Imperial Investments Lp v. Shelby Township

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 21, 2016
Docket327641
StatusUnpublished

This text of Imperial Investments Lp v. Shelby Township (Imperial Investments Lp v. Shelby Township) 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
Imperial Investments Lp v. Shelby Township, (Mich. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

IMPERIAL INVESTMENTS, L.P., UNPUBLISHED July 21, 2016 Plaintiff-Appellant,

v No. 327641 Michigan Tax Tribunal SHELBY TOWNSHIP, LC No. 14-003803-R

Defendant-Appellee.

Before: STEPHENS, P.J., and SERVITTO and GLEICHER, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

When filing eight tax appeals against Shelby Township, counsel for petitioner, Imperial Investments, failed to remit sufficient filing fees to the Michigan Tax Tribunal (MTT). Counsel allegedly did not receive the MTT’s subsequent emails transmitting the docket numbers assigned to the tax appeals and advising petitioner of its default based on the filing fee shortfall. When petitioner failed to act on these messages, the MTT dismissed its petitions. Petitioner immediately remedied the financial issue and in seven of the eight tax appeals, served updated petitions including the docket numbers. Despite that petitioner filed a motion to set aside the default of the petition underlying this appeal, it accidentally failed to serve a single updated petition. This error was not deliberate and caused no delay or prejudice, yet the MTT dismissed the petition once and for all. This was an abuse of the MTT’s discretion. We therefore reverse and remand to the MTT for continued proceedings.

I. BACKGROUND

On May 30, 2014, attorney Joseph Ciaramitaro filed several petitions before the entire tax tribunal on behalf of his client, Imperial Investments, L.P., challenging the property tax assessments of various properties by Shelby Charter Township. He served the petition underlying this matter on the township, which promptly responded and affirmed the accuracy of its assessment of petitioners’ properties.

Ciaramitaro apparently remitted inadequate filing fees with the various petitions he filed on May 30. Accordingly, on July 3, 2014, the MTT sent an order of default to Ciaramitaro via email. The order advised petitioner to cure the default within 21 days by submitting the appropriate filing fee. Absent such cure, the order warned, the petition would be deemed untimely and dismissed. Moreover, petitioner would be required to file a motion establishing good cause to set aside the default. That same day, the MTT electronically submitted to -1- Ciaramitaro a “notice of docket number,” labeling the current matter 14-003803. The notice directed petitioner to serve the township with a new petition bearing the assigned docket number within 45 days, and then file a proof of service.

Ciaramitaro asserts that he did not receive the MTT’s July email regarding the default or the notice of docket number. He did receive, however, the order of dismissal that was served by the same method on October 30, 2014. The dismissal was entered, according to the order, because petitioner “had sufficient notice of its default and . . . ample opportunity to cure the default” but failed to do so. Ciaramitaro contacted the MTT and requested copies of the default and notice of docket number. The MTT provided the docket number notices for all eight petitions filed on May 30. Ciaramitaro’s office then served the township with amended petitions in several matters including the assigned docket numbers and filed proofs of service. His office failed, however, to serve the petition and file a proof of service in the subject docket number— 14-003803.

On November 14, 2014, petitioner filed a motion to set aside the default. Ciaramitaro alleged that he paid insufficient filing fees “due to a clerical error” and remitted the shortfall on petitioner’s behalf. Ciaramitaro further indicated that he had not received the July 3 default notice. In an accompanying brief, Ciaramitaro averred that he and his secretarial staff had reviewed the firm’s email accounts and found no message from the MTT on July 3. The brief continued, “[T]he oversight by this counsel in not responding to the Default was not out of negligence or disrespect . . . but rather as a result of not knowing that a Default was entered.” Therefore, “it would be . . . unjust and inequitable to petitioner to dismiss the case.

In response to petitioner’s motion, on November 17, 2014, the MTT forwarded a form document describing various duties of MTT petitioners. The document provided in relevant part:

The [MTT] continues to have issues with e-mail addresses of parties. As a reminder, if the [MTT] has a record of a party’s e-mail address, the [MTT] will electronically serve all correspondence. Parties cannot opt out of electronic service. . . . Further, the [MTT] continues to have problems with spam filters and full email accounts on email addresses, particularly addresses used by assessors. The [MTT] believes that it is the responsibility of each party, including assessors, to set an appropriate spam filter and clean out their email accounts on a regular basis to receive orders and decisions rendered by the [MTT]. The [MTT] will not resend notices, orders, decisions, etc. where such correspondence from the [MTT] is rejected as spam or is returned because an e-mail account is full. [Emphasis in original.]

On December 1, 2014, the MTT agreed to reinstate the case but held petitioner’s motion to set aside the default in abeyance pending its actual cure of the default. The MTT determined that it erred in the ground cited for dismissing the petition in the first instance. The MTT clarified, “the case should have been dismissed because Petitioner failed to file a Proof of Service indicating that the Petition with noted Docket No. [14-003803] had been timely served and not because Petitioner had failed to timely cure its default, as Petitioner had not yet established a history of deliberate delay.” Specifically, petitioner was required to amend its

-2- petition to include the docket number, serve the township, and file a proof of service with the MTT within 45 days of July 3, 2014.

The MTT put little credence in Ciaramitaro’s claim that he did not receive the July 3 notices of default and docket number. The MTT served the notices through the email address provided by Ciaramitaro and the message was “not returned as undeliverable.” The order of dismissal was sent to the same address with no difficulty, the order further noted. Although petitioner had cured the default to the extent it paid the remainder of the filing fee, the MTT found that petitioner still had not provided a proper notice of service and therefore “the Petition is still not properly pending.” In making this ruling, the MTT made no mention of the November 4, 2014 proofs of service filed by Ciaramitaro in the companion matters or the lack of a proof of service in this docket number. The MTT redesignated the matter as 14-003803-R and ordered “that all documents filed prior to the entry of this order” would be placed in the file for the updated docket number. The order thereby indicated that had a November 4 proof of service been filed, it would thereafter be placed in the record for docket number 14-003803-R. The MTT concluded its order:

IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that Petitioner shall serve the Petition with noted Docket Number as required by TTR 221(4) and 221(5), and file proof demonstrating said service, as required by TTR 221(9), within 14 days of the entry of this Order. Failure to comply with this Order will result in the dismissal of the case, as provided by TTR 231 and 221(4).

In its appellate brief, petitioner claims that Ciaramitaro gave the December 1 order to his secretary “with instructions to serve the Petition and Docket Number upon Respondent.” Petitioner recites that “[u]nbeknownst to Petitioner’s counsel,” the secretary neither served the new petition nor filed a proof of service. Rather, Ciaramitaro claimed that his secretary suffered an emotional breakdown and serving the petition and filing the new proof of service in this docket number fell through the cracks.

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Bluebook (online)
Imperial Investments Lp v. Shelby Township, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/imperial-investments-lp-v-shelby-township-michctapp-2016.