Wolf Creek Productions Inc v. Michael Steven Gruber

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 24, 2019
Docket342146
StatusUnpublished

This text of Wolf Creek Productions Inc v. Michael Steven Gruber (Wolf Creek Productions Inc v. Michael Steven Gruber) 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
Wolf Creek Productions Inc v. Michael Steven Gruber, (Mich. Ct. App. 2019).

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

WOLF CREEK PRODUCTIONS, INC., UNPUBLISHED THOMAS W. NICHOLS, MICHAEL SHERRILL, January 24, 2019 and THOMAS NELSON,

Plaintiffs-Appellants,

v No. 342146 Shiawassee Circuit Court MICHAEL STEVEN GRUBER, LC No. 2017-001086-CB

Defendant-Appellee.

Before: BOONSTRA, P.J., and SAWYER and TUKEL, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

Plaintiffs appeal as of right the circuit court’s order that affirmed the arbitration award in favor of defendant. We affirm.

I. BASIC FACTS

This case arises from an employment dispute between plaintiffs and defendant. Plaintiff Wolf Creek Productions, Inc. (WCP), is a corporation in the business of developing and producing outdoor hunting, fishing, and related television/cable shows. Defendant, Michael Gruber, was an employee and board member of WCP. After a company reorganization, defendant entered into an employment agreement with WCP in November 2012. The agreement contained the following termination provisions:

7. Termination. This Agreement shall terminate, unless otherwise determined and codified in writing by the Board of Directors of EMPLOYER, upon the occurrence of any of the following events:

* * *

C. Termination by EMPLOYER “for cause.” EMPLOYER shall have the right to immediately terminate this Agreement under the following circumstances, each of which shall be deemed “For Cause”: * * *

iii. EMPLOYEE commits any material fraud, theft, embezzlement, misdemeanor or felony or other offense against EMPLOYER.

iv. EMPLOYEE violates the “Confidentiality, Non-Disclosure and Covenant not to Compete” as referenced in this Agreement, or any other similar agreements entered into between EMPLOYER and EMPLOYEE from time to time.

viii. EMPLOYEE engages in any conduct which EMPLOYER, or it’s [sic] Board of Directors believes, in good faith, is detrimental to the best interests of EMPLOYER’S Business, and has, or will materially negatively affect EMPLOYER’S Business.

For purposes of this paragraph 7C, determination by a majority of the Board of Directors, (excluding any vote from EMPLOYEE, if EMPLOYEE is a member of the Board of Directors) shall be determinative. If there is no majority consensus of the Board of Directors, then a vote of not less than 65% ownership interest of the shareholders then entitled to vote shall be determinative.

In January 2015, defendant learned from Thaddius Bedford, who works under the business entity Liquid Image, Inc., that the Professional Sporting Clay Association (PSCA) was looking for a new production company to handle the second season of a show it had. After defendant negotiated with PSCA, defendant informed the principals of WCP that a contract with PSCA “would deliver $340,000” to WCP. The WCP principals, including plaintiffs Thomas Nichols, Michael Sherrill, and Thomas Nelson, agreed to the proposed terms. Defendant, in the name of his own company, Steve Gruber LLC, later signed a letter of intent with PSCA, which ultimately led to the execution of a contract between Steve Gruber LLC and PSCA. The terms of this contract called for PSCA to pay Steve Gruber LLC a total of $385,000. However, part of the agreement indicated that it was the intention of Steve Gruber LLC “to utilize and sub-contract with Liquid Image, Inc. and Wolf Creek Productions to assist in the production of the episodes of PSCA TV contemplated herein.” In addition, Liquid Image received a “finder’s fee” or commission of $45,000 from PSCA. Liquid Image then split that fee and gave $22,500 to defendant.

The arbitration panel found that

[t]here is no dispute that Jon Ross, a senior producer at WCP, was in charge of the PSCA project; that WCP was paid $340,000 for the project and may have been paid slightly more for some other expenses; that PSCA actually conveyed $100,000 payment to WCP even before this contract was signed.

Although requested several times by WCP employees, defendant never furnished a copy of the PSCA contract. At some point later, plaintiffs Sherrill and Nichols learned that the PSCA contract was for $385,000 and that defendant had received $22,500 from Liquid Image.

-2- On April 5, 2016, a shareholders’ meeting was held, where all five shareholders were present. However, the meeting was adjourned “until after conduct of the Board of Directors meeting,” which took place immediately thereafter. The discussion at the board of directors meeting reflected a concern for how the PSCA contract was executed and the fact that defendant had received an extra $22,500, when the board thought that the $22,500 should have gone to WCP.

On May 11, 2016, the “continued annual meeting of the shareholders” took place. All were present except for defendant, who was out of the country. At the meeting, the members who were present (constituting 65% of the company’s stock) unanimously voted to terminate defendant’s employment due to defendant’s material breach of the employment agreement and the covenant not to compete agreement. The shareholders left it for the board of directors to determine the effective date of the termination and to negotiate the terms of the buy-out of defendant’s stock.

After defendant’s employment was terminated, he filed suit in circuit court. WCP, pursuant to the terms of the Agreement, required that the case be handled in arbitration; accordingly, the parties agreed to dismiss the case from circuit court. In his claim submitted to the arbitration panel, defendant alleged breach of employment contract and non-controlling shareholder oppression. Plaintiffs, as the respondents in the arbitration, brought their own counter-claims of breach of fiduciary duty, tortious interference with business expectancy, conversion, fraud, and breach of statutory requirement to discharge duties in good faith.

Of note, among defendant’s listed issues for arbitration, he listed, “Whether claimant, Michael Steven Gruber, violated his Wolf Creek employment contract” and “Whether there was ‘just cause’ to terminate the Wolf Creek employment contract of the claimant.” In their response, plaintiffs denied that these were issues for the arbitration panel to decide, stating that “the governing documents” describe the processes for determining a violation and process for determining just cause.

After a lengthy arbitration process, the three-member panel issued a split decision. The majority framed the issue as thus, “[A]lthough the record is lengthy, the issue is simple and straightforward: did Wolf Creek Productions terminate Steve Gruber’s services for just cause?” Two of the arbitrators found that “[t]here was no just cause to terminate Michael Steven Gruber from the employment of Wolf Creek Productions, Inc.” The panel found that this situation constituted “a classic case of pretext” because the issue involving the PSCA deal was used to accomplish the desire of Nichols, who had been stating for a long time that he had wanted defendant to leave WCP. The panel then returned the matter “to the parties to address the question of remedy.”

In a dissent, one arbitrator would have found that just cause existed for the termination of defendant’s employment with WCP.

-3- Plaintiffs thereafter filed suit in circuit court to vacate the arbitration award. In their corresponding motion, plaintiffs argued that the arbitration panel acted outside of its authority by failing to follow the law and that the panel failed to properly interpret the employment contact.1

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Bluebook (online)
Wolf Creek Productions Inc v. Michael Steven Gruber, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wolf-creek-productions-inc-v-michael-steven-gruber-michctapp-2019.