Michigan Contract Law: Formation, Enforcement, and Breach
Michigan contract law governs the legally binding obligations created between parties through mutual agreement, covering how contracts are formed, when they can be enforced in court, and what remedies apply when a party fails to perform. The framework draws from the Michigan Compiled Laws (MCL), common law principles developed through decades of Michigan appellate decisions, and applicable federal statutes where interstate commerce is involved. This page describes the structural components of contract law as applied in Michigan courts, the classification of contract types, enforcement mechanisms, and the decision points that determine whether a dispute proceeds to litigation or resolution. For a broader orientation to the Michigan legal environment, the Michigan Legal Services Authority catalogs the regulatory and statutory framework that governs this sector.
Definition and scope
A contract under Michigan law is an agreement between two or more parties that creates mutual, enforceable obligations. Michigan courts recognize contracts as binding when they satisfy four foundational elements: offer, acceptance, consideration, and mutual assent. The Michigan Supreme Court has consistently applied these elements under common law doctrine, with the Michigan Compiled Laws providing additional statutory frameworks for specific contract categories, including the Michigan Uniform Commercial Code (MCL §440.1101 et seq.) for transactions in goods.
Michigan contract law distinguishes between two primary categories:
- Common law contracts — govern services, real property transactions, and employment agreements; controlled by Michigan common law as interpreted by the Michigan Court of Appeals and Michigan Supreme Court.
- UCC-governed contracts — apply when the subject matter is the sale of goods; governed by MCL Chapter 440, Michigan's adoption of the Uniform Commercial Code.
The distinction matters because the UCC permits contract formation even when terms are missing or left open, whereas common law requires greater certainty of material terms at the time of formation. For example, a contract for software consulting services is governed by common law, while a contract for the purchase of 500 units of manufacturing equipment falls under the UCC.
Scope limitation: This page covers Michigan state contract law as applied in Michigan Circuit Courts and the Michigan Court of Appeals, plus the U.S. District Courts for the Eastern and Western Districts of Michigan when adjudicating Michigan-law claims. Federal contract law applicable to federal procurement (governed by the Federal Acquisition Regulation) and contracts with tribal entities operating under sovereign frameworks are not covered here. For the regulatory environment that frames Michigan civil litigation, see Regulatory Context for Michigan's Legal System.
How it works
Contract formation in Michigan proceeds through a defined sequence. Courts examine each phase when enforcement is disputed:
- Offer — One party communicates a definite proposal with the intention to be bound upon acceptance. An advertisement, under Michigan common law, is generally not an offer but an invitation to negotiate.
- Acceptance — The offeree agrees to all material terms without modification. A conditional acceptance constitutes a counteroffer under Michigan common law, resetting the negotiation.
- Consideration — Each party must provide something of legal value: a promise, an act, or a forbearance. Michigan courts will not enforce gratuitous promises lacking consideration.
- Mutual assent — Both parties must demonstrate objective agreement, assessed by the "reasonable person" standard. Courts do not evaluate subjective intent alone.
- Capacity — Parties must have legal capacity to contract. Michigan law sets the age of majority at 18 (MCL §722.52); contracts with minors are voidable at the minor's election.
- Legality — The contract's purpose must not violate Michigan statutes or public policy. Contracts for illegal services are void ab initio.
Once formed, enforcement typically proceeds through Michigan Circuit Courts, which hold general civil jurisdiction over contract disputes exceeding $25,000 in controversy. Disputes at or below $6,500 may be filed in Michigan Small Claims Court, which provides an expedited, lower-cost resolution pathway. The Michigan Court Rules (MCR) govern procedural requirements for filing, service, and trial in contract actions.
Common scenarios
Michigan contract disputes arise across a broad range of transactional and relational contexts:
- Real estate purchase agreements — Governed by both common law and the Michigan Land Contract Statute (MCL §565.356 et seq.); must be in writing under the Michigan Statute of Frauds (MCL §566.108).
- Employment contracts — Michigan follows the at-will employment default, but written employment agreements, non-compete clauses, and severance agreements create enforceable contractual obligations; non-competes must satisfy the reasonableness standard under MCL §445.774a.
- Construction contracts — Subject to Michigan's Builders Trust Fund Act (MCL §570.151) and the Michigan Construction Lien Act (MCL §570.1101 et seq.); disputes often involve subcontractor payment obligations and lien priority.
- Consumer contracts — Governed in part by the Michigan Consumer Protection Act (MCL §445.901 et seq.), which prohibits unfair, unconscionable, or deceptive practices in consumer transactions.
- Commercial sales — UCC-governed disputes involving warranty disclaimers, merchantability, and fitness for a particular purpose under MCL §440.2314–§440.2315.
Breach occurs when a party fails to perform a contractual obligation without legal excuse. Michigan courts recognize 3 categories of breach: material breach (justifying the non-breaching party's refusal to perform), minor breach (requiring performance with damages), and anticipatory repudiation (allowing the non-breaching party to treat the contract as breached before the performance date arrives).
Decision boundaries
Determining whether a contract dispute warrants litigation, alternative dispute resolution, or dismissal depends on several threshold questions:
- Is there a written agreement? — The Michigan Statute of Frauds (MCL §566.132) requires certain contracts to be in writing to be enforceable: contracts for sale of real property, contracts not performable within one year, and contracts for goods valued at $1,000 or more under the UCC.
- What is the limitations period? — Michigan imposes a 6-year statute of limitations on most written contract claims and a 6-year period on oral contracts under MCL §600.5807. UCC warranty claims carry a 4-year limitations period under MCL §440.2725.
- What damages are recoverable? — Michigan awards expectation damages (placing the non-breaching party in the position they would have occupied had the contract been performed), reliance damages (reimbursement for losses incurred in reliance on the contract), and restitution (recovery of benefits conferred). Punitive damages are not recoverable in pure contract actions under Michigan law.
- Are there contract defenses? — Michigan recognizes defenses including fraudulent inducement, mutual mistake, duress, unconscionability, impossibility, and failure of consideration. Each defense carries distinct elements and burdens of proof.
- Which forum has jurisdiction? — Contract disputes with parties in different states and amounts exceeding $75,000 may qualify for federal diversity jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. §1332 in the U.S. District Courts for the Eastern or Western District of Michigan, rather than proceeding in state Circuit Court.
Parties to Michigan business formation agreements and commercial contracts should also be aware that Michigan business law formation directly intersects with contract structure when organizational documents — operating agreements, shareholder agreements, partnership agreements — are at issue.
References
- Michigan Compiled Laws (MCL) — Michigan Legislature
- Michigan Uniform Commercial Code, MCL §440.1101 et seq. — Michigan Legislature
- Michigan Statute of Frauds, MCL §566.132 — Michigan Legislature
- Michigan Consumer Protection Act, MCL §445.901 et seq. — Michigan Legislature
- Michigan Court Rules (MCR) — Michigan Supreme Court
- Michigan Builders Trust Fund Act, MCL §570.151 — Michigan Legislature
- [Michigan Construction Lien Act, MCL §570