¶ 1. Brew City Redevelopment Group, LLC, appeals, pursuant to our leave, the dismissal, with the limited right to re-plead, of its complaint against The Ferchill Group, John T. Ferchill, Wispark, LLC, Jerold E Franke, Juneau Avenue Partners, LLC, JTMK-Pabst, Ltd., Highland Best, LLC, and various unknown entities. See Wis. Stat. Rule 807.12 (suing fictitious defendants). We affirm and reverse, as indicated below, and remand for further proceedings.
¶ 2. This case concerns the projected development of land in the City of Milwaukee that used to be owned by the Pabst Brewing Company. As with many attempted major developments of potentially very valuable urban land, especially those that come into court, this matter has been marked by ill-will. Yet, as we explain below, this is a fairly straightforward case, revolving around the material written agreements. We first set out the principles that govern our review of what the trial court did, and then, second, apply those principles to the parties' disputes.
I.
¶ 3. As noted, this case comes to us from the trial court's dismissal of Brew City's complaint. Accordingly, our review is
de novo
and is limited to whether Brew City's complaint asserts claims for which it is entitled to relief.
See Methodist Manor of Waukesha, Inc. v. Martin,
¶ 4. Brew City's complaint asserts nine claims, and we set them out in the order they appear in the complaint: (1) against Wispark for breach of contract; (2) against Wispark for breach of an "implied duty of good faith" (uppercasing omitted); (3) against Franke, Ferchill, and JTMK-Pabst for intentional interference with Brew City's contract with Wispark; (4) against Juneau Avenue Partners for "breach of fiduciary duty" (uppercasing omitted); (5) against Wispark for conversion; (6) against all the defendants for "injury to business" under Wis. Stat. § 134.01 (uppercasing omitted);
II.
¶ 5. By June 5, 2002, Brew City, an entity created by James Haertel, had the right to buy the Pabst property in Milwaukee. On that date, it assigned that right to Wispark, characterized in the complaint as "the real estate development subsidiary of Wisconsin Energy Corporation." Wispark is further described by the complaint as the "sole member" of Highland Best, a limited liability company.
¶ 6. The June 5th assignment to Wispark by Brew City of Brew City's right to buy the Pabst property was reified in a contract bearing that date and executed on behalf of Brew City by Haertel, described in the assignment contract as Brew City's president and chief executive officer, and, on behalf of Wispark, by Franke, described by the contract as Wispark's president. As material to this appeal, according to the June 5th assignment contract:
• Brew City was assigning to Wispark its contractual right to buy the Pabst property;
• Wispark "agrees that upon acquisition" of the Pabst property from Pabst, Wispark "shall convey to" Brew City, "or shall arrange for a direct conveyance from" Pabst "to" Brew City "of fee simple title to theportions of the" Pabst property "known as Buildings No. 27, 28 and 35." Brew City and Wispark "acknowledge and agree that the development and use of' buildings 27, 28, and 35 "shall be subject to mutually agreeable restrictive covenants, which are in accordance with master planning considerations for the" Pabst property development;
• Wispark was to employ Haertel "as a consultant to" Wispark "on terms and conditions (including scope of work) mutually agreeable to the parties for two years after the acquisition of the" Pabst property, and Haertel was to be paid "a fee of $79,000 per year" (parenthetical in original);
• "Subject to the terms and conditions of the [June 5th assignment] Agreement," Wispark "agrees to provide" Brew City "with up to ten percent of the environmental remediation credit that" Wispark "has received from" Pabst "to reimburse" Brew City "for its reasonable out-of-pocket costs associated with environmental remediation" of buildings No. 27, 28, and 35. "Such reimbursement shall be made after" Wispark "has received such funds from" Pabst "and within twenty (20) days after" Brew City "has provided" Wispark "with documentation reasonably satisfactory to" Wispark "that" Brew City "has expended or committed to expend funds equal to the claimed reimbursement" (parenthetical in original);
• "At the closing of the acquisition of the" Pabst property, Brew City "shall be entitled to receive all personal property located in buildings 27, 28 and 35," except for fixtures and other property the June 5th assignment contract characterizes, plus other personal property the June 5th assignment describes; and
• "The parties [that is, Brew City and Wispark] acknowledge that it is" Wispark's "intent to create a new entity to own the" Pabst property. "Subject to compliance with the terms and conditions of thisAssignment, and further subject to closing the purchase of the" Pabst property, Brew City "shall be entitled to a five percent ownership interest in such entity."
Significantly, as we will see later, Brew City did not agree in the June 5th assignment contract that Wispark's obligations to Brew City under the contract could be transferred to that "new entity" so as to result in a novation.
See Brooks v. Hayes,
¶ 7. Juneau Avenue Partners is the "entity" referred to in the June 5th assignment contract that was created to own the Pabst property. It was, according to Brew City's complaint, "created" on September 6, 2002, and, on the complaint's "information and belief," is "a joint venture" of JTMK-Pabst and Highland Best. JTMK-Pabst is described as "an affiliate of The Ferchill Group," and Highland Best is described as "an affiliate of' Wispark, which, as noted, earlier, is alleged to be Highland Best's sole member. According to Brew City's complaint, at a September 10, 2002, closing, Juneau Avenue Partners purchased from Pabst the property subject to Wispark's June 5th assignment contract with Brew City. We now turn to the complaint's allegations to determine whether they state claims for relief.
¶ 8. As we have seen, Wispark agreed in the June 5,2002, assignment contract to: (1) either give to Brew City or arrange for Brew City to receive buildings 27, 28, and 35, "upon acquisition" of the Pabst property from Pabst, and work with Brew City to ensure that appropriate restrictive covenants relating to those buildings were drawn up; (2) hire Haertel as a consultant; (3) give to Brew City an environmental remediation-credit in connection with buildings 27, 28, and 35; and (4) give to Brew City certain described personal property.
¶ 9. Brew City's First Claim asserts that Wispark breached the June 5th assignment contract and that Brew City was damaged as a result because: "title to buildings 27, 28 and 35" was not conveyed to Brew City "in a timely manner"; Wispark did not "in a timely manner, or at any time," "draft reasonable 'mutually agreeable restrictive covenants' for the development and use of the Brew City properties"; Wispark did not "honor Brew City's request for reimbursement" of remediation costs; the value of what the June 5th assignment contract promised would be Brew City's five percent interest in Juneau Avenue Partners was significantly watered-down; and Haertel was not paid his "consulting salary on a timely basis." 1
¶ 10. The trial court held that Juneau Avenue Partners, not Wispark, was the proper party against whom the First Claim should have been asserted be
¶ 11. A complaint states a claim for breach of contract when it alleges: (1) a contract between the plaintiff and the defendant that creates obligations flowing from the defendant to the plaintiff; (2) failure of the defendant to do what it undertook to do; and (3) damages.
See Northwestern Motor Car, Inc. v. Pope,
• Wispark promised in the June 5th assignment contract with Brew City that when the Pabst property was acquired from Pabst, Wispark would either convey or arrange for the conveyance of buildings 27, 28, and 35 to Brew City. According to Brew City's complaint, Wispark did not do that.
• Wispark promised in the June 5th assignment contract with Brew City that it would employ Haertel as a paid consultant. Brew City's complaint alleges that although Haertel received "[mjonthly consulting payments" under a consulting agreement that was not signed because Brew City had objections to the proffered draft, the monies "were not timely paid."
• Wispark promised in the June 5th assignment contract with Brew City to make the environmental remediation payments to Haertel in connection with his development of buildings 27, 28, and 35. Brew City's complaint alleges that this was not done.
• Wispark promised in the June 5th assignment contract with Brew City that Brew City would get specified items of personal property from the Pabst property, and that this would occur at the closing on the Pabst property. A fair inference from Brew City's complaint is that this has not happened.
• Wispark promised in the June 5th assignment contract with Brew City that Brew City "shall be entitled to a five percent ownership interest in" what was formed as Juneau Avenue Partners.
Although according to Brew City's complaint, Wispark, as envisioned by the June 5th assignment contract with Brew City, could transfer to Juneau Avenue Partners the rights Wispark got under that assignment contract, Wispark's obligations to Brew City under the June 5th assignment contract could not, without Brew City's consent, be transferred to Juneau Avenue Partners or any other entity so as to relieve Wispark of its responsibility for these contractual obligations. Brooks states the rule, which we reprint at length because the parties do not discuss it in their briefs, although we raised the matter at oral argument:
The rule for delegation of the performance of a contractual obligation is that the obligor may delegate a contractual duty without the obligee's consent unless the duty is "personal." The rule for delegation of responsibility is that if the obligor delegates the performance of an obligation, the obligor is not relieved of responsibility for fulfilling that obligation or of liability in the event of a breach. The obligor under the contract is treated as having rendered the performance even when an independent contractor has rendered it, and the obligor remains the party liable for that performance if the performance proves to be in breach of the contract.
Where the obligee consents to the delegation, the consent itself does not release the obligor from liability for breach of contract. More than the obligee's consent to a delegation of performance is needed to release the obligor from liability for breach of contract. For the obligor to be released from liability, the obligee must agree to the release. If there is an agreement between the obligor, obligee and a third party by which the thirdparty agrees to be substituted for the obligor and the obligee assents thereto, the obligor is released from liability and the third person takes the place of the obligor. Such an agreement is known as a novation.
Id.,
¶ 12. "Every contract implies good faith and fair dealing between the parties to it," and mere compliance with the form but not the substance of a contract breaches that covenant of good faith.
Bozzacchi v. O'Malley,
C. Third Claim: Intentional Interference with Contractual Relationship, Against Jerold E Franke, John T. Ferchill, and JTMK-Pabst, Ltd.
¶ 13. "The elements of tortious interference with a contract are: (1) the plaintiff had a contract or
• by not giving Brew City title to buildings 27, 28, and 35;
• by not "draft[ing] reasonable 'mutually agreeable restrictive covenants'" in connection with those buildings, so Brew City could develop them within the Pabst property complex;
• by not "honoring] Brew City's request for reimbursement" of its remediation expenses;
• by offering Brew City an ownership interest in Juneau Avenue Partners that Brew City contends did not comply with the intent of the June 5th assignment contract;
• by not paying "Haertel's consulting salary on a timely basis"; 3
• by not "performing] in accordance" with the time-is-of-the essence clause in the June 5th assignment contract;
• "by intentionally delaying performance of the terms of the June 2 [sic], 2002 Assignment [in order] to delay and avoid transfer of title of Brew City'sbuildings, and to minimize Brew City's ability to obtain or maintain tenants for its buildings, among other things, in an attempt to push Brew City to sell its entire interest in Juneau Avenue Partners"; and
• "in other respects."
As we have seen, Wispark ultimately transferred the Pabst property to Juneau Avenue Partners, and, other than Wispark's obligations under the June 5th assignment contract that we discussed in Parts II.A. and B. of this opinion, the only defendant other than Wispark that, according to the complaint, had the legal responsibility or authority to do any of the things about which Brew City complains in its Third Claim is Juneau Avenue Partners. Of Franke, Ferchill, and JTMK-Pabst, only JTMK-Pabst is alleged to be a member of Juneau Avenue Partners, described by the complaint as a limited liability company. Under Wis. Stat. §§ 183.0304 and 183.0305, neither members of a limited liability company nor its manager may be liable in tort, for their acts or conduct as a member or manager, to third persons, such as, here, Brew City.
4
Thus, JTMK-Pabst is not a proper party to Brew City's tortious-interference claim because no conduct other than as a
¶ 14. Brew City bases this claim on its contention that it should have a five-percent interest in Juneau Avenue Partners, and thus, according to its briefs on appeal, Brew City was a joint-venturer with Juneau Avenue Partners. The complaint, however, indicates that, as of yet, Brew City is not a part of Juneau Avenue Partners, and thus, as of yet at least, Brew City is not in a joint venture with Juneau Avenue Partners.
See Edlebeck v. Hooten,
¶ 15. Brew City contends that Wispark's failure to "deliver title to buildings 27, 28 and 35 to Brew City" was a conversion of its property. The trial court disagreed. So do we.
¶ 16. "The elements of tortious conversion comprise: (1) intentionally controlling/taking property belonging to another; (2) controlling/taking property without the owner's consent; and (3) those acts resulting in serious interference with the rights of the owner to possess the property."
Bruner v. Heritage Cos.,
¶ 17. Brew City contends that its complaint states a claim under Wis. Stat. § 134.01 against all of the defendants. Section 134.01 provides:
Injury to business; restraint of will. Any 2 or more persons who shall combine, associate, agree, mutually undertake or concert together for the purpose of willfully or maliciously injuring another in his or her reputation, trade, business or profession by any means whatever, or for the purpose of maliciously compelling another to do or perform any act against his or her will, or preventing or hindering another from doing or performing any lawful act shall be punished by imprisonment in the county jail not more than one year or by fine not exceeding $500.
Although phrased as a criminal statute, a party may bring a civil action under the section to recover damages caused by its violation.
See Gerol v. Arena,
• the defendants "acted together for the common and agreed upon purpose of injuring Brew City's reputation and business";
• the defendants "acted maliciously and intentionally to injure Brew City's reputation and business"; and
• Brew City was damaged as a result.
Taken in conjunction with allegations that Franke and Ferchill had discussed "at several of the monthly or bi-weekly meetings of the Juneau Avenue Partners" whether Haertel has " 'suffered enough,'" and that at "several meetings, Franke or Ferchill concluded the meeting by stating, 'No, Haertel has not suffered enough,'" Brew City's Sixth Claim passes pleading muster under Wis. Stat. § 134.01. 6 The defendants contend, however, that the economic-loss doctrine bars Brew City's § 134.01 claim. We disagree.
¶ 19. As we have seen in footnote five, the economic-loss doctrine applies when a party seeks tort remedies for breaches of commercial real-estate contracts.
Van Lare v. Vogt, Inc.,
G. Seventh Claim: Conspiracy to Intentionally Interfere with Contractual Relationship, Against Jerold P. Franke, John T. Ferchill, and JTMK-Pabst, Ltd.
¶ 20. This is a recasting of what Brew City alleged as its Third Claim, and for the reasons set out in Part II.C. of this opinion we modify the trial court's dismissal of Brew City's Seventh Claim as to JTMK-Pabst, Franke, and Ferchill to be without prejudice in accordance with what we wrote in connection with Brew City's Third Claim.
¶ 21. This is a recasting of what Brew City alleged as its Fifth Claim, with the addition of Juneau Avenue Partners as a party. For the reasons set out in Part II.E. of this opinion we affirm the trial court's dismissal of Brew City's Eighth Claim.
I. Ninth Claim: Punitive Damages, Against All of the Defendants.
¶ 22. With the exception of Brew City's Sixth Claim, and the leave to re-plead Brew City's Third and Seventh Claims, the only surviving Brew City claims are claims for breach of contract. Punitive damages "generally cannot be had in breach of contract claims."
Grams v. Milk Prods., Inc.,
¶ 23. In sum, we reverse the trial court's dismissal of Brew City's First, Second, and Sixth Claims, affirm but modify the trial court's dismissal of Brew City's Third and Seventh Claims, affirm the trial court's dismissal of Brew City's Fourth, Fifth, and Eighth Claims, and vacate the trial court's dismissal of Brew City's Ninth Claim, and we remand this matter to the trial court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
By the Court. — Orders affirmed in part; reversed in part and cause remanded for further proceedings.
Notes
The parties agreed at oral argument that the claim in connection with Haertel's consulting contract has been resolved.
Thus, we need not analyze Brew City's contention that the agreement in the June 5th assignment contract that Wispark "may assign its rights under this Assignment to a new entity that is formed for the purpose of purchasing and/or developing the Properly, provided [Brew City] receives its 5% equity interest therein" made receipt by Brew City of its five-percent interest a condition precedent to the transfer of the Pabst property by Wispark to that entity, Juneau Avenue Partners.
See Gross v. Hoffman,
As noted in footnote one, this claim has been resolved.
Wisconsin Stat. § 183.0304 provides:
Liability of members to 3rd parties. (1) The debts, obligations and liabilities of a limited liability company, whether arising in contract, tort or otherwise, shall be solely the debts, obligations and liabilities of the limited liability company. Except as provided in ss. 183.0502 and 183.0608, a member or manager of a limited liability company is not personally liable for any debt, obligation or liability of the limited liability company, except that a member or manager may become personally hable by his or her acts or conduct other than as a member or manager.
(2) Notwithstanding sub. (1), nothing in this chapter shall preclude a court from ignoring the limited liability company entity under principles of common law of this state that are similar tothose applicable to business corporations and shareholders in this state and under circumstances that are not inconsistent with the purposes of this chapter.
WISCONSIN Stat. § 183.0305 provides:
Parties to actions. A member of a limited liability company is not a proper party to a proceeding by or against a limited liability company, solely by reason of being a member of the limited liability company, except if any of the following situations exists:
(1) The object of the proceeding is to enforce a member's right against or liability to the limited liability company.
(2) The action is brought by the member under s. 183.1101.
The parties discuss the application of the economic-loss doctrine, which is designed "to prevent a party to a contract from employing tort remedies to compensate the party for purely economic losses arising from the contract."
Grams v. Milk Prods., Inc.,
We disagree with the trial court's determination that, for the purposes of the defendants' motion to dismiss Brew City's complaint, animus directed at Haertel did not encompass Brew City.
The precise limits of the fraud exceptions to the economic-loss doctrine are still, apparently in flux.
See Van Lare,
