Nathan J Mazur v. Michigan Commercial Resource Locator Inc

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 17, 2019
Docket343611
StatusUnpublished

This text of Nathan J Mazur v. Michigan Commercial Resource Locator Inc (Nathan J Mazur v. Michigan Commercial Resource Locator 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
Nathan J Mazur v. Michigan Commercial Resource Locator Inc, (Mich. Ct. App. 2019).

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

NATHAN J. MAZUR, FRANK ASKER, UNPUBLISHED KENNETH R. ROBSON, and DAVID YALDO, December 17, 2019

Plaintiffs-Appellants,

v No. 343190 Wayne Circuit Court MICHIGAN COMMERCIAL RESOURCE LC No. 14-016133-CK LOCATOR, INC., HATCHETT DEWALT & HATCHETT, PLLC, JAMES P. O’NEILL, GAGGO, INC., NOURY GAGGO, MIKE GAGGO, SABASTIAN RESTUM, also known as SAM AJAMI, DENNIS J. DICAPO, also known as DENALI J. DICAPO, BARBARA F. WILLIAMS, ROBERT L. BROWN, JESSICA RUSH, ROSE WALTON, DAVID J. CROSS, MARVIN HICKS, ROBERTO CARTA, CARE FINANCIAL SERVICES, INC., and ASSET DISPOSITION SPECIALIST, LLC,

Defendants,

and

MARCELLUS LONG JR., PC, and MARCELLUS LONG, JR.,

Defendants-Appellees.

NATHAN J. MAZUR, FRANK ASKER, and KENNETH R. ROBSON,

Plaintiffs,

-1- DAVID YALDO,

Plaintiff-Appellee,

v No. 343611 Wayne Circuit Court MICHIGAN COMMERCIAL RESOURCE LC No. 14-016133-CK LOCATOR, INC., HATCHETT DEWALT & HATCHETT, PLLC, MARCELLUS LONG JR., PC, MARCELLUS LONG, JR., JAMES P. O’NEILL, GAGGO, INC., NOURY GAGGO, MIKE GAGGO, DENNIS J. DICAPO, also known as DENALI J. DICAPO, BARBARA F. WILLIAMS, ROBERT L. BROWN, JESSICA RUSH, ROSE WALTON, DAVID J. CROSS, MARVIN HICKS, ROBERTO CARTA, CARE FINANCIAL SERVICES, INC., and ASSET DISPOSITION SPECIALISTS, LLC,

SABASTIAN RESTUM, also known as SAM AJAMI,

Defendant-Appellant.

Before: RONAYNE KRAUSE, P.J., and CAVANAGH and SHAPIRO, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

In Docket No. 343190, plaintiffs, Nathan J. Mazur, Frank Asker, Kenneth R. Robson, and David Yaldo, challenges the trial court’s order granting summary disposition in favor of defendants Marcellus Long, Jr., and his law firm, Marcellus Long, Jr., PC (“the Long defendants”). In Docket No. 343611, defendant Sebastian Restum (a/k/a Sam Ajami) appeals a default judgment entered against him and defendant Dennis J. Dicapo (a/k/a Denali J. Dicapo). We affirm the default judgment, but reverse the grant of summary disposition as to the Long defendants.

I. BASIC FACTS

This case arises from an alleged “illegal advance fee scheme,” in which more than 50 people, including plaintiffs, were conned out of money, totaling more than $2,000,000. The purported architects behind the scheme included defendants Restum and Barbara Williams, who allegedly targeted business persons who sought commercial loans. In executing the scheme,

-2- Restum and Williams used defendants Care Financial Services, Inc., and Michigan Commercial Resource Locator, Inc. (“Michigan Commercial”) to execute the fraud. The gist of the scheme is that Michigan Commercial would agree to facilitate the procurement of commercial loans by finding nonconventional lenders. When potential clients agreed to apply for a commercial loan, they were required to pay large, advanced fees before the loan would be funded. These fees typically were paid to Michigan Commercial’s attorney, Marcellus Long, Jr., and his law firm. Long would deposit the fees he received into his client trust account. After the checks cleared, Long would then retain a portion to cover his own fees before forwarding the remainder of the funds to Michigan Commercial. Long testified that at Michigan Commercial’s direction, he disbursed the funds to Williams (personally), who was president of Michigan Commercial. However, no loans ever materialized, and although the facilitation agreements provided that all advanced fees would be returned if the loans did not close, no fees ever were returned.

Plaintiffs filed an 11-count complaint, raising claims of (1) breach of contract, (2) conversion, (3) unjust enrichment, (4) intentional misrepresentation, (5) negligent misrepresentation, (6) silent misrepresentation, (7) innocent misrepresentation, (8) breach of fiduciary duty, (9) conspiracy, (10) violation of the Racketeering Influence and Corrupt Organizations Act (RICO), 18 USC 1961 et seq., and (11) legal malpractice.

The Long defendants moved for summary disposition, arguing that there was no evidence to support any of the 11 counts against them. The trial court agreed, explaining that there is no “question of fact regarding Mr. Long, not on the conversion—alleged conversion count, not on the breach of contract count, not on the breach of fiduciary duty, nothing, because the principle item, if you will, or link that is missing is Mr. Long’s knowledge or anything from which you can infer, Mr. Long’s knowledge of [Restum’s] criminal activities.”

With regard to defendants Restum and Dicapo, a default was entered against them for their failure to appear and defend in the action. After holding an evidentiary hearing regarding the amount of damages,1 the trial court entered default judgments in favor of each plaintiff, against Restum and Dicapo, jointly and severally. The default judgments awarded plaintiffs the following amounts: Mazur–$203,139.79; Asker–$116,677.55; Robson–$146,023.75; and 2 Yaldo–$124,902.76.

II. DOCKET NO. 343190

Plaintiffs argue that the trial court erred in determining that there was no evidence that Long knew of Restum’s criminal activities. We agree with plaintiffs that there is a question of

1 Although ordered to participate at the evidentiary hearing via telephone, Restum did not participate. After several failed attempts to communicate to the imprisoned Restum over the telephone, the trial court concluded that Restum was making himself unavailable and proceeded with the hearing. 2 These amounts included treble damages and attorney fees under MCL 600.2919a and 18 USC 1961, plus judgment interest.

-3- fact on that matter and that the trial court erred in granting the Long defendants summary disposition.3

Viewed in a light most favorable to plaintiffs, there was sufficient evidence presented from which a reasonable person could find that Long knew of his client’s fraudulent scheme. Long drafted the facilitation agreements for Restum. He participated in 20 transactions in which the hopeful borrower signed the agreement and made the deposit. To Long’s knowledge, not one of the loans “closed,” i.e., Long was aware that Restum had not secured a loan for any of the would-be borrowers. Long also served as the “payee” for the facilitation agreements, meaning that the borrowers paid his law firm the deposit money, which he then placed into his client trust account. After the checks cleared, Long would then retain some portion for his own fees before disbursing the remainder of the funds to Williams in her personal capacity. Long believed that Williams was the president of Michigan Commercial, but he could not explain why he was directed to make the cashier checks payable to Williams rather than Michigan Commercial. Similarly, when pressed on why the funds were placed in his client trust account—as opposed to direct payment to Michigan Commercial—Long simply maintained that “the money did not belong to me. It belonged to Michigan Commercial, who was my client.”

Arguably, Long’s testimony in and of itself casts doubt on his claim that he had no knowledge of Restum’s wrongdoings. Given that the deals never closed and that Long immediately transferred the funds minus his fees to Williams in her personal capacity, a reasonable mind could infer that Long knew or had reason to know of the fraudulent scheme. In any event, in response to the Long defendants’ motion for summary disposition, plaintiffs provided affirmative evidence not only of Long’s knowledge but also his participation in the fraudulent scheme.

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