Commissioner of Insurance of Michigan v. DMD Kyoto Plaza Shopping Center, L.L.C.

42 F. Supp. 2d 726, 1998 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 21150, 1998 WL 1012388
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Michigan
DecidedDecember 31, 1998
Docket5:98-cv-00108
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 42 F. Supp. 2d 726 (Commissioner of Insurance of Michigan v. DMD Kyoto Plaza Shopping Center, L.L.C.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Michigan primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commissioner of Insurance of Michigan v. DMD Kyoto Plaza Shopping Center, L.L.C., 42 F. Supp. 2d 726, 1998 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 21150, 1998 WL 1012388 (W.D. Mich. 1998).

Opinion

*728 OPINION AND ORDER ON PLAINTIFF’S MOTION FOR REMAND AND ON DEFENDANTS’ MOTION TO TRANSFER VENUE

MILES, Senior District Judge.

Plaintiff Commissioner of Insurance of the State of Michigan (“Commissioner”), acting as liquidator of an insurance company, entered into a purchase agreement under which it agreed to sell certain commercial mortgage loans and real properties to the Flatiron Property Corporation, a Delaware corporation. Defendants DMB Kyoto Plaza Shopping Center, L.L.C., DMB Sandy Plains Junction, L.L.C., and DMB Homeshow Plaza (M.A.) L.L.C. (collectively the “DMB entities”) are the designees and assignees of Flatiron’s rights under that purchase agreement. On or about July 1, 1998, the Commissioner filed this action in Michigan’s Ingham County Circuit Court, seeking a declaratory judgment that the DMB entities are not entitled under the terms of the purchase agreement to reimbursement for certain environmental remediation costs which the DMB entities claim to have incurred in connection with environmental conditions at the subject properties. The Commissioner’s complaint also sought a declaration that he, and not the DMB entities, is entitled to monies held in an escrow account established under the terms of the purchase agreement for the purpose of reimbursing the purchaser for environmental remediation costs.

The DMB entities filed a timely notice of removal to this court on July 31, 1998, asserting jurisdiction based on diversity pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1332(a)(1). The following motions are currently before the court: (1) the Commissioner’s Motion for Remand (docket no. 9), and (2) the DMB entities’ Motion to Transfer Venue to the Southern District of New York (docket no. 7). For the reasons to follow, the court grants both motions.

FACTS

Confederation Life Insurance Company (“Confed”) was a Canadian insurer that did substantial business in the United States. Since 1964, Confed had used Michigan as its “state of entry” in the United States and, as such, Michigan was the primary regulator of Confed in this country. In August, 1994, after Confed became insolvent, Michigan’s Ingham County Circuit Court appointed the Commissioner as rehabilitator of Confed. On October 23, 1996, Michigan’s Ingham County Circuit Court, acting on the motion of the Commissioner, entered an order directing the Commissioner, who was vested with title to Confed’s assets, to liquidate Confed’s estate. See Plaintiffs Motion for Remand, Exhibit A (In the Matter of Rehabilitation of the Confederation Life Ins. Co. In the United States, No. 94-78300-CR, Liquidation Order).

As part of his efforts to liquidate Con-fed, the Commissioner negotiated several sales of Confed’s real estate assets. In February, 1997, the Commissioner entered into a Mortgage Loan and REO Property Purchase Agreement (the “purchase agreement”) with Flatiron, under which the Commissioner conveyed Confed’s interests in certain properties in California and Georgia. 1 Pursuant to the terms of the purchase agreement, the Commissioner deposited $ 2,000,000 into an escrow account held by The Chase Manhattan Bank (“Chase”), a New York State chartered bank, as escrow agent. The escrow account was established under the purchase agreement for the purpose of reimbursing Flatiron for environmental remediation costs incurred by Flatiron within 225 days after the closing, subject to specified limitations.

Each of the DMB entities is a Delaware limited liability company, and each has its sole and principal place of business in New Yoi’k. As noted above, the DMB entities are the assignees of Flatiron’s rights under the purchase agreement. Seeking to *729 exercise their rights under the agreement, they notified the Commissioner that they had incurred remediation costs, and claimed entitlement to a portion of the amount held in escrow. 2 The Commissioner, apparently believing that the conditions for reimbursement were not satisfied, denied the DMB entities’ claims.

Seeking to resolve the dispute as over their entitlement to the escrowed funds, on May 29, 1998 the DMB entities filed an action in a New York court, naming Chase as the holder of the fund and the Commissioner as a claimant. 3 Several days later, counsel for the Commissioner telephoned the DMB entities’ New York counsel and requested that the DMB entities voluntarily dismiss the Commissioner from the action on the basis that the Ingham County Circuit Court’s liquidation order enjoined all persons and entities from commencing any actions against the Commissioner (as liquidator) or Confed’s assets. Although the DMB entities disagreed with the Commissioner’s view of the liquidation order, they nonetheless discontinued the New York action against the Commissioner, continuing to pursue it against Chase and the escrow fund.

Apparently unwilling to have the New York action continue in any event, the Commissioner filed a motion in the Michigan liquidation proceedings seeking an order enjoining the DMB entities from further prosecuting the New York action. At the conclusion of a show cause hearing on July 22, 1998, the Ingham County Circuit Judge presiding over the proceedings, Judge Thomas L. Brown, granted the Commissioner’s motion. 4 Although the DMB entities contend that they are currently appealing that ruling, they also contend that they have sought a voluntary dismissal of the New York action.

The Commissioner thereafter filed this declaratory action against the DMB entities in the Ingham County Circuit Court. Filed separate arid apart from the liquidation proceedings, the action was given a different case number and assigned by blind draw to a different judge. 5 (The action was subsequently re-assigned to Judge Brown.) The DMB entities filed their notice of removal on July 31, 1998. On September 3, 1998, the Commissioner filed his Motion for Remand, arguing that the actipn should be remanded to the state court because this court lacks subject matter jurisdiction. More specifically, the Commissioner’s motion asserted that jurisdiction was lacking because the action “concerns the distribution of assets over which the Ingham County Circuit Court has in rem jurisdiction” and “federal courts cannot exercise jurisdiction over property after a state court has taken jurisdiction over it in an in rem proceeding.” Alternatively, the Commissioner ar *730 gued that this court should abstain from hearing the case. The Commissioner’s motion did not raise any other issues with respect to the removal procedure.

Additional facts relevant to the disposition of the parties’ motions are discussed in the analysis which follows.

ANALYSIS

1. The Commissioner’s Motion for Remand

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Related

In re Rehabilitation of Frontier Ins.
6 Misc. 3d 291 (New York Supreme Court, 2004)

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Bluebook (online)
42 F. Supp. 2d 726, 1998 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 21150, 1998 WL 1012388, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commissioner-of-insurance-of-michigan-v-dmd-kyoto-plaza-shopping-center-miwd-1998.