Can IV Packard Square, LLC v. Craig Schubiner

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedAugust 12, 2022
Docket21-1717
StatusUnpublished

This text of Can IV Packard Square, LLC v. Craig Schubiner (Can IV Packard Square, LLC v. Craig Schubiner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Can IV Packard Square, LLC v. Craig Schubiner, (6th Cir. 2022).

Opinion

NOT RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION File Name: 22a0331n.06

Case No. 21-1717

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT FILED Aug 12, 2022 ) CAN IV PACKARD SQUARE, LLC, DEBORAH S. HUNT, Clerk ) Plaintiff-Appellee, ) ) ON APPEAL FROM THE UNITED v. ) STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR ) THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF CRAIG SCHUBINER, ) MICHIGAN ) Defendant-Appellant. ) OPINION )

Before: GIBBONS, WHITE, and NALBANDIAN, Circuit Judges.

NALBANDIAN, Circuit Judge. A quick drive south from the University of Michigan sits

an apartment-retail complex formerly known as Packard Square. Construction for the

development finished in 2019 after going more than $20 million over budget. Disputes over

financing for the development are the genesis of this appeal.

Can IV Packard Square, LLC (“Can IV”) financed the project by loaning tens of millions

of dollars to the developer, Packard Square, LLC (“Packard Square”). It secured that loan with a

mortgage on the property. In addition, Packard Square’s sole member Craig Schubiner executed a

guaranty to cover completion costs above and beyond the original budget. Can IV ended up

foreclosing on the property and recouped the guaranty amount from the sheriff’s sale and a state-

court judgment. But Can IV sued to enforce the guaranty anyway, and the district court awarded

$20 million plus 16 percent interest. Because this amounts to impermissible double recovery, we

vacate, reverse, and remand with instructions to enter summary judgment in Schubiner’s favor. No. 21-1717, Can IV Packard Square, LLC v. Schubiner

I.

The law in this case is simple but the facts are complex. We begin with the facts and

procedural history. Back in 2014, Packard Square set out to redevelop a derelict shopping center

into a luxury retail and apartment complex. To finance the project, Packard Square obtained a

$53.78 million loan (the “Original Loan”) from Can IV, a private equity firm. The parties executed

a loan agreement (the “Original Loan Agreement”). And they secured that loan with both a

mortgage on the property and a promissory note (together with the Original Loan Agreement, the

“Original Loan Documents”). Under the mortgage, Packard Square consented to “the appointment

of a receiver for all or any part of the Property” in the event of default. (R.1, Mortg., PageID 119.)

Can IV wanted additional assurances, so Packard Square’s principal and sole member—

Craig Schubiner—executed two guaranties to belt-and-suspender Can IV’s investment. The first

of these (the “Recourse Guaranty”) guaranteed repayment of the Original Loan. And the second

(the “Completion Guaranty”) guaranteed both the completion of the project “within the time limits

set forth in the [Original] Loan Documents” and payment of any “Completion Cost Deficiency.”

(R. 130-3, Completion Guar., PageID 8626-41.) “Completion Cost Deficiency,” in turn, included

construction costs going above and beyond the budget for hard and soft costs listed in the Original

Loan Agreement (set at $37.92 million).1 (Id. at PageID 8627; R. 152-2, Original Loan Agreement,

PageID 10740.)

1 More specifically, the Completion Guaranty defines “Completion Cost Deficiency” as follows: “[A]s of the date of determination, the amount by which the sum of (i) all remaining unpaid and projected Hard Costs and Soft Costs in accordance with the Construction Budget, the Construction Contract and the Loan Documents and (ii) all remaining and projected costs to enable the performance and satisfaction of all of the covenants of Borrower contained in the Loan Documents through the Final Completion with respect to Hard Costs and Soft Costs, as of such date, exceeds (A) all undisbursed Loan funds allocated to payment of Hard Costs or Soft Costs, (B) all sums in the Construction Reserve allocated to payment of Hard Costs or Soft Costs, and (C) all sums in 2 No. 21-1717, Can IV Packard Square, LLC v. Schubiner

With these documents papered and inked, construction began on the project. But it wasn’t

long before things began to unravel. Soon enough, the parties found themselves embroiled in a

series of legal disputes, three of which are relevant here.

Receivership and foreclosure. In 2016, Packard Square defaulted by missing the

construction milestones specified in the Original Loan Documents. And so Can IV filed suit in the

Washtenaw County Circuit Court, seeking foreclosure and the appointment of a receiver. That

court appointed a receiver to take over the property, borrow funds as needed, and complete the

construction. Packard Square appealed, but the Michigan Court of Appeals affirmed. Can IV

Packard Square LLC v. Packard Square LLC, No. 335512, 2018 WL 521843, at *5, *9 (Mich. Ct.

App. Jan. 23, 2018) (per curiam). Soon after that, the Michigan Supreme Court denied leave to

appeal. Can IV Packard Square LLC v. Packard Square LLC, 917 N.W.2d 624 (Mich. 2018)

(mem.).

By this point, it was becoming apparent that the project would end up overbudget. And so

the newly-appointed Receiver secured an additional $37.46 million in loans from Can IV (the

“Receiver Loan”) to finance and complete the remaining construction. This Receiver Loan was

secured by a super-priority mortgage on the same property.

The litigation continued apace in the meantime. Can IV eventually moved for summary

disposition on its foreclosure claim. More specifically, it sought foreclosure on both mortgages

(on the Original Loan and the Receiver Loan, respectively). See Can IV Packard Square, LLC v.

Schubiner, No. 352510, 2021 WL 1711593, at *2 (Mich. Ct. App. Apr. 29, 2021) (per curiam).

The Washtenaw County Circuit Court granted summary disposition and “entered a judgment of

the Construction Disbursement Account allocated to payment of Hard Costs or Soft Costs.” (R. 130-3, Completion Guar., PageID 8627 (emphasis added).) 3 No. 21-1717, Can IV Packard Square, LLC v. Schubiner

foreclosure authorizing the sale of the property at a sheriff’s sale.” Id. (internal quotation omitted).

A sheriff’s sale took place in November 2018, and Can IV purchased the property with a $75

million credit bid. Id. Can IV applied the proceeds first to the higher priority Receiver Loan and

the leftover amount to the Original Loan. Id. at *11. This left Can IV about $14 million short,

which included the remaining indebtedness on the Original Loan and $1.6 million for the

remaining construction costs. Id. Not long after, the Michigan Court of Appeals affirmed the trial

court’s order. Id. at *1. The Michigan Supreme Court eventually denied leave to appeal. Can IV

Packard Square LLC v. Packard Square LLC, 939 N.W.2d 686, 686-87 (Mich. 2020) (mem.).

Recourse Guaranty. A second action paralleled much of the receivership litigation. In

September 2017, Packard Square filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy. Can IV, 2021 WL 1711593, at

*1. The bankruptcy triggered, in turn, Can IV’s right to enforce the Recourse Guaranty. Id. at *2.

And so in 2018, Can IV sued Schubiner in the Oakland County Circuit Court for repayment of the

Original Loan. Id. In December 2019, the court granted summary disposition in Can IV’s favor

and held Schubiner liable for the outstanding $14 million. Id. at *3. Schubiner appealed, but the

Michigan Court of Appeals affirmed. Id. at *17. About a year later, the Michigan Supreme Court

denied Schubiner’s application for leave of appeal. Can IV Packard Square, LLC v. Schubiner,

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