Weingartz Supply Company v. Salsco Inc

871 N.W.2d 375, 310 Mich. App. 226, 2015 Mich. App. LEXIS 703
CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 9, 2015
DocketDocket 317758
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 871 N.W.2d 375 (Weingartz Supply Company v. Salsco Inc) 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
Weingartz Supply Company v. Salsco Inc, 871 N.W.2d 375, 310 Mich. App. 226, 2015 Mich. App. LEXIS 703 (Mich. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

*228 SAAD, J.

Plaintiff appeals the trial court’s order that granted defendant summary disposition under MCR 2.116(0(10). 1 For the reasons stated below, we affirm.

I. INTRODUCTION

This case requires us to interpret a section of an act that has not been fully interpreted in a published Michigan decision. The act involved, the Farm and Utility Equipment Act (FUEA), MCL 445.1451 et seq., regulates interactions between manufacturers and wholesalers (which the act labels “suppliers”) that sell farm and utility equipment to other businesses, and businesses (which the act labels “dealers”) that sell farm and utility equipment directly to consumers. The FUEA is designed to assist dealers of farm and utility equipment, and it provides certain rights and remedies dealers may invoke and use against suppliers. However, a dealer cannot invoke the rights and remedies provided by the FUEA unless its contractual relationship with its supplier has been terminated. Accordingly, this threshold matter — whether an agreement has been terminated — determines whether a dealer can seek a remedy against a supplier under the FUEA.

The question presented in this case relates to the method by which a dealer may terminate an agreement with a supplier, before it seeks a remedy under the FUEA: namely, whether the dealer must terminate its agreement with a supplier via certified mail. Plaintiff, a dealer of utility equipment, claims that the FUEA makes termination by certified mail optional, and that *229 a dealer is able to terminate the agreement with its supplier in other ways and still invoke the remedies listed in the statute. Defendant, a supplier of utility equipment, argues that the FUEA requires a dealer to terminate an agreement by certified mail before it seeks a remedy under the FUEA.

Because the plain language of the FUEA explicitly mandates that a dealer must terminate its agreement with a supplier via certified mail before it can seek a remedy under the act, we reject plaintiffs argument and affirm the trial court’s grant of summary disposition to defendant.

II. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

A. FACTUAL BACKGROUND

Plaintiff, Weingartz Supply Company (Weingartz), is a retail company that sells and services grounds-maintenance equipment. Defendant, Salsco, Inc. (Salsco), is a manufacturer that makes lawn rollers used to smooth and level terrain on golf courses. 2 In 2006, Weingartz contacted Salsco and ordered a number of rollers for its stores. The parties did business for the next five years, and Weingartz ordered a total of twenty rollers during the course of the relationship. Weingartz sold twelve of these rollers, and kept replacement parts for Salsco’s rollers on hand for maintenance purposes.

However, the golf-products industry began to decline during the financial crisis, and Weingartz stopped selling golf-related equipment as a result. In the summer of 2011, one of Weingartz’s major shareholders and employees called an employee of Salsco to inform *230 her that Weingartz would no longer sell Salsco’s products, and that it wanted to return the inventory of those products it still possessed. The Salseo employee asked Weingartz to send her a copy of its inventory, which at the time included eight rollers (worth approximately $80,000) and replacement parts for the rollers (worth approximately $4,000 to $5,000).

Weingartz sent Salseo a list of this remaining inventory via e-mail on August 26, 2011. However, Salsco’s president did not want to retake the inventory because he believed the products were outdated. Salseo told Weingartz it would refuse to accept return of the inventory in an e-mail dated August 29, 2011. After this exchange, Weingartz continued to hold the inventory, and unsuccessfully attempted to sell it to golf courses until the end of the golfing season in October 2011. At no time did Weingartz attempt to return the equipment to Salseo.

Over a year later, on September 12, 2012, Weingartz sent Salseo a notarized letter, which contained a number of very specific provisions. It listed the undamaged inventory and parts still possessed by Weingartz, invited Salseo to inspect the listed items, and noted that Weingartz purchased the products in the 30 months before August 26, 2011, when Weingartz terminated its business relationship with Salseo. The letter also notified Salseo that Weingartz had appointed a title agency to serve as an escrow agent for funds related to the exchange of the inventory, and included an escrow agreement to that effect. It is unclear if Salseo responded to Weingartz’s letter, but Salseo did not take any further action to receive or retake the inventory, nor did Weingartz attempt to send the inventory to Salseo to transfer possession.

*231 B. PROCEDURAL HISTORY

This action, which Weingartz initiated in November 2012, has a convoluted procedural history, and much of it is not relevant to this appeal. In its initial complaint, Weingartz alleged that Salsco violated the FUEA in August 2011, when Salsco refused to repurchase the unsold inventory of its products held by Weingartz.

Both parties eventually moved for summary disposition under MCR 2.116(C)(10). In its motion, Salsco asserted that Weingartz did not have a cause of action under the FUEA, because as a “dealer” of utility equipment that wished to terminate its contractual relationship with a “supplier” of utility equipment, the FUEA required Weingartz to send Salsco a termination notice via certified mail. Salsco observed that Weingartz admitted it had never sent Salsco any documents via certified mail, and argued that as a result of its noncompliance with the mandatory provisions of the FUEA, Weingartz’s claim lacked merit. Weingartz disputed Salsco’s reading of the FUEA and claimed that (1) the act permits, but does not require, a dealer to terminate a business relationship with a supplier via certified mail and (2) its September 2012 letter to Salsco followed the mandates of the FUEA and successfully invoked its rights under the act, which Salsco violated when it refused to repurchase the remaining inventory of rollers and spare parts.

In August 2013, the trial court held that Weingartz failed to follow the mandates of the FUEA because it did not send Salsco a termination notice via certified mail. Accordingly, the court granted Salsco’s motion for summary disposition. On appeal, Weingartz asks us to reverse the trial court’s order and grant summary *232 disposition, 3 and it makes the same arguments in favor of summary disposition as it did in the trial court.

III. STANDARD OF REVIEW

A trial court’s decision to grant or deny summary disposition is reviewed de novo. MEEMIC Ins Co v DTE Energy Co, 292 Mich App 278, 280; 807 NW2d 407 (2011).

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871 N.W.2d 375, 310 Mich. App. 226, 2015 Mich. App. LEXIS 703, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weingartz-supply-company-v-salsco-inc-michctapp-2015.