Bank of America v. 5-3 Greenway Trust

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 22, 2015
Docket324043
StatusUnpublished

This text of Bank of America v. 5-3 Greenway Trust (Bank of America v. 5-3 Greenway Trust) 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
Bank of America v. 5-3 Greenway Trust, (Mich. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

BANK OF AMERICA, UNPUBLISHED December 22, 2015 Plaintiff-Appellee,

v No. 324043 Kent Circuit Court 5-3 GREENWAY TRUST and MATTHEW J. LC No. 14-003426 CREHAN, as Trustee of the 5-3 GREENWAY TRUST,

Defendants-Appellants.

Before: OWENS, P.J., and MURPHY and HOEKSTRA, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

Plaintiff Bank of America (“the bank”), as mortgagee, judicially foreclosed on a mortgage with respect to a condominium unit (“the property”), purchased the property at a sheriff’s sale for $129,913, filed a summary-proceedings action in district court after the redemption period expired absent redemption, and obtained a default possession judgment in the district court. The Meadows Condominium Association (MCA) recorded, during the above- referenced redemption period, a notice of lien for $1,822 in unpaid assessments. And, after the bank had been awarded its default possession judgment, a sheriff’s sale was conducted on the condominium lien, resulting in a purchase of the property for $5,225 by defendant 5-3 Greenway Trust (“the trust”) through defendant Matthew J. Crehan, as trustee of the trust,1 and triggering the commencement of a new redemption period. The trust made efforts to shorten the redemption period on the basis of alleged abandonment of and damage to the property, while the bank attempted to exercise the right of redemption by inquiring about the redemption amount and tendering a payment to the register of deeds. The trust ignored the bank’s inquiries and rejected the tendered payment on the basis that they were untimely in light of the expiration of the purportedly-shortened redemption period. The trust had also initiated its own summary- proceedings action in district court, obtaining a default possession judgment against the bank,

1 For purposes of this opinion and ease of reference, and given that Crehan was sued in his capacity as trustee of the trust, we shall refer to defendants collectively as “the trust,” unless otherwise indicated.

-1- which was not directly challenged by the bank. This quiet-title action ensued in the circuit court to settle the competing claims and interests. The trust appeals as of right the circuit court’s order granting summary disposition and quieting title in favor of the bank. This appeal ultimately comes down to whether the circuit court collaterally attacked the district court’s possession judgment entered in favor of the trust and, if so, whether the circuit court had the authority to engage in the collateral attack. We hold that the circuit court’s ruling was a collateral attack on the possession judgment and that the collateral attack was impermissible, given that there was not a want of personal or subject-matter jurisdiction relative to the district court action. Accordingly, we reverse the circuit court’s ruling and remand for entry of judgment quieting title in favor of the trust.

We initially note that the bank does not dispute that it failed to pay required MCA assessments after obtaining legal title to the property, that MCA held a valid lien on the property due to the unpaid assessments, that MCA’s recorded notice of lien was valid, that MCA’s notice of foreclosure sale was legally sound, that the subsequent sheriff’s sale wherein the trust purchased the property was conducted in accordance with the law, and that the trust obtained equitable title to the property under the sheriff’s deed. The record also fully supports these propositions. After the redemption period commenced relative to MCA’s sheriff’s sale, but before the general six-month redemption period expired, MCL 559.208(2), the trust filed its complaint in the district court to recover possession of the property through summary proceedings, MCL 600.5701 et seq. The trust filed the complaint on the basis that the property had been abandoned, thereby shortening the redemption period to one month, see MCL 559.208(2), and that the shortened redemption period had expired absent redemption by the bank, entitling the trust to possession.2 The trust also cited MCL 600.3240(13)(b) in its district court complaint, as based upon the property having a boarded-up window.3 For the time period at issue, the relied-upon and short-lived language in subsection (13) of the statute was fully applicable, and it provided, in relevant part, as follows:

After the sale under section 3220 and periodically throughout the redemption period, the purchaser at the sale may inspect the exterior and interior of the property and all ancillary structures. If inspection is unreasonably refused or if damage to the property is imminent or has occurred, the purchaser may immediately commence summary proceedings for possession of the property under chapter 57 . . . . A court shall not enter a judgment for possession in an

2 Given the trust’s position that the redemption period had expired without redemption by the bank, the trust ignored letters from the bank’s counsel requesting a redemption computation. 3 With respect to the relied-upon language in subsection (13) of MCL 600.3240, it was inserted into the statute pursuant to 2013 PA 104, and made effective January 10, 2014, which was during the redemption period following MCA’s December 18, 2013 sheriff’s sale, even if shortened to one month, and before the trust commenced its district court action. Under 2014 PA 125, effective June 19, 2014, which was after the circuit court litigation eventually began, the relied- upon language in MCL 600.3240(13) was deleted by the Legislature.

-2- action under chapter 57 if, before the hearing for possession, the mortgagor repairs any damage to the property that was the basis for the action. If a judgment for possession is entered in favor of the purchaser, the right of redemption is extinguished and full title to the property vests in the purchaser. As used in this subsection, “damage” includes, but is not limited to, any of the following:

...

(b) A boarded up or closed off window or entrance. [Emphasis added.]

A default possession judgment was later entered by the district court against the bank and in favor of the trust, providing the trust with the right of possession. Significantly, the bank never filed a motion in the district court to set aside the default judgment of possession, never moved for relief from the possession judgment, and never filed a circuit court appeal of the judgment. The trust subsequently refused to accept a redemption payment submitted by the bank to the county register of deeds. The bank then filed the instant circuit court quiet-title complaint, and the court eventually granted summary disposition and quieted title in favor of the bank.

With respect to the circuit court’s findings and conclusions that provided the substantive basis for its ruling, the court determined that the redemption period had not expired by the date that the district court action was commenced, given that an underlying affidavit of abandonment recorded by the trust was a nullity, and that MCL 600.5714(1) thus did not provide a ground for purposes of summary proceedings that would have supported an entitlement to possession by the trust.4 The circuit court determined that the affidavit of abandonment was a nullity on the basis that the trust was a foreclosure-sale purchaser and not a “mortgagee,” as required by MCL 600.3241a in relation to employing abandonment procedures and obtaining an abandonment designation. The trust had referenced MCL 600.3241a in the affidavit of abandonment, but later argued that MCL 559.208(2) of the Condominium Act allowed purchasers to pursue an abandonment, which argument was rejected by the circuit court, and which issue we need not resolve.

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Bluebook (online)
Bank of America v. 5-3 Greenway Trust, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bank-of-america-v-5-3-greenway-trust-michctapp-2015.