Franklin13 LLC v. Raj Anshuman Goswami

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 14, 2018
Docket336517
StatusUnpublished

This text of Franklin13 LLC v. Raj Anshuman Goswami (Franklin13 LLC v. Raj Anshuman Goswami) 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
Franklin13 LLC v. Raj Anshuman Goswami, (Mich. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

FRANKLIN13, LLC, and JUDITH E GOLDNER, UNPUBLISHED June 14, 2018 Plaintiffs-Appellees,

v No. 336517 Oakland Circuit Court RAJ ANSHUMAN GOSWAMI and SUSAN LC No. 2016-152894-CH GOSWAMI,

Defendants-Appellants.

Before: SWARTZLE, P.J., and SHAPIRO and BOONSTRA, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

Defendants appeal by right the trial court’s order granting plaintiffs a prescriptive easement over a private road owned by defendants (the “access parcel”) for the benefit of plaintiffs’ parcel.1 We affirm.

I. PERTINENT FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

In 1976, Goldner and her then-husband Norman Goldner acquired a land contract interest in the property located at 26171 West 13 Mile Road in the Village of Franklin (“the property”). Adjacent to the property is the access parcel, a private road that provides several parcels with access to West 13 Mile Road. Since 1977, Goldner used the access parcel to enter and leave the property, as well as for mail and municipal trash pickup. Goldner and Norman were divorced in 1980; Goldner and her children continued to live at the property. In 1986, Goldner and Norman completed the required payments on the land contract and the property was conveyed to them by warranty deed. In 1991, Norman conveyed his interest in the property to Goldner via quitclaim deed; when Norman remarried in 1992, he and his new wife signed another quitclaim deed conveying any interests they had in the property to Goldner.

1 At times it will be necessary for us to refer to the parties or others individually. We will then refer to plaintiff Franklin13, LLC as “Franklin13,” plaintiff Judith Goldner as “Goldner,” Norman Goldner as “Norman,” defendant Raj Goswami as “Raj,” and defendant Susan Goswami as “Susan.” We will refer to Franklin13 and Goldner collectively as “plaintiffs,” and Raj and Susan Goswami collectively as “defendants.”

-1- Goldner was the sole owner of the property until 2004, when she conveyed the property to the Judith E. Goldner Revocable Living Trust (“the Goldner Trust”) of which she was the trustee. In 2013, Goldner was unable to make her mortgage payments and the property went into foreclosure. The property was sold at a sheriff’s sale, but Goldner was able to redeem the property before the redemption period expired thanks to a loan from a family member, Jonathon Victor, and his two brothers (who are not named in the record below). In return for the loan, Goldner signed a deed conveying the property to Franklin13, a limited liability company owned by Victor and his brothers, while reserving a life estate in the property to herself. The deed referred to Goldner as “an Individual,” and did not reference the fact that the property was owned by the Goldner Trust of which she was trustee. Goldner and Victor averred by affidavit that they intended the deed to “convey to [Goldner and Franklin13] the continued access to [the] property over the private road” and to convey the property “with the identical manner of ingress and egress that [Goldner] had utilized for the past 36 years.”

In 2014, defendant Raj purchased a parcel of property located at 26175 West 13 Mile Road in the Village of Franklin. That parcel included the access parcel. Raj admitted at his deposition that he was aware when he purchased the property that multiple people used the access parcel to access their respective properties. Sometime after the purchase, Raj married Susan. In 2015, defendants informed Goldner that they planned to move the access road in such a way that it would no longer connect to her driveway, altering her ability to access her property by vehicle as well as changing the location of her mailbox and trash pickup.

Plaintiffs filed suit against defendants in 2016, seeking to have the trial court declare an easement by prescription over the access parcel and enjoin defendants from altering the access parcel in the manner proposed. Plaintiffs and defendants both later filed motions for summary disposition on the issue of whether plaintiffs could establish the elements of a prescriptive easement. After a hearing on the cross-motions for summary disposition, the trial court entered a written opinion and order granting plaintiffs’ motion for summary disposition under MCR 2.116(C)(10), denying defendants’ motion for summary disposition, and granting plaintiffs the declaratory and injunctive relief they sought.

This appeal followed.

II. STANDING

Defendants argue that plaintiffs do not have an interest in the subject property, and therefore lack standing to sue, because the property is owned by the Goldner Trust and the Goldner Trust never conveyed its interest in the subject property. Instead, defendants contend, Goldner signed the quitclaim deed to Franklin13 in her individual capacity. Defendants assert that Goldner individually did not have an interest in the subject property in 2013 and that she was therefore unable to convey the property to Franklin13. As a result, the 2013 quitclaim deed is invalid, the subject property remains owned by the Goldner Trust, and plaintiffs do not have an ownership interest in the subject property and could not bring this action seeking a prescriptive easement. We disagree.

“This Court has viewed a claim that a plaintiff lacks standing as a motion under MCR 2.116(C)(5), i.e., that the plaintiff lacks the legal capacity to sue.” Pontiac Police & Fire

-2- Prefunded Group Health & Ins Trust Bd of Trustees v Pontiac No 2, 309 Mich App 611, 619; 873 NW2d 783 (2015) (citation omitted). The party asserting the affirmative defense that the plaintiff lacks the legal capacity to sue must do so in the ‘first responsive pleading or in a motion filed prior to that pleading.’ ” Id.; see also MCR 2.116(D)(2). Defendants failed to raise the issue of plaintiffs’ lack of standing in their first responsive pleading or in a motion filed prior to that pleading. Defendants have thus waived the issue. Glen Lake-Crystal River Watershed Riparians v Glen Lake Ass’n, 264 Mich App 523, 528; 695 NW2d 508 (2004).

Further, even if defendants had not waived the issue, we would find their argument to be without merit. A trustee generally has the power to “sell . . . or otherwise dispose of . . . trust property for any purpose upon any terms or conditions. . . .” MCL 700.7817(y). However, a trustee can also, generally speaking, act personally or individually. See Bankers Trust Co of Muskegon v Forsyth, 266 Mich 517, 520; 254 NW 190 (1934) (quotation marks and citation omitted) (“A suit against one sued as an individual does not bind him as trustee, and, conversely, judgment against one sued in a representative capacity does not conclude him in a subsequent action brought by or against him as an individual, although the same identical issue is involved[.]”). The Goldner Trust grants Goldner, as trustee, the power to “buy, sell, acquire, dispose of, mortgage, encumber, lease, rent, or otherwise deal with any such property upon such terms and conditions as in the sole judgment of the Trustee shall seem just and proper. . . .” Therefore, despite Goldner’s failure to label herself as trustee for purposes of the 2013 deed conveyance, the powers she exercised were authorized by the Goldner Trust. Goldner had no personal interest in the property and no ability to convey it in her individual capacity.

The lack of descripto personae on the deed, i.e. descriptive language describing Goldner as the trustee, see Black’s Law Dictionary (10th ed), is not fatal to the validity of the deed. See Pungs v Hilgendorf, 289 Mich 46, 52-53; 286 NW 152 (1939); Levine v Katz, 293 Mich 493, 498-499; 292 NW 466 (1940); see also Jerome v Great American Ins Co, 52 NC App 573, 578- 579; 279 S E 2d 42 (1981).2

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Franklin13 LLC v. Raj Anshuman Goswami, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/franklin13-llc-v-raj-anshuman-goswami-michctapp-2018.