STATE OF MICHIGAN
COURT OF APPEALS
BANK OF AMERICA, UNPUBLISHED
December 22, 2015
Plaintiff-Appellee,
v No. 324043
Kent Circuit Court
5-3 GREENWAY TRUST and MATTHEW J. LC No. 14-003426
CREHAN, as Trustee of the 5-3 GREENWAY
TRUST,
Defendants-Appellants.
Before: OWENS, P.J., and MURPHY and HOEKSTRA, JJ.
PER CURIAM.
Plaintiff Bank of America (“the bank”), as mortgagee, judicially foreclosed on a
mortgage with respect to a condominium unit (“the property”), purchased the property at a
sheriff’s sale for $129,913, filed a summary-proceedings action in district court after the
redemption period expired absent redemption, and obtained a default possession judgment in the
district court. The Meadows Condominium Association (MCA) recorded, during the above-
referenced redemption period, a notice of lien for $1,822 in unpaid assessments. And, after the
bank had been awarded its default possession judgment, a sheriff’s sale was conducted on the
condominium lien, resulting in a purchase of the property for $5,225 by defendant 5-3 Greenway
Trust (“the trust”) through defendant Matthew J. Crehan, as trustee of the trust,1 and triggering
the commencement of a new redemption period. The trust made efforts to shorten the
redemption period on the basis of alleged abandonment of and damage to the property, while the
bank attempted to exercise the right of redemption by inquiring about the redemption amount
and tendering a payment to the register of deeds. The trust ignored the bank’s inquiries and
rejected the tendered payment on the basis that they were untimely in light of the expiration of
the purportedly-shortened redemption period. The trust had also initiated its own summary-
proceedings action in district court, obtaining a default possession judgment against the bank,
1
For purposes of this opinion and ease of reference, and given that Crehan was sued in his
capacity as trustee of the trust, we shall refer to defendants collectively as “the trust,” unless
otherwise indicated.
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which was not directly challenged by the bank. This quiet-title action ensued in the circuit court
to settle the competing claims and interests. The trust appeals as of right the circuit court’s order
granting summary disposition and quieting title in favor of the bank. This appeal ultimately
comes down to whether the circuit court collaterally attacked the district court’s possession
judgment entered in favor of the trust and, if so, whether the circuit court had the authority to
engage in the collateral attack. We hold that the circuit court’s ruling was a collateral attack on
the possession judgment and that the collateral attack was impermissible, given that there was
not a want of personal or subject-matter jurisdiction relative to the district court action.
Accordingly, we reverse the circuit court’s ruling and remand for entry of judgment quieting title
in favor of the trust.
We initially note that the bank does not dispute that it failed to pay required MCA
assessments after obtaining legal title to the property, that MCA held a valid lien on the property
due to the unpaid assessments, that MCA’s recorded notice of lien was valid, that MCA’s notice
of foreclosure sale was legally sound, that the subsequent sheriff’s sale wherein the trust
purchased the property was conducted in accordance with the law, and that the trust obtained
equitable title to the property under the sheriff’s deed. The record also fully supports these
propositions. After the redemption period commenced relative to MCA’s sheriff’s sale, but
before the general six-month redemption period expired, MCL 559.208(2), the trust filed its
complaint in the district court to recover possession of the property through summary
proceedings, MCL 600.5701 et seq. The trust filed the complaint on the basis that the property
had been abandoned, thereby shortening the redemption period to one month, see MCL
559.208(2), and that the shortened redemption period had expired absent redemption by the
bank, entitling the trust to possession.2 The trust also cited MCL 600.3240(13)(b) in its district
court complaint, as based upon the property having a boarded-up window.3 For the time period
at issue, the relied-upon and short-lived language in subsection (13) of the statute was fully
applicable, and it provided, in relevant part, as follows:
After the sale under section 3220 and periodically throughout the
redemption period, the purchaser at the sale may inspect the exterior and interior
of the property and all ancillary structures. If inspection is unreasonably refused
or if damage to the property is imminent or has occurred, the purchaser may
immediately commence summary proceedings for possession of the property
under chapter 57 . . . . A court shall not enter a judgment for possession in an
2
Given the trust’s position that the redemption period had expired without redemption by the
bank, the trust ignored letters from the bank’s counsel requesting a redemption computation.
3
With respect to the relied-upon language in subsection (13) of MCL 600.3240, it was inserted
into the statute pursuant to 2013 PA 104, and made effective January 10, 2014, which was during
the redemption period following MCA’s December 18, 2013 sheriff’s sale, even if shortened to
one month, and before the trust commenced its district court action. Under 2014 PA 125,
effective June 19, 2014, which was after the circuit court litigation eventually began, the relied-
upon language in MCL 600.3240(13) was deleted by the Legislature.
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action under chapter 57 if, before the hearing for possession, the mortgagor
repairs any damage to the property that was the basis for the action. If a judgment
for possession is entered in favor of the purchaser, the right of redemption is
extinguished and full title to the property vests in the purchaser. As used in this
subsection, “damage” includes, but is not limited to, any of the following:
...
(b) A boarded up or closed off window or entrance. [Emphasis added.]
A default possession judgment was later entered by the district court against the bank and
in favor of the trust, providing the trust with the right of possession. Significantly, the bank
never filed a motion in the district court to set aside the default judgment of possession, never
moved for relief from the possession judgment, and never filed a circuit court appeal of the
judgment. The trust subsequently refused to accept a redemption payment submitted by the bank
to the county register of deeds. The bank then filed the instant circuit court quiet-title complaint,
and the court eventually granted summary disposition and quieted title in favor of the bank.
With respect to the circuit court’s findings and conclusions that provided the substantive
basis for its ruling, the court determined that the redemption period had not expired by the date
that the district court action was commenced, given that an underlying affidavit of abandonment
recorded by the trust was a nullity, and that MCL 600.5714(1) thus did not provide a ground for
purposes of summary proceedings that would have supported an entitlement to possession by the
trust.4 The circuit court determined that the affidavit of abandonment was a nullity on the basis
that the trust was a foreclosure-sale purchaser and not a “mortgagee,” as required by MCL
600.3241a in relation to employing abandonment procedures and obtaining an abandonment
designation. The trust had referenced MCL 600.3241a in the affidavit of abandonment, but later
argued that MCL 559.208(2) of the Condominium Act allowed purchasers to pursue an
abandonment, which argument was rejected by the circuit court, and which issue we need not
resolve. The circuit court’s determinations that there was no legally-sound abandonment of the
property, that the six-month redemption period was thus controlling, and that the district court
action was therefore invalid because the trust had no basis to proceed under MCL 600.5714(1),
clearly and indisputably constituted a collateral attack on the district court possession judgment.
With respect to former MCL 600.3240(13)(b), the only direct finding made by the circuit court
was that the claim of a damaged or boarded-up window was not adequately identified and
4
MCL 600.5714(1) lists numerous circumstances in which a person entitled to possession may
recover possession by summary proceedings, and MCL 600.5714(1)(g) is the only provision that
could have conceivably applied in this case, allowing for a possession judgment “[w]hen a
person continues in possession of premises sold by virtue of a mortgage or execution, after the
time limited by law for redemption of the premises.” We note that MCL 600.5714(1) does not
contain a provision or language that would fit the circumstances outlined in former MCL
600.3240(13), but subsection (13) clearly authorized an action for summary proceedings.
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established in the district court case, which also constituted a collateral attack on the validity of
the possession judgment.5 The trust appeals the circuit court’s disposition of the case.
This Court reviews de novo a trial court’s decision on a motion for summary disposition,
Loweke v Ann Arbor Ceiling & Partition Co, LLC, 489 Mich 157, 162; 809 NW2d 553 (2011),
issues of statutory construction, Estes v Titus, 481 Mich 573, 578-579; 751 NW2d 493 (2008), a
trial court’s ruling on equitable matters, including a quiet-title determination, Richards v Tibaldi,
272 Mich App 522, 528; 726 NW2d 770 (2006), and jurisdictional questions, Kar v Nanda, 291
Mich App 284, 286; 805 NW2d 609 (2011).
The trust strenuously maintains that the circuit court’s ruling constituted an improper
collateral attack on the district court’s judgment. We agree. A collateral attack is “[a]n attack on
a judgment entered in a different proceeding.” Black’s Law Dictionary (7th ed). Collateral
attacks threaten the finality of judgments and the preservation of scarce judicial resources.
People v Carpentier, 446 Mich 19, 37; 521 NW2d 195 (1994). In Clohset v No Name Corp (On
Remand), 302 Mich App 550, 563-564; 840 NW2d 375 (2013), this Court addressed and rejected
an attempt to collaterally attack a district court consent judgment, observing as follows:
Even assuming arguendo that th[e] monetary component of the stipulated
consent judgment exceeded the district court's authority, defendants still could not
properly collaterally attack the entry of that judgment. As the Michigan Supreme
Court explained in Bowie v Arder, 441 Mich 23, 49; 490 NW2d 568 (1992),
quoting Jackson City Bank & Trust Co v Fredrick, 271 Mich 538, 545; 260 NW
908 (1935) (citation omitted):
“Want of jurisdiction must be distinguished from error in the exercise of
jurisdiction. Where jurisdiction has once attached, mere errors or irregularities in
the proceedings, however grave, although they may render the judgment
erroneous and subject to be set aside in a proper proceeding for that purpose, will
not render the judgment void, and until set aside it is valid and binding for all
purposes and cannot be collaterally attacked.”
In other words, “lack of subject matter jurisdiction can be collaterally
attacked[, whereas] the exercise of that jurisdiction can be challenged only on
direct appeal.” [Citation omitted; alteration in original.]
5
This conclusion by the circuit court was encased in a footnote that the court effectively
described as being dicta, so it really is not clear why the circuit court rejected the trust’s
arguments under MCL 600.3240(13)(b). However, it must be implied that the circuit court
indeed refused to honor or accept the possession judgment relative to former MCL
600.3240(13)(b), because if the possession judgment was valid and encompassed that statutory
provision, the statute quite clearly required a conclusion that title vested in the trust.
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In Jackson City Bank, 271 Mich at 544, our Supreme Court explained that “[w]hen there
is a want of jurisdiction over the parties, or the subject-matter, no matter what formalities may
have been taken by the trial court, the action thereof is void because of its want of jurisdiction,
and consequently its proceedings may be questioned collaterally as well as directly.” (Emphasis
added.) A collateral attack is allowable only if the assailed court never acquired personal or
subject-matter jurisdiction. Workers’ Compensation Agency Dir v MacDonald’s Indus Prod, Inc
(On Reconsideration), 305 Mich App 460, 477; 853 NW2d 467 (2014). Here, the circuit court
collaterally attacked the district court judgment, but did not expressly discuss personal and
subject-matter jurisdiction.
Subject-matter jurisdiction is established by the pleadings and exists when a proceeding
is of a class of cases that the court is authorized to adjudicate and the complaint is not clearly
frivolous. Clohset, 302 Mich App at 561. “The district court . . . ha[s] jurisdiction over
summary proceedings to recover possession of premises under . . . chapter [57].” MCL
600.5704. Further, MCL 600.8302 provides, in relevant part:
(1) In addition to the civil jurisdiction provided in sections 5704 . . ., the
district court has equitable jurisdiction and authority concurrent with that of the
circuit court in the matters and to the extent provided by this section.
...
(3) In an action under chapter 57, the district court may hear and
determine an equitable claim . . . involving a right, interest, obligation, or title in
land. [6.]
The trust’s district court action was a suit seeking a judgment of possession in regard to
the property, as based on the trust’s interest and equitable title acquired by deed at the sheriff’s
sale,7 the expiration of a shortened redemption period due to abandonment and absent
redemption, and damage to the property, MCL 600.3240(13)(b). The district court proceeding,
as reflected in the pleadings, fell within the class of cases that the district court was authorized to
adjudicate and the complaint was not clearly frivolous. Although the circuit court did not
expressly mention the term jurisdiction, it did conclude that the trust’s case failed to satisfy any
of the grounds listed in MCL 600.5714(1). Again, MCL 600.5714(1) identifies numerous
6
With respect to summary proceedings in the district court to recover possession of property,
MCL 600.5732 provides the court with the authority to enter default judgments. “If the jury or
the judge finds that the plaintiff is entitled to possession of the premises, or any part thereof,
judgment may be entered in accordance with the finding and may be enforced by a writ of
restitution . . . .” MCL 600.5741. “The remedy provided by summary proceedings is in addition
to, and not exclusive of, other remedies, either legal, equitable or statutory.” MCL 600.5750.
7
See Fed Nat’l Mtg Ass’n v Lagoons Forest Condo Ass’n, 305 Mich App 258, 268-269; 852
NW2d 217 (2014).
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circumstances in which a person entitled to possession may recover possession by summary
proceedings.8 We do not view MCL 600.5714(1) as a provision concerning subject-matter
jurisdiction; rather, it goes to the issue of what must be established by the proofs in order to
entitle a party to a judgment of possession. Assuming for the sake of argument that MCL
600.5714(1) constitutes a provision touching on subject-matter jurisdiction, a review of the
trust’s district court complaint, i.e., the pleadings, reveals a claim that fits within MCL
600.5714(1)(g), which authorizes entry of a possession judgment “[w]hen a person continues in
possession of premises . . . after the time limited by law for redemption of the premises.”9 We
hold that the district court had subject-matter jurisdiction, and any defects in regard to whether
the property could legally be deemed abandoned and whether the redemption period was
shortened and expired absent redemption merely went to the exercise of the court’s subject-
matter jurisdiction, which was immune from collateral attack even if exercised in grave error.
Also, in the context of the trust’s district court claim under former MCL 600.3240(13), although
not fitting within any of the circumstances enumerated in MCL 600.5714(1), MCL 600.3240(13)
itself effectively gave a district court jurisdiction to entertain an immediate summary-
proceedings action when there was an allegation that property incurred damage as found in an
inspection undertaken during the redemption period. And the question whether the trust was
entitled to judgment on the basis of satisfying the damage criteria in MCL 600.3240(13) went not
to the issue of whether the district court had subject-matter jurisdiction, but simply to whether
the court had properly exercised its jurisdiction, which was immune from collateral attack even if
exercised in grave error. In sum, the district court’s judgment was not subject to collateral attack
on the basis that it lacked subject-matter jurisdiction.
With respect to whether the district court had personal jurisdiction over the bank, we first
note that the district court’s jurisdiction to determine the possessory interests in the property
generally implicated its in-rem jurisdiction, which the court clearly held, regardless of whether
the court had jurisdiction over the bank. See MCL 600.751 (“The courts of record of this state
shall have jurisdiction over land situated within the state whether or not the persons owning or
claiming interests therein are subject to the jurisdiction of the courts of this state.”). Moreover, it
is abundantly clear that the district court had general personal jurisdiction over the bank, a
corporate entity, given that the bank plainly carried on a continuous and systematic part of its
business within Michigan. MCL 600.711(3); Electrolines, Inc v Prudential Assurance Co, Ltd,
260 Mich App 144, 166-167; 677 NW2d 874 (2003). We note that there was some evidence
presented indicating that the district court summons and complaint was not served on the bank in
8
To quote exactly the introductory sentence in MCL 600.5714(1), “A person entitled to
possession of premises may recover possession by summary proceedings in the following
circumstances[.]”
9
We cannot conclude that the collateral-attack analysis, in determining whether there was
subject-matter jurisdiction, entails an attacking court reexamining anew whether the redemption
period had actually expired and then, on finding that the redemption period had not expired,
ruling that the attacked court lacked subject-matter jurisdiction.
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compliance with MCR 4.201(D) (service of process in summary-proceedings actions).10 In
Alycekay Co v Hasko Constr Co, Inc, 180 Mich App 502, 505-506; 448 NW2d 43 (1989), this
Court observed that “[w]here service of process is defective, the trial court may be deprived of
personal jurisdiction over the defendant and left without legal authority to render a judgment.”
(Emphasis added); see also Dogan v Mich Basic Prop Ins Ass’n, 130 Mich App 313, 320; 343
NW2d 532 (1983). We first note that this language is not definitive, and we question the
soundness of any proposition suggesting that defective service automatically equates to lack of
personal jurisdiction. Indeed, MCR 2.116(C) distinguishes between dismissal based on lack of
personal jurisdiction, (C)(1), and dismissal based on insufficient service of process, (C)(3). In
the context of our collateral-attack analysis under Clohset, we hold that the district court
generally had personal jurisdiction over the bank to determine its interest in the property given
the bank’s contacts with Michigan, thereby precluding the circuit court’s collateral attack, even
though the exercise of that personal jurisdiction may have been defective because of improper
service of process. At oral argument in this Court, the bank’s counsel agreed that insufficient
service of the district court summons and complaint would reflect an improper exercise of
personal jurisdiction, not a want of personal jurisdiction. In sum, the district court’s judgment
was not subject to collateral attack on the basis that it lacked personal jurisdiction over the bank.
The next question to address concerns the extent of the impact of the possession
judgment on the quiet-title ruling. A default judgment is treated the same as a litigated judgment
and is considered a decision on the merits. Richards, 272 Mich App at 531. “It is an established
principle of Michigan law that a default settles the question of liability as to well-pleaded
allegations and precludes the defaulting party from litigating that issue.” Wood v DAIIE, 413
Mich 573, 578; 321 NW2d 653 (1982). The trust claimed, in part, a right to possession under
former MCL 600.3240(13)(b) (“[a] boarded up or closed off window”). It is irrelevant whether
the window was actually boarded up or damaged and whether former MCL 600.3240(13) was
otherwise satisfied, as the unchallenged default judgment established the claim under MCL
600.3240(13)(b).11 The trust also claimed in its district court complaint that the bank was
“wrongfully holding over following redemption period of foreclosure sale,” which was based on
abandonment and a shortened redemption period. It is irrelevant whether the trust, not being a
mortgagee, could seek a determination of abandonment, whether the redemption period was
10
In light of our resolution of this appeal, it is unnecessary for us to determine whether service
was legally sound.
11
The bank argues that MCA boarded-up the window, not the bank, that the bank had no notice
of the damage allegation and lost the chance to repair, and that former MCL 600.3240(13) only
allowed relief against a “mortgagor,” which did not encompass the bank. However, by failing to
directly challenge the default possession judgment, and given the impermissibility of a collateral
attack on that judgment, the bank is forced to accept the judgment and the establishment of the
trust’s claim under MCL 600.3240(13)(b).
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shortened, and whether it expired absent redemption, as the unchallenged default judgment
established the claim that the bank wrongfully held over following the redemption period.12
The bank devotes a great deal of time to the argument that only a circuit court has
jurisdiction to determine title to property in quiet-title actions, MCL 600.2932(1),13 and that a
district court only has jurisdiction to determine the right to possession. And therefore, anything
determined in the district court or encompassed by the district court possession judgment has no
bearing whatsoever on the circuit court’s determination of title, which must be independently
assessed by the circuit court. This argument lacks merit. First, it fails to appreciate that some
possession judgments are necessarily predicated on an underlying title determination, as is the
case here; the right of possession by the trust was dependent on its equitable title becoming
absolute or legal title on the basis of expiration of the redemption period absent redemption.
Second, the bank’s argument ignores MCL 600.8302(3), which, again, provides that “[i]n an
action under chapter 57, the district court may hear and determine an equitable claim . . .
involving a right, interest, obligation, or title in land.” (Emphasis added.) Finally, the fact that a
circuit court has jurisdiction over quiet-title actions to determine interests in land does not mean
that previously-entered, unchallenged, and valid possession judgments are irrelevant and have no
bearing on the proper determination of title by the circuit court. This is made exceptionally clear
in the context of former MCL 600.3240(13), which specifically provided that title vests with
entry of a possession judgment. The circuit court was not entitled to disregard this statutory
mandate when resolving the quiet-title dispute, considering that there was no jurisdictional
problem that would have allowed a collateral attack. Aside from former MCL 600.3240(13),
given the unchallenged default possession judgment, it became established that the bank had
wrongfully held over following the redemption period. And the circuit court was required,
12
We also note that “[c]ollateral estoppel applies to default judgments; however, the default
judgment is conclusive only as to those matters essential to support the judgment.” Rohe
Scientific Corp v Nat’l Bank of Detroit, 133 Mich App 462, 467; 350 NW2d 280 (1984); see also
DAIIE v Higginbotham, 95 Mich App 213, 219; 290 NW2d 414 (1980). Expiration of the
redemption period and a failure to redeem were essential to one of the trust’s claims, and damage
to the property, i.e., a boarded-up window, and a failure to repair were essential to the claim
under former MCL 600.3240(13).
13
MCL 600.2932(1) provides:
Any person, whether he is in possession of the land in question or not,
who claims any right in, title to, equitable title to, interest in, or right to
possession of land, may bring an action in the circuit courts against any other
person who claims or might claim any interest inconsistent with the interest
claimed by the plaintiff, whether the defendant is in possession of the land or not.
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considering the inability to mount a collateral attack, to accept that premise in rendering its quiet-
title ruling. Of course, accepting that premise dictated a ruling quieting title in favor of the trust.
Reversed and remanded for entry of an order granting summary disposition and quieting
title in favor of the trust. We do not retain jurisdiction. Having fully prevailed on appeal, the
trust is awarded taxable costs under MCR 7.219.
/s/ Donald S. Owens
/s/ William B. Murphy
/s/ Joel P. Hoekstra
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