Mаrk H. Getman, plaintiff in an action for corporate dissolution below, was also named by Donald and Annа Mathews as counter-defendant in their counterclaim for breach of contract and tortious intеrference with their ambulance business. The jury entered a verdict against Getman on the counterclaim in the amount of $54,972. Getman brought a motion for a new trial, which was denied. Getman appeals as of right thе judgment on the jury verdict and the trial court’s order denying his motion for a new trial. 1 We reverse and remand for а new trial based on the trial court’s erroneous jury instructions.
Despite the fact that there was no objеction to the instructions at trial, this Court may review Getman’s claim of error upon a showing of manifest injustice.
Bluemlein v Szepanski,
101 Mich
*248
App 184, 191;
In the present case, the court’s instructions were highly confusing and replete with inappropriate references to liability theories which had nеither been pled nor proven. The court failed to define certain terms essential to the theоry of liability pleaded and argued by the Mathewses at trial, that being the tort of intentional interference with business relations. The court failed to define the term "intentional” for the jury and further failed to apprise the jury of the necessity of proving that the alleged interference with the Mathewses’ ambulance business was not only intentional but also unjustified. See
Schipani v Ford Motor Co,
The court’s instructions as to damages were equally erroneous. The court openly invited the jury to award exemplary damages, such as those
*249
for "mental distress, embarrassment, humiliation”, and other nonpecuniary damages. This contravened the well-established rule thаt one who commits the tort of intentionally interfering with another’s business relations is subject to liability for "pecuniary damages”. See Restatement Torts, 2d, § 766B, p 20. Exemplary damages are ordinarily inappropriate in commercial contexts such as the present one.
Cf. Kewin v Massachusetts Mutual Life Ins Co,
Even if this Court were to accept thе Mathewses’ premise that exemplary damages could properly have been awarded in thе present case— which we specifically decline to do — the trial court’s instructions relating to suсh damages were so erroneous as to mandate reversal. The court failed to inform the jury of thе prerequisites for awarding exemplary damages. In
Bailey v Graves,
In the instant case, the trial court did not instruct the jury as to the malice requirement for exemplary damages. Absent this crucial instruction, the jury’s verdict may well have included an amount for exemplary damages which was based upon the misconception that the Mathewses were not required to show malice. Since the verdict was not apportioned, any tainted quantum of damages *250 is unknown. Under similar circumstances, the Court in Bailey, supra, reversed and remanded for a new trial.
There is one final aspect in which thе court’s instructions as to damages were erroneous. The court failed to define the term "lost profits”, neglecting to distinguish between "gross profits” and "net profits”. Damages for lost profits must be based on the loss оf net, rather than gross, profits.
Lawton v Gorman Furniture Corp,
It is not necessary tо review Getman’s remaining contentions that he was denied a fair tral by the misconduct of the Mathewses’ сounsel and that the verdict was against the great weight of the evidence.
Reversed and remanded for a new trial.
Notes
Getman’s original claim for сorporate dissolution is not the subject of this appeal. The appeal relates solely to the trial on the Mathewses’ counterclaim.
