Opinion ID: 1711476
Heading Depth: 1
Heading Rank: 2

Heading: receipt and release

Text: The Undersigned hereby acknowledge receipt of the sum of $________ cash in hand paid by ANR Storage Company in full and complete payment and satisfaction of all obligations owed by ANR Storage Company to the undersigned for, in consideration of, and related to, the execution by the undersigned of a Mineral Deed ... including all obligations arising out of representations (whether oral or in writing) made by ANR Storage Company and arising out of a letter and Terms of Offer addressed to the undersigned by John R. Milam, Director, Land and Storage Acquisition, dated 03/08/83; and the undersigned hereby release ANR Storage Company obligations [sic]. In the early 1990s, the plaintiffs came to believe that the Blue Lake field had held a far greater volume of gas condensate in 1983 than ANR had led them to believe. In 1993, the plaintiffs filed suit, alleging that ANR's calculations had been either intentionally false and incorrect, or negligently false and incorrect. To remedy this misrepresentation, the plaintiffs sought a monetary award. In its answer, ANR offered the affirmative defense that each plaintiff had accepted a cash payment in exchange for the execution of a release of all obligations arising out of representations (whether oral or in writing) made by ANR Storage Company in connection with the sale. ANR later moved for summary disposition on the basis of the release. In its motion, ANR further asserted that a person seeking to rescind a release must first tender back the amount paid in consideration of the release. Stefanac v. Cranbrook Educational Community ( After Remand ), 435 Mich. 155, 458 N.W.2d 56 (1990). In a written opinion resolving the motion, the circuit judge stated his own agreement with the procedural arguments of the plaintiffs, but said that the court was required by Stefanac to grant summary disposition in favor of ANR. The Court of Appeals affirmed. [6] Again, Stefanac was thought to control. The plaintiffs have applied to this Court for leave to appeal.
The principle applied by the lower courts comes from Carey v. Levy, 329 Mich. 458, 460-465, 45 N.W.2d 352 (1951), and earlier decisions. The most recent exposition of the precept is in Stefanac, in which this Court explained the basic rule [7] and offered this holding: We hold that when a plaintiff has entered into a settlement agreement tender of consideration recited in the agreement must occur not only within a reasonable time after execution of the agreement, but in all cases prior to or simultaneously with the commencement of any proceeding raising a legal claim in contravention of the agreement. [435 Mich. at 159, 458 N.W.2d 56.] A great deal may be said about Stefanac and the earlier cases, and about the steps that must be followed by a party who seeks to set aside a release and litigate the underlying controversy. [8] However, the tender rule is inapplicable in the present case. Despite the labeling of the document signed by the plaintiffs to obtain their contingent payments, they did not execute a binding release. In Stefanac (and in Leahan ), the employer discharged an employee under circumstances that could give rise to liability. The employer obtained an early compromise, exchanging significant consideration for a release of liability. The employee's later attempts to rescind the release failed, in part because the consideration for the release was not tendered back within a reasonable time. In the present case, the plaintiffs simply executed a contract with ANR. They were not compromising liability. After agreement had been reached, the plaintiffs deeded their mineral rights in exchange for a payment of money. By the terms of the agreement, the dealings between the plaintiffs and ANR were concluded, except that there remained the possibility of contingent payments. If they were to be made, the contingent payments would be calculated on a formula found in the original agreement. As it transpired, the contingent payments were required. The plaintiffs each received such a payment, in an amount fixed by the original documents. Without further negotiation or consideration, the checks were accompanied by a putative release. The plaintiffs signed in order to get the checks to which they were already entitled under the original agreement. On this record, it is plain that the nominal release was not in fact a release of all liability arising from the original transaction. It was, at most, an acknowledgement that ANR had fulfilled its contractual obligation to make the contingent payment. The previously quoted excerpts from Carey and Stefanac indicate that the tender requirement serves to provide[ ] a fair and necessary check against the instability of contracts not to sue. 435 Mich. at 177-178, 458 N.W.2d 56. That laudable goal is not affected in this case, since the plaintiffs did not enter into a separate contract of release___they did not foreswear suit over ANR's actions and statements in conjunction with the original agreement for the sale of the plaintiffs' mineral rights. For these reasons, we reverse the judgments of the Court of Appeals and the circuit court, and remand this case to the circuit court for further proceedings. MCR 7.302(F)(1). BRICKLEY, C.J., and LEVIN, MICHAEL F. CAVANAGH, BOYLE, RILEY, MALLETT and WEAVER, JJ., concur.