Betty Holmes v. Aringtor Hicks

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 30, 2020
Docket346065
StatusUnpublished

This text of Betty Holmes v. Aringtor Hicks (Betty Holmes v. Aringtor Hicks) 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
Betty Holmes v. Aringtor Hicks, (Mich. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

If this opinion indicates that it is “FOR PUBLICATION,” it is subject to revision until final publication in the Michigan Appeals Reports.

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

BETTY HOLMES, UNPUBLISHED April 30, 2020 Plaintiff/Counterdefendant-Appellant,

v No. 346065 Saginaw Circuit Court ARINGTOR HICKS and MASTERPIECE, INC., LC No. 16-029869-CB

Defendants/Counterplaintiffs- Appellees,

and

ARLINGTON HICKS,

Defendant/Counterplaintiff.

Before: BORRELLO, P.J., and O’BRIEN and CAMERON, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

Plaintiff/counterdefendant, Betty Holmes, appeals by right a judgment awarding her $11,807.21 following a jury trial. After trial, the trial court denied Holmes’s claims for equitable relief. For the reasons set forth in this opinion, we affirm.

I. BACKGROUND

This case arises out of a dispute between Holmes and Aringtor Hicks1 over the ownership of a parcel of commercial real property and the nature of any agreement they may have reached between themselves.

Holmes testified that she owns Heavenly Realm Adult Foster Care, which consists of multiple adult foster care facilities in Saginaw. Hicks owns Masterpiece, Inc., which he

1 Aringtor Hicks is also known as Arlington Hicks.

-1- characterized as “basically a property management company.” Hicks met with Holmes for lunch at some point after their class reunion in the summer of 2015. According to Holmes, Hicks set up the meeting because he wanted to discuss the adult foster care business in Saginaw, and he told her that he operated adult respite facilities in Detroit. Hicks’s trial testimony, although somewhat vague and unclear, suggested that he told Holmes he was looking for properties in Saginaw for purposes of opening a semi-independent living or respite services facility. Hicks testified that he and Holmes met again after the initial lunch meeting to look at properties together.

With respect to the property that is the subject of this dispute, Holmes testified that she discovered the property was for sale while driving near one of her other facilities and that she eventually made an offer, which was accepted, to purchase the property for $40,000. The listing realtor then told Holmes that the property had to be sold at public auction due to bankruptcy proceedings. Holmes’s testimony reflects that she paid at least $12,000 from her business account toward the purchase price of the property, including a $10,000 down payment that Holmes was told was necessary to secure a right to place the first bid on the property. When Hicks returned to Saginaw, Holmes gave him a tour of all of her facilities, told him about the subject property that she was purchasing, and showed him the subject property. When Holmes told Hicks how much she was going to pay for the property, he offered to loan her the money but she declined. According to Holmes, Hicks began contacting her “constantly” from this point forward but there were never any plans to go into business together.

Holmes testified she later contacted Hicks to tell him she had been the only person to bid on the property and to ask him if he still wanted to loan her the money. He responded that he would loan her $30,000, and Holmes agreed to accept the loan. Hicks subsequently informed Holmes that he could only loan her $25,000, and she then agreed to this arrangement. Holmes testified that Hicks gave her a cashier’s check for $25,000 before the closing and that when she asked him about the terms for repayment, he told her that they could “come up with something.”

Holmes closed on the property and received a deed conveying the property to her. According to Holmes, neither Masterpiece nor Hicks were involved in the closing. Holmes testified that shortly after the closing, Hicks began contacting her and telling her “he needed to show where his money was.”2 Holmes further testified when she asked Hicks if he wanted her to repay the money immediately, he said that he did not want her money now and that he wanted her to give him a deed conveying the property to him in exchange for a land contract from him providing for her repayment of the $25,000 to him. When Holmes proposed giving him a promissory note, Hicks indicated that he did not want a promissory note. Holmes testified that Hicks was only interested in obtaining a deed conveying the property to him. The terms of the land contract apparently would have required Holmes to repay $32,000 at 6% interest, although Holmes testified that she believed at the time that the repayment amount was erroneous.

Holmes and Hicks went to the register of deeds, but they were unable to record the land contract because the title company had not yet paid the taxes from the recent sale to Holmes.

2 Although the exact meaning of this statement is difficult to discern, it appears from the context of Holmes’s testimony that she understood Hicks to be referring to the manner of acknowledging the $25,000 debt that she owed him.

-2- According to Holmes, when she and Hicks parted ways after leaving the register of deeds, Hicks apparently had both the land contract and the quitclaim deed that Holmes had signed conveying the property to Masterpiece. Hicks would not answer Holmes’s calls later that day, so Holmes recorded a different quitclaim deed the next day that conveyed the property to both Holmes and Masterpiece. Later the same day, Hicks apparently recorded the quitclaim deed he previously obtained from Holmes which conveyed the property solely to Masterpiece.

In contrast to the version of events related at trial by Holmes, Hicks claimed to have arranged a deal with Holmes whereby she would essentially act as a straw buyer for him. Hicks testified that he and Holmes had been planning on going into business together, with each of their companies owning a respite services facility in Saginaw. Specifically, Hicks testified he was planning to purchase the subject property for this purpose, while Holmes already owned another property to be used for this purpose. According to Hicks, he toured the subject property with Holmes and told her that he was going to put in an offer to purchase the property for Masterpiece, but Holmes convinced him to let her put in a lower offer herself because she thought that the listing realtor liked her.

Miranda Morrow, a realtor who worked with Hicks on prior real estate transactions, testified she began putting together an offer on Hicks’s behalf to buy the subject property but complications arose regarding obtaining financing and Hicks told her Holmes was going to purchase the subject property on his behalf. According to Morrow, she understood the agreement to be that Hicks would own the property and Holmes would manage the operations of the facility.

Hicks testified he gave Holmes all of the money she used to purchase the subject property—i.e., $40,000—and that Holmes did not use any of her own money in purchasing the property. Hicks explained he gave Holmes the money in installments rather than in a lump sum. According to Hicks, Holmes was to convey the property to Hicks or Masterpiece after the closing but she never did. Hicks believed Holmes did not want to convey the property to him and appeared to want to keep the property for herself.

Hicks’s testimony reflects that the parties’ business relationship apparently deteriorated, and they began discussing a plan for Holmes to keep the subject property and pay back the money she owed Hicks through a land contract. Hicks testified he asked Holmes to return his money instead, but she did not have sufficient funds available. He further testified the land contract was Holmes’s idea.

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Betty Holmes v. Aringtor Hicks, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/betty-holmes-v-aringtor-hicks-michctapp-2020.