Smith v. Cliffs on the Bay Condominium Ass'n

617 N.W.2d 536, 463 Mich. 420
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 10, 2000
DocketDocket 111587
StatusPublished
Cited by47 cases

This text of 617 N.W.2d 536 (Smith v. Cliffs on the Bay Condominium Ass'n) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smith v. Cliffs on the Bay Condominium Ass'n, 617 N.W.2d 536, 463 Mich. 420 (Mich. 2000).

Opinions

Per Curiam.

This case involves a constitutional challenge to the procedures by which the plaintiffs obtained a tax-sale title to property formerly owned by the defendant association. Each party asked the circuit court to quiet title. The court granted summary disposition for the plaintiffs. However, the Court of Appeals reversed, ruling that the association was not given constitutionally adequate notice of the tax sale and related redemption periods.

The case returns to this Court after a remand for additional findings. We conclude that mailing of tax delinquency and redemption notices to a corporation at its tax address of record in the manner required by the General Property Tax Act, MCL 211.1 et seq.; MSA [422]*4227.1 et seq., is sufficient to provide constitutionally adequate notice. We therefore reverse the judgment of the Court of Appeals and reinstate the circuit court’s judgment in favor of the plaintiffs.

i

During the 1960s a developer named C. James Davis constructed an apartment complex in Washte-naw County’s Ypsilanti Township. None of the apartment buildings were constructed on the adjacent parcel that is the subject of this case. The record does not reveal whether the disputed parcel was included within the original description of the land on which the apartment complex was built. Davis later transferred ownership to a partnership called “Bay Properties.” There were two partners, Keith A. Metcalf and John McKee. In 1972, Bay Properties converted the existing apartments to condominium ownership.

On May 26, 1972, Davis, Metcalf, and McKee created the defendant nonprofit corporation to be the managing entity for the condominiums. The original articles of incorporation show Metcalf as the association’s resident agent and his mailing address as 770 South Adams, Suite 110, Birmingham, Michigan, 48011. Other contemporaneous documents show that same address for Bay Properties.

On June 7, 1972, Bay Properties conveyed the land beneath the condominium improvements to the association. The disputed parcel was not included in the deed’s land description.

On October 10, 1973, by a separate quitclaim deed, Bay Properties conveyed the disputed parcel to the [423]*423association, stating its address as 770 South Adams, Suite 202, Birmingham, Michigan, 48011.

The record contains no further information about what became of Bay Properties, Davis, Metcalf, or McKee. Nor does it show whether anyone affiliated with the association continued to occupy the Birmingham address after 1973.

The disputed parcel is “green space” adjacent to the condominium complex. The association says that it and the owners of the individual condominium units have always assumed that the disputed parcel was included within the description and tax bills for the entire complex. The circuit court’s order on remand, based on a stipulation by the parties, found that for unknown reasons the township did not place the disputed parcel on its tax rolls until 1976. Before then, on October 3, 1975, the association had filed with the Corporation and Securities Bureau a notice that both its resident agent and mailing address had changed. It identified the Ann Arbor Trust Company as the new resident agent, stating the new address as P.O. Box 12, Ann Arbor, Michigan, 48107.1 Nothing required the association to send a copy of this notice to the township, and the association apparently did not do so.

Even after the proceedings on remand, the parties and the circuit court have been unable to establish the details of many of the events relevant to the sending of notices and proceedings regarding the delinquent taxes, tax sale, redemption periods, and trans[424]*424fer of title. Much of this results from the lapse of time and the inadequacy of the available records.

While the inadequacy of the record leaves uncertainties, they are not critical for the disposition of this case. So far as can be determined, all notices relating to taxes on and the tax sale of the disputed parcel were sent to the Birmingham address. The association does not contend that the township, county, or state failed to give any of the required notices in the maimer specified in the statutes. Rather, the association’s claim is that the sending of notices to its former address in Birmingham was inadequate. The only information in the record indicating that the township, county, or state had reason to believe that the Birmingham address was not correct is in the state’s affidavit regarding the notice of hearing under MCL 211.131e; MSA 7.190(3), which says that the notice was returned by the post office as “Not Deliverable As Addressed.”

The township first issued a tax bill for the parcel in 1976, mailing it to the association at its by-then obsolete Birmingham address. The township has no record showing either that the taxes were paid or were not paid. The township’s records show that in 1977, the tax bill was sent to the Birmingham address, and that the taxes were not paid.

After a tax bill has gone unpaid for three years, the property may be sold to satisfy the delinquent tax bill plus interest and penalties. MCL 211.60; MSA 7.104. Here, the tax sale was in 1980 to satisfy the delinquent 1977 tax bill.2 No private party purchased the [425]*425property, and it was bid in to the state as provided in MCL 211.67; MSA 7.112.

In the fall of 1987, after the expiration of the applicable redemption periods, the state issued a deed to the plaintiffs under MCL 211.131; MSA 7.188. The deed was recorded on November 13, 1987. Tax bills for 1987 and all subsequent years have been sent to the plaintiffs and paid by them.

In late 1990 or early 1991, the association learned that the plaintiffs claimed to own the disputed parcel and on February 27, 1991, recorded an affidavit that served to cloud the plaintiffs’ title. After efforts to settle the dispute failed, plaintiffs filed this action on March 5, 1996, asking the circuit court to quiet their title. The association filed a counterclaim seeking the same relief. The circuit court granted summary disposition for the plaintiffs.

n

Following the circuit court’s decision, the association appealed, and the Court of Appeals reversed. 226 Mich App 245; 573 NW2d 296 (1997). For its due process analysis, the Court of Appeals relied heavily on our decision in Dow v Michigan, 396 Mich 192; 240 NW2d 450 (1976). It focused on the language of Dow that the state must employ “such means ‘as one desirous of actually informing [the property owner] might reasonably adopt’ to notify [the owner] of the pen-dency of the proceedings.” 396 Mich 210.

In the present case, the Court of Appeals faulted the state for failing to make any additional effort to ascertain the association’s current address when the notice of hearing under MCL 211.131e; MSA 7.190(3) [426]*426sent by certified mail was returned as undeliverable. The Court of Appeals said:

In the present case, defendant did not receive notice sufficient to satisfy due process concerns. Plaintiffs do not contend that defendant received actual notice, but assert that the attempts to notify defendant of the pending proceedings were sufficient. However, it would be reasonable to expect a county, upon the return of a tax bill as undeliverable, to take some meaningful effort to obtain the correct address of the property owner.

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Bluebook (online)
617 N.W.2d 536, 463 Mich. 420, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-cliffs-on-the-bay-condominium-assn-mich-2000.