Great Day Real Estate LLC v. Asjj Hotel Management Inc

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 13, 2026
Docket369575
StatusUnpublished

This text of Great Day Real Estate LLC v. Asjj Hotel Management Inc (Great Day Real Estate LLC v. Asjj Hotel Management 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
Great Day Real Estate LLC v. Asjj Hotel Management Inc, (Mich. Ct. App. 2026).

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

GREAT DAY REAL ESTATE, LLC, UNPUBLISHED March 13, 2026 Plaintiff-Appellant, 2:14 PM

v No. 369575 Berrien Circuit Court ASJJ HOTEL MANAGEMENT, INC., and LC No. 2021-000018-CB RIVERVIEW HOSPITALITY, LLC,

Defendants-Appellees.

Before: RIORDAN, P.J., and O’BRIEN and YOUNG, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

Plaintiff, Great Day Real Estate, LLC, filed a commercial real estate broker’s lien on certain real property pursuant to the Commercial Real Estate Broker’s Lien Act (CREBLA), MCL 570.581 et seq., then filed this action seeking to foreclose on that lien. Plaintiff’s lien named defendant ASJJ Hotel Management, Inc. (ASJJ Management) as the “owner” of the property on which plaintiff sought to foreclose, but the record owner of the property was ASJJ Hotel Properties (ASJJ Properties)—a separate corporate entity. The trial court held that a commercial real estate broker’s lien filed under the CREBLA must name the “record owner” of the property, so the lien on which plaintiff was attempting to foreclose—which did not name the “record owner” of the property—was void and unenforceable, and plaintiff’s claim premised on that lien must be dismissed. This was error. The relevant subsection of the CREBLA requires that a commercial real estate broker’s lien contain “[t]he name of the owner of the commercial real estate,” MCL 570.584(9)(b), in contrast to other sections of the act that apply to the narrower “owner of record.” See, e.g., MCL 570.590 and MCL 570.591. While ASJJ Management is not the owner of record of the commercial real estate at issue, the trial court never addressed whether ASJJ Management is otherwise an owner of that real estate. We therefore vacate the trial court’s order to the extent that it dismissed plaintiff’s foreclosure claim and struck plaintiff’s lien, affirm the order in all other respects, and remand this case for further proceedings.

-1- I. BACKGROUND

On May 23, 2018, plaintiff entered into an agreement with ASJJ Management in which ASJJ Management effectively agreed that, if plaintiff found a buyer for the “Silver Beach Hotel” (the hotel property), then the “seller” would pay plaintiff a finder’s fee equal to 2% of the selling price. Ramzi Fakhouri—the owner of ASJJ Management—signed the agreement on behalf of ASJJ Management, and Nidal Haddad signed the agreement on plaintiff’s behalf. The agreement did not identify the owner of the hotel property, and the record owner at the time was not ASJJ Management but ASJJ Properties, a separate legal entity owned by Fakhouri.

Plaintiff alleges that it found a prospective buyer for the hotel property, and that buyer formed Riverview, which then entered into a land contract to purchase the hotel property. This land contract referred to ASJJ Management and ASJJ Properties collectively as “Seller,” and represented that “Seller has title to the Property, free and clear of any judgments, liens, or other encumbrances.” A version of this contract was allegedly executed on November 18, 2020. On December 2, 2020, a “memorandum of land contract” for the hotel property was recorded with the Berrien County Register of Deeds. This memorandum identified the “seller” as ASJJ Properties and the buyer as Riverview.

By late December 2020, plaintiff had not received its finder’s fee, so it claimed a commercial real estate broker’s lien on the hotel property. That lien was recorded by the Berrien County Register of Deeds on December 23, 2020, and it identified the owner of the property as ASJJ Management (not ASJJ Properties).

Plaintiff filed the complaint giving rise to this case on January 28, 2021. In its complaint, plaintiff sought to foreclose on its lien. But plaintiff attached to its complaint not the lien that it recorded with the Berrien County Register of Deeds (which named ASJJ Management as the owner of the hotel property) but a lien naming ASJJ Properties as the owner of the hotel property.

No one initially caught this discrepancy. ASJJ Management failed to respond to plaintiff’s complaint, and a default was entered against it. ASJJ Management moved to set aside this default on June 9, 2021, and it attached to its motion an affidavit signed by Fakhouri in which he swore that the hotel property was owned by ASJJ Properties, not ASJJ Management. The default against ASJJ Management was set aside on February 14, 2023, and in ASJJ Management’s March 3, 2023 answer to plaintiff’s complaint, ASJJ Management again denied that it owned the hotel property.

On April 17, 2023, presumably on the basis of ASJJ Management’s representations, plaintiff asked for leave to amend its complaint to add ASJJ Properties as a defendant. The court denied this motion on May 30, 2023, because plaintiff did not include with its motion a copy of the proposed amended complaint. At no point thereafter did plaintiff file a proper motion to amend its complaint, so ASJJ Properties was never added as a defendant.

By late December 2023, the parties had nearly reached a settlement, but on December 29, 2023, ASJJ Management’s counsel finally discovered the discrepancy between the lien attached to plaintiff’s complaint and the lien recorded with the Berrien County Register of Deeds. That same day, ASJJ Management’s counsel sent plaintiff’s counsel’s an email alleging that the lien attached to plaintiff’s complaint “was doctored” and did not match “the actual recorded lien.”

-2- ASJJ Management’s counsel sent a second email the following day in which she alleged that plaintiff’s counsel was attempting “to foreclose on a forged lien.”

The parties had a trial scheduled for January 16, 2024, but due to ASJJ Management’s recent discovery of the supposed forgery and because the parties could not resolve the issue among themselves, ASJJ Management filed a motion for sanctions on January 4, 2024. In this motion, ASJJ Management alleged that the lien attached to plaintiff’s complaint (which named ASJJ Properties as the owner of the hotel property) was a “forgery” and did not match the lien recorded with the Berrien County Register of Deeds (which named ASJJ Management as the owner). ASJJ Management further asserted that, forgery allegations aside, the lien recorded with the Register of Deeds was “invalid” under MCL 570.584—the statute specifying what a commercial real estate broker’s lien must include—because it did not name the record owner of the hotel property (i.e., ASJJ Properties). ASJJ Management asked the trial court to dismiss this action as a sanction.

Plaintiff responded on January 11, 2024, denying any wrongdoing. Plaintiff emphasized that the lien attached to its complaint, while apparently not recorded by the Berrien Register of Deeds, had a sticker on it from the Berrien County Register of Deeds and was stamped as a “NON- OFFICIAL COPY.” Plaintiff conceded that the actual lien recorded with the Register of Deeds did not have this stamp, and despite investigating the issue, plaintiff could “provide no explanation for the discrepancy brought up in Defendant’s motion[.]” Plaintiff also vehemently denied that either the defect in the lien recorded with the Register of Deeds or the fact that plaintiff attached the wrong lien to its complaint required dismissal of this action. As relevant to this appeal, plaintiff asked that it be allowed to amend its complaint to add the lien actually filed with the Register of Deeds, and it argued that that lien was not invalid because a commercial real estate broker’s lien only needed to name an owner of the commercial real estate, and there was a question of fact whether ASJJ Management was an equitable owner of the hotel property, regardless of whether it was the owner of record.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Great Day Real Estate LLC v. Asjj Hotel Management Inc, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/great-day-real-estate-llc-v-asjj-hotel-management-inc-michctapp-2026.