Court Opinion

ID: 9392501
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-05-05 05:13:02.148388+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:18:46.178959
License: Public Domain

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

VINCENT BOWDEN,                                                        UNPUBLISHED
                                                                       May 4, 2023
               Plaintiff-Appellant,

v                                                                      No. 360485
                                                                       Wayne Circuit Court
BRODERSEN MANAGEMENT CORP, and,                                        LC No. 20-004122-NO
BRODERSEN ENTERPRISES OF MICHIGAN,
LLC,

               Defendants-Appellees,

and

BRODERSEN PROPERTIES, LLC, and POPEYES,

               Defendants.

Before: M. J. KELLY, P.J., and SWARTZLE and FEENEY, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

        Although plaintiff raises multiple arguments that are a variation on a theme, this case is
resolved by addressing only one: whether this Court’s order in a prior interlocutory appeal had
the effect of dismissing all defendants from this lawsuit. We conclude that it did and affirm the
trial court.

          Because this case may be resolved on procedural grounds, only a brief recitation of the
underlying facts of the case is necessary. Plaintiff alleges that in 2017 he purchased a two-piece
chicken meal at a Popeye’s restaurant in Detroit. According to plaintiff, he immediately became
ill after biting into a piece of chicken. He claims that the chicken had a “foul smell” and an “awful
taste.” Plaintiff claims that what he bit into was not chicken, but in fact a fried mouse. According
to plaintiff, after interacting with restaurant staff, he went to the hospital where he was treated and
released.

                                                 -1-
        Plaintiff filed this action three years later, in March of 2020, just a few days before the
period of limitations expired. The complaint alleged product liability claims under both negligence
and strict liability theories, as well as a claim for breach of implied warranty. Plaintiff named three
defendants: Brodersen Management Corp, Brodersen Properties, LLC, and Popeyes. Brodersen
Management is the parent company with subsidiaries named Brodersen Properties and Brodersen
Enterprises of Michigan, LLC. Brodersen Properties owns the real estate of the restaurant, while
Brodersen Enterprises actually operates the restaurant.

         Defendants filed a motion for summary disposition in February 2021. Defendants sought
summary disposition under both MCR 2.116(C)(8) (failure to state a claim) and MCR
2.116(C)(10) (no genuine issue of material fact). Defendants presented several arguments in
support of that motion. Their arguments essentially break down into two categories. First, that
plaintiff has not come forth with sufficient evidence to establish any of the defendants’ liability.
And, second, that plaintiff did not actually name as a defendant the one entity that could potentially
be liable: Brodersen Enterprises, the operator of the restaurants.1 The trial court granted the motion
in part and denied the motion in part. It granted the motion as to Brodersen Properties and Popeyes
being improper parties. And, having determined that Brodersen Enterprises rather than Brodersen
Management was the proper party, it granted substitution of Brodersen Enterprises in place of
Brodersen Management under the misnomer doctrine. It further directed that all references to
Brodersen Management in the caption and complaint be struck. Finally, it denied defendants’
motion in all other respects.

        Brodersen Management and Brodersen Enterprises then filed an application for leave to
appeal to this Court. The application raised three issues. The first issue challenged allowing the
substitution of Brodersen Enterprises in place of Brodersen Management and the other two issues
related to the trial court’s denial of summary disposition on the substantive grounds raised below.
This Court, in lieu of granting leave, reversed the trial court in part:

                Pursuant to MCR 7.205(E)(2), in lieu of granting leave to appeal, the Wayne
       Circuit Court’s October 12, 2021 order is REVERSED, but only to the extent that
       the trial court held that plaintiff was entitled to substitute a new party defendant in
       this action under the “misnomer doctrine,” and this case is REMANDED to the trial
       court for further proceedings consistent with this order. Because the appellant
       business organizations are two separate legal entities, neither the relation-back
       doctrine nor the misnomer doctrine are applicable here. See Miller v Chapman
       Contracting, 477 Mich 102, 106-108; 730 NW2d 462 (2007); Salem Springs, LLC
       v Salem Twp, 312 Mich App 210, 222-224; 880 NW2d 793 (2015).

               In light of the foregoing, the motion for stay pending appeal is DENIED as
       moot.

1
 The other Brodersen entities did not operate the restaurant and Popeyes is a brand, not a legal
entity.

                                                 -2-
        On remand, plaintiff filed a “Motion to Rescind the Substitution of Brodersen Enterprises
of Michigan, LLC and Reinstate Brodersen Management Corporation as a Defendant.” Plaintiff
argued that, because this Court reversed the decision to substitute Brodersen Enterprises for
Brodersen Management, the trial court should reinstate Brodersen Management as a defendant.
Plaintiff argued that defendants had not originally requested in their motion for summary
disposition that Brodersen Management be removed as an improper party and that the trial court
had not granted summary disposition in favor of Brodersen Management.

        The trial court denied plaintiff’s motion. As the trial court stated on the record:

                Here, the Court does agree with defendant's arguments. At the hearing for
        the MSD, this Court specifically considered whether Brodersen Management
        Company was proper party defendant. It is included on the record and, based on
        the briefs and the oral argument, this Court ruled that the Brodersen Management
        Corporation should be substituted in place of Brodersen Enterprises of Michigan,
        LLC, the franchise owner and proper party. This substitution was argued by the
        plaintiff. The Court entered an order, removing all references of Brodersen
        Management Corp and left the new defendant, Brodersen Enterprise of Michigan,
        LLC. The Court of Appeals reversed this Court's order, to the extent that the trial
        Court held that plaintiff was entitled to substitute a new party defendant in the
        action under this misnomer doctrine and found the relation back doctrine, nor the
        misnomer doctrine were not applicable. The Court of Appeals remanded to the trial
        Court for further proceedings consistent with their order. They didn’t—the Court
        of Appeals did not reinstate Brodersen Management Corp into this case. The Court
        of Appeals found Bro—Brodersen Enterprises could not be added. The Court of
        Appeals threw out the only viable defendant, leaving no defendants. Thus, this
        supports the reason why the remaining arguments that were brought on the
        application for stay pending leave for appeal was [sic] moot, because there was
        nothing left to rule on, given there were no more defendants. So, wherefore in light
        of the Court of Appeals[’] decision and the record, the Court agrees with the
        defendant, that the case is over and a judgment dismissal is proper and counsel
        should submit an order to that effect.

        At this point, two things are clear. First, that the effect of the trial court’s October 12, 2021
order granting partial summary disposition included a dismissal of Brodersen Management, which
was the basis for allowing a substitution of Brodersen Enterprises, rather than merely allowing the
addition of Brodersen Enterprises. Second, in the January 31, 2022 order denying leave to appeal,
this Court left intact that part of the trial court’s order. And, while this Court could have directed
that Brodersen Management be reinstated when it reversed the order of substitution for Brodersen
Enterprises, no reinstatement was ordered.

       This arguably renders the issue unreviewable under the law of the case doctrine. As
explained in Ashker v Ford Motor Co, 245 Mich App 9, 13; 627 NW2d 1 (2001):

        The law of the case doctrine holds that a ruling by an appellate court on a particular
        issue binds the appellate court and all lower tribunals with respect to that issue.
        Driver v Hanley (After Remand), 226 Mich App. 558, 565; 575 N.W.2d 31 (1997).

                                                  -3-
        Thus, a question of law decided by an appellate court will not be decided differently
        on remand or in a subsequent appeal in the same case. Id. The primary purpose of
        the doctrine is to maintain consistency and avoid reconsideration of matters once
        decided during the course of a single continuing lawsuit.

Interestingly, plaintiff, in his brief in the trial court, cites Ashker and argues that the law of the case
doctrine actually supports his position. Specifically, plaintiff argued that because this Court
remanded for further proceedings consistent with the order, that must mean that we must have
concluded that the case would continue on, thus precluding Brodersen Management from pursuing
the issue that it should be dismissed from the lawsuit. Plaintiff’s argument is misplaced for a
number of reasons.

        First, as discussed above, the trial court had dismissed Brodersen Management from the
case. Therefore, it is plaintiff’s burden to establish that Brodersen Management should be
reinstated. Second, plaintiff places too much significance on the phrase “remanded for further
proceedings consistent with this order.” That phrase, or some variation of it, is typically used by
this Court in orders and opinions whenever a case is remanded to the trial court especially if there
are no specific directions which limit the scope of the remand. It could be, in fact, that the case
will continue following remand. For example, if, following the reversal of summary disposition,
there remained a viable party defendant then the further proceedings might involve going to trial,
a different motion for summary disposition being filed and considered, or a myriad of other
possibilities. On the other hand, the further proceedings might be nothing more than the trial court
entering the order closing the case. In this case, it was the latter that the trial court found necessary
and we agree with the trial court.

       More to the point, any application of the law of the case doctrine would be in Brodersen
Management’s favor. The effect of the trial court’s earlier order was to dismiss Brodersen
Management from the case and allow Brodersen Enterprises to be substituted in its place. This
Court only held that the substitution was improper while not concluding that that had any effect
on the dismissal of Brodersen Management. Thus, we are estopped from revisiting whether
Brodersen Management should not have been dismissed.

        But, assuming that consideration of that issue is not precluded by the law of the case
doctrine, we would nevertheless affirm the trial court. Plaintiff’s motion to reinstate is, in
substance, a motion for the trial court to reconsider the dismissal of Brodersen Management. The
trial court denied the motion. Therefore, the only question properly before us is whether Brodersen
Management should have been dismissed as not being a proper party. This would require plaintiff
to persuasively argue that Brodersen Management is a proper party. This plaintiff fails to do.

       First, looking to plaintiff’s motion in the trial court, it does not offer any argument that
Brodersen Management is a proper party defendant. Rather, plaintiff’s argument rested on its
theory that this Court’s reversal of the substitution also of necessity reinstated Brodersen
Management as a defendant, an argument that we have already rejected.

       Second, turning to plaintiff’s brief on appeal, it too fails to make an argument as to why
Brodersen Management is a proper party defendant. Plaintiff’s primary argument on appeal
regarding whether Brodersen Management should have been dismissed as an improper party

                                                   -4-
focuses on the procedural posture in the trial court. Specifically, plaintiff argues that Brodersen
Management did not properly raise the issue in its trial court motion, that plaintiff was caught off
guard at the motion hearing, and plaintiff did not get a fair opportunity to address the issue. It is
certainly true that defendant’s motion for summary disposition could have been more explicit on
this issue with respect to Brodersen Management. But to say that plaintiff was caught completely
off guard is not entirely accurate.

        First of all, one of defendants’ affirmative defenses listed in its answer to the complaint
was that Brodersen Management did not “operate the franchise restaurant” at issue. Second, in
defendants’ initial disclosures, they specifically point out that “Plaintiff has named parties that do
not operate the franchise restaurant and therefore, have no duty or liability.” Third, in their
summary disposition motion and brief, defendants specifically stated that the actual entity
operating the restaurant is Brodersen Enterprises, which was owned by Brodersen Management.
Fourth, in its response to the motion for summary disposition, plaintiff raised the possibility of
using the misnomer doctrine to substitute in Brodersen Enterprises. Finally, this issue was clearly
discussed by the parties because, at the October 2, 2021, hearing on the motion for summary
disposition, plaintiff’s counsel specifically stated that “I asked numerous times if we can do a
stipulated order to correct any misnomer to get the correct party involved . . . .”

        Moreover, if plaintiff were truly caught off guard at the hearing when Brodersen
Management was included in the discussion regarding proper party defendants, plaintiff could
have raised the issue with the trial court and requested additional time to brief and argue that
specific point. Plaintiff certainly had the opportunity to raise the issue in its motion to reinstate
Brodersen Management and argue why Brodersen Management is a proper party to the litigation,
but plaintiff failed to do so.

        The only argument plaintiff presents in the current appeal is that Brodersen Management
is a proper party defendant is an undeveloped argument about piercing the corporate veil. Citing
Wells v Firestone Tire and Rubber Co, 421 Mich 641, 650-651; 364 NW2d 670 (1984), plaintiff
states that “our courts have allowed a party to pierce the corporate veil and hold a parent
corporation liable for the tortious conduct of its wholly owned subsidiary where the parent
corporation dominates the subsidiary and if recognizing the separate entities would aid in the
perpetration of a wrong.”

       Wells is hardly on point. First, it was, as it described itself, a “reverse piercing” case.
Wells, 421 Mich at 650. This was a workers’ compensation case where the employee was
attempting to separate the corporate owner, Firestone, from the local Firestone store which was a
wholly-owned subsidiary of the national company. Second, the case involved workers’
compensation principles and whether an employee of the subsidiary should be considered an
employee of the parent, thus precluding a lawsuit against the parent under the exclusive remedy
doctrine. Therefore, it is of little benefit to this case.

       Somewhat more relevant is plaintiff’s reliance on Acton Pluming & Heating Co v Jared
Guilders, Inc, 368 Mich 626; 118 NW2d 956 (1962). But Acton points out that piercing the
corporate veil is reserved for extreme cases. Indeed, in that case, the trial court concluded that
“the corporations were mere shams and that the record indicated not one of the corporations was
operated as a legitimate corporation.” Acton, 368 Mich at 628. Clearly, while these cases set

                                                 -5-
forth the basic principles for piercing the corporate veil, plaintiff does nothing to apply those
principles to the case before us.

        Plaintiff also argues that Brodersen Management should be estopped from denying that it
is a proper party defendant because it misrepresented that Brodersen Management was a proper
party. But the only evidence that plaintiff offers in his brief is the same evidence that he referred
to at the hearing on the motion for summary disposition in the trial court: that plaintiff’s counsel
received letters from the insurance company that the insured was Brodersen Management. But the
fact that the insurance company insured Brodersen Management does not make Brodersen
Management a proper party defendant, nor does it even constitute a representation by Brodersen
Management that it is the proper party to be sued. This is particularly true in light of, as discussed
above, the numerous instances where defendants pointed out that Brodersen Enterprises operated
the restaurant.

        Plaintiff also argues that this Court’s prior order reversing the substitution of parties had
the effect of reinstating Brodersen Management as a defendant. This is inconsistent with the trial
court’s conclusion at the motion hearing that it had, in fact, dismissed Brodersen Management as
not being a proper defendant and allowed Brodersen Enterprises to be substituted in as the proper
defendant. Even if plaintiff’s argument regarding the effect of our prior order is technically correct
as a procedural matter, the fact remains that the trial court determined that Brodersen Management
is not a proper defendant and plaintiff has failed to put forth a viable argument to the contrary.

        In sum, plaintiff was on notice from the beginning of the lawsuit that defendants’ position
was that Brodersen Enterprises was the only proper party defendant. And plaintiff consistently
failed to make a persuasive argument why Brodersen Management was a proper party defendant.2

        For these reasons, we conclude that our prior order dismissed the only remaining, viable
defendant from this lawsuit. Thus, the only option available to the trial court on remand was to
dismiss the case. Moreover, even if it were appropriate in light of our prior order to revisit the
issue whether Brodersen Management was a proper party defendant, plaintiff has not presented a
viable argument as to why the trial court erred in concluding that Brodersen Management is not a
proper defendant.

       Affirmed. Defendants may tax costs.

                                                               /s/ Michael J. Kelly
                                                               /s/ Brock A. Swartzle
                                                               /s/ Kathleen A. Feeney

       2
          Plaintiff’s final argument is merely a rebuttable to an anticipated argument by defendants
that an alternative ground for affirming the trial court is that there is not genuine issue of material
fact regarding whether there was a breach of duty that caused plaintiff’s illness. While plaintiff
did correctly anticipate that this argument would be raised, we need not address it in light of our
rejection of plaintiff’s argument on appeal.

                                                 -6-