B & C Land Company v. Board of Education of the City of Detroit

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 18, 2018
Docket337846
StatusUnpublished

This text of B & C Land Company v. Board of Education of the City of Detroit (B & C Land Company v. Board of Education of the City of Detroit) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
B & C Land Company v. Board of Education of the City of Detroit, (Mich. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

B & C LAND COMPANY, UNPUBLISHED October 18, 2018 Plaintiff-Appellant,

v No. 337846 Wayne Circuit Court BOARD OF EDUCATION OF THE CITY OF LC No. 15-012898-CK DETROIT,

Defendant-Appellee.

Before: O’BRIEN, P.J., and K. F. KELLY and FORT HOOD, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

Plaintiff, B & C Land Company, appeals as of right the trial court’s order granting summary disposition in favor of defendant, the City of Detroit Board of Education. We reverse in part and remand for further proceedings.

Although the parties agree on the most basic facts, the record at this stage is sorely underdeveloped and, as a result, most of the pertinent facts are unclear or contested. Plaintiff purchased land from defendant in 2004. The purchase agreement was signed on April 27, 2004, and, per its terms, conveyed a single parcel: “615 South West[ End], Detroit, Michigan.” Both parties agreed, however, that the purchase agreement was intended to convey more parcels than the one listed. Robert Carmack—who represented plaintiff in the sale—and Jean-Vierre Adams—the attorney that handled the sale on behalf of defendant—testified that the sale was for “the McMillan school site,” which consisted of more parcels than the one listed. The deed that defendant transferred to plaintiff following the purchase agreement reflected this. It included three parcels: “615 S. West End Ave.,” “711 S. West End Ave.,” and “721 S. West End Ave.”

Carmack testified that before closing, defendant faxed him a document (the 2004 document)1 that, according to Carmack, listed 615 South West End as the address “commonly known as McMillan School site.” The document itself, which was included with the lower court record, refers to a site that “consists of an abandoned school building and yard” and is made up

1 Plaintiff refers to this document as a “listing agreement,” but nowhere in the document does it suggest that it was, in fact, a listing agreement.

-1- of 11 different parcels with a “common street address” of “615 S. West End.” But contrary to Carmack’s testimony, the 2004 document does not refer to the McMillan school or state that it represents “the McMillan school site.” According to Adams, the 2004 document did not, in fact, represent the McMillan school site, and was actually “a document supplied to [defendant] by . . . Carmack, which outlined what he believed to be the parcels included in the McMillan site.”

In the years between 2004 and 2015, the record reflects only one interaction between the parties. That interaction is an authorization letter from defendant for the sale of one of the now disputed parcels of land—“7811 South Street”—to plaintiff. The authorization letter listed the purchaser as plaintiff, listed the purchase price as $10,000, and stated the “Business Justification” for the sale as “[t]he District sold part of the former McMillan building and adjacent land to the B & C Land Company in 2004.” According to Adams, the sale referred to in the authorization letter was the result of plaintiff wanting to buy additional parcels adjacent to the ones it already purchased. Carmack disagreed; he testified that the 2007 sale was for parcels that plaintiff already owned by way of the purchase agreement, and that it was willing to pay $10,000 for those parcels because it would cost $10,000 or more to hire an attorney to enforce the purchase agreement. Carmack also testified that the 2007 sale was for more parcels than just 7811 South Street, but he did not explain why the other parcels were not listed in the authorization letter. Regardless of these discrepancies, the parties agree that the 2007 sale was never completed.

Carmack testified that after this second sale fell through, he continued attempting to get the outstanding parcels of the McMillan school site. Sometime around 2015, defendant obtained the services of a title agency to determine whether it owned parcels that plaintiff, through Carmack, had expressed interest in. As a result of the agency’s efforts, defendant established that it had title to at least 10 of the parcels in the 2004 document. Relevant to this appeal, the agency concluded that when the purchase agreement was signed, defendant was not the owner of record of two of the parcels in the 2004 document—7811 South Street and 7821 South Street— but still technically owned the parcels. Apparently, defendant had acquired the deeds to those parcels in 1977 pursuant to a “friendly condemnation,” but the deeds were never recorded. Defendant did not record the deeds until 2015 after the title agency discovered the defect.2

The record also includes email exchanges between the parties during this time, but the significance of these exchanges—if any—is entirely unclear. These exchanges appear to go to the central issue of this case: determining which parcels were transferred in the purchase agreement. Yet, from these exchanges, it is unclear which parcels—or even how many parcels— the parties believed were transferred, i.e., which parcels and how many parcels constituted “the McMillan school site.” At one point, Carmack sent an email to Adams asking why defendant

2 While not necessary to the resolution of this appeal, it is unclear whether the agency ever resolved who had title to one of the properties that is now the subject of this appeal: 7831 South Street. As of defendant’s October 3, 2016 motion for summary disposition, defendant believed that it did own that parcel.

-2- “only sent paperwork on one lot instead of 7,” but then later stated “the deed I have lists only 3 parcels and should be 10.”3 In a later email from Adams to Carmack, she stated that defendant did not own some of the parcels plaintiff sought,4 that one of the parcels—7811 South Street— could be sold to plaintiff “for best and final per the Michigan Treasurer’s office,” and that “[a]ll other parcels for the MacMillan [sic] school will be included in the Correcting [sic] Deed which we should have available for you this week.”

Defendant eventually issued plaintiff a “Corrective Deed” in October 2015. This deed included 7 of the 11 parcels in the 2004 document: “615 S. West End Ave.,” “711 S. West End Ave.,” “721 S. West End Ave.,” “515 S. West End Ave.,” “741 S. West End Ave.,” “704 S. Springwells Ave.,” and “706 S. Springwells Ave.” Accompanying the deed was an unsigned letter on the “Detroit Public Schools” letterhead, which stated that “[t]he enclosed Corrective Quitclaim Deed includes all of the parcels comprising the McMillan School Site . . . .” Consistent with this document, Adams testified that the corrective deed was intended to convey the entire McMillan school site as contemplated by the parties at the time of the purchase agreement, and that the McMillan school site consisted of only those seven parcels. Carmack disagreed; he testified that the McMillan school site—which he agreed was the only property transferred in the purchase agreement—included three additional parcels: 7811 South Street, 7821 South Street, and 7831 South Street.5 This disagreement led plaintiff to file the suit that is now before this Court.

In its complaint, plaintiff alleged (1) that defendant breached the parties’ purchase agreement by not transferring the remaining three parcels of the McMillan school site and plaintiff was entitled to specific performance, and (2) that plaintiff was entitled to quiet title of the remaining three parcels because it had performed its obligations under the purchase agreement and effectively extinguished defendant’s interest. Defendant eventually filed for summary disposition, arguing—among other things—that there was no breach of contract because there was no contract.

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B & C Land Company v. Board of Education of the City of Detroit, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/b-c-land-company-v-board-of-education-of-the-city-of-detroit-michctapp-2018.