Schultz Excavating Asphalt V Smyrna Ready Mix Concrete Llc
NOT RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION
File Name: 25a0366n.06
No. 25-1038
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FILED
FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT Jul 23, 2025
KELLY L. STEPHENS, Clerk
)
SCHULTZ EXCAVATING & ASPHALT OF
)
LUDINGTON, LLC,
) ON APPEAL FROM THE
Plaintiff-Appellee, ) UNITED STATES DISTRICT
) COURT FOR THE WESTERN
v. ) DISTRICT OF MICHIGAN
)
SMYRNA READY MIX CONCRETE, LLC, dba )
SRM Concrete, ) OPINION
Defendant-Appellant. )
)
Before: COLE, GIBBONS, and BUSH, Circuit Judges.
JOHN K. BUSH, Circuit Judge. Claiming to be from Schultz Excavating & Asphalt of
Ludington (Schultz), a fraudster tricked Smyrna Ready Mix (Smyrna) into sending two checks
totaling $267,658.50 to an address in Florida. The fraudster then deposited those checks and got
away with it. Under Michigan Law, Smyrna bore no responsibility except to the extent that its
failure to exercise ordinary care contributed to the loss. Finding that this exception applied, the
district court held Smyrna entirely responsible. We affirm.
I.
Schultz and Smyrna were business partners. Schultz provided transportation services to
Smyrna, and Smyrna supplied concrete and other building materials to Schultz. Sometime after
2019, the two started trading invoices over email instead of hardcopy. After receiving an emailed
invoice, each company mailed a check to the other. Schultz mailed its checks to Smyrna’s address
No. 25-1038, Schultz Excavating & Asphalt v. Smyrna Ready Mix Concrete, LLC
in Murfreesboro, Tennessee. And Smyrna mailed its checks to Schultz’s address in Ludington,
Michigan.
In May 2022, Schultz’s bookkeeper, Tammy Britton, received an email from
loriDuddles@Smyrnareadymix.com, a legitimate Smyrna email address, asking Schultz to send
Smyrna’s checks to a new payee, Donald Ault, at a new address in Bonita Springs, Florida. Britton
found the email suspicious, so she called Smyrna to confirm its authenticity. Smyrna confirmed
the email was fake. Neither Schultz nor Smyrna took action in response to the attempted fraud.
On July 21, Smyrna received an email appearing to come from Schultz’s legitimate email
address, schultzexcavating@yahoo.com. This too was a fraudulent email. Like the May email to
Schultz, this email asked Smyrna to begin paying Schultz’s checks to a new payee, Deault
Enterprises, at a new address in Estero, Florida. The fraudster also attached a W-9 form that
appeared to have Tammy Britton’s signature. On October 19, Smyrna mailed a $227,441.42 check
to that Florida address, which was deposited on November 2.
Smyrna received another fraudulent email on November 30 requesting a payment of
$40,217.18. This time though, the email came from an address with an extra “i” in it:
schulitzexcavating@yahoo.com. On December 7, Smyrna sent a $40,217.18 check to the Florida
address. On December 12, Smyrna received another email from the “schulitz” email account
asking for an update on the payment. On December 16, the check was deposited. In sum, Smyrna
sent a total of $267,658.50 to the Florida address, believing that the checks were sent to Schultz.
A few days later, the parties discovered the fraud. The discovery occurred when a Smyrna
employee delivered a holiday gift to Schultz’s office, and Britton mentioned that Smyrna had not
paid Schultz for six months. After some investigation, it became clear that a fraudster had asked
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No. 25-1038, Schultz Excavating & Asphalt v. Smyrna Ready Mix Concrete, LLC
Smyrna to change Schultz’s mailing address to the Florida address. Nobody has identified the
fraudster.
Schultz sued Smyrna in Michigan state court to recover the value of the lost payments.
Smyrna then removed the case to federal court. The district court held a bench trial. Because the
fraudster appeared to send emails from legitimate email addresses at both companies, each party
argued in part that the other had been hacked and was therefore responsible for the loss. The
district court, in its oral finding of facts, said:
We do not know how the imposter got in. I don’t believe anyone has proven to me
by a preponderance of the evidence how the imposter got in. A legitimate e-mail
of Smyrna’s was used by the imposter right in May. A legitimate e-mail of Schultz’
was used by the imposter from July going forward, so I cannot deduce who got
hacked.
R. 55, PageID 912.
The court ultimately ruled in Schultz’s favor, finding that Smyrna’s failure to exercise
ordinary care contributed to the loss and that Schultz did not contribute to the loss:
[Smyrna] contributed to the loss and they bear the full responsibility for that
contribution. Had they not been phished, through no fault established by Schultz,
they wouldn’t have changed the provider name to the imposter location, different
entity, different location, and then all the bills went to the wrong person, so it was
their contribution of failure to exercise reasonable care that led to the entire
payment of both bills.
...
[S]o the counterpoint is did any failure to exercise ordinary care by Schultz
contribute to the loss, and I do not believe that I have evidence to establish that they
were hacked by a preponderance of the evidence, so even though we had a
vulnerable [email] server, I cannot find by a preponderance of the evidence that
they contributed to this loss.
R. 55, PageID 915. Smyrna appealed.
II.
We review the district court’s legal conclusions de novo and its factual findings for clear
error. Dillon v. Cobra Power Corp., 560 F.3d 591, 599 (6th Cir. 2009).
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Smyrna argues that the district court failed to hold Schultz to its applicable burden of proof.
Its only authority is a Michigan statute, MCL § 440.3404. Derived from Article 3-404 of the
Uniform Commercial Code, this section provides that a payor (Smyrna) who pays a fraudster has
no obligation to compensate the payee (Schultz) if the payor believed in good faith that the
fraudster was the payee. MCL § 440.3404(1). However, if the payor, “fails to exercise ordinary
care . . . the person bearing the loss may recover from the person failing to exercise ordinary care
to the extent the failure to exercise ordinary care contributed to the loss.” MCL § 440.3404(4).
Based on this language, Smyrna argues that:
Schultz bears the burden of proof as to the extent of Smyrna’s fault—it must prove,
for example, that Smyrna was 40% at fault, or 80% at fault, or even 100% at fault.
And for Schultz to prove that Smyrna is 100% at fault, Schultz bears the burden of
proving Schultz was 0% at fault. . . . [F]or Schultz to be able to establish that “the
extent” of Smyrna’s contribution to the loss was 100%, Schultz would have to show
that Schultz was not hacked and so contributed 0% to the loss.
Appellant’s Br. at 17–18.
This argument misunderstands burdens of proof. True, Schultz had to prove that Smyrna
was 100% responsible for the loss, and tautologically that means Schultz had to be 0% responsible.
But Schultz did not have to present evidence about its lack of culpability—it did not need to find
Russell’s Teapot. See Cavanaugh v. Bartelt, 178 F. Supp. 3d 819, 826 (D. Neb. 2016). Schultz
only needed to present evidence that, standing alone and with “the benefit of every reasonable
inference,” would have allowed “reasonable minds [to] differ with regard to whether” Smyrna was
fully responsible for the loss. Teodorescu v. Bushnell, Gage, Reizen & Byington, 506 N.W.2d 275,
277 (Mich. Ct. App. 1993); see also Kusens v. Pascal Co., 448 F.3d 349, 360 (6th Cir. 2006) (“In
diversity cases, when a Rule 50 motion for judgment as a matter of law is based on a challenge to
the sufficiency of the evidence, this Court applies the standard of review used by the courts of the
state whose substantive law governs the action.”).
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No. 25-1038, Schultz Excavating & Asphalt v. Smyrna Ready Mix Concrete, LLC
Smyrna, in its own presentation of evidence, could have rebutted Schultz’s showing by
demonstrating that Schultz was hacked or otherwise contributed to the loss. It attempted to do so
by showing that Schultz failed to secure its emails. And it succeeded in part. The district court
found that, in 2020, it was not “commercially reasonable to use a Yahoo account for your
business[.]” R. 55, PageID 912. It also agreed with Smyrna that “Yahoo is a dangerous place to
reside as a commercial entity and sharing passwords is a dangerous habit to do and having multiple
people write under one name is a bad idea[.]” Id. at 914. But Smyrna failed to convince the district
court that these actions contributed to the loss. Id. at 915.
On appeal, Smyrna has not argued that its evidence was so strong that the district court
committed clear error by exonerating Schultz. Instead, it only complains that “[t]he district court
held Smyrna responsible for steps it did not take that might have prevented the loss, but it did not
hold Schultz responsible for steps Schultz did not take that might have prevented the loss.”
Appellant’s Br. at 21–22. In other words, Smyrna quibbles with the district court about what
actions contributed to the loss. But these types of inferences fall within the factfinder’s discretion,
so long as there is sufficient evidence to support them. Perkins v. Standard Oil Co. of Cal., 395
U.S. 642, 648 (1969).
Smyrna does not argue that the evidence was insufficient to conclude that it contributed to
the loss. Rather, it argues that because “the district court found that both parties failed to act in a
commercially reasonable manner, it was clear error for the district court to allocate 0% of the loss
to Schultz and 100% of the loss to Smyrna.” Appellant’s Br. at 24. But for commercially
unreasonable behavior to affect the allocation of liability, it must have “contributed to the loss.”
MCL § 440.3404(4). Smyrna does not point to any fact in the record suggesting that Schultz’s
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No. 25-1038, Schultz Excavating & Asphalt v. Smyrna Ready Mix Concrete, LLC
commercially unreasonable email account contributed to the loss. So it cannot show that the
district court committed clear error.
The lone case that Smyrna cites cannot save it. In Beau Townsend Ford Lincoln, Inc. v.
Don Hinds Ford, Inc., 759 F. App’x 348 (6th Cir. 2018), a case with similar facts to this one, a
panel of this court reversed a grant of summary judgment for a company that had negligently
maintained its email server. But the posture of the case makes all the difference. The Beau
Townsend court noted that “[n]o court can resolve . . . factual disputes at the summary judgment
stage” and remanded for trial because “both parties support[ed] their respective arguments with
record evidence suggesting the other party was at fault.” Id. at 358–59.
Beau Townsend might have had currency here at the summary judgment stage, but it has
none post-trial. At this stage, rather than show that an open question of fact exists, Smyrna needs
to convince us the opposite is true. It must show that the evidence of Schultz’s contribution to the
loss was so overwhelming that the district court committed clear error in not assigning it fault. But
Smyrna presents no argument from the evidence. It only makes conclusory assertions that
Schultz’s weak email security must have contributed to the loss. That is not enough.
III.
Ultimately, it was Smyrna who, when asked to send hundreds of thousands of dollars to “a
new payee to a new named company in a new state, [made] not one effort . . . to call Schultz to
say, is this correct?” R. 55, PageID 914. To the district court, that would have been “a very, very
simple fix.” Id. It assigned Smyrna full responsibility for its failure to exercise reasonable care.
That was not clear error. We affirm.
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