Court Opinion

ID: 9725050
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-08-26 11:26:50.750939+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T18:25:09.433927
License: Public Domain

DAVIS, J.
Defendant Forest River, Inc., appeals as of right an order granting revocation of acceptance under the Magnuson-Moss Warranty — Federal Trade Commission Improvement Act (the MMWA), 15 USC 2301 et seq., to plaintiff of a recreational vehicle (RV) manufactured by Forest River and sold by Kitsmiller RV Inc.1 We affirm, albeit with one clarification.
As we discuss later in this opinion, the remedy of “revocation of acceptance” is actually a Uniform Commercial Code (UCC), MCL 440.1101 et seq., remedy, available by statute under MCL 440.2608, but not available to plaintiff in this case because plaintiff and defendant were not in privity of contract. See Henderson v Chrysler Corp, 191 Mich App 337; 477 NW2d 505 (1991). However, it is clear from the pleadings, discussions, and arguments that plaintiff really pursued, and the trial court really granted, the equitable remedy, available at common law, of “rescission,” which is available irrespective of privity. Our affirmance is based on the “well-settled” principle that “the gravamen of an action is determined by reading the complaint as a whole, and by looking beyond mere procedural labels to determine the exact nature of the claim.” Adams v Adams (On Reconsideration), 276 Mich App 704, 710-*79711; 742 NW2d 399 (2007). Therefore, we affirm the substance of the trial court’s order, but not the nomenclature used.
The facts of this case are not seriously disputed. Plaintiff and his wife are avid campers. In 2002, they decided to upgrade from a relatively small Winnebago RV to a 34-foot Windzone RV manufactured by Forest River and sold by Kitsmiller RV They were motivated in part by an injury that precluded plaintiff from easily entering and leaving the Winnebago, and partly a desire for a larger and more-luxurious vehicle that could be used for more extensive traveling. Although they had owned RVs before, and plaintiff had learned how to operate vehicles of that size while serving in the military, they had never owned a new RV before. After taking possession of the RV plaintiff experienced numerous problems with it, some of which he concluded were safety issues. He cut short a total of three intended trips, and the RV spent several months being repaired by Forest River on two occasions. Plaintiff ultimately concluded that Forest River should take the RV back and repay his purchase price. Plaintiff has properly maintained the RV in the meantime. The only real disputes concerned the number and the severity of the problems plaintiff experienced and some testimony that all new RVs are expected to have initial problems that can be worked out.
Plaintiffs complaint alleged eight counts: breach of express warranty; breach of implied warranty of merchantability; revocation of acceptance under MCL 440.2608; breach of written warranty under the MMWA; breach of implied warranty under the MMWA; violation of the Michigan Consumer Protection Act, MCL 445.901 et seq.; breach of contract; and rescission of contract. The parties stipulated the dismissal of the *80claim for revocation of acceptance under state law; however, a significant part of plaintiffs claim was the assertion that he was nevertheless able to seek revocation of acceptance or rescission as a common-law remedy through the MMWA. The trial court granted summary disposition to defendant on the breach-of-contract claim, and a jury found in defendant’s favor on the Michigan Consumer Protection Act claim; plaintiff has not cross-appealed with regard to those matters. The jury found that plaintiff had “proven that he is entitled to revoke his acceptance of the motor home,” on the basis of which the trial court entered judgment against defendant, from which defendant now appeals.2
The first question posed is what remedies or causes of action are provided for under the MMWA. “The applicability of a legal doctrine is a question of law. This Court reviews questions of law de novo.” James v Alberts, 464 Mich 12, 14; 626 NW2d 158 (2001). Because there is no decision on point regarding the MMWA from the United States Supreme Court, this Court is required to make its own independent assessment of the MMWA; although federal court decisions may be persuasive, they are not controlling, even if there is no conflict between them. Abela v Gen Motors Corp, 469 Mich 603, 606-607; 677 NW2d 325 (2004). Under the circumstances of this case and considering the answers reached by other courts, we are not persuaded of a present necessity to answer this question. As we will discuss later in this opinion, the law in Michigan obviates any need to do so to resolve the issues at bar.
*81Under the MMWA, subject to provisions not relevant here, “a consumer who is damaged by the failure of a supplier, warrantor, or service contractor to comply with any obligation under this chapter, or under a written warranty, implied warranty, or service contract, may bring suit for damages and other legal and equitable relief” in a state or federal court. 15 USC 2310(d)(1). The MMWA provides for an award of costs and expenses to prevailing parties, but it does not otherwise indicate what that legal and equitable relief might be. Nothing in the MMWA itself appears to mandate any sort of privity between any parties. In fact, its definition of a “supplier” suggests the opposite: The term “supplier” means “any person engaged in the business of making a consumer product directly or indirectly available to consumers.” 15 USC 2301(4) (emphasis added). Significantly, it states that “implied warranties” arise under state law. 15 USC 2301(7). Nowhere in the MMWA is there any hint regarding the nature of the “damages and other legal and equitable relief.”
The parties cite cases reaching opposite results with regard to whether the available relief under the MMWA is limited to whatever is available under state law in the jurisdiction where a suit is brought. We have not been offered any authority suggesting that a plaintiff under the MMWA is entitled to any less than would be available under state law, and it appears that the parties do not dispute that much. The lower federal courts are substantially divided on the issue whether the MMWA provides remedies in addition to those available under state law. In our view, whether the MMWA mandates the availability of remedies beyond what the state provides can only be satisfactorily determined by the United States Supreme Court. However, it seems settled that the MMWA does make available, at a *82minimum, remedies that are available under state law. Because we find plaintiff here is entitled to a remedy under Michigan law, we need not address this question any further in this case.
We note initially two legal theories that do not afford plaintiff a remedy here. First, as Henderson discussed, “revocation of acceptance” is a purely statutory remedy under MCL 440.2608 that was “inextricably connected to the contractual relationship between a buyer and a seller,” and “[t]he fact that a manufacturer may be liable under its warranty provisions does not change the fundamental nature of the revocation remedy as being contractually based.” Henderson, supra at 341-343. The Henderson Court therefore found that revocation of acceptance, as a contractual remedy, required privity of contract. Id. Second, Michigan’s “lemon law,” MCL 257.1401 et seq., explicitly excludes RVs and motor homes. MCL 257.1401(f). This is significant, in part, because such an exclusion is not necessarily intuitively obvious. But most importantly, the “lemon law” would give purchasers of automobiles an adequate remedy at law, Henderson, supra at 342, precluding an equitable remedy such as rescission from being available against automobile manufacturers. Detroit Trust Co v Old Nat’l Bank of Grand Rapids, 155 Mich 61, 65; 118 NW 729 (1908). We hold that neither the “lemon law” nor the UCC is relevant to this matter.
The critical issue in this case is whether a purchaser who, like plaintiff in this case, is not in contractual privity with a manufacturer may obtain the common-law remedy of rescission. We find that privity has long been categorically eliminated in Michigan as a prerequisite to purchasers’ bringing suit against manufacturers, and the Legislature’s adoption of the UCC did not abolish rescission except where the parties actually do have a contract with each other.
*83The abolition of the privity requirement was accomplished half a century ago in Spence v Three Rivers Builders & Masonry Supply, Inc, 353 Mich 120, 126-127; 90 NW2d 873 (1958). The case involved concrete building blocks that turned out to be defective after they had been used to construct buildings; the problem was that the plaintiff purchased the blocks from an intermediary who was not reachable at the time of the action, not from the manufacturer itself. Id. at 122-125. Justice VOELKER, writing for the Court, observed that the “general rule” in Michigan had, until that time, been that a person who had not directly contracted with a manufacturer — and was therefore “ ‘not in privity’ ” —could not recover from the manufacturer for defective products under theories of either negligence or implied warranty. The “major concern” of the Court was whether, in that day and age, to uphold the trial court’s “holding that the plaintiff is barred from her action by lack of privity of contract with defendant. ...” Id. at 125. In other words, whether the lack of privity “insulat[ed the defendant] from all liability to plaintiff.” Id. at 123.
Justice VOELKER observed that at that time, the cases on point were inconsistent and symptomatic of “try-ting] vainly to wed the outmoded thinking and legal cliches of the past to the pressing realities of modern life.” Id. at 129. Thus, “[aggrieved plaintiffs have scarcely known whether to sue in deceit or fraud or for negligence or breach of warranty — or indeed whether it was worthwhile to sue at all.” Id. “Either lack of privity should always be a defense in these cases, or it never should be. The basically contractual notion of privity in this context has largely to do with the right of a party to bring his action against the person he seeks to hold, regardless of injury suffered.” Id. at 129 (emphasis in original). Justice VOELKER further noted that the “doc*84trine of nonliability crept into our law from a casual dictum in an English case decided in 1842 (which, to add to the delightful irony, did not even involve a manufacturer),” which American courts seized upon and expanded “into a ‘general rule’ to relieve manufacturers of all liability,” even after “the English in due course sensibly scuttled their earlier dependence on this old dictum . ...” Id. at 132.
Our Supreme Court concluded that, following the lead of Carter v Yardley & Co Ltd, 319 Mass 92; 64 NE2d 693 (1946), the “general rule” requiring a purchaser to be in contractual privity to bring suit against a manufacturer was unjust, unsound, out of touch with modern-day realities, and in need of abandonment. Spence, supra at 134-135.
Three years later, our Supreme Court revisited the issue and it made even clearer the absurdity of applying the outdated privity requirement in modern society and the importance of a policy that recognized the current economic realities. Manzoni v Detroit Coca-Cola Bottling Co, 363 Mich 235; 109 NW2d 918 (1961). The Court observed that warranty actions were “of ancient lineage” and historically required privity of contract. Id. at 238. However, that requirement was an anachronism left over from “when many of our precedents began to take form” in a day when “[s]ales were little more than neighborhood trades” and products were “made under the very eyes of the person who ultimately used it.” Id. at 238-239. Therefore, the privity requirement was an adaptation to conditions largely free of intermediaries, vastly simpler than the modern world and realistically inapplicable to it. Id. at 239-241.
In contrast, the Manzoni Court noted that modern sales were nothing like the sales of the day in which the privity requirement was adopted. Quoting extensively *85from the supreme court of New Jersey, Manzoni explained that in an economy where manufacturers were no longer generally in privity with their products’ users, “ ‘where the commodities sold are such that if defectively manufactured they will be dangerous to life or limb, then society’s interests can only be protected by eliminating the requirement of privity between the maker and his dealers and the reasonably expected ultimate consumer.’ ” Id. at 240, quoting Henningsen v Bloomfield Motors, Inc, 32 NJ 358, 379; 161 A2d 69 (1960). The Court therefore concluded that the privity requirement, as a prerequisite to bringing a warranty claim, was an anachronism and inapplicable tó the modern commercial world; rather than engage in '“the use of fictions,” many jurisdictions had therefore simply abandoned the privity requirement outright. Manzoni, supra at 241. The Court reiterated that Michigan permitted recovery under theories of negligence or breach of implied warranty. Id.
Spence and Manzoni were decided while the Uniform Sales Act was in effect in Michigan; the Uniform Sales Act was adopted in 1913, 1913 PA 100, and was replaced (along with other old uniform acts) with the Uniform Commercial Code in 1964. Critically, the Uniform Sales Act — and particularly § 69, 1948 CL 440.69 — addressed the remedy of rescission, and it was merely “declaratory of the common law.” Rubin v Crowley, Milner & Co, 214 Mich 365, 369; 183 NW 51 (1921); Kirby v Gibson Refrigerator Co, 274 Mich 395, 399; 264 NW 840 (1936); Cova v Harley Davidson Motor Co, 26 Mich App 602, 610-611; 182 NW2d 800 (1970). Moreover, our Supreme Court has explicitly stated that it has repudiated the privity-of-contract requirement for pursuing a warranty claim under the Uniform Sales Act. Prentis v Yale Mfg Co, 421 Mich 670, 682 n 9; 365 NW2d 176 (1984). It is clear that privity-of-contract was long ago elimi*86nated in Michigan as a prerequisite to bringing a suit, under the common law, seeking rescission on the theory of breach of implied warranty.3
Even after the UCC became effective in Michigan, our Supreme Court again recounted the history of the privity requirement in Hill v Harbor Steel & Supply Corp, 374 Mich 194; 132 NW2d 54 (1965). The Court observed that there had been “a time . . . when lack of privity of contract between plaintiff and defendant was a defense to a suit for breach of warranty,” but that an exception had previously developed for foods, and that exception was made the rule in Spence. Id. at 201. The Hill Court provided two significant clarifications. First, that the Spence decision had erroneously implied that there was no distinction between a negligence action and an action alleging breach of implied warranty, when in fact the two actions were significantly different, the most important difference being that a plaintiff need not show a lack of due care to prevail under a warranty theory. Id. at 202-204. Second, although the Manzoni decision had involved a food product, the opinion itself had been general and intended to apply to all cases involving defective products. Id. at 204. Thus, even after the UCC was adopted, it was clear that at common law, in suits between purchasers and manufacturers, contractual privity remained discredited and abandoned as an anachronistic requirement that had no place in the modern world.
*87Shortly after Hill, our Supreme Court reiterated that in a case involving an innocent bystander with no privity of any sort pursuing a breach-of-warranty claim against a manufacturer, “[t]he fact is that Michigan, for abundantly worthy reasons, has eliminated lack of privity as a defense to actions as at bar . . . Piercefield v Remington Arms Co, Inc, 375 Mich 85, 99; 133 NW2d 129 (1965).4 Almost a decade later, our Supreme Court was asked to determine whether a third-party purchaser of property could recover from a title abstractor on the basis of a faulty abstract of title despite a lack of contractual privity between them. Williams v Polgar, 391 Mich 6, 9; 215 NW2d 149 (1974). Among other issues in the case, our Supreme Court again explained that it had “in categorical terms relieved Michigan jurisprudence of the restrictions of ‘privity.’ ” Id. at 9-10, 15-18 (citing Spence, supra).
The parties and the trial court gave considerable attention to Henderson, and in particular Henderson's holding that the remedy of revocation of acceptance under the UCC was only available to purchasers against parties with whom they were in privity of contract. We hold that Henderson is not relevant to this case except to the extent that it reaffirms the fact that the statutory UCC remedy of revocation of acceptance is distinct from the common-law equitable remedy of rescission. Henderson, supra at 339-341; see also Gauthier v Mayo, 77 Mich App 513, 515; 258 NW2d 748 (1977). This is, of course, entirely proper: the UCC “keeps intact those areas of the common law not superseded by specific provisions of the UCC.” Huron Tool & Engineering Co *88v Precision Consulting Services, Inc, 209 Mich App 365, 374; 532 NW2d 541 (1995); MCL 440.1102(2)(a) and 440.1103.
In Henderson, the plaintiff attempted to pursue a breach-of-contract action against a party with whom he did not have a contract. The Henderson Court discussed rescission only to explain that rescission was an equitable remedy distinct from the contractual remedy now provided for in the UCC. Henderson, supra at 340. The Henderson Court stated that warranty liability was an independent matter, and in that case it was irrelevant because the plaintiff had abandoned his warranty claims. Id. at 342-343. Henderson did not obviate the longstanding “principles of law and equity” in Michigan that the remedy of rescission is available for breach of implied warranty.5 Indeed, the holding in Henderson was consistent with the reasoning behind our Supreme Court’s explanation of the purpose behind the economic-loss doctrine: just as it would be inappropriate to recover on a tort theory for a breach of contract, it would be inappropriate to recover on a breach-of-warranty theory for a breach of a contract. The legal theory in a given case must be appropriate to the kind of wrong allegedly suffered.
In contrast to Henderson, plaintiff here actually pleaded alternative claims of “revocation of acceptance” *89under the UCC and “rescission” in his complaint. However, it is clear that plaintiffs claims were based on defendant’s alleged breach of implied warranty, not on a breach of contract. Moreover, the parties did not clearly differentiate “rescission” from “revocation,” but they appeared to consider the primary remedy plaintiff pursued throughout this case to be equitable. As discussed earlier in this opinion, our concern is with the substance of a claim, irrespective of the labels applied by the parties. Adams, supra at 710-711. The substance of the claim that plaintiff pleaded and pursued here was a breach-of-warranty theory seeking the venerable equitable remedy of rescission. The UCC provides a remedy that applies in contract cases; nothing in the UCC revoked the remedy of rescission, nor did it in any way suggest that the important policy set forth by Justice VOELKER is no longer applicable to the way sales are conducted today.
We find additional support in the way in which this Court has treated the “economic-loss doctrine.” Our Supreme Court described the doctrine as follows:
The economic loss doctrine, simply stated, provides that “ ‘[w]here a purchaser’s expectations in a sale are frustrated because the product he bought is not working properly, his remedy is said to be in contract alone, for he has suffered only “economic” losses.’ ” This doctrine hinges on a distinction drawn between transactions involving the sale of goods for commercial purposes where economic expectations are protected by commercial and contract law, and those involving the sale of defective products to individual consumers who are injured in a manner which has traditionally been remedied by resort to the law of torts. [Neibarger v Universal Coops, Inc, 439 Mich 512, 520-521; 486 NW2d 612 (1992) (citations omitted).]
Our Supreme Court concluded that the economic-loss doctrine applied in Michigan, and, as a consequence, “where a plaintiff seeks to recover for economic loss *90caused by a defective product purchased for commercial purposes, the exclusive remedy is provided by the UCC, including its statute of limitations.” Id. at 527-528 (emphasis added). The economic-loss doctrine therefore was originally applicable only between sophisticated commercial parties of nominally equal knowledge and bargaining power; in other words, businesses. The purpose of the doctrine was to prevent a plaintiff from recovering in tort for a harm that was fundamentally contractual, unless the plaintiff had suffered an injury that was not solely economic. Id. at 527-529.
However, this Court extended the economic-loss doctrine to unsophisticated, individual purchasers, but only “where: (1) the parties or others closely related to them had the opportunity to negotiate the terms of the sale of the good or product causing the injury, and (2) their economic expectations can be satisfied by contractual remedies.” Quest Diagnostics, Inc v MCI World-Com, Inc, 254 Mich App 372, 380; 656 NW2d 858 (2002). In the absence of an actual transaction of some sort involving both parties, there was no way they could have bargained for terms with respect to each other, and therefore no way a contractual remedy could be available. Id. at 380-381. Most importantly, where this Court has applied the economic-loss doctrine in the absence of contractual privity, it did so because it found contractual privity irrelevant to the availability of a remedy for a breach of warranty. Sullivan Industries, Inc v Double Seal Glass Co, Inc, 192 Mich App 333, 342-343; 480 NW2d 623 (1991), quoting and adopting Chief Judge DANHOF’s dissenting opinion in Auto Owners Ins Co v Chrysler Corp, 129 Mich App 38, 43-44; 341 NW2d 223 (1983). Chief Judge DANHOF had stated that “in a breach of warranty action it is unnecessary to establish vertical privity of contract between the manu*91facturer and purchaser . . . even where the loss is solely economic.” Id. at 44 (DANHOF, C.J., dissenting), citing Piercefield and Cova.
The significance of the above discussion is that the UCC and the economic-loss doctrine apply to situations where the parties have some kind of contractual relationship with each other. No such contractual relationship existed here. The UCC and the economic-loss doctrine therefore simply do not apply.
Michigan law has, for half a century, unambiguously afforded the remedy of rescission to purchasers against remote, out-of-privity manufacturers on a theory of breach of implied warranty.6 The Legislature’s adoption of the UCC restricted the availability of that remedy only where the parties are, in fact, in contractual privity. In this case, plaintiff proceeded under theories of revocation of acceptance and rescission. For the reasons stated, he was clearly entitled to the verdict of rescission awarded by the trier of fact.
We affirm the trial court’s primary grant of judgment in plaintiffs favor under the MMWA because rescission is an available remedy in this case under Michigan law. We clarify that, given the substance of plaintiffs action, the judgment was clearly based on the remedy of rescission for a breach of implied warranty, even if it *92was not characterized as such. In light of our decision, we decline to consider the merits and arguments concerning alternative judgments.
OWENS, P.J., concurred.

 Kitsmiller RV accepted a case evaluation and was dismissed with prejudice as a defendant. Forest River will be referred to as the singular “defendant” in this opinion.

 The trial court also granted an alternative judgment in plaintiffs favor, to be effective only if this Court reversed the grant of revocation. Because of our resolution of the revocation issue, we need not address the merits of the alternative judgment and express no opinion about them.

 The dissent quotes a quotation in Lash v Allstate Ins Co, 210 Mich App 98, 102; 532 NW2d 869 (1995), in support of the conclusion that rescission is definitionally unavailable here. We note that the quotation from Lash traces its lineage back to Wall v Zynda, 283 Mich 260, 264; 278 NW 66 (1938), a case that predates Spence by two decades. More importantly, Wall was not a consumer-goods case at all; rather, it was concerned with whether an action specifically seeking rescission of a land contract constituted an action founded upon a covenant in that contract.

 The remainder of the discussion concerned the possibility, which our Supreme Court declined to address at the time, that such a warranty case might be barred on the alternative basis that there was too great a causal distance between the injury and the defect. Id.

 Additionally, Henderson relied on an out-of-state case for the proposition that the UCC now provided for “revocation of acceptance” as a new remedy, distinct and different from “rescission”; in that case, the District Court of Appeal of Florida explicitly cautioned “that this does not alter a plaintiffs right to bring suit under a common law theory of rescission by pleading the traditional grounds for equitable relief.” Peppler v Kasual Kreations, Inc, 416 So 2d 864, 865 n 1 (Fla App, 1982). Although an out-of-state case would not ordinarily be binding, we note it here simply because reliance thereon in Henderson further shows that it did not find rescission abolished in Michigan except with regard to the narrow field of breach-of-contract claims.

 This theory is incompatible with much of our dissenting colleague’s concerns about possibly unlimited liability. Under an implied-warranty theory, a plaintiff — whether an immediate purchaser or a purchaser many intermediate owners removed — must in any event prove that there had been a defect in the product when it left the manufacturer’s control, especially where that product requires regular maintenance, is expected to undergo wear, or where “the product has provided defect-free serviceability for a reasonable period of time.” Kupkowski v Avis Ford, Inc, 395 Mich 155, 166; 235 NW2d 324 (1975). Furthermore, at an obvious minimum, the time constraints are provided by applicable statutes of limitations.