2 Crooked Creek LLC v. Cass County Treasurer

CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 16, 2021
Docket159856
StatusPublished

This text of 2 Crooked Creek LLC v. Cass County Treasurer (2 Crooked Creek LLC v. Cass County Treasurer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
2 Crooked Creek LLC v. Cass County Treasurer, (Mich. 2021).

Opinion

Michigan Supreme Court Lansing, Michigan

Syllabus Chief Justice: Justices: Bridget M. McCormack Brian K. Zahra David F. Viviano Richard H. Bernstein Elizabeth T. Clement Megan K. Cavanagh Elizabeth M. Welch

This syllabus constitutes no part of the opinion of the Court but has been Reporter of Decisions: prepared by the Reporter of Decisions for the convenience of the reader. Kathryn L. Loomis

2 CROOKED CREEK, LLC v CASS COUNTY TREASURER

Docket No. 159856. Argued on application for leave to appeal October 7, 2020. Decided March 16, 2021.

2 Crooked Creek, LLC (2CC) and Russian Ferro Alloys, Inc. (RFA) filed an action in the Court of Claims against the Cass County Treasurer, seeking to recover monetary damages under MCL 211.78l of the General Property Tax Act (the GPTA), MCL 211.1 et seq., in connection with defendant’s foreclosure of certain property. In 2010, 2CC purchased property for development in Cass County. 2CC failed to pay the 2011 real-property taxes and, in 2013, forfeited the property to defendant. From January through May 2013, defendant’s agent, Title Check, LLC (Title Check), mailed via first-class and certified mail a series of notices to the address listed in the deed. These notices apprised 2CC of the unpaid property taxes, forfeiture, and possibility of foreclosure. The certified mail was returned as “Unclaimed—Unable to Forward,” but the first-class mail was not returned. Meanwhile, 2CC constructed a home on the property, obtaining a mortgage for the construction from RFA. On June 18, 2013, Katelin MaKay, a land examiner working for Title Check, visited the property; determined it to be occupied; and being unable to personally meet with any occupant, posted notice of the show-cause hearing and judicial-foreclosure hearing on a window next to the front door of the newly constructed home. Title Check continued its notice efforts through the rest of 2013 and into 2014, mailing various notices as well as publishing notice in a local newspaper for three consecutive weeks. After no one appeared on 2CC’s behalf at the January 15, 2014 show-cause hearing or the February 18, 2014 judicial-foreclosure hearing, the Cass Circuit Court, Michael E. Dodge, J., entered the judgment of foreclosure. The property was not redeemed by the March 31, 2014 deadline, and fee simple title vested with defendant. 2CC learned of the foreclosure a few weeks later. In July 2014, 2CC moved to set aside the foreclosure judgment on due-process grounds. These efforts failed, however, because the circuit court concluded that defendant’s combined efforts of mailing, posting, and publishing notice under the GPTA provided 2CC with notice sufficient to satisfy the requirements of due process. 2CC appealed. In an unpublished per curiam opinion issued on March 8, 2016 (Docket No. 324519), the Court of Appeals, METER, P.J., and BOONSTRA and RIORDAN, JJ., affirmed. At the same time 2CC moved to set aside the foreclosure judgment, it filed a separate action in the Court of Claims for monetary damages under MCL 211.78l(1), alleging that it had not received any notice required under the GPTA. Defendant moved for summary disposition under MCR 2.116(C)(7). The Court of Claims, MICHAEL J. TALBOT, J., denied the motion and held a bench trial. At the close of 2CC’s proofs, the court granted an involuntary dismissal in favor of defendant, holding, in relevant part, that 2CC had received at least constructive notice of the foreclosure proceedings when MaKay posted notice on the home at a time when 2CC “was exercising dominion and control over the property by contracting for the construction of a home on the property.” 2CC appealed as of right, and the Court of Appeals, SAWYER, P.J., and CAVANAGH and K. F. KELLY, JJ., affirmed. 329 Mich App 22 (2019). 2CC sought leave to appeal in the Supreme Court, and the Supreme Court ordered oral argument on the application limited to 2CC’s claim for monetary damages under MCL 211.78l(1). 505 Mich 865 (2019).

In an opinion by Justice ZAHRA, joined by Chief Justice MCCORMACK and Justices BERNSTEIN, CLEMENT, and CAVANAGH, the Supreme Court, in lieu of granting leave to appeal, held:

MCL 211.78l(1) provided that if a judgment for foreclosure was entered under MCL 211.78k of the GPTA and all existing recorded and unrecorded interests in a parcel of property were extinguished as provided in MCL 211.78k, the owner of any extinguished recorded or unrecorded interest in that property who claimed that he or she did not receive any notice required under the GPTA was not permitted to bring an action for possession of the property against any subsequent owner but could only bring an action to recover monetary damages. By using the term “any,” the Legislature intended to encompass all types of notice required under the GPTA, not just actual notice. The use of “actual notice” in other provisions as opposed to the use of “any notice” in MCL 211.78l(1) indicated that the Legislature likely intended to differentiate between “actual notice” and “any notice.” Further, the legal definition of “notice” is not constrained to situations in which a person receives actual notice; a person may be deemed to have received notice regardless of whether actual awareness exists. The Court of Appeals erred by suggesting that the remedy recognized in In re Treasurer of Wayne Co for Foreclosure (Perfecting Church), 478 Mich 1 (2007), of setting aside a foreclosure judgment on due-process grounds was mutually exclusive from the monetary-damages remedy provided in MCL 211.78l(1). MCL 211.78(2) specifically sets forth the Legislature’s intent to comply with the minimum requirements of due process without granting additional rights that might interfere with the foreclosure process, while MCL 211.78l(1) represented the Legislature’s attempt to limit all remedies available under the GPTA to monetary damages. Reading these two provisions together, the Legislature, in enacting the 1999 amendments of the GPTA, intended to provide monetary damages under MCL 211.78l(1) only to those former property owners who did not receive constitutionally adequate notice. Although MCL 211.78l(1) provided “a damages remedy that [was] not constitutionally required,” a due- process violation for lack of notice still served as a necessary predicate for such a claim. Accordingly, property owners who received constitutionally adequate notice sufficient to satisfy the minimum requirements of due process under the GPTA would have necessarily received the notice required under the GPTA and, thus, could not sustain an action for monetary damages under MCL 211.78l(1). In this case, because 2CC had already been adjudicated to have received such notice, 2CC could not establish that it did not receive any notice required under the GPTA. Accordingly, the Court of Appeals correctly dismissed 2CC’s action for monetary damages under MCL 211.78l(1), albeit for the wrong reasons.

Affirmed.

Justice VIVIANO, concurring in the judgment, agreed with the majority that plaintiffs could not invoke MCL 211.781(1), but he would not have decided the question whether a plaintiff who received constitutionally sufficient notice has thereby received “any notice required under this act” for purposes of MCL 211.781(1). To decide whether plaintiffs failed to receive “any notice required under this act” would involve determining whether plaintiffs received the notice required under the GPTA’s numerous notice provisions, and if any of those provisions required actual notice and that notice was not received, then the failure to receive actual notice might have satisfied MCL 211.781(1), enabling a monetary-damages claim. However, plaintiffs did not present that argument. Plaintiffs therefore failed to show that MCL 211.781(1) allowed claims whenever taxpayers did not receive “actual notice.”

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Bluebook (online)
2 Crooked Creek LLC v. Cass County Treasurer, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/2-crooked-creek-llc-v-cass-county-treasurer-mich-2021.