Plaintiff appeals as of right from an order of the Ingham Circuit Court granting summary disposition in favor of defendant pursuant to MCR 2.116(C)(8). We affirm in part and reverse in part.
Plaintiff enrolled her eighteen-month-old daughter in day care with defendant. On December 9, 1992, plaintiff dropped off her daughter at defendant’s facility at lunch time. Plaintiff’s daughter had been prescribed medication, and plaintiff filled out an authorization form granting defendant’s employees permission to administer the medication to her daughter that day. Just after 5:00 P.M. on December 9, 1992, one of defendant’s employee’s placed the child, who had fallen asleep, in a crib in the infant room. At approximately 6:00 P.M., defendant’s employees locked the doors of the facility and went home for the day, apparently unaware that plaintiff’s daughter was still sleeping in the crib. Shortly thereafter, plaintiff returned to the facility to pick up her daughter and found the facility locked and unlit. Plaintiff called 911. A police officer who responded to the call looked through a window of the facility, with the aid of a flashlight, and saw the child sleeping in the crib. Another officer then broke a window and retrieved the child from the building. The child was upset after the incident, but was not physically harmed. When plaintiff went into the facility to retrieve her daugh *692 ter’s belongings, she apparently found the medication authorization form and observed that it had not been initialed to indicate that the child had been given the medication. Plaintiff alleged that she suffered emotional distress as a result of the incident.
Plaintiff filed a complaint against defendant, alleging breach of contract, statutory, regulatory, and internal policy violations, negligence, and gross negligence, and seeking exemplary damages. Defendant moved for summary disposition of plaintiff’s claims pursuant to MCR 2.116(C)(8) and (C)(10). After a hearing, the trial court granted summary disposition of plaintiff’s claims pursuant to MCR 2.116(C)(8).
Plaintiff first argues that the trial court erred in granting summary disposition of her breach of contract claim pursuant to MCR 2.116(C)(8) on the ground that plaintiff failed to allege compensable emotional distress. We agree.
This Court reviews a trial court’s grant of summary disposition de novo.
Nelson v Ho,
The recovery of damages for the breach of a contract is limited to those damages that are a natural result of the breach or those that are contemplated by the parties at the time the contract was made.
Kewin
*693
v Massachusetts Mut Life Ins Co,
When we have a contract concerned not with trade and commerce but with life and death, not with profit but with elements of personality, not with pecuniary aggrandizement but with matters of mental concern and solicitude, then a breach of duty with respect to such contracts will inevitably and necessarily result in mental anguish, pain and suffering. In such cases the parties may reasonably be said to have contracted with reference to the payment of damages therefor in event of breach. Far from being outside the contemplation of the parties they are an integral and inseparable part of it. [Id. at 471.]
Examples of personal contracts include a contract to perform a cesarean section,
Stewart,
supra; a contract for the care and burial of a dead body,
Allinger v Kell,
We believe that a contract to care for one’s child is a matter of “mental concern and solicitude,” rather than “pecuniary aggrandizement.” Stewart, supra at 471. Therefore, like the contract to care for the plaintiff’s elderly mother in Avery, supra, the contract involved in the instant case was personal in nature, rather than commercial. At the time the contract was executed, it was foreseeable that a breach of the contract would result in mental distress damages to plaintiff, which would extend beyond the mere “annoyance and vexation” that normally accompanies the breach of a contract. Kewin, supra at 417. Such damages are clearly within the contemplation of the parties to such a contract.
The trial court granted summary disposition of plaintiff’s breach of contract claim pursuant to MCR 2.116(C)(8) on the ground that plaintiff failed to plead that she suffered a definite and objective physical injury as a result of her emotional distress. However, damages may be awarded for emotional distress caused by a breach of a personal contract even where the emotional distress does not result in a physical injury. Avery, supra at 243. We therefore conclude that the trial court erred in granting summary disposition of plaintiff’s breach of contract claim pursuant to MCR 2.116(C)(8).
*695 Plaintiff next argues that the trial court erred in granting summary disposition of her claim based on violations of the child care organizations act, MCL 722.111 et seq.; MSA 25.358(11) et seq., pursuant to MCR 2.116(C)(8) after finding that the act did not authorize a private cause of action. We disagree.
Whether plaintiff has a private cause of action under the child care organizations act is a question of statutory inteipretation.
Long v Chelsea Community Hosp,
The primary goal of judicial inteipretation of statutes is to give effect to the intent of the Legislature.
Farrington v Total Petroleum, Inc,
Generally, when a statute creates a new right or imposes a new duty, the remedy provided by the statute to enforce the right, or for nonperformance of the duty, is exclusive.
Pompey v General Motors Corp,
Here, the act does not expressly create a private cause of action. Furthermore, the act adequately provides for enforcement of its provisions through proceedings instituted by the Attorney General. MCL 722.123; MSA 25.358(23). The act also provides criminal penalties for the violation of its provisions. MCL 722.125; MSA 25.358(25). Therefore the trial court properly concluded that plaintiff had no private cause of action based on the alleged violations of the child care organizations act.
Finally, plaintiff argues that the trial court abused its discretion in denying her motion to amend her complaint for a second time on the ground that the amendment would result in prejudice to the court. We agree that the trial court abused its discretion in denying plaintiffs motion on the basis of prejudice to the court, but, nevertheless, conclude that, because the amendment would have been futile, plaintiffs motion to amend was properly denied.
When deciding a motion for summary disposition based on MCR 2.116(C)(8), the court must give the parties an opportunity to amend their pleadings as provided by MCR 2.118, unless the amendment would be futile. MCR 2.116(I)(5);
Weymers v Khera,
In the absence of bad faith or prejudice to defendant, we do not believe that prejudice to the court caused by plaintiffs delay in filing a motion to amend was a proper reason for denying plaintiffs motion. However, this Court will not reverse where the trial court reached the right result for the wrong reason.
Glazer v Lamkin,
Affirmed in part and reversed in part.
Notes
Contracts that have been held to be commercial, rather than personal, include a no-fault automobile insurance contract,
Butler v DAIIE,
