business days after entry of the order.

It is not disputed that MDE timely produced the requested records within 10 business days. However, Woods did not submit the administrative appeal within the required 20 days after entry of the stipulated order, despite his agreement to waive any challenge to the audit reports if he did not timely submit the appeal. Woods attempted to remedy the situation by seeking from MDE, the day after the stipulated deadline passed, a four-day extension to submit the appeal which MDE denied. Woods filed the appeal, nine days past the appeal deadline, but the MDE/SPI denied it as untimely. Woods then moved the trial court to retroactively extend the deadline by an additional 10 days in an attempt to render his late appeal timely, which the court denied.

In court filings, Woods asserted that he “made a good faith effort” to file the appeal by the stipulated deadline, but that ultimately the agreed-upon 20 days was not enough time to complete the task. Woods explained that he received the requested FOIA information from MDE within six days of the deadline to submit the appeal, that he had “no idea whether he would receive everything he required from the FOIA request or how long it would take to go through the materials,” and that he was obliged to examine onerous volumes of data and records.2 Woods elaborated that he initially requested 30 days to file the appeal, but “MDE made it clear to the Receiver that it was 20 days take it or leave it.” He explained that, when he agreed to the 20-day deadline, he was “faced with a dilemma” of either seeking the trial court’s intervention, which he believed would be a waste of time, or accepting that deadline, then attempting to complete the appeal within it or seeking an extension from MDE if needed.

MDE/SPI disputed Woods’s claim that he was “strong-armed into agreeing to an onerous 20-day filing deadline,” asserting that Woods himself proposed 20 days.3 Further, according to MDE/SPI, Woods never expressed the concern that he did not have enough time to prepare the appeal.

After MDE/SPI refused to accept Woods’s late appeal, PACE moved the trial court for leave to commence suit against Woods for his “inexplicable failure” to timely file the

2 A letter from the SPI to Woods suggested that Woods told MDE/SPI’s counsel that he “incorrectly calendared the deadline,” but Woods denied mis-calendaring the deadline. 3 MDE/SPI supported that assertion with an e-mail thread between Woods and their counsel showing that Woods originally proposed 30 business days to file the appeal, after which their counsel proposed 10 days, which Woods rejected, but indicated that he would accept 20 days.

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Bluebook (online)
In Re Paris Academy, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-paris-academy-michctapp-2024.