Lathfield Investments, LLC v. City of Lathrup Village

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Michigan
DecidedNovember 9, 2023
Docket4:21-cv-10193
StatusUnknown

This text of Lathfield Investments, LLC v. City of Lathrup Village (Lathfield Investments, LLC v. City of Lathrup Village) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Michigan primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lathfield Investments, LLC v. City of Lathrup Village, (E.D. Mich. 2023).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF MICHIGAN SOUTHERN DIVISION

LATHFIELD INVESTMENTS, LLC, LATHFIELD HOLDINGS, LLC, and LATHFILED PARTNERS, LLC,

Plaintiffs, Case No. 21-cv-10193 HON. BERNARD A. FRIEDMAN

vs.

CITY OF LATHRUP VILLAGE, LATHRUP VILLAGE DOWNTOWN DEVELOPMENT AUTHORITY, JIM WRIGHT, and MCKENNA & ASSOCIATES, INC.,

Defendants. /

OPINION AND ORDER GRANTING THE MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT FILED BY DEFENDANTS LATHRUP VILLAGE AND THE DDA (ECF NO. 40) AND GRANTING IN PART AND DENYING IN PART THE MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT FILED BY DEFENDANTS WRIGHT AND MCKENNA (ECF NO. 42)

This matter is before the Court on a motion for summary judgment filed by defendants City of Lathrup Village (“Lathrup,” “Lathrup Village,” or “the City”) and Lathrup Village Downtown Development Authority (“DDA”), (ECF No. 40), as well as a motion for summary judgment filed by defendants Jim Wright and McKenna & Associates (“McKenna”), (ECF No. 42). Plaintiffs Lathfield Partners, LLC; Lathfield Holdings, LLC; and Lathfield Investments, LLC (collectively “Lathfield” or “plaintiffs”) have filed responses to the motions, (ECF Nos. 44, 45), and defendants have filed replies, (ECF Nos. 46, 49). The Court does not believe

oral argument will aid in the resolution of this matter and will not hold a hearing. E.D. Mich. LR 7.1(f)(2). For the reasons that follow, the motion filed by the City and the DDA is granted; the motion filed by Wright and McKenna is granted in

part and denied in part. I. Background In January 2021, each of the three plaintiffs filed a separate lawsuit in Oakland County Circuit Court against defendants Lathrup Village, DDA, Wright,

and McKenna. All three cases were removed to the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Michigan and were ultimately consolidated. (ECF No. 10) (Order consolidating cases 21-cv-10193, 21-cv-10195, and 21-cv-10198).

The factual allegations and claims are very similar (frequently identical) across the three complaints and any differences are largely irrelevant to resolution of these motions. See (21-cv-10193, ECF No. 1); (21-cv-10195, ECF No. 1); (21- cv-10198, ECF No. 5) (Amended Complaint). For ease of reference, the Court will

refer to the allegations in the complaint filed in 21-cv-10193 unless otherwise noted. Lathfield alleges that in January 2020 it purchased from Dahl Real Estate,

LLC certain real property, situated on Southfield Road in Lathrup Village, which is located in the City’s Mixed-Use Zoning District (the “Property”). (21-cv-10193, ECF No. 1, PageID.7-8). The complaint alleges that for at least a decade the City

has licensed uses at the Property that are permitted under that zoning designation and that plaintiffs have no plan to change the use of the Property. (Id., PageID.8). Lathfield further contends that under Article 6 of the City’s zoning code, “site plan

review” only applies to development or if there is a proposed change of use. (Id.). Nevertheless, the complaint alleges that after Lathfield bought the Property the City represented that site plan approval was required. (Id., PageID.9). Lathfield urges that the City “demanded that an inspection of the Property be

permitted” and that Lathfield, “unaware of Lathrup’s zoning code at the time and fearful of Lathrup’s threats of government action, was compelled against its will to permit an inspection of the property.” (Id.). The complaint suggests that

inspections were conducted on the Property in July of 2020 by the City and defendant Jim Wright,1 following which an inspection report was issued “purporting to claim that [Lathfield] must conduct certain repairs to the Property.” (Id., PageID.9). Plaintiffs assert that the inspection report relied upon 2014, 2015,

and 2017 versions of the building and trade codes, but that “[t]he codes adopted by Lathrup . . . are limited to the 2006 versions of the various . . . codes.” (Id., PageID.9-10). The complaint urges that plaintiffs attempted to appeal the

1 The complaint alleges that Wright is an employee of defendant McKenna and that McKenna is employed by the City as an independent contractor. (Id., PageID.7). conclusions of the inspection but were told that the inspection report was not appealable because no violations had been issued. (Id., PageID.10, n.1).

Lathfield also alleges that based on this “improper [i]nspection,” Jim Wright told Lathfield’s licensees, prospective licensees, contractors, and tradesmen that the Property was being condemned and thus that they should not seek permits to

work on the Property. (Id., PageID.10). The complaint asserts that so far, however, the City “has taken no action to condemn the Property.” (Id.). Lathfield states that in September 2020, the City issued a Site Plan Review to Lathfield indicating that the Property “was likely approved as an office

building” and acknowledging that Lathfield “intends to maintain the mixture of uses operating in the building, and that no additional space is proposed to be added.” (Id.) (internal quotation marks omitted). According to plaintiffs, this Site

Plan Review confirms that there has been no change of use at the Property and, thus, that “there is no mechanism” by which the City can compel Lathfield to comply with the Site Plan Review. (Id., PageID.11). Plaintiffs assert that the City “realized that [it had] no enforcement

mechanism under its zoning code,” so it instead “threaten[ed] [Lathfield] with prosecution for not having obtained a business license.” (Id.). Lathfield contends that under the city’s code it was not required to obtain a business license, but says

that it submitted an application anyways, which was denied. (Id.). The complaint further alleges that the City “threatened to withhold the business license applications of [Lathfield’s] commercial licensees,” in violation of the code, and

that the City also “threatened to punish [Lathfield] by issuing citations to it for not obtaining a business license.” (Id., PageID.11-12). Additionally, Lathfield contends that the City has “threatened to punish

[Lathfield] for refusing to disclose confidential business information of its licensees.” (Id., PageID.12). Although plaintiffs acknowledge that the city has an ordinance that compels commercial landlords to disclose information about tenants, the complaint asserts that Lathfield “does not have tenants at its buildings”

because its licensees are, by law, not tenants. (Id.). Furthermore, Lathfield urges that it has contracts with its licensees that “prohibit[] the disclosure of the names and occupations of the businesses that [Lathfield] contracts with.” (Id.,

PageID.21). Broadly, plaintiffs assert that the defendants engaged in “a concerted effort . . . to coerce and intimidate [Lathfield] to perform upgrades and improvements to the Property that the City cannot otherwise lawfully compel.” (Id., PageID.16).

The complaint also suggests that “the City has previously been sued by at least one prior owner over the very issues raised in this Complaint” but “took steps to conceal that lawsuit’s results and whatever settlement led to its dismissal.” (Id.,

PageID.23). Specifically, plaintiffs allege that Jet Dhaliwal, the manager of the company that sold the Property to Lathfield (Dhal Real Estate, LLC) sat on the DDA for a number of years. (Id., PageID.24). According to the complaint, before

the sale to Lathfield occurred, the City threatened to condemn the Property and Dhal Real Estate sued the City. (Id.). Plaintiffs urge that the City’s lack of enforcement with regard to the Property over several years would make it

inequitable for the City to now enforce zoning requirements that it has not enforced on prior owners.

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Lathfield Investments, LLC v. City of Lathrup Village, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lathfield-investments-llc-v-city-of-lathrup-village-mied-2023.