Spohn v. Van Dyke Public Schools

822 N.W.2d 239, 296 Mich. App. 470
CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 8, 2012
DocketDocket No. 301196
StatusPublished
Cited by77 cases

This text of 822 N.W.2d 239 (Spohn v. Van Dyke Public Schools) 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
Spohn v. Van Dyke Public Schools, 822 N.W.2d 239, 296 Mich. App. 470 (Mich. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

Per Curiam.

Plaintiff, Cindy Spohn, appeals as of right the trial court’s grant of summary disposition based on judicial estoppel in favor of defendants, Van Dyke Public Schools (VDPS), Edie T. Burks, Mark Skrzynski, Donald Colpaert, and Kathleen Spaulding, on Spohn’s claim of workplace sexual harassment. We affirm.

I. FACTS

At the time of the events leading to her workplace sexual harassment claim, Spohn was employed as a [473]*473secretary with the Van Dyke Public Schools (VDPS). During the relevant time period, Edie T. Burks was the personnel director for VDPS, Kathleen Spaulding was the superintendent for VDPS, and Mark Skrzynski served as Spohn’s direct supervisor at the Thompson Community Center. Donald Colpaert was a teacher at VDPS and is the individual that Spohn accused of engaging in various communications resulting in her sexual harassment claim.

For purposes of this appeal, the facts pertaining to Spohn’s underlying claim of sexual harassment are not relevant and will not be addressed because the grant of summary disposition was premised, and is challenged, on the basis of the trial court’s determination regarding the applicability of judicial estoppel and Spohn’s earlier participation in a Chapter 13 bankruptcy proceeding. Although the parties dispute the significance of various events that occurred during Spohn’s underlying lawsuit for sexual harassment and her Chapter 13 bankruptcy proceedings, as well as the trial court’s reliance on those events in granting summary disposition, there is no disagreement regarding the actual timeline of the events that transpired.

The alleged incidents of harassment that comprise Spohn’s complaint occurred from September 2008 through the beginning of December 2008. Spohn and her husband filed their joint petition for Chapter 13 bankruptcy on November 27, 2008. This was Spohn’s fourth petition with the bankruptcy court. Spohn and her husband filed their proposed Chapter 13 bankruptcy plan on December 9,2008. But the proposed plan did not refer to or mention Spohn’s potential lawsuit for sexual harassment or hostile-environment sexual harassment against VDPS and the other defendants in this case.

[474]*474Spohn’s final day of work with VDPS was on January 6, 2009. On that same day, Spohn’s husband contacted an attorney to discuss whether Spohn had a potential lawsuit against VDPS.

As part of the Chapter 13 bankruptcy proceedings, Spohn and her husband attended a meeting of creditors on January 14, 2009. While Spohn’s husband testified that he had been laid off from work, neither Spohn nor her husband indicated that they were contemplating or pursuing civil litigation pertaining to Spohn’s employment with VDPS. Although on January 23, 2009, the Chapter 13 Standing Trustee, Tammy Terry, filed objections to Spohn’s bankruptcy plan and sought restrictions premised on the number of Spohn’s prior bankruptcy filings, the bankruptcy court ultimately confirmed Spohn’s Chapter 13 plan on February 25, 2009. In May 2009, Spohn’s attorney wrote a letter to VDPS proposing a settlement of the sexual harassment claim.

Because of Spohn’s failure to make payments in accordance with the Chapter 13 plan, the trustee moved to dismiss Spohn’s Chapter 13 plan on August 26, 2009. On September 15, 2009, Spohn filed a response to the trustee’s motion to dismiss. On September 28, 2009, Spohn initiated the underlying litigation in the Macomb Circuit Court by filing her complaint alleging violation of Michigan’s Civil Rights Act (CRA).1 On that same day, Spohn voluntarily withdrew her response to the trustee’s motion to dismiss. The bankruptcy court formally dismissed Spohn’s Chapter 13 petition on March 11, 2010. Spohn has acknowledged, under oath, that neither she nor her husband ever disclosed her potential cause of action for sexual harassment while the bankruptcy proceedings were pending.

[475]*475On August 16, 2010, defendants Van Dyke Public Schools, Burks, Skrzynski, and Spaulding moved for summary disposition of Spohn’s CRA suit pursuant to MCR 2.116(0(10). Although Colpaert was not initially included as a party to this motion, he did separately file a responsive brief concurring and seeking to join with the other defendants in pursuing summary disposition. Defendants’ only assertion was that Spohn was judicially estopped from pursuing her sexual harassment claim because of her failure to include this potential lawsuit as an asset in the Chapter 13 bankruptcy proceeding. Specifically, defendants argued that Spohn’s failure to list her civil lawsuit as an asset established that she asserted a contrary position in the circuit court from that assumed in the bankruptcy court in violation of her duty as a bankruptcy debtor to disclose all potential causes of action. According to defendants, such an inconsistency in her pleadings was sufficient to support judicial estoppel. In addition, defendants argued, because the bankruptcy court “adopted the contrary position either as a preliminary matter or as part of a final disposition,” as demonstrated by that court’s confirmation of Spohn’s Chapter 13 plan, the criteria for judicial estoppel had been met, necessitating dismissal of Spohn’s sexual harassment claim.

Spohn contested the propriety of dismissal based on judicial estoppel, asserting that on the date of filing her Chapter 13 plan, she had no reason to believe a viable sexual harassment claim existed. In addition, Spohn argued, based on her inability to pay in conformance with the bankruptcy plan as of April 27, 2009, that it was assumed that her petition would be dismissed, obviating any need for amendment or disclosure. Spohn contended that the bankruptcy trustee’s motion for dismissal was granted on October 1, 2009, and that any [476]*476delay in the final issuance of an order of dismissal was irrelevant. Finally, Spohn asserted that her failure to disclose the sexual harassment lawsuit in the bankruptcy proceedings did not result in an unfair advantage or any substantial detriment to defendants. Spohn averred that she had no reason or motive to conceal the sexual harassment lawsuit from the bankruptcy court given that it would not have resulted in any financial benefit because her debts were not being discharged in bankruptcy, rather she was on a schedule to pay 100 percent of her outstanding debts, the vast majority of which were secured.

During the hearing on defendants’ motion for summary disposition, in response to argument by Spohn’s counsel that the failure to disclose the potential lawsuit to the bankruptcy court constituted “mistake or inadvertence” based on the absence of a “motive for concealment,” the trial court stated:

She knew the ins and outs of bankruptcy. This was her fourth bankruptcy.
So she certainly should know, or you would think anybody with normal knowledge would know that if it’s a potential asset down the road it’s got to be disclosed.
Arguably, you are talking about no motive, maybe it would be nice to have the wild card sitting under the blotter somewhere so when all this calms down, okay, now you go ahead with the lawsuit. Would that be a possibility?

During further discourse with the trial court, Spohn’s counsel acknowledged that Spohn did not disclose the potential lawsuit to her bankruptcy attorney and did [477]*477not amend her bankruptcy petition.

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Bluebook (online)
822 N.W.2d 239, 296 Mich. App. 470, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/spohn-v-van-dyke-public-schools-michctapp-2012.