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
ZAINAB HANS, UNPUBLISHED
March 31, 2022
Plaintiff-Appellant,
v Nos. 355468; 356936
Oakland Circuit Court
AHSAN HANS, LC No. 2016-842481-DM
Defendant-Appellee,
and
EISENBERG & SPILMAN, PLLC, and HOWARD
I. WALLACH,
Other Parties.
Before: RICK, P.J., and MURRAY and SHAPIRO, JJ.
PER CURIAM.
In March 2019, the trial court entered a judgment of divorce, consistent with an arbitrator’s
award. The judgment was approved by both plaintiff and defendant. In July 2019, defendant filed
a motion for clarification of the judgment as applied to the distribution of proceeds from the sale
of real property, primarily because of competing attorney liens. On September 16, 2019, the trial
court issued a postjudgment order explaining how the sale proceeds were to be distributed.
Plaintiff now appeals, and we affirm.1
1
Plaintiff initially filed an appeal as of right from the trial court’s September 16, 2019 order, which
was assigned Docket No. 355468. After defendant filed his appellee’s brief and challenged this
Court’s jurisdiction as of right, plaintiff filed a delayed application for leave to appeal the same
order, which was assigned Docket No. 356936. This Court granted the application and
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I. BACKGROUND
Plaintiff and defendant were married in 2008, and in 2016, plaintiff filed for divorce. The
trial court eventually entered a stipulated order sending the case to binding arbitration. After the
arbitrator issued a final decision, the parties agreed on the terms of a judgment, which incorporated
the arbitrator’s award. The parties had substantial debt, which included attorney fees and other
unsecured debt. The arbitrator ordered the parties to pay their own attorney fees, except that
defendant was required to pay $50,000 of plaintiff’s attorney fees. Defendant was also ordered to
pay 75 percent of the unsecured marital debt and plaintiff was to pay the remaining 25 percent.
The two most significant marital assets were the family residence on Linden Way in Auburn Hills,
and a residential condominium on Berkshire in Sterling Heights. The parties’ attorneys were
granted liens against the properties for their outstanding attorney fees, with the arbitrator
estimating that plaintiff owed her attorney approximately $140,000 and that defendant owed his
counsel at least $50,000.
Both the arbitration award and the divorce judgment addressed scenarios for selling both
properties and distributing the sales proceeds to pay the parties’ unsecured debt, but also
recognized that the properties were subject to the attorney liens. When preparing to sell the first
property, uncertainty arose over how to distribute the sale proceeds under the terms of the
judgment, particularly because the equity value of the first property was inadequate to pay all of
the attorney liens. Even when the second property sold a short time later, there did not appear to
be enough equity in that property to satisfy the attorney liens and the remaining marital debt.
Defendant moved for clarification of the judgment with regard to how to distribute the sales
proceeds. At that time, plaintiff owed her counsel $137,340.65, of which defendant was required
to pay $50,000. Defendant owed his attorney approximately $85,000. After considering
defendant’s motion, the trial court clarified that the attorney liens, including the $50,000 owed by
defendant to plaintiff’s counsel, should be given equal priority and be paid first. The first property
lacked sufficient equity to satisfy the attorney liens, so the attorneys agreed to release their liens
to allow the sale of the property to be completed.
Plaintiff moved for reconsideration of the trial court’s decision because she believed it
effectively gave defendant more than a 50-percent share of the equity in the property. She argued
that the divorce judgment and the arbitrator’s decision first required the sale proceeds to be equally
divided between the parties, before applying the proceeds to satisfy the attorney liens.
Accordingly, the $50,000 amount owed by defendant to plaintiff’s attorney would not be given
priority, which might have allowed plaintiff to either fully pay her attorney, pay off some of her
share of the marital debt, or allowed her to directly receive a portion of the sale proceeds. The trial
court disagreed and denied plaintiff’s motion for reconsideration.
II. ANALYSIS
consolidated the two appeals. Hans v Hans, unpublished order of the Court of Appeals, entered
May 20, 2021 (Docket No. 356936).
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Plaintiff challenges the trial court’s decision clarifying the terms of the divorce judgment
as applied to the distribution of the sales proceeds, arguing that the trial court erred in its
interpretation of the judgment, acted without authority to modify the judgment, and failed to reach
a result that equitably divided the marital estate.
The divorce judgment was entered in accordance with an arbitration decision and the
parties agreed to the terms of the judgment. As such, plaintiff appropriately characterizes the
judgment as a consent judgment. A consent judgment of divorce is to be construed as a contract.
Andrusz v Andrusz, 320 Mich App 445, 452; 904 NW2d 636 (2017).
[A] consent judgment can only be modified with the consent of the parties, at least
in the absence of fraud, mistake, illegality, or unconscionability. Blaske v Blaske,
33 Mich App 210, 212; 189 NW2d 713 (1971); Greaves v Greaves, 148 Mich App
643, 646; 384 NW2d 830 (1986). The trial court may, however, fill voids in an
incomplete consent judgment, and in so doing must balance the equities insofar as
is possible under the circumstances. See Greaves, 148 Mich App at 646-647. The
consent judgment at issue in this matter is a contract and must be treated as such
pursuant to ordinary principles of contract interpretation. [In re Lobaina Estate,
267 Mich App 415, 417-418; 705 NW2d 234 (2005)]. [Andrusz, 320 Mich App at
453.]
This Court “review[s] de novo as a question of law the proper interpretation of a contract, including
a trial court’s determination whether contract language is ambiguous.” Id. at 452. Unambiguous
contracts must be enforced as written, but if a contract is ambiguous, its meaning becomes a
question of fact. Id. at 453. This Court reviews a trial court’s factual findings for clear error. Id.
at 452. “A finding is clearly erroneous if, after a review of the record, we are left with a definite
and firm conviction that the trial court made a mistake.” Lueck v Lueck, 328 Mich App 399, 404;
937 NW2d 729 (2019).
In the arbitrator’s original decision, he outlined some very specific scenarios for satisfying
the allocated debt and the attorney liens, but which ultimately were inapplicable to the parties’
circumstances as they unfolded. In relevant part, the divorce judgment incorporated the
arbitrator’s award and specified as follows:
If Plaintiff/Mother either (1) fails to give written notice within 21 days of
the entry of this Judgment, (2) fails to refinance the outstanding mortgage on the
Linden Way Property within 90 days of the entry of the Judgment of Divorce, or
(3) if she indicates within 21 days of entry of the Judgment that she does not desire
to be awarded the Linden Way home, then both residences will be placed for sale
within 10 days of such notice. Pending its sale, Plaintiff/Mother shall be solely
responsible for the mortgage, property taxes, utilities and other costs associated
with the Linden Way Property until it is sold. Subject to any applicable lien
recorded by either or both parties’ counsel, when the first residence is sold, $45,300
of the net proceeds will be applied to the debts being allocated to Plaintiff/Mother
and the balance will be applied to debts allocated to Defendant/Father. When the
second residence is sold, the balance owed by Defendant/Father on the $181,190 in
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debts will be paid from the net proceeds. If there is money remaining after the
second residence is sold, the amount remaining will be theoretically divided into
two equal amounts, one part theoretically for Defendant/Father and the other one
for Plaintiff/Mother. From Defendant/Father’s theoretical one-half, $50,000 will
be paid to Plaintiff/Mother’s counsel by the title company at closing if there are
sufficient funds, and, if not, then the balance will be immediately paid to Zainab’s
counsel. Plaintiff/Mother will receive her one half of the funds when the second
house is sold. . . .
Plaintiff seems to argue that the trial court should not have treated the lien for $50,000 that
defendant was responsible for paying on an equal basis with the two other liens because it conflicts
with the arbitrator’s decision, as incorporated into the divorce judgment, to divide the real property
equally. However, there was no reason for the court to treat that lien any differently than the two
other attorney liens, in light of the limited marital assets.
When defendant moved for clarification of the judgment with regard to disbursing the sale
proceeds, the trial court made it clear that it intended to follow the terms of the judgment of divorce
with respect to the distribution of the proceeds of the sales of the two properties. It is apparent
from the judgment that the sale proceeds were to be divided equally only after the proceeds were
used to first pay the attorneys, then the arbitrator’s fees, and then the couple’s marital debts. The
judgment of divorce included judgment liens in specific amounts granted to the parties’ attorneys,
but the arbitrator’s decision did not address the actual adjusted amounts of the attorney liens. It is
apparent that the problem arose when actually distributing the sales proceeds because of the large
attorney liens in comparison to the net proceeds available after the sale of each property. Because
the arbitrator’s decision did not adequately consider the amounts involved for the attorney liens,
the trial court did not err by making a supplemental ruling clarifying how the proceeds should be
distributed between the parties’ attorneys. To the extent that the judgment can be characterized as
a consent judgment entered after arbitration, there was a void related to the actual amount of the
liens encumbering the real properties, which the trial court properly could address and resolve
because it was incomplete. Andrusz, 320 Mich App at 453. Given the large amounts owed, there
was no money left over to divide the proceeds equally between the parties.
In short, plaintiff is claiming that she was not treated fairly with regard to the distribution
of the sales proceeds because some of the proceeds were used to pay off the share of her attorney
fees that defendant was obligated to pay, which plaintiff equates as giving defendant an overall
larger share of the proceeds. Although plaintiff maintains that the proceeds should have been
divided equally to pay the attorney fees and marital debts, this argument is inconsistent with the
intent expressed in the arbitrator’s award and, more importantly, it conflicts with what the parties
agreed to in the judgment of divorce. They each generally agreed that the real estate proceeds
would be applied to paying their attorney fees and other marital debt before being equally divided
among them. The trial court had to slightly modify how the sales proceeds would be distributed,
but the modifications were generally consistent with the intent expressed by the parties in the
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judgment of divorce. Accordingly, plaintiff has not shown that the trial court erred in its
interpretation of the divorce judgment.2
To the extent that plaintiff argues that the trial court failed to follow the arbitrator’s
supplemental recommendations after he was asked to clarify his decision, no error has been shown.
The arbitrator’s recommendation to split the sales proceeds 50-50 to pay the attorney liens first
and then pay the marital debt conflicts with the terms of the judgment of divorce and fails to
recognize that plaintiff’s counsel had filed a lien for the $50,000 portion that defendant owed for
plaintiff’s attorney fees, giving that payment priority over other unsecured debt. Therefore, the
trial court did not err by refusing to follow the arbitrator’s supplemental recommendation.
Plaintiff also appears to argue that her share of the debt, $45,300, includes her own
payments to her attorney, which means that this debt should have also been given the same priority
as the $50,000 in plaintiff’s attorney fees for which defendant was responsible. However, the
$45,300 that plaintiff was required to pay was not treated as legal fees, but as unsecured debt, and
defendant likely also had credit card debt that included his attorney fees. Any debt for attorney
fees the parties already paid with their credit cards was treated differently and had a lower priority
because it was not secured by liens.
In sum, the trial court’s September 16, 2019 order comports with the intent expressed in
the arbitrator’s original decision and is consistent with the judgment of divorce. Therefore,
plaintiff has not demonstrated any error with the trial court’s postjudgment rulings regarding
distribution of the sales proceeds.
Plaintiff complains that the trial court’s postjudgment order fails to achieve an equitable
distribution of the marital estate. Because plaintiff did not raise this argument before the trial
court, it is unpreserved. Therefore, we review this issue for plain error affecting plaintiff’s
substantial rights. Demski v Petlick, 309 Mich App 404, 426-427; 873 NW2d 596 (2015).
Although plaintiff correctly observes that “[t]he goal in distributing marital assets in a
divorce proceeding is to reach an equitable distribution of property in light of all the
circumstances,” Berger v Berger, 277 Mich App 700, 716-717; 747 NW2d 336 (2008), the trial
court was not tasked with distributing the marital estate. The parties had already proceeded to
2
We respectfully disagree with our dissenting colleague’s view on the allocations made. The
judgment required that the debt of both parties be satisfied first, and only if there were any monies
left over after satisfying the debts (an unlikely event, as recognized by the court and the parties),
would there be an equal share of any remaining proceeds. We also give much deference to the
court in addressing these property distribution issues, as the court had to exercise discretion in
meeting the changing demands necessitated by when each house was sold and all the competing
interests. Keefer v Keefer, 141 Mich App 751, 754-755; 367 NW2d 445 (1985). The trial court is
not required to follow one method over another, as long as the method used results in a fair and
equitable division in light of all the circumstances. Heike v Heike, 198 Mich App 289, 292; 497
NW2d 220 (1993).
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binding arbitration and the arbitrator had rendered a decision allocating marital debt and
distributing the parties’ property, and the arbitrator’s decision was incorporated into a judgment of
divorce, which both parties approved, and neither appealed. The ensuing dispute resulted from
changes in the parties’ circumstances and the arbitrator’s failure to fully factor the amounts of the
attorney liens into his original decision. The trial court properly recognized that its role was not
to revisit and consider anew a distribution of the marital estate, but to interpret and apply the
judgment of divorce. Thus, the trial court did not err by failing to reexamine what was equitable
under the circumstances and by instead limiting its role to addressing the void regarding how to
pay the attorney liens in a manner that was consistent with the terms of the divorce judgment.3
We also reject plaintiff’s argument that the trial court lacked the authority to modify the
judgment. Because plaintiff did not challenge the trial court’s authority to interpret and clarify the
terms of the divorce judgment, we review this issue for plain error affecting plaintiff’s substantial
rights. Demski, 309 Mich App at 426-427.
Plaintiff argues that defendant’s motion to clarify the judgment was not timely filed under
MCR 3.602(J), as a motion to vacate the arbitrator’s award, or under MCR 3.602(k), as a request
to modify or correct the award. But because defendant’s motion involved a request to clarify or
modify the divorce judgment, not the arbitrator’s award, neither of these rules applied.
Defendant’s motion for relief from the divorce judgment was timely filed under MCR 2.612(C)(2)
(the motion must be filed within a reasonable time).
Plaintiff also argues that her constitutional right to due process of law was violated because
the trial court delayed ruling on her motion for reconsideration of the September 16, 2019 order
until approximately a year later. Although it appears that the trial court may have issued an order
denying the motion for reconsideration on the same day it was filed, the court later explained that
it may not have ruled on the motion because plaintiff failed to file a copy of the motion with the
judge’s chambers. In any event, the trial court addressed the motion for reconsideration on October
27, 2020, and despite the delay, plaintiff did not show that there were grounds to grant the motion
for reconsideration. Accordingly, the delay was not prejudicial to plaintiff. Plaintiff’s complaint
that she was not permitted to argue her motion for reconsideration fares no better, as MCR
2.119(F)(2) provides that a party is not entitled to oral argument on a motion for reconsideration
unless the trial court directs otherwise. “The basic requirements of due process in a civil case
include notice of the proceeding and a meaningful opportunity to be heard.” Al-Maliki v LaGrant,
286 Mich App 483, 485-486; 781 NW2d 853 (2009). Because plaintiff had the opportunity to
present her arguments in her motion for reconsideration, and the motion was considered and
decided by the trial court, plaintiff was not denied due process of law.
3
Plaintiff complains that the trial court improperly ignored the arbitrator’s decision when it ruled
on defendant’s motion to clarify the distribution of the real estate proceeds, but as previously
explained, the trial court was addressing a problem that the arbitrator did not fully resolve in his
initial decision. The divorce judgment was entered by the trial court, and the court was permitted
to make a postjudgment ruling interpreting and applying its own judgment.
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Plaintiff also argues that the trial court erred by failing to follow the arbitrator’s
supplemental recommendation and not entering a proposed order that was approved by the
arbitrator. As previously discussed, the court’s task was to clarify the meaning of the provision in
the divorce judgment providing that distribution of the real estate proceeds was “subject to” the
attorney liens. It is apparent that language in the judgment (as well as the arbitrator’s award)
provided that the net proceeds from the sales of the properties were to first be applied to satisfy
the attorney liens and then to pay off the marital debts. Any equal division of remaining sales
proceeds was not to occur until the attorney liens and the marital debt was first satisfied. Because
the trial court’s task was to interpret and apply the terms of the divorce judgment, the trial court
properly refused to adopt plaintiff’s proposal, which would have allowed her to share in half of
the sales proceeds before the liens and debts were satisfied.
The parties agreed to arbitrate the issues in the divorce and they also agreed to the terms of
the divorce judgment. An arbitrator’s authority to correct errors or omissions in an arbitration
award is limited to 14 days after the award is issued. MCL 600.5078(3). The arbitrator’s final
award, which formed the basis for the judgment of divorce, was filed with the court on February
4, 2019. It was not until July 2019, well after the judgment was entered in March 2019, that
defendant filed the motion for clarification of the property award in the judgment with regard to
the distribution of the sales proceeds. By that time, the arbitrator no longer had authority to correct
or modify his decision. MCR 3.602(L) provides that a trial court shall enter a judgment on an
arbitration award and that such judgments have the same force and effect as other judgments.
Accordingly, once the judgment of divorce was entered, the trial court had the authority to hear
postjudgment motions. See MCR 2.119; MCR 2.612; MCR 3.213. Accordingly, the trial court
did not err by entertaining defendant’s motion for clarification of the judgment.4
Plaintiff is correct that courts have limited authority to vacate a domestic relations award
entered after arbitration. MCL 600.5081(2). However, the court did not vacate any award. It was
asked to review enforcement of the terms, as incorporated into its judgment, in light of changes in
the circumstances surrounding the sales of the marital properties. The trial court made it clear
many times that it was only concerned with enforcing the arbitrator’s original ruling and the terms
as adopted in the divorce judgment. The trial court declined to follow the arbitrator’s supplemental
recommendation after the judgment was entered because it would have resulted in a modification
of the judgment.
In sum, the record shows that the trial court gave effect to the arbitrator’s original decision
in the postjudgment orders it issued, consistent with the court rules. MCR 3.602(K) and (L). The
4
Because judgment had already been entered, it was the trial court, not the arbitrator, who had the
authority to determine whether the terms of the divorce judgment required clarification in order to
effectuate the terms of the judgment with regard to the distribution of the sales proceeds. To the
extent that the arbitrator was asked for his input on any necessary clarification, he was not at liberty
to recommend a result that was inconsistent with terms of the judgment and the original arbitration
award. The arbitrator’s original decision also did not address the amounts of the attorney liens.
By the time the arbitrator was asked for his input after the judgment was issued, the arbitrator
lacked the authority to issue a new ruling.
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trial court’s postjudgment orders did not modify the arbitrator’s original decision, but attempted
to enforce and follow it, given the changes of circumstances regarding the sales of the real
properties and the amounts of the attorney fees owed by the parties. Compare Gordon Sel-Way,
Inc v Spence Bros, Inc, 438 Mich 488, 497-501; 475 NW2d 704 (1991). Even though the arbitrator
was consulted with regard to his original award, the trial court was not obligated to follow the
arbitrator’s supplemental recommendation when it was apparent that it was inconsistent with the
terms of the divorce judgment.
Next, plaintiff argues that the trial court erred by denying her motion for reconsideration
on the basis that the motion was moot because the proceeds from the sale of the Linden Way
property had already been distributed in accordance with the trial court’s September 16, 2019
order.5 Even if the trial court erred by holding that the motion was moot, see Barrow v Detroit
Election Comm, 305 Mich App 649, 659-660; 854 NW2d 489 (2014), the court also stated that if
plaintiff’s arguments were not moot, plaintiff had not demonstrated a valid basis for
reconsideration. Because plaintiff has not shown that the trial court erred by issuing its September
16, 2019 order clarifying how the sales proceeds were to be distributed, any error in the trial court’s
characterization of plaintiff’s arguments as moot was harmless. MCR 2.613(A) (“An error in . . .
a ruling or order . . . is not ground for . . . vacating, modifying, or otherwise disturbing a judgment
or order, unless refusal to take this action appears to the court inconsistent with substantial
justice.”).
Affirmed.
/s/ Michelle M. Rick
/s/ Christopher M. Murray
5
The trial court also explained why it denied plaintiff’s motion for reconsideration on the merits.
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