Plaintiff appeals as of right from an order of the Oakland Circuit Court, which granted summary disposition to defendant pursuant to MCR 2.116(C)(8), for failure to state a claim upon which relief could be granted. Defendant cross appeals from the trial court’s denial of its
Plaintiff leased space to operate a supermarket in a shopping center owned by defendant. Plaintiff and defendant executed the lease on June 17, 1982, with the original term to be from October 1, 1985, to September 30, 1990. Plaintiff had two renewal options that, if exercised, would allow it to continue leasing the property until September 30, 2000.
The last paragraph of the lease, entitled "Right of First Refusal,” provided as follows:
Landlord agrees to offer to tenant right of first refusal of any bona fide offer to purchase premises described herein during the term of lease and further provided Tenant exercises option to purchase within ten (10) days from date of notification from Landlord of said offer to purchase, under the same terms and conditions and with payment of the same security deposit as provided in said offer.
Plaintiff filed a complaint on April 21, 1992, seeking specific performance of its right of first refusal to purchase the parcel of real property leased from defendant. In its complaint, plaintiff alleged that it had uncovered a "scheme” by defendant’s officers or agents "to circumvent LaRose’s right of first refusal,” and that defendant had "taken steps” to convey plaintiff’s demised property by selling the capital stock of defendant corporation to Robert Kato. 1
Following some discovery, the court granted
I
The principal issue presented is one of first impression in this state, requiring us to decide whether the sale of all of a corporate lessor’s stock constitutes a "sale” of the corporation’s real property triggering a lessee’s right of first refusal to purchase the demised property. We agree with defendant and the overwhelming majority of courts of other jurisdictions that have addressed this issue, and conclude that it does not.
A
A motion for summary disposition under MCR 2.116(C)(8) for failure to state a claim tests the legal sufficiency of a claim and is decided only by reference to the pleadings.
Patterson v Kleiman,
B
A provision in a leasehold contract providing a tenant with a right of first refusal to purchase the demised property is valid in Michigan.
Nu-Way Service Stations, Inc v Vandenberg Bros Oil Co,
C
In
K C S, Ltd v East Main Street Land Development Corp,
40 Md App 196;
Tenant is in no worse position than it was before the sale of the stock. Tenant still possesses all the rights and privileges conferred on it by the lease, including the "right of first refusal” to purchase the property demised to the Tenant.
There appears to be a dearth of cases dealing with the issue raised by Tenant .... Perhaps this is true, because, as one authority suggests, the answer is usually obvious. Annot., 70 ALR3d 203,206 (1976). We think it obvious in the matter now before us. . . . If, perchance, a large corporation with a multitude of stockholders entered into a lease ... no one would seriously contend that a transfer of some of the corporate stock from a seller thereof to a buyer would operate so as to trigger [a] "right of first refusal” on the theory that the sale of the stock is the equivalent to a sale of the demised premises. Yet, the only difference between that hypothetical and the case sub judice is the quantity of the stock being sold. The fact that as a result of the stock sale the control of the corporate landlord will be altered did not change the ownership of the East Main Street property. [Id. at 199-200. Citations omitted.]
See also
Cruising World, Inc v Westermeyer,
351 So 2d 371 (Fla Dist Ct App, 1977), cert den 361 So 2d 836 (Fla, 1978);
Torrey Delivery, Inc v Chautauqua Truck Sales & Service, Inc,
We find the reasoning of the above cases to be persuasive and hold that a corporate lessor’s stock sale, standing alone, does not constitute a "sale” of corporate real estate triggering a lessee’s right of first refusal to purchase the demised property.
II
In its complaint, plaintiff alleges that the sale of stock in this case was a scheme by defendant’s owners or agents to circumvent plaintiff’s right of first refusal under the lease. 2 Thus, plaintiff asserts that equity requires us to examine the motives of defendant’s corporate owners in making the stock sale to Kato.
Plaintiff asks this Court not to follow K C S, Ltd, supra, arguing that the court ignored the apparent subterfuge involved in the sale. However, we find that the court in that case was fully apprised of the buyers’ original desire to purchase the real estate rather than the stock, as well as the fact that they bought the stock for the same price they had offered to buy the land. Id. at 197-198. Similarly, the court in Cruising World, Inc, supra, was aware that the stock purchaser had originally inquired about purchasing the land, which was adjacent to the buyer’s land. Id. at 372. Neither court entered into the equitable analysis proposed by plaintiff.
Other cases have examined the motives of the corporate owners in making a stock sale. For example, in
Prince v Elm Investment Co, Inc,
Although a transfer of corporate stock to a stranger to the lease may not be a "sale,” and a transfer [of land] from a corporation to its stockholders (or vice versa) may not be a "sale,” there would probably be a sale if these two steps occurred in sequence according to a pre-arranged plan. Otherwise, a lessor could incorporate and sell the stock [sic, "land” is intended] to himself individually, and the parties would have accomplished in a step transaction what they could not have accomplished directly. [Id. at 823, n 3.]
Absent a showing of bad faith or wrongdoing on the part of the corporate lessor, such multistep transactions do not trigger a lessee’s right of first
In harmonizing a number of cases presenting a variety of transactions, the Prince court formulated a rule:
[F]or purposes of a right of first refusal, a "sale” occurs upon the transfer (a) for value (b) of a significant interest in the subject property (c) to a stranger to the lease, (d) who thereby gains substantial control over the leased property. [Id. at 823.]
See also
Belliveau v O’Coin,
Here, plaintiff asserts that the transfer of defendant’s corporate stock to Kato constituted the first
B
The above doctrine also disposes of plaintiff’s attempt to pierce defendant’s corporate veil. This Court will ignore a corporate identity only where three prerequisites are satisfied:
First, the corporate entity must be a mere instrumentality of another entity or individual. Second, the corporate entity must be used to commit a fraud or wrong. Third, there must have been an unjust loss or injury to the plaintiff. [Nogueras v Maisel & Associates of Michigan,142 Mich App 71 , 86;369 NW2d 492 (1985).]
Here, defendant corporation has not been used to commit a fraud or wrong. The sale of stock to Kato was proper, notwithstanding plaintiff’s evidence that Kato was originally interested in ownership of the land. K C S, Ltd, supra; Cruising World, Inc, supra. Moreover, plaintiff cannot show an unjust loss or injury. Plaintiff is in the exact same position it was before the stock sale to Kato. See K C S, Ltd, supra at 199.
Because plaintiff has failed to allege fraud on the part of defendant’s corporate owners, and Kato
III
In its cross appeal, defendant asserts that plaintiff’s lawsuit was frivolous and on that basis the trial court erred in denying its motion for costs and attorney fees. A trial court’s finding that a claim is frivolous will not be reversed on appeal unless clearly erroneous.
Attorney General ex rel Director of Dep’t of Natural Resources v Acme Disposal Co,
An attorney has an affirmative duty to conduct a reasonable inquiry into the factual and legal viability of a pleading before it is signed. MCR 2.114(D);
Davids v Davis,
Affirmed.
Notes
Although not alleged in plaintiffs complaint — and therefore not subject to consideration under a motion for summary disposition brought under MCR 2.116(C)(8) — we note for clarification purposes only that, at the time the lease was executed, defendant’s corporate stock was owned entirely by James and Helene Raisin. On January 11, 1990, the Raisins sold all the stock to Robert Kato.
Although it is unclear from the time frames provided in Vaughn LaRose’s affidavit whether the sale of stock occurred before or after Kato approached LaRose and his father about purchasing the business, plaintiff asserts in its brief on appeal that the discussion with Kato occurred first.
We note that plaintiffs counsel explained at the summary disposition motion hearing that plaintiffs cause of action was for breach of contract, not fraud.
