Northeast Comanche Tribe Inc v. International Comanche Society

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 13, 2021
Docket352490
StatusUnpublished

This text of Northeast Comanche Tribe Inc v. International Comanche Society (Northeast Comanche Tribe Inc v. International Comanche Society) 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
Northeast Comanche Tribe Inc v. International Comanche Society, (Mich. Ct. App. 2021).

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

NORTHEAST COMANCHE TRIBE, INC., UNPUBLISHED May 13, 2021 Plaintiff-Appellant,

V No. 352490 Grand Traverse Circuit Court INTERNATIONAL COMANCHE SOCIETY, LC No. 2019-034836-CZ

Defendant-Appellee.

Before: SAWYER, P.J., and STEPHENS and RICK, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

In this action for declaratory and injunctive relief, plaintiff appeals the circuit court’s order dismissing its complaint with prejudice for failing to comply with a stipulated order. We affirm.

I. UNDERLYING FACTS

This case involves a dispute over who is the legitimate governing board of plaintiff, the Northeast Comanche Tribe, Inc. (NE Tribe), an organization whose members own and fly Comanche airplanes.1 The NE Tribe is affiliated with defendant, the International Comanche Society, whose purposes, according to its articles of incorporation, include to “enable Comanche pilots to meet and become better acquainted.” The NE Tribe is a regional branch of the ICS membership.

In 2014, the NE Tribe members elected C.J. Stumpf its Tribe Chief, and, from 2014 to 2018, Stumpf and the other elected officers served as the Tribe’s governing board. In 2018, NE Tribe member Av Shiloh began questioning the Tribe’s election process. Shiloh maintained that the NE Tribe had not held proper annual member voting elections since 2015, and that its officers, including Stumpf, had held their offices for more than two consecutive years in violation of the

1 The Comanche is a popular line of light aircraft that Piper Aircraft Corporation manufactured from 1958 to 1972.

-1- NE Tribe’s bylaws. Shiloh referred to provisions of a set of bylaws that had been posted on the NE Tribe’s website, but were removed in or near October 2017.2

However, Stumpf maintained that she and her fellow officers had been reelected in duly conducted annual elections held from 2015 through 2018, and that an election was set to be held in August 2019. She further denied that the bylaws put forward by Shiloh were those of the NE Tribe. Stumpf maintained that the NE Tribe never adopted bylaws and was governed under the corporate law of its state of incorporation, Kansas. According to Stumpf, none of the NE Tribe members she surveyed, whose membership dated back to the Tribe’s 1992 incorporation, had any recollection of the NE Tribe’s ever adopting any bylaws, and her “thorough review” of the Tribe’s meeting minutes and other records reflected that the Tribe had never done so.

Shiloh raised the issue with ICS leadership, whose investigation found no evidence of any NE Tribe elections since 2015. This placed the legitimacy of the Tribe’s officers, including Chief Stumpf, in question.

On February 2, 2019, the ICS Board revoked Stumpf’s membership, citing her involvement in disseminating misleading and false information on a website, social media posts, and in e-mails, along with the lack of elections for the NE Tribe’s officers in recent years, and Stumpf’s insistence that the Tribe did not have bylaws. According to the ICS, the revocation of Stumpf’s membership left the NE Tribe without a Tribe Chief. On February 18, 2019, the ICS Board contacted the NE Tribe’s membership and called for nominees for an election of the Tribe’s governing board to be conducted on the ICS’s voting platform.

On March 8, 2019, plaintiff’s counsel sent the ICS a written demand to cease and desist from interfering with the NE Tribe’s internal affairs and governance. Stating that the ICS was proceeding under the mistaken premise that the NE Tribe was governed by bylaws, plaintiff demanded an immediate retraction of its call for the Tribe’s election. The ICS ignored plaintiff’s demand and proceeded with the NE Tribe’s election, commencing member voting on March 11, 2019.

On March 22, 2019, plaintiff initiated this lawsuit seeking injunctive relief, “including enjoining and restraining the ICS from counting the subject election process,” and a declaratory judgment that the results of the election commenced by the ICS “are null and void.” Plaintiff also sought a temporary restraining order to stop the election on the grounds that the NE Tribe already had a duly elected governing board, including Tribe Chief Stumpf, that the ICS had no authority to conduct an election for the Tribe, and that the election was conducted on the basis of purported bylaws that the NE Tribe never adopted.

2 Those provisions included, among others, Article IV, § G, providing that the NE Tribe is required to hold annual elections; Article IV, § A, providing that the term of office of an officer “shall be one (1) year and not more than two (2) consecutive years . . . .”

-2- Meanwhile, on March 25, 2019, the voting of the NE Tribe’s membership under the ICS’s auspices ended. The votes were tallied, and the resulting slate of officers included Shiloh as Tribe Chief.

On April 8, 2019, the trial court heard and denied plaintiff’s motion for a temporary restraining order. There, plaintiff again maintained that the purported bylaws were “bogus,” and that no members of the NE Tribe recalled ever adopting any bylaws, nor did any meeting minutes exist indicating that the Tribe ever did so, while the ICS asserted otherwise and put forward the purported bylaws as applicable to the NE Tribe. The litigation proceeded to discovery.

In July 2019, Malcolm Dickinson, the putative incumbent Treasurer of the NE Tribe, discovered some bylaws-related documents in an envelope in a box that suggested that the NE Tribe had in fact adopted bylaws. Specifically, Dickinson found an April 1992 NE Tribe newsletter that stated, “A major item of business is the tribe’s decision on incorporation as a membership non-profit corporation and the adoption of a set of bylaws,” and that the business of the NE Tribe’s 1992 annual meeting would include incorporation and bylaws. Embedded in the newsletter was a set of bylaws. Dickinson also found a July 28, 1992 report from the then Tribe Chief of the NE Tribe indicating that the Tribe voted to incorporate as a membership, nonprofit corporation in the State of Kansas, and adopted its first set of bylaws “which are patterned after that suggested by ICS.” Dickinson also found a letter from a past NE Tribe treasurer, dated November 5, 1998, stating that a copy of the NE Tribe bylaws, as well as the ICS bylaws, had been forwarded to him. The 1998 letter questioned whether the current officers had been elected in compliance with the NE Tribe’s bylaws, and referred to a requirement that there be an annual meeting of the Tribe membership for the purpose of electing officers. The purported bylaws the former treasurer quoted in his letter contain very similar language to that of the bylaws that the ICS put forward as those of NE Tribe. After discovering these documents, Dickinson sent an e- mail to Stumpf and the other putative officers of the NE Tribe, and to plaintiff’s counsel, explaining that he had “opened a box” and found the historical records, and forwarding the documents to them. The putative officers, including Stumpf, were not persuaded that bylaws had actually been adopted.

Meanwhile, issues with discovery compliance arose, including plaintiff’s failure to provide answers to the ICS’s discovery requests and to cooperate with scheduling depositions, culminating in the ICS’s July 23, 2019 motion to dismiss plaintiff’s complaint for discovery violations, or, alternatively, to compel discovery. The parties resolved the issues by negotiating an agreement in the form of a stipulated order, which the trial court entered on August 13, 2019.

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