Fifth Third Bank v. Triangle Associates Inc

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 29, 2015
Docket321737
StatusUnpublished

This text of Fifth Third Bank v. Triangle Associates Inc (Fifth Third Bank v. Triangle Associates Inc) 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
Fifth Third Bank v. Triangle Associates Inc, (Mich. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

FIFTH THIRD BANK, UNPUBLISHED October 29, 2015 Plaintiff-Appellee,

No. 321737 Kent Circuit Court TRIANGLE ASSOCIATES, INC., LC No. 13-004365-CZ

Defendant-Appellant.

Before: TALBOT, C.J., and BECKERING and GADOLA, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

Defendant, Triangle Associates, Inc. (Triangle), appeals as of right the April 28, 2014 order granting summary disposition to plaintiff, Fifth Third Bank (Fifth Third Bank), in this declaratory action. We affirm.

I. PERTINENT FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

The procedural history of this case is as long as it is complicated, and reads like a law school student’s Civil Procedure exam nightmare. In 2008, Triangle obtained a judgment against Bentwaters Partners (Bentwaters) in the amount of $430,465.96. Bentwaters had a deposit (checking) account with Fifth Third Bank (the Bentwaters Account). In August 2011, Fifth Third Bank, Bentwaters, and the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) entered into a deposit account control agreement (DACA), in which Bentwaters granted the USDA a security interest in the Bentwaters Account.

A. WRIT OF GARNISHMENT AND DEFAULT JUDGMENT

In what provided the spark for a series of litigation, Triangle sought and received from the clerk of the Kent Circuit Court a writ of garnishment against Fifth Third Bank in June 2012. The writ of garnishment was served on Fifth Third Bank the following day. Fifth Third Bank placed a hold on the funds and notified Bentwaters of the writ, but it did not deliver a verified disclosure within 14 days of receiving the writ, as is required by MCR 3.101(H). As a result, on June 26, 2012, the clerk of the Kent Circuit Court entered a default against Fifth Third Bank, at Triangle’s request. The following day, the circuit court entered a default judgment “[f]or” Triangle, “[a]gainst” Fifth Third Bank, in the amount of $484,550.40. That same day, Fifth Third Bank delivered its garnishee disclosure form.

-1- Fifth Third Bank moved the circuit court to set aside the default on July 16, 2012, arguing that there was good cause for its delay and that it had a meritorious defense, i.e., it was precluded from making any distributions under the writ of garnishment because the USDA had a security interest in the Bentwaters Account. The circuit court denied the motion, as well as a subsequent motion for reconsideration.

In November 2012, Fifth Third Bank filed two motions for relief from the default judgment, the second of which is pertinent to this appeal. In the second motion for relief from judgment, Fifth Third Bank argued that the default judgment should be vacated because of noncompliance with the court rules regarding default judgments. The circuit court denied the motion, expressing satisfaction that “everything was done properly under the court rules . . . .” As will be discussed in more detail below, this Court subsequently granted Fifth Third Bank’s application for leave to appeal the denial of this second motion for relief from judgment.

B. INTERPLEADER ACTION

On September 5, 2012, Fifth Third Bank filed an interpleader action in Kent Circuit Court to resolve what it described as competing interests in the Bentwaters Account. It identified the USDA, Triangle, and Mercantile Bank1 as parties with competing interests in the account. Thereafter, the USDA removed the interpleader action to federal court in the United States District Court for the Western District of Michigan (district court). Triangle moved the district court to dismiss the action based on a number of grounds, including res judicata, collateral estoppel, waiver, and unclean hands. In evaluating the motion for dismissal, the district court examined the nature of the default judgment that Triangle obtained against Fifth Third Bank. Triangle argued that, upon entry of the default judgment, the writ of garnishment obtained against Fifth Third Bank merged with the default judgment and ceased to operate as to the funds in the Bentwaters Account. In other words, Triangle argued that Fifth Third Bank was liable to pay Triangle its own assets, regardless of any assets held on behalf of Bentwaters, in order to satisfy the default judgment.

The district court rejected the notion that Fifth Third Bank was liable to pay Triangle out of its own assets. It stated MCL 600.4051 expressly provides for circumstances when a garnishee may become personally liable. Those circumstances—when a garnishee knowingly and willfully answers falsely upon disclosure or examination—were not present in this case. The district court explained that the default judgment was entered against Fifth Third Bank because it failed to timely file its verified disclosure; thus, the default judgment was entered against Fifth Third Bank without regard to anything disclosed by it. The district court also denied Triangle’s motion for summary judgment.

Thereafter, Bentwaters argued that the USDA was entitled to summary judgment, argued that the funds in the Bentwaters Account should be awarded to the USDA because the USDA’s security interest was superior to the claims of Mercantile Bank and Triangle. Triangle argued that it did not have a claim to the funds to the Bentwaters Account because the default judgment was a personal judgment against Fifth Third Bank. Triangle also argued that the federal court lacked the ability to discharge Fifth Third Bank from liability in excess of the funds in the Bentwaters Account. The

1 The details of Mercantile Bank’s claims to the funds in the Bentwaters Account are not pertinent to this appeal; consequently, we do not discuss Mercantile Bank in any detail.

-2- district court found that the USDA had a security interest in the funds in the Bentwaters Account, and that this security interest had priority over the claims of Mercantile Bank and Triangle. As a result, it granted the motion for summary judgment.

In addition, the court reiterated its belief that Fifth Third Bank was not personally liable to pay the default judgment. However, the court reasoned that it was unnecessary to rehash Triangle’s argument that the default judgment constituted a personal judgment against Fifth Third Bank because Fifth Third Bank did not seek a discharge of liability with respect to anything outside the funds in the Bentwaters Account, and its judgment would not affect Fifth Third Bank’s liability outside those funds. In accordance with the district court’s ruling, Fifth Third Bank tendered a check in the amount of $486,235.40 to the district court. The court then discharged Fifth Third Bank from all liability with respect to the Bentwaters Account.

C. DECLARATORY ACTION—THE INSTANT PROCEEDINGS

On May 9, 2013, the day after tendering the funds to the district court, Fifth Third Bank initiated the instant action by filing a complaint for declaratory relief in the trial court.2 Fifth Third Bank alleged that in the course of all the proceedings between it and Triangle, a controversy had arisen regarding whether it was personally liable to Triangle under the default judgment. Fifth Third Bank believed that Triangle would attempt to execute the default judgment against its personal assets. According to Fifth Third Bank, the parties needed a declaratory judgment to guide their action with respect to the default judgment.

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Fifth Third Bank v. Triangle Associates Inc, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fifth-third-bank-v-triangle-associates-inc-michctapp-2015.