STATE OF MICHIGAN
COURT OF APPEALS
FANNETTA WATSON, UNPUBLISHED
March 16, 2017
Plaintiff-Appellant,
v No. 330746
Oakland Circuit Court
COMERICA BANK, LC No. 2015-145058-CH
Defendant-Appellee.
Before: MARKEY, P.J., and WILDER and SWARTZLE, JJ.
PER CURIAM.
Plaintiff, Fanetta Watson, appeals as of right from the trial court’s orders setting aside the
default against defendant, Comerica Bank, denying plaintiff’s motion for default judgment, and
granting summary disposition to defendant pursuant to MCR 2.116(C)(8). We affirm.
On July 10, 2003, Jack Simmons signed a note for a $45,000 home equity line of credit
from defendant, secured by a mortgage on a residential property located in Southfield. This
mortgage, duly recorded by defendant, contained a power of sale provision allowing defendant to
foreclose without judicial proceedings. Simmons died in 2009 and plaintiff appears to have
become the personal representative of his estate. Plaintiff subsequently conveyed the property to
herself by quit claim deed as personal representative of Simmons’s estate and properly recorded
that deed on October 17, 2013. Although the mortgage survived this transfer, there is no
evidence in the record that plaintiff assumed the note secured by this mortgage.
Simmons’s estate eventually defaulted on the note. Defendant, through its collections
agent, notified plaintiff, as the representative of Simmons’s estate, of the default, defendant’s
acceleration of the note, and its intent to foreclose if payment was not made. Simmons’s estate
never paid this debt and defendant foreclosed on the property by sheriff’s sale.
On December 30, 2014, Deputy Sheriff John Roehrig sold the property to defendant at
public auction and provided defendant with a sheriff’s deed acknowledging defendant’s
equitable interest in the property. On January 6, 2015, defendant recorded the sheriff’s deed.
Defendant attached to this recording a December 22, 2014, “non-military affidavit” of “Tracy
Simpson,” an employee of the firm representing defendant in these proceedings. Simpson
attested that she “conducted a search of the Department of Defense Manpower Data Center” for
Simmons and that this search indicated that Simmons was not an active military service member.
Plaintiff also attached to the sheriff’s deed a December 30, 2014, “affidavit of auctioneer” signed
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by Deputy Sheriff Roehrig. Through his signature on this affidavit and the sheriff’s deed,
Roehrig attested that
by virtue of the power of sale, and pursuant to the statutes of the State of
Michigan in such case made and provide, a notice was duly published and a copy
thereof was duly posted in a conspicuous place upon the premises described in the
mortgage that the premises, or some part of them, would be sold on the 30th Day
of December 2014, at the place of holding the trial court within Oakland County,
wherein, the premises are located.
Roehrig also certified that the redemption period would expire, and that the sheriff’s deed would
become operative, on June 30, 2015. It is undisputed that neither plaintiff, nor anyone else, ever
redeemed the property.
On January 20, 2015, plaintiff filed a complaint with the Oakland County Circuit Court
against defendant seeking to set aside the sheriff’s sale. Plaintiff claimed that defendant failed to
post a copy of the notice of foreclosure and sale in a conspicuous place upon the subject property
within the 15-day timeframe provided by MCL 600.3208, and that defendant’s actions were
“intentionally designed to preclude the Plaintiff from entering into a Loan Modification and keep
possession of her home.” Plaintiff additionally alleged that defendant committed fraud in the
foreclosure proceeding because Simpson “clearly did not have personal knowledge of the facts
asserted in the documents because if he did have personal knowledge he would have read and
known that Defendant failed to comply with MCLA 600.3208.”
On January 26, 2016, plaintiff attempted to serve defendant by sending a copy of the
summons and complaint by certified mail, return receipt requested. Her attorney’s affidavit of
service, however, indicates that he actually sent a copy of the summons and complaint to an
address registered with “Comerica, Inc.” not Comerica Bank. Plaintiff did not attempt to serve
personally an officer, resident agent, or other person in-charge of a Comerica Bank office or
business establishment.
On February 26, 2015, the trial court clerk entered a default at plaintiff’s request.
Plaintiff then moved the trial court for a default judgment. The day before the hearing on that
motion, someone at the trial court telephoned defendant as a courtesy to inform it of the action.
That same day, defendant filed a response opposing plaintiff’s motion for default judgment,
averring that it never received notice of the suit because plaintiff instead sent the notice to
Comerica, Inc. at the company’s registered address.
At the hearing, the trial court denied plaintiff’s motion for default judgment, stating that
plaintiff did not properly serve defendant. Plaintiff requested reconsideration of this decision,
arguing that she properly served defendant’s business entity because Comerica, Inc. was a
subsidiary of Comerica Bank. The trial court denied this motion, stating that plaintiff failed to
demonstrate a palpable error requiring reconsideration.
Defendant then moved to set aside the default and for summary disposition under MCR
2.116(C)(8). Defendant reiterated its argument that default was improper because it was not
properly served and argued that Deputy Roehrig’s recorded affidavit served as presumptive
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evidence that defendant complied with the notice requirements of MCL 600.3208. Defendant
further argued that, because plaintiff could show no procedural irregularity or fraud in the
foreclosure procedure, defendant was entitled to summary disposition because plaintiff lacked
standing to challenge the foreclosure.
Plaintiff disagreed. She argued that defendant was estopped from enforcing the sheriff’s
sale because “Plaintiffs [sic] relied on Defendant’s representation and MCLA 600.3205 which
bars the Sheriff’s Sale during the financial review process” and that defendant was unjustly
enriched because defendant “received the proceeds of the Sheriff’s Sale and can sue the Plaintiff
for any deficiency.” Plaintiff further argued that defendant did not post the notice required by
MCL 600.3208, but failed to provide any affidavit or other documentary evidence to that effect.
On November 4, 2015, well after the expiration of the redemption period, the trial court
heard defendant’s motions to set aside the default and for summary disposition. The trial court
first set aside the default stating that “I don’t think it was properly served.” The trial court then
allowed the parties to address defendant’s motion for summary disposition over plaintiff’s
objection that defendant was required to pay plaintiff her costs incurred in setting aside the
default before defendant could make such a motion. In her argument, plaintiff stated that she
filed an affidavit stating that she lived at the subject property and that no one posted the notice on
the property. The trial court, however, could not locate this affidavit in the record.
The trial court granted summary disposition to defendant, dismissing plaintiff’s
complaint in its entirety. Regarding MCL 600.3208, the trial court concluded that Deputy
Roehrig’s affidavit served as presumptive evidence of notice and, because plaintiff provided the
court with no evidence to counter that presumption, she could not allege a fraud or procedural
irregularity sufficient to afford her standing to challenge the foreclosure or seek quiet title. The
trial court then concluded that plaintiff’s claim of promissory estoppel failed as a matter of law
because she did not allege any specific promise that anyone made to her and that plaintiff’s claim
for unjust enrichment failed because the court could not imply a contract when the terms of the
mortgage clearly covered the ramifications of Simmons’s default. Plaintiff moved for
reconsideration of this decision, raising the same arguments as she had previously. The trial
court again denied reconsideration, stating that plaintiff failed to demonstrate a palpable error.
Default Judgment Was Properly Set Aside. On appeal, plaintiff first argues that the trial
court erred by denying plaintiff’s motion for a default judgment and by setting aside the default.
We disagree.
“The ruling on a motion to set aside a default or a default judgment is entrusted to the
discretion of the trial court.” Alken-Ziegler, Inc v Waterbury Headers Corp, 461 Mich 219, 227;
600 NW2d 638 (1999). “Indeed, a trial court’s decision in this regard should only be reversed on
appeal when there is a clear abuse of that discretion.” Shawl v Spence Bros, Inc, 280 Mich App
213, 220; 760 NW2d 674 (2008). Accordingly, this court’s review of that exercise of discretion
“is sharply limited,” Aliken-Ziegler, 461 Mich at 227, and the trial court’s decision may not be
overturned for a mere “difference in judicial opinion,” Shawl, 280 Mich App at 220 (internal
quotation marks and citation omitted). “Rather, an abuse of discretion occurs only when the trial
court’s decision is outside the range of reasonable and principled outcomes.” Saffian v Simmons,
477 Mich 8, 12; 727 NW2d 132 (2007).
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MCR 2.603(D)(1) “governs motions to set aside a default,” Shawl, 280 Mich App at 218,
and provides:
A motion to set aside a default or a default judgment, except when grounded on
lack of jurisdiction over the defendant, shall be granted only if good cause is
shown and an affidavit of facts showing a meritorious defense is filed.
A defendant proves good cause to set aside a default by showing “(1) a substantial defect
or irregularity in the proceedings upon which the default was based, (2) a reasonable excuse for
failure to comply with the requirements which created the default, or (3) some other reason
showing that manifest injustice would result from permitting the default to stand.” Shawl, 280
Mich App at 221 (internal quotation marks and citation omitted). In determining whether
defendant has proved good cause to set aside a default, the trial court may consider, inter alia,
“whether the party completely failed to respond or simply missed the deadline to file,” “whether
there was defective process or notice,” “the circumstances behind the failure to file or file
timely,” and “whether the failure was knowing or intentional.” Id. at 238. To determine whether
a defendant’s affidavit shows a meritorious defense, the trial court should consider whether the
affidavit contains evidence showing that:
(1) the plaintiff cannot prove or defendant can disprove an element of the claim or
a statutory requirement;
(2) a ground for summary disposition exists under MCR 2.116(C)(2), (3), (5), (6),
(7) or (8); or
(3) the plaintiff’s claim rests on evidence that is inadmissible. [Id.]
Still, MCR 2.603, MCR 2.625, and MCR 2.612 make plain that the first inquiry the trial
court must undertake when determining whether to grant a defendant’s motion to set aside a
default is whether the defendant had properly come within that court’s jurisdiction as of the time
of the default. Regarding corporations, MCR 2.105(D) provides that:
Service of process on a domestic or foreign corporation may be made by
(1) serving a summons and a copy of the complaint on an officer or the
resident agent;
(2) serving a summons and a copy of the complaint on a director, trustee,
or person in charge of an office or business establishment of the corporation and
sending a summons and a copy of the complaint by registered mail, addressed to
the principal office of the corporation;
(3) serving a summons and a copy of the complaint on the last presiding
officer, president, cashier, secretary, or treasurer of a corporation that has ceased
to do business by failing to keep up its organization by the appointment of officers
or otherwise, or whose term of existence has expired;
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(4) sending a summons and a copy of the complaint by registered mail to
the corporation or an appropriate corporation officer and to the Michigan Bureau
of Commercial Services, Corporation Division if
(a) the corporation has failed to appoint and maintain a resident
agent or to file a certificate of that appointment as required by law;
(b) the corporation has failed to keep up its organization by the
appointment of officers or otherwise; or
(c) the corporation’s term of existence has expired.
In this case, plaintiff attempted to serve process on defendant Comerica Bank by sending
a copy of the summons and complaint by registered mail, return receipt requested, to what
appears to be the processing agent for Comerica Inc. Plaintiff argues that this method of service
was proper because the law firm representing Comerica Bank in the foreclosure and sheriff’s sale
had indicated to plaintiff that it represented Comerica Inc. and because Comerica Inc. is a
business establishment of Comerica Bank. Even if plaintiff’s contentions are true, however,
plaintiff still did not properly serve defendant.
First, assuming arguendo that Comerica Bank and Comerica Inc. are related such that
serving Comerica Inc. with process is akin to serving Comerica Bank with process, plaintiff
would only be entitled to serve defendant by registered mail under MCR 2.105(4) if defendant
failed to keep up its organization, see MCR 2.105(4)(b)-(c), or if defendant failed to maintain a
resident agent, see MCR 2.105(4)(a). Plaintiff makes no claim that defendant meets either of
these requirements. Further, even if defendant did meet the requirements under MCR
2.105(4)(a)-(c), to serve defendant properly by registered mail, plaintiff would also be required
to send a copy of the summons and complaint by registered mail to the Michigan Bureau of
Commercial Services. Plaintiff’s failure to do so in this case further precludes her from
accomplishing service of process under MCR 2.105(4).
Likewise, assuming arguendo that Comerica Inc.’s Michigan address is one of
defendant’s business establishments, plaintiff failed to meet the requirements provided by MCR
2.105(2) for serving a defendant through its business establishment. MCR 2.105(2) requires
plaintiff to serve personally the summons and complaint on the person in charge of defendant’s
business establishment and send a copy of the summons and complaint by registered mail to the
“principal office of the corporation.” Plaintiff did neither. Rather, plaintiff sent a copy of the
summons and complaint by registered mail to defendant’s purported business establishment and
had no contact with defendant’s principal office.
Accordingly, plaintiff failed to serve defendant properly under any plausible scenario.
Because defendant had not filed any response, nor entered an appearance, before the trial court
clerk entered the default, defendant was not properly within the circuit court’s jurisdiction at the
time of default. Therefore, the trial court properly set aside the default and denied plaintiff’s
motion for a default judgment.
Because plaintiff’s motion for reconsideration presented the circuit court with no legal or
factual argument that would indicate that plaintiff properly served defendant, the circuit court
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also properly denied plaintiff’s motion for reconsideration of its order setting aside the default.
See MCR 2.119(F)(3) (“The moving party must demonstrate a palpable error by which the court
and the parties have been misled and show that a different disposition of the motion must result
from correction of the error.”).
Payment of Costs. Plaintiff next argues that the trial court erred in considering
defendant’s motion for summary disposition. Plaintiff argues that she was entitled to the costs
she incurred in the default proceedings and that defendant was required to pay these costs before
the court could entertain defendant’s motion for summary disposition. We disagree.
MCR 2.603(D)(4) conditions a defendant’s relief from default upon the defendant’s
payment of costs, and provides that:
An order setting aside the default or default judgment must be conditioned on the
defaulted party paying the taxable costs incurred by the other party in reliance on
the default or default judgment, except as prescribed in MCR 2.625(D). The
order may also impose other conditions the court deems proper, including a
reasonable attorney fee.
MCR 2.625(D) governs orders to set aside a default, and provides that:
(1) If personal jurisdiction was acquired over the defendant, the order must
be conditioned on the defendant’s paying or securing payment to the party
seeking affirmative relief the taxable costs incurred in procuring the default or the
default judgment and acting in reliance on it;
(2) If jurisdiction was acquired by publication, the order may be
conditioned on the defendant’s paying or securing payment to the party seeking
affirmative relief all or a part of the costs as the court may direct;
(3) If jurisdiction was in fact not acquired, costs may not be imposed.
Contrary to plaintiff’s assertions before the trial court and on appeal, plaintiff’s failure to
serve defendant properly meant that the trial court did not have jurisdiction over defendant at the
time of default. This lack of jurisdiction precluded the trial court from awarding plaintiff costs
associated with the default. MCR 2.625(D)(3). With no obligation to pay any costs to plaintiff,
defendant was entitled to submit to the jurisdiction of the trial court and move for summary
disposition and the court was required to rule on this motion.
Summary Disposition Was Proper. Finally, plaintiff argues that the trial court erred in
granting summary disposition to defendant pursuant to MCR 2.116(C)(8). We disagree.
“A trial court’s determination regarding a motion for summary disposition is reviewed
de novo.” Sanders v Perfecting Church, 303 Mich App 1, 3; 840 NW2d 401 (2013). This Court
reviews “a trial court’s decision regarding a motion for reconsideration for an abuse of
discretion. Id. at 8. A trial court abuses its discretion when its decision falls outside of the range
of reasonable and principled outcomes. Maldonado v Ford Motor Co., 476 Mich 372, 388; 719
NW2d 809 (2006).
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“A motion for summary disposition under MCR 2.116(C)(8) tests the legal sufficiency of
a claim by the pleadings alone.” Smith v Stolberg, 231 Mich App 256, 258; 586 NW2d 103
(1998). “A motion under MCR 2.116(C)(8) may be granted only where the claims alleged are so
clearly unenforceable as a matter of law that no factual development could possibly justify
recovery.” Maiden v Rozwood, 461 Mich 109, 119; 597 NW2d 817 (1999) (internal quotation
marks and citation omitted). “Under this subrule, all well-pleaded factual allegations are
accepted as true and construed in a light most favorable to the nonmovant.” Liggett Rest Group,
Inc v City of Pontiac, 260 Mich App 127, 133; 676 NW2d 633 (2003) (internal quotation
notations and citation omitted). “However, mere conclusions, unsupported by allegations of fact,
will not suffice to state a cause of action.” Eason v Coggins Mem Christian Methodist Episcopal
Church, 210 Mich App 261, 263; 532 NW2d 882 (1995). Additionally, the trial court may
consider an instrument that is a matter of public record when deciding a (C)(8) motion. See
MCR 2.113(F)(1)(a); see also Dalley v Dykema Gossett, 287 Mich 296, 301 n 1, 788 NW2d 679
(2010).
“Foreclosure of a mortgage containing a power of sale is permissible by advertisement,
provided the proceedings are instituted in accordance with the foreclosure statutes.” Trademark
Properties of Michigan, LLC v Fed Nat Mortg Assn, 308 Mich App 132, 138; 863 NW2d 344
(2014). MCL 600.3208 sets forth the requirements a mortgagee must meet to foreclose by sale
of a mortgaged property:
Notice that the mortgage will be foreclosed by a sale of the mortgaged premises,
or some part of them, shall be given by publishing the same for 4 successive
weeks at least once in each week, in a newspaper published in the county where
the premises included in the mortgage and intended to be sold, or some part of
them, are situated. If no newspaper is published in the county, the notice shall be
published in a newspaper published in an adjacent county. In every case within
15 days after the first publication of the notice, a true copy shall be posted in a
conspicuous place upon any part of the premises described in the notice.
After the mortgagee has provided proper notice of the pending sale, the sheriff or deputy
sheriff may sell the property at public auction to the highest bidder. MCL 600.3216. The
mortgagee may, in good faith, purchase the property at this sale, MCL 600.3228, and, the sheriff
or deputy sheriff will issue to it a sheriff’s deed, MCL 600.3232, granting the mortgagee “an
equitable interest in the mortgaged premises,” Trademark Properties, 308 Mich App at 138-139.
Those with an ownership interest in a foreclosed residential property may redeem the property by
paying to the mortgagee the statutory percentage of indebtedness owed within six months of the
sheriff’s sale. MCL 600.3240(8). Redemption voids the sheriff’s deed and any equitable interest
it conferred. MCL 600.3240(1).
If an interested party “fails to avail him or herself of the right of redemption, all the
mortgagor’s rights [and any person claiming rights stemming from the mortgagor’s rights] in and
to the property are extinguished.” Bryan v JP Morgan Chase Bank, 304 Mich App 708, 713; 848
NW2d 482 (2014). Therefore, upon expiration of the redemption period, the sheriff’s deed
becomes operative and vests “in the grantee therein named, his heirs or assigns, all the right, title,
and interest which the mortgagor had at the time of the execution of the mortgage, or at any time
thereafter.” MCL 600.3236.
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The natural consequence of the expiration of the redemption period, and the expiration of
the mortgagor’s interest in that property, is that the mortgagor or any person claiming an interest
under the mortgagor, lacks standing to bring a claim relative to that property. See Bryan, 304
Mich App at 713-714. Accordingly, the only part of the foreclosure sale that such a plaintiff
may challenge is the procedure of that sale itself. Freeman v Wozniak, 241 Mich App 633, 637-
638; 617 NW2d 46 (2000). Therefore, to survive a motion for summary disposition pursuant to
MCR 2.116(C)(8), a plaintiff seeking to set aside a foreclosure sale must allege facts showing
(1) fraud or irregularity in the foreclosure procedure, (2) prejudice . . . , and (3) a
causal relationship between the alleged fraud or irregularity and the alleged
prejudice, i.e., that the [plaintiff] would have been in a better position to preserve
the property interest absent the fraud or irregularity. [Diem v Sallie Mae Home
Loans, Inc, 307 Mich App 204, 210–11; 859 NW2d 238 (2014).]
In this case, plaintiff did not sufficiently allege facts showing a fraud or procedural
irregularity to overcome defendant’s motion for summary disposition. In her complaint, plaintiff
alleged that defendant committed fraud through Tracy Simpson’s affidavit because Simpson had
no personal knowledge of the foreclosure sale or notice thereof. Plaintiff further alleged a
procedural irregularity in that no one affixed a copy of the notice of foreclosure and pending sale
to the subject property as required by MCL 600.3208.
Regarding Simpson’s affidavit, the attestations contained therein were strictly limited to
whether Jack Simmons was an active military service member at the time of the foreclosure. No
one disputes that Simmons died in 2009 and could not have been in active military service at the
time of the 2014 foreclosure. Plaintiff has not explained, nor can this Court discern, how
Simpson’s affidavit perpetrated a fraud upon her or otherwise constituted a procedural
irregularity under the foreclosure statutes. Accordingly, Simpson’s affidavit is irrelevant to those
questions.
Closer to the point, MCL 600.3256(C) allows “[a]ny party desiring to perpetuate the
evidence of any [foreclosure] sale” to procure “an affidavit setting forth the time, manner and
place of posting a copy of such notice of sale to be made by the person posting the same.” Under
MCL 600.3264, these affidavits may be recorded by the register of deeds and “shall be
presumptive evidence of the facts therein contained.”
Defendant attached to its motion for summary disposition a copy of the sheriff’s deed
which stated that a copy of the required notice was timely affixed to the subject property and an
“Affidavit of Auctioneer” in which the deputy sheriff that conducted the sale attested that the
sale was conducted as described in the sheriff’s deed. Defendant properly recorded these
documents with the register of deeds. Accordingly, the trial court did not err when it considered
these documents as presumptive evidence that proper notice was affixed to the subject property
under MCL 600.3208. Therefore, to survive defendant’s motion under MCR 2.116(C)(8),
plaintiff was required to bring forth some evidence rebutting this presumption of notice.
Plaintiff failed to do so. Although plaintiff’s counsel asserted at the hearing below that
plaintiff signed an affidavit stating that she lived at the subject property and no notice was ever
affixed to the property, that affidavit does not appear anywhere in the record and plaintiff has not
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provided it to this Court on appeal. The only evidence plaintiff presented to the trial court to
rebut the presumption of notice was the conclusory statements contained in her complaint, which
are inadequate to defeat defendant’s motion for summary disposition. See Eason, 210 Mich App
at 263. Therefore, the trial court properly concluded that plaintiff lacked standing to challenge
the foreclosure or seek quiet title to the property.
Regarding plaintiff’s claim for promissory estoppel, to plead a claim for promissory
estoppel, plaintiff must allege:
(1) a promise, (2) that the promisor should reasonably have expected to induce
action of a definite and substantial character on the part of the promisee, and (3)
that in fact produced reliance or forbearance of that nature in circumstances such
that the promise must be enforced if injustice is to be avoided. [Novak v
Nationwide Mut Ins Co, 235 Mich App 675, 686–87; 599 NW2d 546 (1999).]
Because plaintiff has not shown any specific promise made to her, plaintiff’s claim fails as a
matter of law. Accordingly, the trial court properly granted summary disposition to defendant on
that claim.
Concerning plaintiff’s claim for equitable estoppel, in Senters v Ottawa Savings Bank,
443 Mich 45, 56; 503 NW2d 639 (1993), our Supreme Court held that “[w]here, as in the present
case, a statute is applicable to the circumstances and dictates the requirements for relief by one
party, equity will not interfere.” Plaintiff’s sole potential relief is provided by MCL 600.3240(8),
which granted her a right to redeem within six months of the sheriff’s sale. “[I]n the absence of
fraud, accident or mistake, the possibility of injustice is not enough to tamper with” this strict
statutory provision. Freeman, 241 Mich App at 637. Because plaintiff has not sufficiently pled
fraud, accident or mistake, plaintiff’s claim for equitable estoppel fails as a matter of law.
Accordingly, the trial court properly granted summary disposition to defendant on that claim.
Because plaintiff provided the trial court with no legal or factual argument that would
indicate that defendant was not entitled to judgment as a matter of law, the trial court also
properly denied plaintiff’s motion for reconsideration of its order granting summary disposition
to defendant. See MCR 2.119(F)(3).
Affirmed.
/s/ Jane E. Markey
/s/ Kurtis T. Wilder
/s/ Brock A. Swartzle
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