Larwin Mortgage Investors v. Suffolk Co., Douglas Spicer, City of Westland, Intervenor-Appellee

852 F.2d 568, 1988 U.S. App. LEXIS 9950
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJuly 22, 1988
Docket87-1454
StatusUnpublished

This text of 852 F.2d 568 (Larwin Mortgage Investors v. Suffolk Co., Douglas Spicer, City of Westland, Intervenor-Appellee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Larwin Mortgage Investors v. Suffolk Co., Douglas Spicer, City of Westland, Intervenor-Appellee, 852 F.2d 568, 1988 U.S. App. LEXIS 9950 (6th Cir. 1988).

Opinion

852 F.2d 568

Unpublished Disposition
NOTICE: Sixth Circuit Rule 24(c) states that citation of unpublished dispositions is disfavored except for establishing res judicata, estoppel, or the law of the case and requires service of copies of cited unpublished dispositions of the Sixth Circuit.
LARWIN MORTGAGE INVESTORS, et al., Plaintiffs,
v.
SUFFOLK CO., et al., Defendants,
Douglas Spicer, Defendant-Appellant,
City of Westland, Intervenor-Appellee.

Nos. 87-1454, 87-1522.

United States Court of Appeals, Sixth Circuit.

July 22, 1988.

Before BOYCE F. MARTIN, Jr., WELLFORD and DAVID A. NELSON, Circuit Judges.

DAVID A. NELSON, Circuit Judge.

Representing that he was the assignee of a certain money judgment entered almost ten years earlier by the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Michigan, and representing further that the judgment had not been fully paid or discharged, appellant Douglas Spicer moved the district court for an order renewing and extending the judgment and reentering it in his name. The judgment debtors (who are now in bankruptcy) did not object, and in due course Mr. Spicer's motion was granted.

The original holder of the judgment had created a cloud on the title to a number of parcels of real estate in the City of Westland, Michigan, and elsewhere by recording a notice of levy of execution on any interest the judgment debtors had in the designated parcels. The judgment debtors have sworn that they had no such interest, but the notice of levy was re-recorded after the date of the purported assignment to Mr. Spicer, and Westland homeowners with interests in the parcels described in the notice of levy were given to understand that they would have to come to terms with Mr. Spicer if they wanted to be able to sell their homes free and clear of the recorded encumbrance.

The homeowners complained to the City, which itself had real estate interests that were clouded by the notice of levy. Moving to intervene in the lawsuit in which the judgment had been entered, the City sought relief from the order renewing and extending the judgment.

The City's motion brought to the attention of the district judge certain facts of which he had been unaware at the time he granted the motion to renew and extend. Among these was the fact that before the judgment debtors received notice of the purported assignment, the original holder of the judgment had entered into a settlement agreement which, by its terms, released the judgment debtors. The district judge also learned that an instrument acknowledging satisfaction of the judgment as to the original holder thereof had been filed within a few hours of the filing in the district court of a notice of the assignment. The judgment debtors attested, by affidavit, that they had not been given any notice of the purported assignment until three days after the date of the release.

The district court granted the City's motion to intervene, vacated the order renewing and extending the judgment, ordered that the notice of levy and any similar instruments recorded by Spicer be cancelled and discharged of record, and ordered Spicer to return whatever monies he had exacted from the homeowners as the price of removing the cloud on their titles.

The most significant question presented on appeal is whether the district court was wrong in finding, as it did find, that "the settlement and satisfaction of the judgment was binding as to Spicer." Because the record demonstrates that at the time of the settlement agreement releasing the judgment debtors the assignment of the judgment had not been perfected, as against the judgment debtors, by notice to them, we believe that the district court was correct in concluding that the settlement was binding on Spicer. The judgment debtors having been discharged before they were notified of the assignment, the court's order will be affirmed.

* Mr. Spicer, a lawyer who appears on his own behalf in this matter, did not ask to testify in the district court. No other witnesses took the stand, no deposition testimony was introduced, and the affidavits contained in the record are not particularly expansive. The facts on which the case turns must be gleaned largely from documentary evidence, and the story that emerges from the documents is in some respects incomplete. With that cautionary note, we shall attempt to detail the salient facts as we understand them.

In the early 1970s, it appears, a Michigan couple named Harold and Shirlee Rosin were interested in the construction of a Michigan condominium project financed by a California real estate investment trust known as Larwin Mortgage Investors. The project went sour, and in 1974 Larwin brought a diversity action in federal district court seeking foreclosure of its mortgage and praying for a deficiency judgment against the Rosins as guarantors of the mortgage indebtedness.

One of the Rosin's co-defendants, Codco, Inc., filed a cross-claim against the Rosins on a separate loan guarantee. Codco thereafter moved for summary judgment on its cross-claim, and on June 30, 1975, the district court granted the motion. Judgment was entered for Codco against the Rosins in the amount of $398,958.98, plus interest from September 16, 1974, the date on which Codco had filed its cross-claim.

In November of 1982 Codco requested the clerk of the district court to issue a writ of execution on the 1975 judgment. In this connection Codco submitted an affidavit executed by its President, Richard Ratkus, stating that the sum of $134,000 was to be credited against the total accrued interest and costs. Taking into account the accrued interest that remained unsatisfied, the net balance due, as of the date of the affidavit, was said to be $451,408.48.

The clerk of the court issued a writ of execution to the United States Marshal. The marshal's return indicates that, as instructed by Codco, he "levied execution" by the expedient of recording a notice of levy with the office of the register of deeds of Wayne County, Michigan.

The notice of levy, as recorded on December 3, 1982, states that on November 30, 1982, pursuant to the writ of execution, the marshal levied upon all of the Rosins' right, title and interest in some 63 parcels of real estate. A legal description of each parcel was incorporated in the notice of levy.

Some two years later, on November 17, 1984, the President of Codco, Richard Ratkus, executed on behalf of Codco a one paragraph instrument of assignment reading as follows:

"For value received, Codco, Inc., a Michigan corporation, hereby sells, assigns and transfers to Douglas Spicer, all right, title and interest possessed by Codco, Inc., in and to a certain Judgment of the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Michigan, Southern Division, in case number 4-72200, dated and entered June 30, 1975, in favor of Codco, Inc., and against Harold Rosin, individually, and against Harold Rosin and Shirlee Rosin jointly, in the amount of $398,958.98, plus interest at the rate of 7% per annum from September 16, 1974. Codco, Inc., represents that $25,000.00 has been collected by it or its assigns pursuant to said Judgment since its entry."1

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Bluebook (online)
852 F.2d 568, 1988 U.S. App. LEXIS 9950, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/larwin-mortgage-investors-v-suffolk-co-douglas-spicer-city-of-westland-ca6-1988.