Oswalt v. Meoli

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedApril 20, 2006
Docket05-1075
StatusPublished

This text of Oswalt v. Meoli (Oswalt v. Meoli) 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
Oswalt v. Meoli, (6th Cir. 2006).

Opinion

RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION Pursuant to Sixth Circuit Rule 206 File Name: 06a0141p.06

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT _________________

X Debtors. - In re: DANIEL and MICHELLE OSWALT,

__________________________________________ - - - No. 05-1075

, MARCIA R. MEOLI, Chapter 7 Bankruptcy Trustee, > Plaintiff-Appellant, - - - - v.

- Defendant-Appellee. - CITICORP TRUST BANK, - N

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Western District of Michigan at Grand Rapids. No. 04-00317—Robert Holmes Bell, Chief District Judge. Argued: December 2, 2005 Decided and Filed: April 20, 2006 Before: KENNEDY and GIBBONS, Circuit Judges; DONALD, District Judge.* _________________ COUNSEL ARGUED: Marcia R. Meoli, HANN PERSINGER, Holland, Michigan, for Appellant. Sarah E. Heineman, DYKEMA GOSSETT, Grand Rapids, Michigan, for Appellee. ON BRIEF: Marcia R. Meoli, HANN PERSINGER, Holland, Michigan, for Appellant. Sarah E. Heineman, John C. Arndts, DYKEMA GOSSETT, Grand Rapids, Michigan, for Appellee. _________________ OPINION _________________ JULIA SMITH GIBBONS, Circuit Judge. A Chapter 7 bankruptcy trustee sought to avoid a security interest in the debtors’ affixed mobile home by challenging the security interest as unperfected under Michigan law. The creditor moved for summary judgment in the adversary proceeding, relying on an amendment to the Michigan Mobile Home Commission Act (“MHCA”).

* The Honorable Bernice Bouie Donald, United States District Judge for the Western District of Tennessee, sitting by designation.

1 No. 05-1075 In re Oswalt, et al. Page 2

The bankruptcy court denied summary judgment, and the creditor appealed. On appeal, the United States District Court for the Western District of Michigan reversed the bankruptcy court and granted summary judgment to the creditor. The trustee appealed the summary judgment. We affirm the grant of summary judgment to the creditor because the security interest in the debtors’ affixed mobile home was perfected properly under an amendment to the MHCA. The amendment, despite its enactment after the rights in the bankruptcy estate accrued, clarified the procedure for perfecting security interests in affixed mobile homes. Because the amendment clarified existing law and was not a new law, it relates back to and controls the attachment of the security interest in the debtors’ mobile home. I. Citicorp granted Daniel and Michelle Oswalt a mortgage on their real property and affixed mobile home in Constantine, Michigan on December 3, 2001. At that time, the MHCA provided a method for perfecting security interests in mobile homes by noting liens on titles. Mich. Comp. Laws §§ 125.2301-125.2350 (1987), amended by Mich. Comp. Laws § 125.2330i (2004). Many creditors, however, perfected security interests in mobile homes by recording traditional mortgage liens, especially when the security interests extended to the real property to which the mobile homes were affixed. To perfect its security interest in the Oswalts’ mobile home and land, Citicorp recorded a traditional mortgage lien with the St. Joseph County Register of Deeds on December 19, 2001. After Citicorp recorded a mortgage lien on the Oswalts’ mobile home, the Sixth Circuit issued its opinion in Boyd v. Chase Manhattan Mortgage Corp. (In re Kroskie), 315 F.3d 644 (6th Cir. 2003). Kroskie was a bankruptcy adversary proceeding in which a Chapter 7 trustee avoided a security interest in a mobile home by challenging the security interest as unperfected under Michigan law. Id. The Kroskie creditor, like Citicorp, had recorded a traditional mortgage lien instead of availing itself of the MHCA perfection procedure. Id. at 646. Finding that the MHCA provided the exclusive means of perfecting mobile home security interests under Michigan law, the Sixth Circuit held that the Kroskie security interest was avoidable. Id. at 646-49. Under Kroskie, security interests recorded as traditional mortgage liens were unperfected and were therefore subordinated in bankruptcy cases to other claims against the estate. The Kroskie decision created chaos in the Michigan mobile home financing market. Potential lenders could not detect existing security interests in affixed mobile homes by title searches because the security interests were no longer recorded as traditional mortgages. First Analysis of S.B. 425, 92nd Leg. Reg. Session (Mich. 2003). In fact, traditional mortgage loans, with their relatively lower interest rates, became unavailable to mobile home owners for purchase money or refinancing. Id. Lenders treated all mobile home financing as personal property loans, subject to higher interest rates, because of the method for perfecting the security interests. Id. Because Kroskie disrupted the mobile home financing market, the Michigan legislature acted to undo the effect of the Sixth Circuit decision. See id. (arguing that the July 2003 amendment would either “render[] the Kroskie decision moot” or “reinstate the titling and financing practices that existed before the Kroskie decision”). The legislature amended the MHCA on July 14, 2003, to specify that creditors could perfect security interests in mobile homes by recording traditional mortgage liens. Mich. Comp. Laws § 125.2330i (2003) (amending Mich. Comp. Laws §§ 125.2301- 125.2350 (1987)). The Michigan legislature also included a statement of intent in the Enacting Section of the amendment: It is the intent of this legislature that a security interest or lien on a mobile home affixed to real property may be perfected in the manner provided under law for No. 05-1075 In re Oswalt, et al. Page 3

perfecting a lien on real property, and not exclusively by a notation of the security interest or lien on the certificate of title. Enacting Section 1, Pub. Act No. 44, S.B. 425 (2003). Before the Michigan legislature amended the MHCA and after the Kroskie decision, the Oswalts filed a Chapter 7 bankruptcy proceeding on April 11, 2003. The bankruptcy trustee filed an adversary proceeding on September 11, 2003, to avoid Citicorp’s security interest in the Oswalts’ mobile home. Because the security interest was recorded as a traditional mortgage and not as a notation on the Oswalts’ title, the trustee argued that Citicorp’s security interest was unperfected under Kroskie. Citicorp moved for summary judgment, arguing that its security interest was perfected under the amendment to the MHCA. The bankruptcy court denied the motion for summary judgment, and Citicorp appealed to the United States District Court for the Western District of Michigan. The district court reversed the bankruptcy court and granted summary judgment to Citicorp, holding that the security interest in the Oswalts’ mobile home was perfected by the MHCA amendment because that amendment was not a new law but a clarification of the law as it existed when Citicorp recorded its mortgage. The trustee appealed to this court, maintaining that the security interest was unperfected because the amendment to the MHCA was a new law without retroactive application. During the pendency of this appeal, the Michigan legislature again amended the MHCA. Mich. Comp. Laws § 125.3330i(6) (2004) (amending Mich. Comp. Laws § 125.2330i (2003)). The legislature added language to the prior amendment, indicating that it applies retroactively and that traditional mortgages recorded before the Kroskie decision are perfected security interests. Id. The added language deals directly with the situation where the creditor recorded a traditional mortgage lien but not a security interest: The lien or security interest on a mobile home . . .

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