Batshon v. MAR-QUE GENERAL CONTRACTORS, INC.

Decision Date18 April 2001
Docket NumberDocket No. 116895.
Citation624 N.W.2d 903,463 Mich. 646
PartiesPetronella BATSHON and Benson Rubin, Plaintiffs-Appellants, v. MAR-QUE GENERAL CONTRACTORS, INC., Dewey Stewart and Expert Plumbing, Inc., Defendants-Appellees.
CourtMichigan Supreme Court

Alan C. Applebaum, Southfield, MI, for the plaintiffs-appellants.

Kurt D. Meyer, Troy, MI, for defendant-appellee Mar-Que General Contractors, Inc.

Kurt A. Anselmi, Bloomfield Hills, MI, for defendant-appellee Expert Plumbing, Inc.

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

The plaintiffs sued the defendants, who successfully interposed a release executed by the plaintiffs and an insurance company. Summary disposition was granted in favor of the defendants, and the circuit court and the Court of Appeals affirmed. We reverse on the ground that the release did not limit the potential liability of the defendants.

I

Plaintiffs Petronella Batshon and Benson Rubin owned a house in Southfield.1 An October 1993 fire did substantial damage to the structure. Working from several trucks, firefighters evidently pumped a significant amount of water into the building. Perhaps in connection with the fire, the basement flooded knee-deep several weeks later.

Substantial reconstruction work was done in early 1994. The cost was apparently borne by AAA of Michigan, the insurer of the house. As the reconstruction work was being done, the plaintiffs decided to connect with the city water line. They contracted with Mar-Que General Contractors. Mar-Que, in turn, subcontracted with Dewey Stewart to dig a trench for the pipe, and with Expert Plumbing, Inc., to install the water line.

In March 1994, the basement walls of the house buckled, causing additional damage. This suit is premised on the plaintiffs' allegation that this damage was caused by the negligence of Mar-Que and its subcontractors (Stewart and Expert Plumbing) in the course of installing the water line.

Evidently, the plaintiffs' initial conclusion had been that the collapse of the walls was the result of the fire and the efforts of the fire department. With the assistance of counsel, they sent AAA an April 1994 letter demanding that AAA pay a significant portion of the $27,900 bill for repairing the walls.

The negotiations with AAA led to a $3,000 settlement, in exchange for a May 1994 release. The meaning of that release is the central question in this case.

In October 1995, the plaintiffs filed in district court a complaint against Mar-Que, Stewart, and Expert Plumbing.2 The defendants responded with motions for summary disposition under MCR 2.116(C)(7), saying that the language of the release barred the plaintiffs' claim.

The district court granted the motions, agreeing that the release barred the claims against the present defendants. The court later denied reconsideration. The plaintiffs appealed, but the circuit court affirmed.

The Court of Appeals also affirmed,3 and the plaintiffs now seek leave to appeal in this Court.

II

The release was executed on a generic printed form that bore the title, "RELEASE COVERING ALL CLAIMS." AAA's name was typed into a blank space, so that the plaintiffs were releasing "AAA of Michigan, his/her/their executors, administrators, and all persons or organizations responsible for his/her/their acts from all claims and causes of action for all injuries, losses, and damages sustained by [the plaintiffs], arising from an incident, all or part of which occurred on or about the 23rd day of March, 1994, at or near [the plaintiffs' Southfield address]." The printed form also contained the language, "I intend this document to operate as a release for all consequences of the injuries, losses and damages sustained by me," after which were typed the words "in regards to the basement walls whether or not I am presently aware of such consequences."

The defendants argue that the release covers "all persons." Agreeing, the Court of Appeals said that "[t]he word `all' encompasses the broadest possible classification." The plain language of the release does not, however, cover all persons and organizations.4 The key sentence in the release agreement provides for a "release of AAA of Michigan, his/her/their executors, administrators, and all persons or organizations responsible for his/her/their acts." The first use of the term "his/her/their"5 unmistakably is as a substitute for repeating AAA of Michigan. It is likewise plain that when the term "his/her/their" is used again in the same sentence that it is also a substitute for AAA of Michigan. See Henderson v. State Farm Fire & Casualty Co., 460 Mich. 348, 356, 596 N.W.2d 190 (1999) (explaining that a court should "give contextual meaning to [a contractual] phrase to determine what the phrase conveys to those familiar with our language and its contemporary usage"). It follows that this printed release form is not a complete release of liability with respect to all parties in connection with the incident underlying the release, but rather pertains to "all persons or organizations" only insofar as they might be "responsible for [AAA's] acts."6

The nature of the potential claim being released was stated in terms that were expansive ("I intend this document to operate as a release for all consequences of the injuries, losses and damages sustained by me in regards to the basement walls whether or not I am presently aware of such consequences"). Because this document more narrowly identifies the persons and entities being released, however, only t...

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