Soho Land Development Inc v. Oakland County Treasurer

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 16, 2024
Docket368567
StatusUnpublished

This text of Soho Land Development Inc v. Oakland County Treasurer (Soho Land Development Inc v. Oakland County Treasurer) 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
Soho Land Development Inc v. Oakland County Treasurer, (Mich. Ct. App. 2024).

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

SOHO LAND DEVELOPMENT, INC, UNPUBLISHED December 16, 2024 Plaintiff-Appellant, 2:01 PM

v No. 368567 Oakland Circuit Court OAKLAND COUNTY TREASURER, LC No. 22-197704-CK

Defendant-Appellee.

Before: RIORDAN, P.J., and BOONSTRA and YATES, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

Plaintiff appeals by right the trial court’s order granting defendant’s motion for summary disposition. We affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand for further proceedings.

I. PERTINENT FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

Plaintiff, a land developer, filed suit against defendant in 2015, alleging that defendant had wrongfully foreclosed on a hotel owned by plaintiff. In 2016, the parties settled that case. Specifically, in August of 2016, the parties signed a Memorandum of Settlement (the Memorandum) which provided, in relevant part:

1. Defendant will endeavor to acquire the following properties and convey them, as is, without warranty, to Plaintiff. Plaintiff understands that each of the properties is a tax foreclosed property that did not sell at the July auction:

* * *

k. 20 Vacant Condominium Units on Lone Oak Circle, Holly.

Before executing the Memorandum, plaintiff’s president contacted defendant seeking additional information about the ownership of the 20 vacant condominium lots in Holly (the vacant lots). Counsel for defendant responded by email to plaintiff’s counsel, stating in relevant part that “we have confirmed that the Treasurer’s office is the current title holder.” The parties executed an Amended Memorandum of Settlement (the Amended Memorandum) in November 2016. The

-1- Amended Memorandum continued to provide, in relevant part, that defendant would “endeavor to acquire” and convey to plaintiff “as is, without warranty,” property that included “20 Vacant Condominium Units on Lone Oak Circle, Holly.” Also, the Amended Memorandum added that defendant would endeavor to acquire and convey to plaintiff additional properties, including a residential property located at 1827 East Pearl in Hazel Park (the Hazel Park Property). The Amended Memorandum provided that plaintiff understood that the properties listed were the subject of tax foreclosure and did not sell at a July or October treasurer’s auction. The Amended Memorandum also provided in relevant part that plaintiff had the right to inspect the properties, that the properties would be conveyed “as soon as practicable but no later than December 16, 2016,” and that “Defendant shall maintain the properties . . . in the manner in which Defendant has maintained the properties since acquiring title until conveyed to Plaintiff.” The Amended Memorandum stated that its terms would be incorporated into a formal release and settlement agreement.

On December 9, 2016, the parties executed a Settlement and Release Agreement (the Settlement Agreement), which provided that defendant “conveys” certain properties, including the “20 Vacant Condominium Units on Lone Oak Circle, Holly” and the Hazel Park Property, “as is, without warranty” to plaintiff. It also recited that “the contingencies in the Amended Memorandum of Settlement have been satisfied.” The Settlement Agreement contains the following provisions relevant to this appeal:

2. Conveyance of Real Properties.

A. Defendant conveys the following properties, as is, without warranty, to Plaintiff pursuant to a treasurer’s deed. Plaintiff understands that each of the properties is a tax-foreclosed property that did not sell at the July 2016 tax foreclosure auction:

vi. 20 Vacant Condominium Lots on Lone Oak Circle, Holly, Parcel ID I 01-01-201-017 through -036

B. Defendant also conveys the following properties, as is, without warranty, to Plaintiff. Plaintiff understands that each of the properties is a tax-foreclosed property that did not sell at either the July or October 2016 tax foreclosure auctions:

v. 1827 E. Pearl, Hazel Park, parcel ID 28-25-36-234-014

C. Treasurer’s Deed; Disclaimer of Warranties, As is Condition. The above properties are conveyed to Plaintiff via the treasurer’s deeds attached as Exhibit A (“Treasurer’s Deeds”). Defendant makes no representations whatsoever, and expressly disclaims any and all warranties, concerning the properties conveyed. Plaintiff accepts the properties in their present condition and releases Defendant from all liability arising from any condition of or on the premises, whether known

-2- or subsequently discovered, including but not limited to all claims based on environmental contamination of the premises. Plaintiff acknowledges that the properties are transferred subject to the rights not extinguished by the circuit court’s foreclosure judgment vesting title in the Oakland County Treasurer pursuant to MCL 211.78k(5), including future installments of special assessments, visible or recorded easements, private deed restrictions, liens or other governmental interests imposed pursuant to the Natural Resources and Environmental Protection Act, Act 451 of the Public Act 1998, as amended, rights under a recorded oil or gas lease, or severed oil or gas interests protected from foreclosure by MCL 554.291(3).

3. Releases and Discharges.

In consideration of the mutual promises set forth in this Agreement . . . . This release is intended to also release any and all claims Plaintiff may have against Defendant arising from the properties transferred in Paragraphs (2)(A) and (2)(B) other than the interest that is conveyed by the Treasurer’s Deeds.

The deeds for the vacant lots and the Hazel Park Property were attached to the Settlement Agreement; each stated that defendant “conveys in fee simple interest” to plaintiff the subject property.

After the Settlement Agreement was approved by the trial court, it dismissed plaintiff’s wrongful foreclosure case.

In 2021, plaintiff contacted the condominium association that oversaw the vacant lots. The association informed plaintiff that the twenty vacant lots did not exist as separate parcels and were not owned by either plaintiff or defendant; rather, by operation of law, they had reverted to common elements owned by the association in 2015.1

Additionally, at some point after the Settlement Agreement was signed and the case dismissed, plaintiff learned that the city of Hazel Park had demolished the house on the Hazel Park Property sometime after the Amended Memorandum was signed but before the Settlement Agreement was signed. Neither party was aware of this demolition when the Settlement Agreement was signed.

1 Prior to 2016, MCL 559.167(3) provided that, under certain conditions, if a developer had not completed development and construction of condominium units within 10 years after the commencement of construction, the undeveloped portions of the project would revert by operation of law to general common elements. The statute was later amended to provide that a condominium association was required to vote on and declare such a reversion, as well as record it with the register of deeds; however, that amendment was held not to operate retroactively. See Cove Creek Condo Ass’n v Vista! Land & Home Dev, LLC, 330 Mich App 679, 688-690; 950 NW2d 2019. In this case, the parties have not challenged the condominium association’s assertion that the vacant lots reverted to common elements in 2015.

-3- Plaintiff filed suit in December 2022, alleging that defendant had breached the Settlement Agreement by (1) failing to convey the vacant lots, and (2) failing to convey the Hazel Park Property in the same or similar condition it was in at the time of the Settlement Agreement.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Soho Land Development Inc v. Oakland County Treasurer, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/soho-land-development-inc-v-oakland-county-treasurer-michctapp-2024.