Joby Clark v. Butoku Karate School LLC

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedAugust 18, 2016
Docket326638
StatusUnpublished

This text of Joby Clark v. Butoku Karate School LLC (Joby Clark v. Butoku Karate School LLC) 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
Joby Clark v. Butoku Karate School LLC, (Mich. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

JOBY CLARK, UNPUBLISHED August 18, 2016 Plaintiff-Appellant,

v No. 326638 Macomb Circuit Court BUTOKU KARATE SCHOOL, LLC and JOHN LC No. 2013-004479-CB WASILINA,

Defendant-Appellees.

Before: BECKERING, P.J., and CAVANAGH and GADOLA, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

Plaintiff Joby Clark appeals as of right the trial court’s order granting summary disposition to defendants, Butoku Karate School, LLC, and John Wasilina, of plaintiff’s claims for failure to distribute his interest in a limited liability company, fraud, and conversion. We affirm.

I. FACTS

This case arises from plaintiff’s departure from defendant Butoku Karate School, LLC, a limited liability company in which plaintiff and defendant John Wasilina were the only members. Plaintiff and Wasilina formed the company in 2002 for the purpose of operating a karate school, and together operated the school until plaintiff left the company in January 2011. Several months earlier, in June 2010, Wasilina learned of a rumor that plaintiff was having a sexual relationship with an underage student of the school. Plaintiff assured Wasilina that the rumor was false. Wasilina testified that during the following months, he discussed the topic many times with plaintiff. According to Wasilina, he and plaintiff agreed that the allegations, even if meritless, would likely destroy the school because most of the students were children and parents were likely to withdraw their children. According to Wasilina, he and plaintiff therefore agreed to part ways. By contrast, plaintiff denies that he and Wasilina discussed parting ways until January, 2011.

On January 5, 2011, plaintiff and Wasilina together went to the bank and withdrew $100,000 from the company’s account, which represented the majority of the company’s funds. Plaintiff and Wasilina each received $50,000 of the proceeds of the account. Also in early January 2011, Wasilina learned that the student had retracted her earlier denial of the affair with plaintiff and that plaintiff would likely face criminal prosecution. The record is unclear on -1- whether Wasilina learned of the student’s retraction before or after he and plaintiff withdrew and divided the company’s funds.

On January 12, 2011, Wasilina met with plaintiff and requested that plaintiff sign two documents. The first document was entitled “Notice of Dissolution1” and provided in part:

The partnership heretofore existing between Joby Clark and John Wasilina, under the fictitious name of Butoku [K]arate Dojo, . . . is now dissolved by mutual consent.

That Joby Clark, . . . has withdrawn from and is no longer associated in conducting of said business, and is giving up all legal rights to said business, and John Wasilina, . . . will conduct said business hereafter, has assumed all of the outstanding obligations of said business incurred heretofore and hereafter, and is entitled to all of the assets of said business.

The second document was entitled “The Consent of the Members” and provided in part:

IT IS HEREBY RESOLVED that, pursuant to MCL 450.4509, and Sections 8.1, 8.3, and 9.1 of the Company’s Operating Agreement dated March 28, 2002, the Company accepts the immediate withdrawal and resignation of Member Joby Clark from any and all aspects [of] the Company. . . . Joby Clark’s interest in the Company is extinguished in its entirety without a substitute or financial compensation . . . . The undersigned understand, agree, and acknowledge the fact that Joby Clark shall maintain no further duties, obligations, financial obligations, or responsibilities of any kind to the Company, nor does the Company owe any monies, duties, rights, responsibilities, privileges, accountings, or any other items or tangible means of remuneration in any way to the resigning Member, Joby Clark. . . .

Joby Clark acknowledges having already removed all of his personal and/or business effects and/or property from the location of the Company, . . . and further agrees and acknowledges that there is no reason whatsoever for him to return to said premises. . . [Emphasis added.]

Both plaintiff and Wasilina signed the documents on January 12, 20112. The parties disagree, however, regarding the conversation that took place that day. Wasilina testified that he

1 The Notice of Dissolution, perhaps mistakenly, dissolves any “partnership” that may have existed between plaintiff and Wasilina, citing The Uniform Partnership Act, and is therefore not relevant to the analysis of plaintiff’s withdrawal as a member of Butoku Karate School, LLC. The language of the document, however, is indicative of plaintiff’s intent to relinquish any right to receive further compensation for his interest in the company.

-2- told plaintiff that he no longer wanted to be affiliated with plaintiff and therefore asked plaintiff to sign the documents ending plaintiff’s membership in the company. By contrast, plaintiff asserts that during this meeting Wasilina assured him that plaintiff’s withdrawal from the company was temporary and that plaintiff could rejoin the company in the future after the rumors regarding the student affair had dissipated.

On February 19, 2011, plaintiff was arrested on criminal charges3 related to his alleged relationship with the minor student. Plaintiff was twice tried on the charges with both trials resulting in mistrials. In lieu of proceeding to a third trial on the charges, plaintiff entered a plea of no contest to a lesser charge.

Plaintiff thereafter brought this action against defendants, alleging three counts arising from the dissolution of the business relationship, being fraud, failure to distribute, and conversion. The first count alleged that defendants had defrauded plaintiff because Wasilina had induced plaintiff to sign the documents by misleading plaintiff into believing that he would later be reinstated in the company, and also by promising to pay plaintiff for his membership interest. Plaintiff’s second count alleged that he was owed a distribution from the company for having ended his membership. The third count alleged conversion, contending that plaintiff had left personal property at the karate school and that defendants had possession of that property.

Defendants moved for summary disposition pursuant to MCR 2.116(C)(7) and (10). Defendants argued pursuant to MCR 2.116(C)(7) that the documents signed by plaintiff operated as a release. Defendants further argued that summary disposition was appropriate pursuant to MCR 2.116(C)(10) because under the undisputed facts plaintiff had failed to allege a count for fraud, that plaintiff was not entitled to distribution under the Michigan Limited Liability Company Act, and that plaintiff had failed to state a claim for conversion. The trial court granted defendants’ motion for summary disposition4. The trial court found that there was no demonstration that defendants had defrauded plaintiff, that plaintiff had in fact received a distribution of $50,000 from the company and had agreed that nothing further was owed to plaintiff, and that plaintiff had failed to establish a claim for conversion.

Plaintiff thereafter moved for reconsideration of the trial court’s order, arguing that the trial court had incorrectly concluded that the payment of $50,000 was a withdrawal distribution, and therefore incorrectly concluded that there had been consideration for plaintiff’s withdrawal

2 The Notice of Dissolution is dated January 12, 2011, while the Consent of the Members is dated January 20, 2011. Both plaintiff and Wasilina, however, agree that they both signed both documents on January 12, 2011. 3 The parties agree as to these facts, but the record is silent regarding the precise charges filed against plaintiff and the specific offense to which he pleaded no contest.

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Bluebook (online)
Joby Clark v. Butoku Karate School LLC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/joby-clark-v-butoku-karate-school-llc-michctapp-2016.